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From YouTube: Salt Lake City Council Formal Meeting - 3/26/2019
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A
So
before
I
dive
into
a
little
script
here
about
conduct
during
our
meeting
I
want
to
remind
everybody,
whoever
parked
underneath
the
library
and
the
underground
parking
we
do
validate
for
that.
So,
if
you
did
park
into
there,
please
let
staff
know
we
have
staff
here.
They
can
raise
their
hand
and
we
will
give
you
a
validation
for
tonight.
So
this
is
just
a
standard
script
that
we
have
we'd
like
to
welcome
you
to
each
of
you
to
our
City
Council
meeting
this
evening.
A
We
appreciate
that
you
have
taken
time
out
of
your
day
to
attend
our
meeting
to
participate
and
see
your
local
government
at
work
to
start
the
meeting,
we
have
laid
out
some
guidelines
for
decorum
and
civility
to
make
sure
people
feel
comfortable
and
safe
to
participate.
Please
be
respectful
during
other
people's
comments,
avoid
cheering
or
jeering,
because
it
could
cause
someone
to
feel
intimidated.
Please
also
help
to
take
care
of
this
historic
meeting
room
by
not
standing
on
the
furniture
or
leaning
against
decorative
pieces.
A
If
you
have
a
sign
or
a
prop
or
other
piece
of
equipment,
please
make
sure
that
it
does
not
cause
disruption
or
block
other
people's
views.
Also,
items
like
sticks
and
dolls
are
not
allowed.
Please
do
not
approach
the
Dyess,
which
is
this
area
up
here
or
the
mayor,
and
the
council
sits.
If
you
have
something
you
can
hand
it
to
council
staff
and
they'll
bring
it
to
us.
Our
staff
is
here
to
help
you.
If
you
need
assistance
or
have
any
questions,
please
raise
your
hand
and
a
staff
person
will
come
and
help.
Also.
A
A
A
C
Chair,
yes,
prior
to
that
point
of
personal
privilege,
absolutely
aye,
so
the
City
Council
has
received
quite
a
few
questions
about
ranked
choice.
Voting
since
the
end
of
the
legislative
session
and
I
just
want
to
talk
a
little
bit
about
what
our
position
is
going
to
be
on
this.
So
when,
when
we
first
started
talking
about
this
as
a
council
last
year,
we
didn't
have
a
lot
of
time
to
put
a
lot
of
public
education
effort
into
it.
C
There
was
concern
at
the
time
because
with
a
mayoral
election
and
City
Council
elections,
starting
you
know,
switching
up
the
process.
What
you
know
for
an
election
that
had
already
begun
in
in
many
cases
was
something
that
we
were
a
little
bit
concerned
about
so
the
legislature,
this
past
session
that
just
ended
a
couple
of
weeks
ago
changed
the
law
again
giving
cities
up
until
August,
15th,
I
believe
or
April
15th
to
make
a
decision
on
rank
choice
voting.
C
So
one
of
the
one
of
the
things
that
saw
this
is
Salt,
Lake,
County,
they're,
solid,
City,
doesn't
run
out.
We
don't
run
our
own
elections.
We
have
to
contract
with
Salt
Lake
County
to
operate
our
elections.
We've
found
out
that
Salt
Lake
County
is
not
going
to
be
ready
to
implement
ranked
choice.
Voting
in
their
election
process,
which
means
Salt,
Lake
City,
would
then
have
to
find
somebody
else
to
manage
and
oversee
our
elections.
Salt
Lake
City
in
this
council
in
particular,
has
has
already
we've
led
out
on
a
number
of
election
related
issues.
C
We
were
the
first
major
city
to
do
mail-in
ballots,
it's
citywide,
mail-in
ballots.
We
did
that
during
our
last
election
cycle
and
the
prior
election
cycle,
so
we
are
willing
to
move
forward
with
trying
new
things
and
especially
something
like
rank-choice
voting.
However,
because
of
the
time
frame
that
we're
in
Salt
Lake
City
is
not
we're
not
going
to
be
pursuing
doing
rank-choice
voting
this
coming
election
cycle,
largely
because
of
the
number
of
candidates
running
for
mayor
change.
Changing
up
the
process.
C
Midstream
would
be
unfair
to
those
candidates
and
campaigns,
and
so
we
are
committed
to
talking
about
this
as
a
council
for
future
elections.
You
know
we
appreciate
the
the
process,
but
in
order
for
Salt
Lake
City
to
properly
educate
all
of
our
residents
about
what
rank-choice
voting
is
how
you
know
this
change
is
going
to
benefit.
Them
is
something
that
we
would
not
be
able
to
do
as
quickly
as
we're
being
asked
to
do
so.
C
A
You
councilmember
Luke,
so
we're
going
to
turn
the
time
over
to
the
mayor
who
will
present
recommendations
to
the
council
regarding
proposed
Community,
Development,
Block,
Grant
funding,
emergency
shelter,
grant
funding
home
investment
partnerships,
program,
funding
and
housing
opportunities
for
persons
with
AIDS
funding
budgets.
Mayor
all.
D
Right,
thank
you
very
much
for
having
me
here
this
evening.
I'm
pleased
to
stand
before
you
and
present
a
one-year
action
plan
of
funding
recommendations
for
fiscal
year
2019
and
2020.
These
recommendations
reflect
the
funding
that
will
be
allocated
from
the
US
Department
of
Housing
and
Urban
Development
to
Salt
Lake
City
through
for
grant
programs
specifically
designed
to
address
the
needs
within
our
local
community.
They
are
the
Community
Development,
Block,
Grant,
home
investment
partnerships,
program,
emergency
solutions,
grant
and
housing
opportunities
for
persons
with
AIDS.
D
These
grants
will
produce
nearly
6.5
million
dollars
in
funding
to
help
achieve
the
goals
outlined
in
both
the
city's
five-year
consolidated
plan
and
the
overlapping
goals
outlined
in
the
city's
housing
plan,
which
is
growing
SLC.
The
1920
program
year
represents
the
final
year
of
the
current
consolidated
plan.
The
recommendations
before
you
have
been
arrived
at
after
a
considerable
public
engagement
process
and
an
extensive
review
and
analysis
of
each
application.
D
I
would
like
to
note
that
this
review
includes
past
and
current
performance
of
each
entity
that
applied
anticipated
community
impact
and
alignment
with
the
plan
goals,
the
C
dcpip
and
the
Housing
Trust
Fund
advisory
boards.
As
well
as
myself
have
evaluated
the
respective
requests,
this
review
has
included
the
context
of
furthering
the
goals
of
the
consolidated
plan,
the
housing
plan
and
the
immediate
needs
of
our
community.
D
For
the
funding
cycle,
there
were
over
thirteen
million
dollars
of
requests
through
61
applications
and,
as
I
stated,
we
anticipate
receiving
6.5
million
dollars
in
federal
funding,
while
it
is
impossible
to
fund
every
application.
I
commend
the
invaluable
service
that
each
agency
provides.
Many
of
the
agencies
are
here
tonight
and
to
them.
I
would
like
to
say
thank
you.
Thank
you
for
advocating
on
behalf
of
underserved
and
underrepresented
residents.
They
may
not
have
a
voice
and
oftentimes
are
in
need,
and
thank
you
for
committing
to
help
us
build
a
city
for
everyone.
D
The
consolidated
plan
continues
to
serve
as
a
tool
to
provide
expectations
to
the
funding
recipients,
as
well
as
to
hold
them
accountable
for
their
role
in
shaping
our
community
together.
The
boards
and
I
have
prioritized
affordable
housing.
This
includes
rehabilitation
of
existing
single-family
and
multi-family
housing,
access
to
rental
and
home
ownership
assistance
in
creating
new,
affordable
units.
The
recommendations
also
focus
funding
toward
the
most
vulnerable.
In
our
community,
including
those
experiencing
homelessness,
refugees
and
residents
struggling
with
substance
use
disorders,
I
want
to
recognize
our
housing
and
Neighborhood
Development
Division
staff.
D
They
work
throughout
the
year
to
ensure
that
each
phase,
each
project
and
each
program
is
compliant
with
all
requirements,
ensuring
that
the
city
will
continue
to
be
eligible
for
future
funding
grants.
Thank
you
for
all.
You
do
Salt
Lake's
hand.
Team
I
would
also
like
to
recognize
the
incredible
efforts
of
both
our
citizen
boards
that
inform
this
process.
The
two
boards
spent
a
total
of
nine
weeks
reviewing
applications
interviewing
applicants
researching
and
evaluating
each
proposal
for
funding.
They
are
mindful
about
each
dollar
their
recommendations
and
the
people
who
will
benefit
from
these
programs
and
projects.
D
A
You
mayor,
thank
you.
We're
going
to
jump
into
the
public
hearing,
portions
and
items
B
1
through
B
3
will
be
heard
as
one
public
hearing
so
I
have
a
couple
cards
coming
to
me
just
so.
Everyone
knows
this
is
a
grand
application.
These
are
grant
applications.
One
is
for
US
Department
of
Transportation.
The
other
one
is
for
Rocky
Mountain
high
intensity,
drug
trafficking
area.
A
E
Okay,
the
21st
south
resurfacing
grant
proposal
of
our
application
goes
from
13th
east
to
7th
east,
and
it
really
does
need
more
public
engagement.
The
community
council
doesn't
know
a
thing
about
this
and
they
should
be
involved
in
it.
There's
a
big
fight
going
on
50%
one,
a
road
diet:
50%,
don't
want
a
road
diet.
The
street
does
need
to
be
resurfaced
and
fixed
and
the
grant
makes
SEC
sense
if
you
had
gone
to
the
Community
Council
first.
E
So
all
these
grant
proposals
if
they
effect
streets
in
a
community
councils
area
I'm
urging
you
to
go
first
to
the
community
council.
I
know
the
300
West
grant
proposal
didn't
get
picked
up,
but
that
was
another
one
that
should
have
gone
to
the
community
council
first,
so
they
know
about
it,
they're
clueless
otherwise,
and
that's
not
respectful.
Please
go
to
the
sugarhouse
community
council
and
explain
what
you're
trying
to
do
with
the
ground.
Thanks
for
listening.
Thank.
A
F
A
A
motion
by
councilmember
Fowler
and
a
second
by
councilmember
Johnston
any
discussion.
All
those
in
favor
and
motion
carries
we're
onto
item
b4,
which
is
an
ordinance
for
515,
South,
400,
East,
rezone
and
master
plan.
Amendment
I
don't
have
any
cards.
Does
anyone
want
to
speak
in
regards
to
this
portion?
F
A
G
G
Would
like
to
thank
all
of
you
not
sure
how
many
there
are
who
have
been
involved
with
our
open
space
issues
since
night
since
2003,
when
the
city
first
established
the
open
space
lands
program,
those
of
you
on
the
council
much
newer,
I
hope
you
will
become
involved
in
the
greater
depth
and
continue
to
survive
and
help
resolve
the
challenges
that
having
open
space
in
our
city
requires.
Thank
you.
Thank.
A
F
A
H
A
F
Mr.
chair
I
just
want
to
thank
the
Planning
Division
again.
This
has
been
a
long
time
coming.
It's
a
great
set
of
updates.
It's
probably
not
the
end-all
be-all
of
the
CBS
dr
process,
but
I
appreciate
all
the
work
that
they've
put
in
for
a
number
of
years
on
this.
One
I'm
excited
to
support
it
tonight,
great.
A
All
those
in
favor
aye
motion
carries
as
well.
We
are
on
to
the
big-ticket
items
this
evening.
The
first
one
we'll
be
discussing
is
an
ordinance
in
regards
to
congregate
care
facilities,
zoning
text
amendment
so
just
a
quick
reminder:
I'm
going
to
call
two
names,
the
first
one
please
come
up.
Second,
one
be
ready
again,
no
clapping
cheering
cheering.
This
is
just
an
opportunity
for
you
to
come,
express
your
concerns
or
or
whatnot,
and
here
we
go.
Lucas
Timmons,
followed
by
Therese
Holt.
J
Thank
you
very
much.
My
name
is
Lucas
Timmons
I'm,
currently
a
resident
Sherman
Avenue
between
11
East
and
13,
East
and
I
hope.
The
council
will
sincerely
consider
my
comments
as
a
community
member
that
has
been
it
will
continue
to
be
impacted
by
the
in
between
you
undoubtedly
have
and
will
continue
to
hear
from
passionate
community
members
who
neither
live
near
nor
or
are
impacted
by
the
in
between
this
is
not
surprising.
Given
the
outreach
the
in-between
has
been
in
vocal
in
encouraging
volunteers
to
support
its
mission.
J
I
have
spoken
with
greater
than
50%
of
residents
on
Sherman
Avenue
in
the
western
half
more
than
any
other
ti
be
representative,
including
city
officials.
That
includes
our
elected
councilman,
who
was
elected
to
represent
her
district
and
listened
to
her
constituents.
We
are
not
against
EIB,
we
understand
it's
a
vulnerable
population.
However,
we
are
against
its
modus
operandi
to
serve
a
limited
number
of
terminally
ill,
as
well
as
those
merely
needing
respite
respite,
a
term
used
interchangeably
with
homeless.
J
These
two
cohorts
are
mutually
exclusive,
I
hope
the
council,
when
assessing
the
material
understanding,
how
rezoning
will
impact
my
community
I
hope
you
consider
peer-reviewed
scientific
literature.
The
research
unequivocally
demonstrates
the
population
house
at
TI
b,
has
a
prevalence
of
mental
illness
and
a
majority
have
criminal
history.
This
is
not
my
opinion.
This
is
not
anecdotal
data.
This
is
not
qualitative
qualitative
data.
This
is
fact
fact
proven
across
the
country,
including
faculty
at
the
U.
J
Rezoning
changes
will
have
a
lasting
effect
on
the
safety
of
me,
my
family,
my
neighbourhood,
which
includes
residents
that
have
lived
there
for
decades
nearly
nearby
businesses
and,
most
importantly,
it
will
affect
the
next
generation
of
residents
that
reside
there
and
play
in
our
streets.
This
neighborhood
deserves
better
one
positive
issue
that
this
issue
has
produced
is
that
the
ability
of
my
community
to
better
know
one
another.
We
have
become
tighter.
The
loss
of
such
a
community
due
to
TI
b
will
be
tragic
again.
This
neighborhood
deserves
better.
Thank
you.
B
Good
evening,
I'm
just
come
from
the
opposite
angle
and
I'm
speaking
to
you
today,
in
support
for
the
in
between
I
urge
the
Salt
Lake
City
Council,
to
reject
the
planning
divisions,
recommendation
to
change
the
alimony
facility
to
congregate
care
facility
and
instead
to
create
a
new
land
use
definition
for
medical
respite
facility.
As
this
term
more
accurately
addresses
the
programs.
B
H
A
K
I'm
Allison
Leishman
I
am
a
neighbor
and
I
am
a
the
new
development
director
for
the
in
between
so
I'm
speaking
to
you
from
both
sides.
This
is
a
fabulous
facility.
It
is
surrounded
with
love
for
people
in
our
community
who
deserve
our
attention.
They
are
the
Vote
most
vulnerable
people
in
our
community,
they're
critically
ill
and
they
are
terminally
ill
and
there
are
people
we
cannot
leave
behind
I,
don't
care
what
neighborhood
you
live
in.
They
are
people
and
they
will
always
be
people.
K
The
people
at
all
of
the
people
that
serve
there
are
clients
at
the
in
between
our
residents,
come
at
them
with
love.
I
know
they
say
that
their
Safety's
concerns
have
been
there.
I
never
ever
feel
scared.
I
walk
out
of
there
with
complete
happiness
every
time,
I
leave,
knowing
what
amazing
work
we
are
doing
in
this
community
I'm
not
here
to
talk
about
the
zoning
I'm
here
to
just
say,
thank
you
for
supporting
the
in
between
and
to
I
beg
you
to
always
continue
to
support
the
in
between
as
a
neighbor.
L
Good
evening
I'm
the
Reverend
Tom
goldsmith
senior
minister
of
the
First
Unitarian
Church,
seven
blocks
away
from
the
in
between
and
I
want
to.
Thank
you
for
the
opportunity
to
just
give
a
a
slight
nod
to
a
an
institution,
a
very
humane
institution
that
is
serving
a
very
vital
need
in
our
community.
I
am
very
familiar
with
the
facility
where
the
in
between
out
finds
itself
time.
Winner
was
hillside,
rehab
I've
been
there
for
years
and
many
parishioners
there,
and
it
was
a
real
hopping
place.
L
It
was
busy
cars
going
in
and
out
you
couldn't
park
at
a
park
on
the
streets
because
there
was
no
parking
available.
Now
it's
like
a
hundred
and
eighty
degrees
different,
it's
peaceful,
it's
calm
and
I
want
to
alert
everyone
who's.
Listening,
especially
you
that
the
the
the
neighborhood
has
many
of
my
parishioners,
who
are
all
in
full
support,
including
I,
have
a
family
that
lives
literally
two
doors
down
from
the
in
between.
L
They
are
grateful
that
they
are
that
in-between
is
serving
such
a
vital
need
in
our
community
think
about
how
the
imagination
can
run
away
whenever
the
word
homeless
is
used
immediately.
It's
it's
crime
immediately.
It's
drugs
immediately,
it's
mental
health,
but
just
think
about
the
clients
who
were
there
they're
dying?
L
L
M
I'm,
the
Reverend
cannon,
Steve
Anderson
I
work
for
the
Episcopal
Diocese
of
Utah
and
a
priest
and
dice
of
Utah
for
a
number
of
years
and
I'm.
The
chief
financial
officer
I
often
tell
people
at
the
holiest
time,
I
spend
as
a
priest
with
someone
who
is
passing
away
at
that
very
moment.
It's
a
dimly
lit
stage
with
only
the
person
who's
passing
away
into
greater
life
and
with
God.
If
they've
been
rich,
been
wealthy,
whatever
done
their
life,
it
doesn't
seem
to
matter
the
world
of
build,
has
all
passed
away.
M
There's
nothing
else,
going
up
that
one
person
in
transition
it's
the
holy
time
three
years
ago,
one
things
I
administer
is
a
fund
that
gives
small
grants
for
medical
expenses
for
indigent
people,
received
a
small
grant
request
for
$5,000
me
in
between
struck
by
the
notion
of
indigent
care
and
injured
in
hospice,
and
so
after
the
small
grant
was
approved.
I
went
to
visit
the
side
this
day
old
member.
M
Walking
into
that
place
and
that
Kim,
Korea
and
I
was
given
a
small
tour
and
was
led
to
some
one
of
the
small
twelve
rooms
at
the
place
they
had
at
the
time.
There's
a
gentleman
there
who
had
been
previously
homeless-
and
this
was
the
first
secure
income
fertile
place,
he's
been
in
many
years.
He
had
a
small,
comfortable
room,
he
had
a
TV
and
he
had
his
dog
on
the
bed
with
him.
This
man
passed
away
two
weeks
later,
so
the
in
between
was
holding
his
hands.
M
He
passed
on
the
greater
live
I
became
involved
with
this
I
did
many
of
the
funeral
services
there
and
among
the
board
of
directors.
Now
the
mark
of
who
we
are
as
people
who
are
as
a
community
is
how
we
care
for
the
least
of
those
how
we
could
not
support
this,
but
actually
encourage
this
says
something
more
about
us
than
anything
else
and
I
support
this
wholeheartedly,
with
everything,
I
have
and
I
hope
that
we
do
too.
This
is
good
for
our
community
this.
This
reflects
well
on
us
as
people.
Thank
you
very
much.
F
A
vision
of
a
community.
That's
grounded
in
love
and
not
fear
and
I
stand
before
you
today.
Having
fulfilled
some
of
those
dreams
with
the
help
of
hundreds
of
people
and
I,
think
hundreds
of
angels
that
are
helping
me
every
day.
The
people
who
have
passed
at
the
in
between,
however,
there's
still
a
lot
of
fear
out
in
the
community
fear
with
regards
to
the
population
of
people
who
are
experiencing
homelessness.
F
Fear
of
people
who
have
mental
illness,
people
who
are
different
and
maybe
that's
a
different
skin,
color
or
religion
or
background
or
ancestry,
but
I
still
hold
that
fear
that
vision
that,
as
a
community,
we
can
come
together
from
a
place
of
love,
not
fear
and
all
of
us
at
the
in-between.
Despite
things
that
might
be
happening,
that
we
can
control,
we
do
our
best
to
stay,
grounded
in
love
and
our
core
values,
which
are
kindness,
dignity,
respect,
compassion,
honesty
and
we
recently
added
redemption
because
everybody
everybody
deserves
a
second
chance
and
I.
F
I
Am
Mathilde
Lindgren
I'm
the
program
director
at
the
in-between
I
also
was
here
over
three
years
ago
at
this
very
spot.
When
we
were
talking
about
the
in-between-
and
there
was
a
lot
of
fear
and
a
lot
of
unknowns.
I
can
say
now,
three
years
later,
three
and
a
half
years
later
that
we
have
maintained
a
program
that
is
working
with
virtually
no
major
incidents.
I
You
know
just
have
the
regular
day-to-day
stuff,
but
we
haven't
had
any
major
occurrences,
any
crime,
any
major
police
calls.
This
is
an
important
service
that
we're
providing
this
morning,
I
bathed
the
body
of
a
36
year
old
man
and
called
his
14
year
old
daughter
to
let
her
know
that
her
dad
was
gone.
I
This
is
the
16th
person
that
I've
done
so
far
since
June
of
this
year.
These
are
people
that
have
nobody
else
caring
for
them.
Nobody
that's
coming
to
visit
them,
and
some
of
that
is
their
choices
in
life,
but
it
doesn't
mean
that
they
deserve
to
die
alone
on
the
streets.
It
doesn't
mean
that
they
deserve
to
be
sitting
outside
of
the
hospital,
hoping
that
maybe
the
hospital
will
admit
them.
One
more
time,
hospitals
not
going
to
do
that.
I
There
needs
to
be
a
place
for
these
people
to
go,
and
that's
the
service
that
we're
providing
again
I,
just
I,
just
can't
say
enough
that
it's
absolutely
necessary.
These
are
these:
aren't
elderly
people
that
are
dying
with
us.
These
are
young
people.
William
was
obviously
younger
than
most,
but
we're
talking
50s,
that's
our
average
age
and
there's
a
reason
for
that.
If
we
can
have
people
coming
in
beforehand
and
having
a
short
respite
stay
that
can
prevent
some
of
these
deaths.
I
Some
of
these
people
that
are
coming
back
to
us
and
dying
with
us
are
people
that
have
had
continual
health
problems
that
have
nowhere
to
go
to
recuperate
from
them
and
it
it
makes
them
virtually
impossible
to
beat
some
simple
diseases,
something
that
would
take
us
a
few
weeks
at
home
to
get
over.
So
thanks
for
listening.
G
It
was
quick
writing.
That's
my
bad
I'm
Tammy
I
live
a
block
from
T,
IB
and
I
have
read
all
the
staff
reports
and
testimony
of
this
petition
that
has
been
evolved
over
the
last
three
years.
This
situation
evolves
by
the
day
and
now
Kim
Korea
CIB
does
not
want
this
proposal
approved
because
it
does
not
meet
her
mission
to
expand
and
grow
her
current
population.
The
fact
that
it's
not
a
hospice
provider
and
as
very
few
between
five
to
seven
so
called
real
hospice
patients
has
long
been
settled.
G
There
is
no
medical
criteria,
but
shrimp
Kim
tried
to
make
one.
Last
week,
Kim
has
given
us
a
gift
by
outlining
why
she
is
a
homeless
shelter.
When
asked
the
state
homeless
coordinator
committee
for
five
hundred
thousand
dollars
from
the
h2h
restricted
account,
because
she
was
over
budget
by
seven
hundred
thousand
dollars
in
five
short
months.
We
all
know
a
homeless.
Shelter
cannot
be
at
yabbies
current
location,
but
kim
tried
to
explain
that
away
by
saying
we're
only
a
homeless,
shelter
for
funding
purposes.
G
The
people
who
have
played
defense
for
this
front
for
this
organization
should
be
embarrassed,
but
they
are
not.
I
will
continue
to
call
them
out
publicly,
which
includes
Robert
Goerke
of
the
Salt
Lake
Tribune.
It
is
part
of
their
group
30mb
group,
because
this
is
what
mobs
do
gang
up
on
ordinary
citizens
who
express
questions
and
concerns
for
their
community,
and
they
also
think
that
they
are
the
moral
superior
when
they
are
not
a
good
idea.
Poorly
executed
is
not
good
for
anyone.
The
zoning
changes
might
be
okay
as
written
it's
hard
to
tell.
G
But
what
was
asked
and
what
has
been
discussed
for
years
is
that
this
change
is
modeled
after
the
in-between.
Nothing
should
be
modeled
after
the
in-between.
It
is
a
failed
model
financially
and
operationally.
Ti
b's
latest
budget
report
says
every
resident
costs.
Forty
five
hundred
per
month,
the
serra
da
house,
operates
on
less
than
half
that
amount.
Examples
of
security
issues
at
CIT
ib
are
outlined
in
my
email,
which
includes
the
number
of
9-1-1
calls
to
GI
b
for
mental
health
issues
and
assault.
One
of
TI
B's
performance
measures
is
a
action
and
I
know.
G
A
N
N
N
G
O
Name
is
Deon
Dale
son.
You
may
remember
me
from
the
last
time
I
was
here
for
the
same
reason,
just
the
same
as
any
other
homeless
shelter.
The
in-between
is
a
compassionate
and
needed
service.
Just
like
all
of
them.
They
all
are
I'm,
pretty
sure
that
everyone
here
agrees
with
that,
but
the
in-between
should
have
never
been
allowed
to
open
on
Goshen
Street
in
the
first
place,
because
it
is
a
homeless
shelter
and
there
isn't
anything
wrong
with
that
except
homeless
shelters
are
not
allowed
in
the
institutional
zone.
O
You're
trying
to
come
up
with
creative
ways
to
house
homeless
because
of
the
massive
mistake
that
was
made
to
build
three
shelters
short
of
what
well
over
500
beds,
so
I
get
it
and
it
needs
to
happen
so
do
it
where
homeless,
shelters
are
allowed
and
we'll
all
be
supportive
of
it,
but
not
smack-dab
in
the
middle
of
neighborhoods
that
homes
are
butted
right
up
to
them.
It's
not
fair.
You're
ruining
my
life
I
am
very
concerned
about
the
zoning
change
and
how
it
will
again
negatively
affect
my
neighborhood
and
others
in
institutional
zones.
O
You
want
to
stick
to
facto
homeless
shelters
in
them.
Remove
the
cap
and
use
conditional
use
whose
conditions
can
they
be
mine?
Are
they
Kim's
I?
Don't
trust
anything
labeled
conditional
use
modeled
after
the
lies
and
manipulations
used
to
illegally
open
the
in
between
shelter?
Also,
the
number
25
is
not
arbitrary.
It
was
rounded
up
number
that
would
be
the
people
living
on
that
street.
If
similar
single-family
homes
were
built
there,
it's
a
number
that
would
have
allowed
a
neighborhood
to
take
on
a
homeless
shelter.
O
Yes,
let's
please
call
it
what
it
is
so
that
we
all
know
we're
dealing
with
but
keeps
it
relatively
small
and
manageable.
It
was
not,
however,
meant
to
allow
the
business
to
call
itself.
However,
many
different
titles
to
get
25
more
here,
25
more
here
25
in
town,
we
get
care,
25
and
really
Mawson.
Very
tired.
You
need
to
find
a
better
way
to
write
this
than
just
seven
or
more
four
shelters
in
the
Izone
neighborhoods.
They
all
have
homes
right
up
to
them,
and
schools
and
churches-
please
keep
them.
K
My
name
is
Sofia
and
I
live
two
blocks
from
TI
B
I
am
in
opposition
to
any
amendment.
That
would
allow
organizations
like
the
in
between
be
allowed
to
pop
up
in
any
neighborhood
in
the
city.
It
is
a
city
mandate
to
protect
the
integrity
of
neighbourhoods.
Homeless,
shelters
cannot
be
in
institutional
zones.
It
is
extremely
concerning
to
me
that
members
of
the
City
Council
have
looked
for
ways
to
circumvent
the
law
that
helps
protects,
protect
Salt,
Lake,
City
residents.
K
Tiv
is
a
homeless
shelter
that
cloaked
itself
in
the
facade
of
it
being
a
hospice
for
the
homeless.
Nobody
would
be
against
a
hospice
for
the
homeless.
However,
Kim
runs
her
building
like
a
home
and
fails
to
acknowledge
that
she
is
dealing
with
an
at-risk,
unmanageable
population.
She
has
said
all
homeless
are
not
criminals
or
drug
addicts.
That
is
true,
but
most
are
per.
The
U
of
you
report
published
last
year
at
T,
Ivy's
previous
location
in
Goshen.
K
They
had
an
advocate
in
their
city,
councilperson
'l'm
alpha,
who
brokered
a
25-person
cap
on
TI
b,
to
lessen
the
negative
impacts
to
the
neighborhood
district.
5
has
not
been
afforded
that
same
advocacy.
Our
city,
councilperson,
has
been
an
advocate
for
T
IB
Erin,
said
at
the
Elco
meeting
in
May
of
2018
that
she
had
no
idea
that
TI
b
was
moving
into
the
neighborhood
and
that
she
would
hold
them
accountable
a
week
after
opening
she
was
arm
in
arm
with
Kim.
K
There
are
dozen
people
from
the
area
who
have
been
outspoken
about
their
concerns
with
TI
b.
Erin
has
not
spoken
directly
to
any
of
them.
Other
two
say
they
are
legally
here
allowed
to
be
here,
and
there
is
nothing
you
can
do
about
it.
Erin
was
at
the
meeting
with
Paul
Ryan
stood
up
and
said:
I
have
not
seen
anything.
She
lives
a
ways
away.
She
then
proceeded
to
explain
to
a
30-year
vet,
the
Planning
Department
how
he
was
wrong
in
his
interpretation
of
the
Genesis
and
evolution
of
this
petition.
K
She
never
talked
to
any
of
us
directly
at
that
meeting
in
your
emails.
You
have
been
given
direct
examples
of
the
personal
impact
to
the
neighborhood
on
to
the
neighbors
on
Sherman
Avenue.
Most
of
them
hide
in
the
shadows
because
they
see
how
the
mob
has
attacked
me
that
impact
includes
red
resident,
sneaking
out
non-residents,
sneaking
and
suspected
drug
deals,
the
mentally
ill
walking
the
neighborhood
acting
erratically,
blowing
up
homeless
seeking
refuge
the
middle
of
the
night.
Bizarre
behavior.
This
is
not
a
hospice.
These
people
are
dangerous.
M
Hi,
my
name
is
Dan
Johansen,
live
on,
yellow
Avenue
and
come
here,
but
grudgingly
to
speak,
about
compassion,
Utah
has
a
drug
problem
and
a
mental
health
problem,
not
a
homelessness
problem
or
a
housing.
Affordability
problem
people
on
the
streets
almost
without
exception-
are
there
due
to
substance,
abuse
or
mental
health
issues.
M
Decriminalizing
drug
abuse
legislatively
or
through
decreased
enforcement,
as
the
city
county
and
state
governments
have
done,
will
lead
to
more
broken
lives
and
early
deaths.
It
is
not
effective
or
compassionate.
The
in
between
is
a
backdoor
method
for
locating
a
homeless
shelter
in
the
sugarhouse
harvard-yale
neighborhoods,
something
that
was
overwhelmingly
rejected
by
the
public
less
than
two
years
ago.
M
It
is
a
backdoor
method
because
it
is
largely
using
public
and
pseudo
public
funds
and
financing
and
becomes
a
cup,
and
because
it
comes
with
a
clever
cover
story
that
is
above
reproach
that
the
shelter
is
for
those
battling
terminal
illnesses,
in
fact,
as
admitted
regularly
in
public
forums
and
on
grant
applications
by
the
in
between
substantially
all
of
its
residents,
do
not
have
terminal
illnesses
and
admissions
are
made
without
advanced
certification
of
any
sort
of
medical
condition.
I
started
my
comments
by
discussing
compassion
for
people
with
addiction
problems.
M
I
speak
now
about
compassion
for
residents
of
neighborhoods,
in
which
homeless
shelters
would
be
located,
simply
put
locating
facilities,
housing.
A
large
number
of
persons
with
substance
abuse
problems,
criminal
and
sex
offense
records
is
an
infringement
on
the
right
to
enjoyment
of
the
property
of
surrounding
property
owners.
When
the
city
county
and
state
government
sanctioned
this
type
of
facility,
this
constitutes
a
taking
under
the
US
Constitution.
The
deprivation
of
a
property
right,
I
warned
the
councilman
the
claims
that
sanctioning
the
location
of
these
sorts
of
facilities
can
have
legally
and
politically.
M
L
Thank
you.
It
seems
like
we've
been
here
before
I
think
yet
to
start
of
the
shelters
and
all
the
stuff
with
the
Pioneer
Park
coalition,
the
downtown
Alliance
and
their
efforts
to
relocate
the
homeless.
The
Simpson
Street,
the
same
type
of
discussions,
we're
taking
place
and
they're
gonna
take
a
place
again
in
the
future
when
the
cells
for
shelters
come
into
place.
As
you
all
know,
I
work
very
extensively
with
the
homeless.
I
know
the
community
very
well.
We
interact
with
them
on
a
number
of
different
levels
and
in
support
of
the
homeless
themselves.
L
I
wish
I
had
a
few
people
here
to
speak
for
me
that
many
of
the
programs
that
are
being
facilities
that
are
being
used
are
not
meeting
the
needs
of
the
non
addicts
in
the
homeless.
Community
I
just
had
a
conversation
with
a
young
man
today
that
has
health
problems
and
he
can't
sleep
at
night,
because
the
shelters
are
there's
so
many
addicts
and
too
many
too
much
activity
associated
with
addiction
going
on
with
the
shelter's
at
night.
I
would
urge
you
I
urge
you
almost
beg
you
in
the
name
of
the
non-addicted
homeless.
L
Individuals
out
there
in
the
shelters
and
in
different,
even
the
in
between
addicts
need
drugs.
Addicts
need
money
for
drugs,
they
don't
care
where
they
get
the
money
from
they
get
it
from
other
homeless,
individuals
and
other
patients
and
other
Street,
and
they
buy
the
drugs
where
ever
they
are
and
the
drugs
are
made
available.
L
G
Hi
I'm
Valerie
Fritz
I
am
a
staff
member
at
the
end
between
and
happened
since
about
two
months
after
it
opened
after
I,
had
retired
and
got
bored
and
was
asked
to
help
out
and
I
said.
Okay,
I
think
I
can
do
this.
I've
had
family
members,
who've
been
hospice.
Patients,
I
can't
imagine
dying
alone
on
the
streets
and
I
also
spent
38
years
in
the
drug
and
alcohol
field,
running
residential
treatment
programs
in
residential
neighborhoods
and
a
part
of
what
you're
considering
is
the
impact
of
neighborhoods.
G
When
you
make
zoning
changes
and
I
think
we
do
need
the
zoning
changes,
the
residential
programs
that
we
ran
for
men
for
youth
and
for
mothers
with
children
fit
into
the
neighborhoods,
although
occasionally
there
was
an
initial
uproar
just
like
we
have
here
with
the
in-between
moving
in
a
residential
center,
we
did
not
have
crime,
although
they
were
addicted,
they
were
supervised,
as
are
the
clients
at
the
in
between
the
in
between
clients.
Are
there
for
medical
reasons?
G
G
We
take
clients
to
project
reality
when
their
opiate
addicts
and
we
work
to
link
them
into
treatment
as
they
leave
us
if
their
respite
clients
who
are
in
recovery
from
illness
or
injuries,
so
I
hope
that
helps
a
little
bit,
because
we
do
recognize
the
issues
of
addiction
and
mental
health
and
we
work
with
Valley
behavioral
health
and
we
also
connect
clients
there
as
a
resource.
Thank
You.
P
Hello,
my
name
is
Deb
Sussman
and
I.
Don't
live
in
Salt
Lake
City
I
live
out
in
Sandy
I've
been
a
nurse
for
30
years
in
emergency
rooms,
dealing
with
an
awful
lot
of
homeless
mental
illness
and
addiction.
Most
of
people
in
Sandy
have
support
homeless
people
don't
have
support
and
I
really
don't
think
that
it's
fair
or
right
or
moral
to
treat
them
and
put
them
somewhere
else
and
segregate
them.
P
I've
been
there
several
times,
I've
been
to
several
events.
Fundraisers
and
those
people
are
always
appreciative,
always
respectful
and
the
community
as
a
whole
really
does
come
out
and
support
them
and
I.
Think
that
that's
a
that's
a
really
good
thing.
So
I
would
really
like
you
to
consider
it.
There's
a
lot
of
residential
places
that
work.
Just
fine
and
I
don't
know
the
statistics
about
the
crime
in
that
area.
P
I
know
every
time
I
go
there,
I
feel
safe,
I,
don't
see
drug
I,
don't
see
people
walking
around
acting
suspicious
or
behavior,
like
I,
do
down
in
the
Rio
Grande
area.
So
it's
all
a
learning
experience
for
all
of
us,
but
I
think
that
we
really
do
need
to
treat
them
as
human
beings
in
the
correct
manner.
Thank
you.
M
M
There
I'm
grateful
as
a
volunteer
that
I
can
go
to
a
safe
place
in
my
own
neighborhood
I'm,
no
longer
that
young
and
be
able
to
do
volunteer
work
in
that
safe
environment
that
my
wife
can
go
there
at
night,
I'm
not
worried
about
her
going
to
help
and
volunteer
I
view
volunteerism
as
a
core
value
in
Utah.
It's
one
of
the
things
were
best
known
for
it
brings
our
communities
together,
despite
our
religious
differences,
our
political
differences
and
the
ability
to
do
volunteer
work
in
my
own
neighborhood
on
a
cause.
M
M
Hi,
my
name
is
William
gruha
I'm,
a
long
time
resident
of
Salt
Lake
City
resident
of
Council
District
for
a
retired
business
executive
and
I
currently
serve
as
a
member
of
the
board
of
the
in-between
I've,
been
with
the
in
between
for
two
or
three
four
years.
Very,
very
proud
of
the
in
between
believe
that
the
in
between
is
provides
an
enormous
service
in
Salt
Lake
City
I'd
like
to
speak
today
to
a
couple
points.
M
One
obviously
I
support
the
change
in
the
medical
respite
facility
definitions
and
the
other
specific
points
made
in
the
in-between
statements
and
by
other
members
will
make
in
writing.
But
I'd
also
like
to
make
a
personal
statement
that,
in
my
time,
at
the
in
between
as
I
have
worked
with,
the
executive
and
professional
and
administrative
staffs
of
there
between
I
am
very,
very
proud
of
their
obviously
their
dedication
and
their
hard
work,
but
also
the
integrity
and
the
sensitivity
they've
got
about
dealing
with
whatever
problems
or
issues
that
they've
had
to
deal
with.
M
E
Okay,
this
is
rushed
beyond
belief,
you're
not
supposed
to
be
putting
something
like
this
into
effect,
without
really
seriously
considering
it
and
you've
only
been
considering
it
for
a
month.
The
neighborhood
deserves
more.
You
should
wait
until
the
shelter's
open.
The
new
shelter
is
open
and
see
the
effect
on
them,
and
we
there's
no
map
right
now
for
institutional
zones.
This
affects
institutional
zone,
so
you're
actually
putting
thinking
about
implementing
an
ordinance
without
knowing
what
properties
are
affected.
E
So
neighbors,
don't
know
they
could
find
out
next
year,
they're
right
next
to
an
institutional
zone
that
could
be
turned
into
a
homeless
shelter.
That's
wrong,
so
I
urge
you
not
to
go
for
it
and
rush
through
this
wait
for
a
map.
Wait
till
the
shelter
is
open.
We
also
have
spent
years
trying
to
reduce
the
sex
offender
concentration
near
families
and
all
of
a
sudden,
we
have
five
registered
sex
offenders
in
one
single-family
home
neighborhood.
That's
concerning
to
neighbors,
you
shouldn't
be
dismissing
that.
That's
a
real
serious
concern
for
neighbors
and
families.
E
We
don't
have
a
lack
of
public.
We
have
a
lack
of
public
engagement.
We
have
no
conditional
use
standards,
but
the
most
important
issue
is
the
in
between
which
functions
is
and
provides.
A
very
important
service
is
functioning
as
a
winter
overflow
of
shelter.
It
wasn't
meant
to
and
it's
saving
lives,
but
it's
functioning
as
a
winter
overflow,
shelter
and
that's
wrong.
It's
in
the
middle
of
a
single-family
home
neighborhood.
It
should
be
near
stores,
it
should
be
near
services,
it
should
be
near
transit,
it
shouldn't
be
treating
the
patients
as
prisoners,
they
deserve
better.
E
The
neighborhood
deserves
better
and
the
in
between
residents
deserve
better
too.
Please
don't
rush
this
through.
It
deserves
more
overview
and
public
engagement.
We
want
respect
for
the
residents
of
the
in
between.
We
also
want
respect
for
the
neighborhood.
It
deserves
to
be
I'm
thoroughly
thought
out.
Thanks
for
listening.
N
My
mother
often
said
you
can't
keep
all
their.
You
can
only
keep
some
of
the
people
happy
some
of
the
time,
but
you
can't
keep
all
the
people
happy
all
the
time
and
I
find
this
kind
of
one
of
those
issues
this.
This
is
a
challenging
issue.
I
became
acquainted
with
the
in
between
two
years
ago
and
when
they
were
on
Goshen
Street
and
when
I
became
acquainted
with
them,
I
thought
if
there
is
nothing
else
that
government
provides.
N
N
The
in-between
is
an
opportunity
for
us
as
a
society,
to
provide
support
to
those
that
that
don't
have
that
that
don't
have
that
luxury
Salt
Lake
City
has
long
been
known
for
the
compassion
that
you've
shown
in
in
many
different
areas
and
I
hope
in
this
case,
that
that
you
continue
to
show
that
compassion
to
show
the
the
other
areas
of
the
state.
The
importance
of
leadership.
G
G
Okay,
now
you
got
me
I'm
just
here
to
support
the
in-between,
because
we
work
with
45
to
50
homeless
people
five
days
a
week
and
what
I've
already
talked
to
them
about
the
fact
that
there's
some
of
those
individuals
that
are
going
to
have
to
come
to
the
in
between
and,
like
others
have
said,
I
don't
want
to
see
them
on
the
street,
and
that
is
a
very
safe
place
for
them
to
go.
So
it's
I
feel
it's
very
vital
to
have
the
in-between
and
I
appreciate
what
you've.
What
you're
doing!
Thank
you.
F
Hi
I'm
siggy
I'm
here
in
support
of
the
in
between.
So
when
we
hear
the
word
homeless,
a
lot
of
people,
a
lot
of
people
have
preconceived
notions
and
beliefs
immediately
to
addiction,
danger
and
I
believe
that
almost
every
person
in
this
room
is
guilty
of
passing
one
of
those
people
on
the
street
and
not
giving
them
the
time
of
day
to
look
at
them.
I'm
guilty
myself
and
I
come
to
you
as
myself
as
a
homeless,
resident
of
the
rescue
mission.
F
So
from
a
side
that
hasn't
been
spoken
for
yet
I
been
in
the
shelters,
I've
lived
there
and
the
in-between
is
anything
but
a
homeless,
shelter,
homeless.
Shelter
means
you
can
just
walk
in
when
you
have
nowhere
to
go
hi
drunk
whatever
the
in-betweens,
not
about
that.
These
people
don't
just
walk
in
off
the
street.
F
These
are
people
with
legitimate
medical
needs,
I
got
a
job
there
and
they
were
giving
me
a
second
chance
to
get
my
life
turned
around
and
on
my
third
day
of
employment,
we
had
a
resident
passed
away,
something
that
I
wasn't
expecting
to
see
so
soon
before
my
third
week,
we
had
a
second
resident
passed
away.
These
are
human
beings
that
are
dying
that
are
sick,
that
are,
medical
need,
living
in
the
homeless,
shelter,
I've,
seen
many
people
go
to
the
hospital
and
get
tree
and
then
immediately
get
turned
away
for
lack
of
insurance.
F
A
lot
of
hospitals
will
say
homeless.
Okay,
here
you
go,
have
a
nice
night
and
they
have
medical
needs
that
would
kill
them
on
the
street.
This
place
provides
a
safe
place
for
these
guys
to
turn
to
when
they
have
nowhere
else
to
go
with
these
severe
medical
needs
and
they're
shown
love
and
care
and
compassion-
and
it
is
a
most
like
it
is
the
quietest
safest
place
that
I've
ever
been
to
I
feel
safe.
F
There
and
I
feel
fulfilled
when
I
walk
out
those
doors
every
day,
I
interact
with
the
people
that
are
there
and
they're
humans.
Just
like
you
and
me,
they
want
love
and
compassion.
Just
like
you
and
me,
there's
no
difference
just
because
their
position
in
situation
in
life
doesn't
make
us
any
better
or
them
any
less.
So
I'm
just
up
here
to
stand
up
here
and
say
that
I'm
supporting
them
between
fully.
Thank
you.
Q
So
my
name
is
Dorothy
awanee
and
I
wasn't
going
to
speak,
but
I
thought
it
was
probably
important
to
have
someone
that
was
not
from
the
neighborhood
but
had
been
involved
with
the
in
between
at
the
Goshen
site,
so
I
had
volunteered
at
the
ghost
inside
and
work
for
them
and
at
that
time
I
was
aware
of
I
had
worked
in
the
homeless
programs
for
about
10
years
before
volunteering
with
them.
So
I
knew
what
a
homeless
shelter
looked
like.
Q
I'd
worked
in
one
and
I
knew
what
the
in-between
did
and
they're
certainly
very
different,
but
I
think
at
the
time
I
read
the
articles
from
the
neighbors
and
their
concerns.
I
first
thought.
You
know
why
we
had
this
terrible
problem.
This
isn't
the
the
organization
I
know,
and
it
was
concerning,
because
I
really
believes
that
it's
important
to
allow
the
neighborhood
to
express
their
feelings
that
have
answers
to
that.
But
what
I've
determined
in
my
own
mind
is
that
this
is
not
a
problem.
This
is
an
opportunity.
Q
It's
an
opportunity
for
us
to
face
our
fears,
both
by
as
elected
officials
as
as
neighbors,
and
not
to
think
you
know.
How
does
it
affect
my
neighborhood
in
it?
But
what's
the
basic
issue
and
the
issue
is
people
are
sick
and
dying?
We
need
to
take
be
good
human
beings
and
address
that
issue,
and
sometimes
you're
going
to
get
criticized
for
doing
the
right
thing,
and
what
I
would
just
like
to
ask
the
neighbors
to
do
is
take
a
brass
step
back
being
from
the
west
side.
We
often
feel
beat
up.
Q
O
You
know
I'm
Debra,
Thorpe
I
am
a
nurse
practitioner
and
the
founder
of
the
in-between,
which
actually
was
born
out
of
an
effort
some
10
years
ago,
and
it
took
us
that
long
to
organize
the
the
necessary
support
to
lead
to
our
opening
the
facility
on
Goshen
Street
and
now
succeeding
beyond
my
wildest
imagination
on
13th
South
I
want
to
emphasize
the
difference
between
the
in
between
and
a
homeless
shelter.
A
homeless
shelter
is
a
very
brief
respite
off
the
street.
For
overnight
we
provide
these
people
we
with
a
home,
they
are
no
longer
homeless.
O
O
We
have
had
even
successes
where,
because
we
provide
the
necessary
basic
needs
of
shelter
food,
we
become
surrogate
family
members,
we
they
live
under
a
very
structured
environment
and
many
of
many
of
them
have
actually
become
healed.
We
have
one
graduate
of
our
program,
who
was
an
addict?
Who
was
very
ill
came
to
us
with
the
expectation
that
he
might
not
live
too?
O
D
Hi
I'm,
Charlotte,
Fife,
Jefferson
and
I
live
two
blocks
away
from
where
the
in
between
was
originally
in
Poplar
Grove
as
neighbors.
We
were
concerned,
you
know
about
what
was
when
the
in
between
was
first
coming
in,
but
once
I
got
to
know
what
the
what
the
organization
did
and
I
volunteered
there
and
I
became
a
part
of
the
neighborhood
Advisory
Council
I
could
see
that
it
wasn't
a
homeless
shelter.
It
wasn't
like
like
the
road
home.
D
It
wasn't
that
that
fear
was
not
a
reality
so
living
on
the
west
side,
I've
seen
a
well
we've
all
seen
an
increase
in
homelessness
in
our
city,
but
we
see
it
a
lot
along.
The
Jordan
River
Parkway
trail
along
in
our
parks
right
by
our
house
on
the
west
side-
and
you
know
there
is
there-
is
a
temptation
to
not
want
to
see
that
you
know
we
don't
maybe
if
they
would
go
away,
then
we
wouldn't
have
to
think
about
them,
but
it's
a
reality
that
there
are
sick
and
dying
people
on
the
streets.
D
A
P
Hi
I'll
try
to
stand
tall,
my
name
is
Virginia
Lopez
and
many
of
you
have
volunteered
for
me
at
the
Wiggins
Center
I've
I've
worked
at
Catholic
community
services,
both
in
the
kitchen
and
I
ran
the
weekend
center
for
several
years,
I've
been
working
with
the
homeless
for
more
than
40
years.
I
continued
to
work
for
drug
and
alcohol
treatment.
I
continue
to
work
for
the
homeless
to
try
and
get
them
into
housing.
P
I've
seen
people
with
breast
cancer
when
I
call
ambulance
the
ambulances
they
felt
their
breasts
fell
off,
so
I
know
the
need
and
I
I.
Think
institutions
like
the
in-between
are
important,
but
not
in
the
neighborhood
and
I.
Don't
live
two
blocks
away:
okay,
I!
Don't
live!
You
know
four
blocks
away,
I'm,
not
on
the
board
and
I'm,
not
a
volunteer
over
there
because
I
do
it
at
my
work.
Okay,
but
the
one
thing
I
know
is
I
live
houses
away
from
that
in
between
I've.
P
Had
my
garbage
cans
thrown
I've
come
around
the
corner
and
most
most
of
the
clients
and
and
I
love
doing
what
I
do?
Okay,
clients
come
around
I
come
around
the
corner
and
clients
are
like
Gina
Gina.
Can
you
get
me
housing?
You
know
and
I'm
glad
to
help
them,
but
not
this
close
to
my
house
and
that's
not
I,
mean
I.
Have
people
coming
up
on
my
doorstep,
that
that
know
me
and
and
know
that
I
am
working
for
them?
Okay,
but
this
does
not
belong
in
a
small
neighborhood,
my
neighbor's
house.
P
They
walked
in
the
house.
They
took
the
Kanes
they
my
neighbors
are
hard
of
hearing
and
we
live
in
a
little
close
neighborhood
and
they
leave
the
door
open.
So
I
can
come
and
check
them
because
they're
elderly,
but
they
walked
in,
took
the
his
cane
and
his
walker.
The
other
neighbors
we'd
had
every
I
can
tell
you
stories,
but
I
am
against
changing
the
ordinance
to
let
them
grow,
bigger
and
I.
Just
don't
think
it
should
be.
In
my
neighborhood
thank
you
in
our
neighborhood.
R
My
name
is
Blair
Hodges,
my
daughter
attends
kindergarten
near
the
in
between
first
I,
want
to
thank
everybody
on
the
council
for
listening
to
the
citizens
here
in
the
community.
I
also
want
to
thank
everybody
in
this
room,
whether
I
agree
with
them
or
not,
for
spending
their
evening
tonight
on
something
that
they're
passionate
about
I've
studied
this
issue
carefully
and
I've
studied
the
work
of
the
in
between
I'm
not
affiliated
with
them.
I,
don't
personally
know
anybody
who
works
with
them.
My
daughter
attends
school
near
the
facility
Safety's
our
concern
for
every
citizen.
Here.
R
Nobody
in
this
room
would
tell
you
that
they
don't
care
about
safety,
because
my
daughter
attends
school
near
this
area,
we've
it's
something
that
I've
thought
about,
and
we've
actually
had
frequent
discussions
about
homeless
people
that
we
see
around
the
city.
We
teach
my
daughter,
a
simple
song.
The
song
goes
because
I
have
been
given
much
I
too,
must
give.
We
teach
my
daughter
how
to
be
safe.
We
know
my
daughter
can
be
at
risk.
Sometimes
she
can
be
at
risk
in
our
home.
She
could
be
at
risk
in
the
homes
of
our
friends.
R
She
can
be
at
risk,
regardless
of
whether
her
school
is
near
a
facility
like
this
I
have
fear,
but
I
beat
my
fear
through
action.
I
confront
my
fear
by
volunteering
and
I
commit
to
volunteer
with
the
in
between
to
do
away
with
my
fear.
I
don't
want
to
fear
in-between
the
real
scandal
is
that
we're
only
talking
about
one
facility
in
a
neighborhood
instead
of
facilities
in
every
neighborhood,
where
people
that
don't
have
a
place
to
go
to
die
can
go
to
die.
R
I
encouraged
the
council
to
adopt
the
measures
that
best
serves
the
most
vulnerable
population
of
our
city.
The
values
of
our
city
can
be
seen
in
the
ways
that
we
treat
the
most
vulnerable
people
among
us.
Please
support
the
in
between
I
favor,
the
measure
that
changes
the
terminology
to
medical
respite
facility,
which
is
language
that
the
state
has
recently
adopted.
R
J
Good
evening,
my
perspective
on
this
issue
is
informed
by
two
facts:
number
one,
my
wife
and
I
have
owned
property
on
that
street,
only
two
doors
away
from
the
in
between
for
nine
years,
we
have
a
son,
a
daughter-in-law
and
a
ten
year
old,
granddaughter
living
there.
They
all
feel
perfectly
safe,
including
the
ten
year
old,
granddaughter
who
walks
past
the
in
between
from
home
from
school
every
day
she
feels
perfectly
safe.
J
These,
the
three
of
them
have
been
so
inspired
and
confident
by
the
the
the
the
quietness
of
the
in-between
that
they've
even
put
up
a
yard
sign
on
that
on
their
property,
supporting
the
in
between
my
wife
and
I.
Have
we
don't
we
own
that
property?
We've
been
deeply
involved
with
the
development
of
that
property
for
nine
years,
so
we've
witnessed
the
transformation
of
the
that
property
where
the
in-between
is
from
the
hillside.
Rehab
center
we've
noticed
a
very,
very
big
difference
between
the
kind
of
traffic
and
busyness,
and
so
on.
J
That
was
going
on
with
the
with
hillside
versus
the
the
serenity
virtual
serenity
of
the
in-between.
It's
a
remarkable
transformation.
We
were
so
inspired
my
wife
and
I
by
what
we
were
witnessing
that
we
volunteered
to
work
there.
So,
for
the
past
five
weeks
we
have
been
working
there
as
volunteers,
vacuuming
floors,
wiping
windows,
doing
whatever
menial
tasks
need
to
be
done.
So
we
have
been
inside
that
facility,
interacting
with
people
there.
It
is
not
a
homeless
shelter,
it
is
a
refuge
for
people
who
are
dying
or
who
are
struggling
with
a
life-threatening
disease.
J
So
I
urge
you
to
be
compassionate
about
this
situation.
Do
not
listen
to
the
fear
mongers,
who
are
a
test
of
in
the
other
direction
and
I
do
think
that
a
reclassification
as
far
as
you
all
are
concerned
about
the
legislative
issues,
a
reclassification
to
the
what
the
state
has
authorized
as
a
category
I
think
it's
called
the
medical
respite
facility
I
think
that's
the
way
to
go.
Thank.
A
J
Good
evening,
members
of
the
council,
thank
you
for
letting
everybody
speak.
Thank
you
for
hearing
me.
My
name
is
Nathaniel
Player
I
live
two
blocks
away
from
the
in
between
I
bypass
the
facility
regularly
I
feel
very
safe
by
the
in
between
I
feel,
like
it's
a
good
addition
to
the
neighborhood
it's
very
different
than
when
hillside
was
there.
I
do
agree
that
it's
calmer.
It
feels
good
I'm
part
of
a
group
called
yes
in
my
backyard.
J
We
say
yes
in
my
backyard,
we
support
the
in-between
and
it's
a
group
of
people
who
just
live
in
a
neighborhood
who
were
saddened
by
the
report
coming
out
in
the
Tribune
and
by
the
conversation
in
the
tone
of
the
conversation.
These
are
people
who
believe
in
the
work
of
the
in
between.
We
are
grateful
for
what
they
do
and
we
want
to
help
it
all
speak
from
my
own
values.
J
I
believe
that
every
instrument
being
has
it
worth,
people
who
are
unhappy
people
and
my
community
should
be
a
community
that
is
kind
caring
and
supportive.
That's
why
I'm
here?
That's
why
they,
yes
in
my
backyard
group,
exists.
We
believe
that
quality
medical
care
should
be
available
to
everybody,
and
we
believe
that
it's
a
tragedy
that
a
societal
failure
that
people
should
die
on
the
street
I
think
that
lessens
all
of
us.
J
We
know
studies
show
that
people
who
are
unhappy
cuz
of
a
lack
of
affordable
housing
because
of
unemployment,
poverty,
low
wages,
domestic
violence
and
mental
illness.
Most
people
who
are
unhappy
cool
names
and
people
who
are
on
house
are
more
susceptible
to
diseases,
have
greater
difficulty
accessing
quality
medical
care
and
are
harder
to
treat.
J
We
also
know
that
121
people
died
on
the
street
last
year,
so
I
support
the
change
in
the
zoning
law
and
I
want
you
to
know
that
I
support
the
in
between,
and
there
are
other
people
who
also
support
the
image.
We
are,
how
do
the
work
we're
glad
to
have
them
in
our
community
and
I?
Thank
you
for
your
leadership
on
this
issue.
N
E
O
E
A
H
A
F
A
H
I
don't
know
if
I'm
gonna
read
from
the
card
or
this
they're,
both
pretty
illegible,
but
anyway
my
name
is
Katherine
I'm
a
volunteer
at
the
in-between
I,
clean
toilets,
I,
wash
windows,
I
vacuum,
I,
lift
heavy
boxes,
I,
organize
food,
I,
organize
supplies
and
clothing,
and
whatever
else
they
asked
me
to
do.
I
oftentimes
sit
at
the
front
desk
and
see
who
comes
and
goes
it's
just
not
a
free-for-all.
They're,
like
maybe,
has
been
expressed
tonight,
I'm
concerned
about
some
phraseology.
H
H
Well,
I'll
come
back
to
that,
because
I
can't
quite
remember,
but
I've
heard
terminology
that
that
isn't
quite
correct:
oh
yeah,
giving
numbers!
This
is
how
many
are
on
hospice.
This
is
how
many
are
not.
You
know
what
it's
an
ever.
A
band
flow
experience
there,
but
I
want
to
tell
you
a
little
bit
about
my
family
experience.
I
have
a
father
and
a
brother.
My
brother
was
a
veteran.
H
My
father
went
to
George
Washington
was
an
attorney
worked
for
senators
and
congressmen
before
coming
back
to
Salt
Lake,
to
establish
a
practice
and
serve
in
politics
on
in
any
council
and
any
kind
of
community
service
he
could
give
his
last
appointed
office
was
Attorney
General.
He
ran
for
governor
on
the
Democratic
ticket
as
a
latter-day
Saint
man,
and
that
didn't
go
down
very
well
here.
In
Salt,
Lake
dad
became
quite
ill
in
his
life
and
during
a
perfect
storm
that
hit
him
like
a
tsunami
from
two
or
three
different
forces.
H
My
dad
lost
everything,
but
he
paid
all
of
his
bills.
He
paid
all
of
his
attorney
fees
from
matterr
embezzlement
case
that
went
down
and
he
and
I'm
losing
everything.
Oh,
my
father
ended
up
indigent
and
homeless.
I
want
you
to
know
he
would
have
been
the
perfect
resident
at
the
in
between.
He
would
have
had
friends
there,
because
the
men
were
and
are,
and
the
women
respectable.
H
That
is
the
reason
I'm
there.
It
has
my
heart
and
my
soul.
So
let's
not
use
the
word.
They
as
though
it's
everybody
the
in
between
serves
one
at
a
time
my
dad
was
on
hospice
and
he
would
have
been
admitted
there.
That
is
where
he
belonged
after
I
took
care
of
him
for
many
years.
In
my
home,
Toronto.
A
A
P
K
P
Could
just
read
my
my.
K
J
Good
evening,
members
of
the
salah
council,
thank
you
for
your
listening
ears.
I
serve
my
day.
Job
is
at
the
U
of
U
college
of
Social
Work
I
specialize
in
medical
Social
Work,
with
an
emphasis
in
hospice
and
working
with
the
dying
I've
been
there
25
years.
The
involvement
I've
had
with
the
in-between
has
been
as
first
a
volunteer
and
then,
as
a
member
of
the
board.
J
For
two
years,
it's
been
my
opportunity
to
see
the
workings
of
the
in-between
from
the
inside
under
the
administration,
the
volunteers,
the
employees
I
have
been
very
impressed
at
the
regard
that
the
members
of
the
staff
and
the
volunteers
have
not
just
for
the
residents,
but
for
the
neighborhood
there
are
individuals
we
recognize
in
the
neighborhood
that
have
that
have
concerns.
I
have
seen
the
members
of
the
in
between
reached
out
to
the
neighborhood
myself
being
one
of
them,
supported
by
the
in
between
to
see
if
these
concerns
can
be
resolved.
J
Our
hope
is
that
we
can
become
an
integrated
part
of
the
neighborhood
in
a
way
that
supports
the
compassionate
care
that
is
provided
there,
as
well
as
the
concerns
that
can
be
addressed
to
the
neighbors
which
we've
tried
to
address.
My
hope,
and
my
belief
is
that
these
concerns
can
be
resolved
even
in
the
present
neighborhood
I
support
the
the
change
to
a
medical
respite
facility
and
I
think
that
that
supports
the
mission
of
those
receiving
care
there
and
I.
Thank
you
for
listening
to
our
views.
J
M
You
know
I
I
came
down
here
tonight,
just
for
fun.
I
had
no
idea
what
was
on
the
agenda,
so
I
realized
wow
somebody's
upset,
because
this
is
exactly
what
happened
in
Poplar
Grove
in
our
community
council
meeting
when
the
in
between
moved
into
the
neighborhood.
A
lot
of
people
showed
up.
No
one
was
ever
around
vigilance
was
so
low
until
something
like
this
happened.
M
But
what
turned
out
was
over
the
course
of
a
few
months.
People
who
were
had
their
backyards
right
up
to
the
facility
came
back
to
the
community
council,
one
or
two.
At
a
time
when
someone
from
the
in
between
showed
up
and
said,
it's
actually
been
a
really
good,
they've
been
really
good
neighbors
and
they
and
they
really
had
been
up
until
they
moved
out
and
I
understand.
Your
fear.
I
was
afraid
as
well
I
mean
we
already
have
enough
problems.
You
think
you
think
this
is
tough.
M
We've
got
the
most
kids
in
our
neighborhood
right.
We
have
tons.
I
have
four
elementary
schools
within
the
walking
distance
of
my
house,
and
we
have
more
sex
offenders
more
halfway
houses.
We
have
more
homeless
in
our
vicinity
than
anywhere
else
in
the
city.
So
those
of
you
who
are
really
afraid
of
this
situation,
you
need
to
consider
that
you're
getting
off
light
so
so,
as
as
there
is
further
redistribution
of
folks
who
have
issues
medical
mental
addiction,
all
of
those
all
of
those
will
be
redistributed
in
the
city.
We
can't
handle
the
load.
M
A
F
Want
to
move
that
the
council
continue
this
public
hearing
to
a
future
council
meeting
and
I
want
to
request
that
the
administration
conduct
some
additional
research
based
on
the
open
house
that
was
held
last
week.
The
work
that's
been
happening
with
the
council
and
what
we've
heard
from
the
public
hearing
tonight
and
then
come
back
to
the
council
suggestions
potentially
pertaining
to
the
proposed
congregate
care,
eleemosynary
definitions
and
review.
Whether
establishing
qualifying
provisions
would
be
appropriate
for
this
proposed
use
and
so
that
time
will
hold
another
public
hearing.
I.
A
F
To
echo
what
a
lot
of
people
have
said
and
thank
you
all
for
coming
out
here
tonight.
Thank
you.
If
you
came
to
the
open
house,
the
Planning
Commission
held
last
week,
and
thank
you
to
the
dozens,
probably
hundreds
of
people
that
we've
heard
from
through
email
and
phone
calls
and
I
want
to
thank
my
peers
for
listening
a
lot
of
conversations
coming
in
at
us
and
mostly
to
the
community
for
having
a
voice.
H
H
A
Yep,
okay,
we're
gonna
jump
back
into
item
b8
the
one
year
action
plan
for
Community,
Development,
Block,
Grant
and
other
federal
grants
for
fiscal
year,
2019
2020,
so
I'm,
gonna
read.
This
is
interesting.
I'm
gonna
read
your
name,
but
then
council
members
I'm
also
going
to
read
the
page
and
the
number
mr.
B
Vice
chair
I
have
a
disclosure
to
make
before
we
continue.
I
would
like
to
disclose
that
I've
been
employed
by
neighborhoods
in
the
past
and
occasionally
do
contract
work
for
neighborhood
Salt
Lake,
which
is
one
of
the
organizations
that
is
requesting
funds
and
I
will
recuse
myself
at
the
time
of
discussion
and
vote.
Okay.
R
A
H
M
Evening,
I'm
Dave
Woodman
I'm,
the
housing
director
desist
this
year
we
celebrate
50
years
of
helping
some
of
the
most
vulnerable
people
in
our
community.
Over
those
years,
our
most
stalwart
partner
has
been
Salt.
Lake
City
assist.
Has
three
primary
programs
number
one:
the
emergency
home
repair
program.
These
are
critical
repairs
to
enable
a
family
to
continue
to
live
in
their
home.
Nothing
cosmetic,
no
remodeling,
number,
two
accessibility,
design,
assessment
and
design
options
for
practical
accessibility.
M
Modifications
modifications
are
built
for
low-income
families,
number
3
Aging
in
Place,
preventive
safety,
improvements
which
allow
a
family
to
remain
in
their
home
as
they
grow
older.
Just
last
week
we
braided
our
efforts
with
the
Haan
D
program
to
help
a
family
with
a
difficult
roofing
problem.
This
repair
would
have
been
impossible
without
a
collaborative
approach.
My
thanks
to
Jennifer,
Maryann
and
Pablo
in
the
past
two
years
because
of
the
incredibly
high
demand
assist,
has
expanded
the
entire
budget
before
the
end
of
the
fiscal
year.
M
N
Good
evening,
council
members,
my
name
is
Mike
Okello
I'm,
the
CEO
of
the
Community
Development
Corporation
of
Utah.
We
all
know
that
when
individuals
and
family
have
access
to
stable
quality,
affordable
housing,
they
can
become
part
of
a
diverse
community,
find
and
keep
jobs,
lead
healthier
lives
and
take
better
care
of
their
families.
Cdc.
You
is
the
only
organization
in
our
city
that
provides
downpayment
assistance.
We
can
provide
this
assistance
to
income,
restricted
families
and
individuals
who
are
purchasing
a
home.
N
Finding
an
affordable
home
in
Salt
Lake
City
is
already
difficult
enough
in
Salt
Lake
City,
but
once
it
is
found,
many
need
a
little
help
and
financing
it.
The
assistance
from
CDC
you
provides
that
help
and
gets
people
into
a
safe
and
healthy
place
to
live
and
hopefully
allows
them
to
save
a
little.
Each
month.
Each
client.
M
N
A
N
N
I
come
to
us
from
the
state
and
we're
excited
to
have
this
to
fill
the
gaps
that
those
have,
especially
for
individuals
who
don't
typically
get
a
lot
of
funding
like
families
or
seniors,
do
very
grateful
for
this
opportunity
to
administer
these
funds.
If
you
see
fit
to
fund
any
of
the
other
ones,
that
weren't
recommended
we'll
definitely
welcome
that
and
what
we're
very
grateful
for
these
funds
and
excited
to
use
them.
Thank
you.
Thank.
A
N
The
current
recommendation
for
CDBG
funds
for
NeighborWorks
is
zero
and
I
wanted
to
talk
to
you
about
that,
because
it's
cited
because
we
did
not
draw
down
all
of
our
funds
or
spend
our
money.
What
it's
overlooking
is
that
it
goes
into
a
rotating
fund
and
we
have
currently
$800,000
being
cycled
through
in
that
fund
and
in
that
fund.
We
help
folks
stay
out
of
private
mortgage
insurance,
so
they
can
better
afford
their
homes,
home
improvements,
all
sorts
of
things
that
for
the
most
vulnerable
people
that
live
in
our
neighborhoods
that
we
serve.
N
So
there
is
273
dollars
still
in
that
fund
and
we
have
some
projects
that
did
not
timeout
quite
this
year,
but
we
have
a
home
in
Poplar
Grove
that
will
spend
$250,000
home
an
improvement
of
$45,000
and
six
affordable
units
each
under
200
somewhere
around
two
hundred
five,
fifty
thousand
dollars
we've
had
a
relationship
with
the
city
and
have
drawn
CDBG
funds.
In
fact,
we
were
born
of
with
the
city
and
mind
being
able
to
spend
at
CDBG
dollars,
and
now
you
have
neighbor
works.
N
This
is
a
two-fold
conversation,
though
the
reason
that
we
have
not
been
able
to
rotate
our
funds
is
now
we
have
more
competition.
We've
done
such
a
good
job.
It's
been
duplicated
even
by
folks
like
yourselves.
Here
in
the
city,
we
have
the
same
services
and
our
biggest
competition
is
the
same
people
that
are
saying
that
we
should
receive
zero
dollars.
N
So
while
you
our
biggest
competition,
the
city,
we
feel
that
it's
probably
best
since
there
is
so
much
need
for
homeless,
for
excuse
me
for
affordable
housing,
housing,
there's
so
many
ways
to
spend
it
that
it
seems
unfair
that
we
are
in
competition
and
then
we
are
being
denied
money
by
the
people
that
make
this
decision
you,
our
biggest
computer
company
competitors.
Thank
you
thank.
A
I
D
Sofia
Keller
and
I'm,
the
chief
employment
development
officer
at
Columbus,
Community,
Center
and
I'm
here
to
talk
about
our
Community
Employment
Program
individuals
with
disabilities,
face
an
unemployment
rate
of
65
percent
individuals
with
autism
face
an
unemployment
rate
of
80
to
90
percent
and
individuals
with
college
degrees
with
autism
face
an
unemployment
rate
of
85
percent.
This
is
all
in
light
of
Utah's
unemployment
rate
being
around
3%.
D
We
focus
on
the
employers
needs
and
our
jobseekers
skills,
rather
than
just
training
them
and
then
hoping
that
we
can
get
them
a
job
in
the
community,
and
we
have
been
very,
very
successful
doing
that
with
our
community
partners
and
our
employers
and
Salt
Lake
City,
who
has
been
a
wonderful
partner
of
ours
and
division
of
vocational
rehabilitation.
Our
work
is
made
possible
and
we
are
successful
since
July
1st.
So,
eight
months
we
have
placed
40
individuals
and
jobs
and
we
anticipate
placing
another
20
to
25
at
the
end
of
June.
D
S
Hello,
I'm
Austin
Davis,
the
associate
director
of
first
step
house
just
on
on
behalf
of
first
step
house.
Our
staff
and
our
patients
just
want
to
think
really
the
council,
the
mayor
and
the
staff
and
the
other
departments
here
at
Salt,
Lake
City.
For
all
your
continued
support
of
what
we,
what
we
do,
a
first
step
house
you've
allowed
us
to
expand
treatment,
expound
housing
and
and
really
improve
our
services
over
the
years.
S
I'd
like
to
thank
you
for
your
consideration
of
our
three
requests,
the
first
of
which
is
our
peer
support
program,
its
integrated
into
our
residential
treatment
program.
It's
does
it's
designed
and
implemented
according
to
evidence-based
models
and
includes
the
drip.
The
delivery
of
wellness
recovery
action
plans
to
program
participants.
S
Research
indicates
that
the
clients
who
receive
these
services
have
fewer
crisis's,
hospitalizations,
less
aus,
alcohol
and
drug
use,
enhanced
income,
housing
stability
and
employment.
We
track
it
8
outcomes
in
this
program
and
we
actually
exceed
or
meet
all
the
metrics
on
all
those
of
the
people.
Who've
completed
rap
plans,
92%
of
them
who
are
homeless
or
a
risk
for
homeless,
leave
our
programs
with
stable
housing,
57%
increase
employment
and
84
percent
report,
improvements
to
health
and
and
actually
77%
of
them,
can
complete
a
community
service
project
within
the
community.
So
it's
a
really
cool
program.
S
Our
other
program
is
our
employment,
preparation
and
placement
program.
We
just
started
this
program
in
November,
and
funding
from
the
city
will
allow
us
to
continue
this
funding
into
the
next
fiscal
year
within
since
November
we've
been
able
to
implement
this
program
to
fidelity,
we've
served
over
45
clients,
16
of
those
who
have
gained
employment,
and
we've
actually
made
contact
with
over
a
hundred
and
50
employers
within
the
community
to
coordinate
services
and
employment
services
with
with
employers
in
the
community.
S
Let's
see
the
30,000
four
that
will
allow
us
to
continue
this
program
and
also
leverage
additional
funding
in
the
community
to
continue
with
these
services
within
within
to
the
few,
with
into
fiscal
year
2020.
The
last.
Our
last
request
is
for
our
Resource
Center
program,
so
this
this
year
we
collaborated
with
with
the
road
home
Wow
to
provide
behavioral
health
treatment
services
at
the
shelter.
This
is
a
needed
program,
as
many
people
have
already
spoke
about
this
within
the
community.
B
Good
evening,
council
members,
thank
you
for
the
opportunity
to
speak
on
behalf
of
Guadalupe
center
educational
programs.
My
name
is
Elsa
Burrell
and
I'm.
The
early
learning
center
director
I
want
to
loop
it.
We
have
requested
funding
for
CDBG
for
public
services
to
support
our
Early
Learning
Center,
which
houses
three
of
the
four
five
programs
offer
our
Guadalupe.
These
three
programs
include
in
home,
visiting
toddler
beginnings
and
preschool
programs.
B
Our
Early
Learning
Center
serves
children
birth
through
four
years
of
age,
nearly
all
of
the
families
we
serve
live
below
the
federal
poverty
line
and
the
vast
majority
of
our
students
are
English
language
learners.
Our
in-home
entirely
begins
programs
provide
address
babies
and
toddlers
with
support
to
help
them
reach.
B
Age-Appropriate
development
milestones
before
entering
preschool
and
this
founds
that
we're
requesting
will
be
used
to
help
cover
the
salary,
partial
salary
of
three
toddler,
beginning
teachers
that
serve
up
to
thirty
children
to
your
children
and
the
balance
will
be
used
to
also
help
pay
a
portion
of
the
parent
educators,
the
visit
homes
to
serve
each
12
children
I
we're
grateful
for
the
support
that
we
received
through
CDBG
the
past
few
years.
It
has
greatly
helped
us
achieve
our
mission
of
transforming
lives
through
education
of
the
students
entering
our
kindergarten.
B
Readiness
expectancies,
as
the
peers
who
did
not
participate
in
our
parents
are
grateful
for
the
program.
Our
more
most
recent
parent-teacher
conferences.
Earlier
this
month,
parents
express
how
their
children
love
coming
to
school.
Their
parents
believed
they
were
doing
a
great
job
to
get
them
ready
for
the
next
step
in
their
schooling.
So
thank
you
so
much
again
for
your
past
support
and
for
considering
our
current
a
request.
Thank
you.
Thank.
K
I
represent
the
International
Rescue
Committee
here
in
Salt,
Lake
City,
and
this
project
is
getting
up
to
speed,
expanding
digital
services
for
refugees
and
asylees
here
in
Salt
Lake.
If
awarded
this
I
will
be
overseeing
this
program
and
will
ensure
its
success.
This
is
a
first
year
of
this,
so
IRC
offers
digital
programming
for
Refugees
to
help
them
participate
in
the
ever
expanding
digital
world.
Digital
education
is
integral
to
many
of
our
refugees,
who
have
limited
background
with
digital
tools
or
have
any
access
to
them.
K
So
through
this
project,
the
IRC
will
provide
tools
instruction
for
refugees
and
asylees
in
three
main
areas:
access
to
broadband
access
to
devices
and
through
education
and
training.
Through
this
project,
we
want
to
provide
these
tools
through
helping
out
refugees
and
asylum
seekers,
communicate
with
communication
with
transportation
and
community
services,
focusing
on
the
Salt,
Lake
City's
target
neighborhoods,
and
also
most
at-risk
populations
we
serve,
which
include
refugee
women
to
expand
this
reach.
The
IRC
also
wants
to
integrate
digital
education
into
our
livelihood
programs.
This
includes
all
levels
of
ESL,
early
employment
and
financial
education.
K
I
want
to
highlight
our
projects:
alignment
with
Mayor,
bisquits,
Keys
public
commitment
to
developing
a
comprehensive
digital
policy
for
Salt
Lake
City
IRC
was
thrilled
to
hear
that
there's
going
to
be
higher-level
policies
around
Digital
Inclusion,
knowing
that
refugees
are
one
of
the
most
in
need
groups
of
this
education
and
this
access.
So
thank
you
for
this
opportunity
to
present
this.
I
This
is
not
at
all
intimidating,
hi,
I'm,
Elyse,
Tinsley
I'm,
the
development
manager
at
Neighborhood,
House
for
a
nonprofit
on
the
west
side
of
Salt,
Lake
City
and
we've
been
there
for
a
hundred
and
twenty
five
years.
We
do
day
services
for
children
and
adults
and
intergenerational
programming,
but
this
funding
is
specifically
for
our
preschool
preschool
is
offered
to
of
right
now
over
a
hundred
preschool
students.
We
have
over
a
hundred
on
our
waiting
list
as
well.
I
The
funding
we
have
right
now
from
the
city
is
just
under
thirty
four
thousand
dollars,
and
it
covers
a
portion
of
the
salaries
for
three
of
our
preschool
students
or
teachers,
their
salary
and
benefits
and
impact
sixty
of
our
students.
We're
asking
for
an
additional
fee,
so
forty-five
thousand
dollars
this
year,
which
is
a
little
larger,
but
that
would
allow
us
to
cover
a
portion
of
a
fourth
teacher
who
benefits
and
having
access
to
an
additional
twenty
students.
So
Neighborhood
House
I
said
is
accredited
nationally
from
the
National
Association
for
the
education
of
young
children.
I
It
is
only
one
of
28
of
such
accreditation
in
the
entire
state
of
Utah.
Early
childhood
education
and
Neighborhood
House
works
to
ensure
that
all
children
are
meeting
developmental
milestones
and
are
catered
garden
ready.
Our
program
is
uniquely,
is
unique
in
many
ways,
but
it
is
unique
in
fact,
that
it
responds
to
working
families
and
ways
that
other
places
cannot.
One
such
way
is
that
we
are
open
from
6:30
in
the
morning
until
5:30
in
the
evening
ensuring
that
families
have
the
opportunity
to
seek
and
maintain
employment.
I
Our
existence
is
really
to
help
families
climb
that
economic
ladder
and
get
out
of
poverty
while
providing
access
to
high-quality
education
for
their
students.
We
thank
the
city
for
everything
that
it's
done
for
us
and
hope
that
the
council
will
look
at
what
the
mayor
has
suggested
and
we'll
respond
to
it.
Thank
you
so
much.
F
Good
evening,
Council
members
on
behalf
of
Odyssey
House
of
Utah
I,
would
like
to
thank
the
members
of
the
Salt
Lake
City
Council,
for
choosing
to
recommend
our
vocational
training
program
for
funding
this
year
in
response
to
operation,
Rio
Grande
and
the
growing
number
of
individuals
in
our
community
that
needs
substance,
abuse
treatment,
Odyssey
House
has
been
working
to
expand
its
15,
multifaceted
programs
and
facilities.
In
the
last
year
alone,
we've
increased
the
amount
of
individuals
we've
served
by
about
60%.
F
Unfortunately,
this
has
taken
a
toll
on
our
vocational
training
program.
This
program
offers
job
training
services
to
every
adult
client
in
order
to
set
them
up
for
success
post
treatment
after
discharge,
but
due
to
the
increase
in
individuals
we
serve,
it
has
begun
to
put
a
strain
on
the
program
itself.
Rotational
training
is
essential
to
two
individuals
and
treatment
because
it
provides
them
with
job
skills
and
employment,
readiness
and
opportunities
to
ease
them
back
into
the
workforce
and
later
gain
higher
paying
jobs,
post
treatment,
allowing
them
to
remain
out
of
poverty
and
homelessness.
F
By
recommending
our
vocational
training
program
for
funding
you're,
giving
us
the
opportunity
to
expand
this
essential
program
and
provide
high
quality
job
training
to
all
the
adults
entering
into
our
residential
substance,
abuse
treatment,
programs
at
Odyssey
house
I.
Thank
you
for
your
time
and
for
recommending
us.
P
It
evening
council
members,
my
name
is
Alexandra.
Harvey
I
have
been
with
Salt
Lake
doneita
dental
services
as
the
board
member
for
the
last
several
years,
and
it
is
now
my
honor
to
serve
as
its
new
executive
director
so
like
doneita
dental
has
a
long-standing
tradition
of
serving
Utah's
communities
doing
so
for
nearly
30
years.
Our
services
continuously
administer
relief
to
those
critically
underserved,
as
well
as
promote
education
that
will
help
prevent
curable
diseases.
We
are
a
unique
safety
net
clinic
treating
our
patients
with
the
same
quality
of
care
given
in
a
private
dental
office.
P
P
Since
its
inception,
we
have
provided
more
than
22
million
dollars
in
dental
services
to
tens
of
thousands
of
individuals
suffering
from
poor
oral
health
to
meet
the
continuous
and
growing
need
for
the
dental
care
in
this
community
Solek
donated
dental
has
respectfully
requested
the
Community
Development
Block
Grant,
to
enable
our
volunteers
and
employees
to
continue
providing
preventative,
restorative
and
emergency
dental
care.
Our
donated
program
provides
all
services
at
no
cost
to
homeless
and
low-income
families
and
currently
for
every
dollar
of
funding.
We
receive
we're
able
to
provide
nearly
$4
of
dental
services.
P
The
entire
community
is
positively
affected
by
our
effort,
as
children's
oral
health
is
restored
and
maintained.
Their
overall
health
improves.
School
attendance
increases,
their
self-confidence
grows
and
adults
experience
similar
outcomes
for
many
their
ability
to
obtain
and
maintain
employment
increases
dramatically,
and
their
overall
outlook
on
life
becomes
increasingly
positive.
The
impact
of
a
healthy
smile
cannot
be
overestimated.
P
F
Hello
again,
I'm
Kim
Correa,
the
executive
director
of
the
in
between
the
in
between
is
a
partner
with
Salt
Lake
City.
We
support
the
police
and
fire
emergency
service
by
reducing
unnecessary
911
calls
and
by
placing
people
that
they
identify
through
their
community
connection
center
and
other
outreach
efforts.
This
saves
the
city
lots
of
money
while
freeing
up
scarce
resources
for
true
emergencies.
F
A
S
Thank
you
and
I
will
keep
my
comments
focused
on
those
items
that
have
a
recommendation
attached
to
them
so,
first
of
all
good
evening,
I
want
to
thank
each
and
every
one
of
you
for
your
service
to
our
community.
No
easy
task,
I
understand
that
I
want
to
thank
the
mayor
and
I
want
to
thank
the
community
development
and
capital
improvements
program
board
for
their
volunteering,
their
time
and
making
their
recommendations,
as
well
as
the
Housing
Trust
Fund
board
that
serves
in
a
volunteer
capacity
and
the
staff
that
supports
them.
S
But
it
doesn't
end
there
you're,
also
helping
us
to
provide
rental
assistance
to
help
expedite
the
departure
of
people
out
of
homelessness
and
into
housing.
That's
critically
important
you're,
also
helping
us
to
provide
case
management
services
to
people
once
they've
moved
out
to
help
them
to
stabilize
and
not
to
return
to
shelter,
so
you're
at
the
front
door
of
the
shelter
you're
at
the
exit
door
of
the
shelter
you're,
helping
to
provide
services
within
the
shelter,
and
you
are
helping
the
people
out
in
the
community
who
have
moved
out
of
homelessness
and
into
housing.
S
I
Have
to
be
tall
hello,
my
name
is
Jonathan
Emerson
I
am
the
chief
operating
officer
for
Street
clinic.
Thank
you
for
your
time
tonight.
I
wanted
to
take
this
time
to
address
some
of
the
concerns
that
were
raised.
Regarding
the
continued
funding
for
the
most
program,
it
was
noted
that
fourth
Street
clinic
has
audit
findings
from
the
past
two
years.
Two
years
ago
we
did
change
auditing
firms
after
having
been
with
the
same
firm
for
six
years.
I
This
change
also
score
responded
with
updates
to
changes
to
the
OMB
guidance
regarding
management
of
federal
funds,
and
we've
worked
closely
with
our
auditors
to
address
concerns
raised
during
the
audit
process.
Well,
we
do
have
audit
findings.
Another
material
are
related
to
the
misuse
or
fraud
of
funds.
In
addition
to
this,
we
are
implementing
a
new
financial
management
system,
improving
our
ability
to
report
on
a
timely
basis.
An
additional
concern
that
was
raised
was
related
to
staffing
changes
within
the
organization
from
2015
through
2017.
We
did
experience
a
shortfall
in
qualified
medical
staff.
I
As
a
result,
the
organization
needed
to
prioritize
services
at
the
clinic
forcing
us
to
scale
back
programming
in
other
areas,
including
the
most
program
in
2017,
the
clinic
hired
a
medical
director
who
has
implemented
a
recruitment
and
retention
program,
hiring
for
individuals,
all
of
who
remain
on
staff.
Finally,
concerns
were
raised
regarding
the
clinic's
ability
to
fully
utilize
the
funds.
Spending
from
2016
through
2017
was
impacted
by
the
provider
shortage.
During
this
time
the
clinic
relied
on
volunteers
who
we
did
not
bill
for
to
sustain
the
most
program
since
becoming
fully
staffed
in
2018.
I
The
most
program
has
resumed
operations
and
the
clinic
is
on
track
to
fully
utilize.
The
funds
allocated
in
this
current
funding
cycle
over
the
past
11
years
most
has
appreciated
the
support
from
Salt
Lake
City
funds.
The
40,000
requested
for
most
provides
invaluable
medical
care
and
support
services
for
our
most
vulnerable.
Those
living
in
camps
motels
not
seeking
services.
Many
of
those
served
by
most
are
mentally
ill,
have
a
substance,
use
disorder
or
victims
of
human
trafficking.
I
In
the
last
six
months,
most
has
served
over
a
hundred
to
five
unique
individuals,
many
whom
will
not
receive
services.
If
the
funding
is
not
continued,
we
truly
value
our
partnership
with
the
city,
and
we
look
forward
to
many
more
years
working
together.
We
urge
you
to
reconsider
funding
them
for
the
most
program.
Thank
you.
Thank.
A
C
F
Hello,
I'm
Amber
Lee,
Phyllis
I'm,
the
chief
development
officer
at
YWCA,
Utah
I'd,
like
to
start
by
thanking
the
board
and
the
mayor
for
the
favorable
recommendation
for
the
YWCA's
women
in
jeopardy
program.
One
in
three
women
in
Utah
will
experience
domestic
violence
in
her
lifetime
and
domestic
violence
is
a
leading
cause
of
homelessness
in
our
community,
as
well
as
an
important
sub.
U
sub
population
and
a
priority
target
population
for
this
project,
and
we
are
great.
F
While
we
are
grateful
for
the
funding
recommendation
for
our
women
in
jeopardy
program
which
annually
serves
over
800,
moms
and
kids,
who
are
fleeing
domestic
violence,
45%
of
those
whom
are
from
Salt
Lake
City.
We
hope
and
urge
you
to
reconsider
our
funding
application
for
our
transitional
housing
program.
These
women
are
also
homeless
and
transitional
housing.
F
We
have
48
units
197,
women
and
children
are
able
to
stay
on
our
campus
for
up
to
two
years
and
that's
really
where,
as
one
of
our
program
directors
always
says,
the
real
change
happens,
it
allows
them
to
build
lives
that
are
free
and
safe
from
violence.
Free
from
violence
and
safe
go
to
school,
get
jobs
and
live
independently
for
up
to
two
years,
and
it
really
is
where
real
transformation
happens.
So
I
urge
you
to
reconsider
and
thank
you
so
much
for
your
recommendation
and
your
support.
Thank.
G
So
it
just
saddens
me
that
we've
kind
of
lost
the
the
funding
connection
this
time
or
the
recommendations.
I.
Of
course,
I
would
say.
Please
reconsider.
I
always
want
to
be
able
to
say
that
Salt
Lake
City
is
is
financially
supporting
the
youth,
Resource,
Center
and
I
won't
be
able
to
say
it
next
year,
but
potentially,
but
we
are
we're
making
great
strides
with
homeless
youth.
We
are
sheltering
about
350
youth
a
year,
seeing
700
and
we
are
moving
them
into
housing
as
soon
as
possible.
G
We
do
not
want
them
to
become
chronically
homeless
adults,
we're
building
good
relationships
with
them,
employment
opportunities,
more
housing
opportunities.
We
definitely
need
to
keep
the
shelter
operations
going.
So,
although
it's
a
disappointment,
I
do
want
to
thank
you
for
the
support
that
the
city
has
provided
to
Volunteers
of
America
Utah
in
so
many
ways.
So
thank
you
so
much
thank.
O
Patrice
Dixon
I'm
CEO.
Oh,
you
talk
Community
Action.
Let
me
say
first
thank
you
to
the
mayor's
office
and
staff
for
the
funding
it
recommendations
and
for
the
City
Council.
For
your
time
and
consideration
of
this
funding,
three
of
our
four
funding
requests
were
recommended:
diversion
home,
TBR,
II
and
aqua
Utah
Community
Action
was
the
first
to
pilot
diversion
in
Utah
and
provide
diversions
training
throughout
the
state.
O
Last
year
you
CA
was
able
to
assess
3086
individuals
and
divert
952
of
those
which
is
31%
of
those
prevent
presenting
at
the
shelter
door
to
other
safe
alternative
options.
Diversion
eliminates
additional
trauma
for
the
family
or
individual,
frees
up
shelter
beds
and
reduces
cost
for
the
community.
You
CA
will
be
providing
diversion
services
at
all
of
the
new
resource
centers,
as
well
as
at
the
medval
family
shelter.
Our
hapa
program
helped
170
individuals
and
90
households
in
the
past
year,
who
are
homeless
or
in
danger
of
losing
their
housing.
O
Utah
Community
Action
requested
160
2044
was
recommended
for
ninety
seven
thousand
three.
Ninety
three,
which
is
a
part
of
those
funds
home
and
hava
funding,
allows
you
CA
to
target
the
most
vulnerable,
providing
assistance
needed
for
stable
housing
and
self-sufficiency
gains.
As
the
recommendations
are
considered,
our
rapid
rehousing
program
did
not
receive
funding.
This
funding
helps
those
who
are
homeless
or
facing
eviction
to
maintain
their
housing.
O
Uca
provides
assistance
outside
of
the
shelters
to
meet
a
community
need
for
homeless
prevention
funding
would
allow
us
to
serve
40
households
with
holistic
case
management,
rent
and
deposit
assistance
for
housing
stabilization.
We
appreciate
your
consideration
of
our
funding
requests
and
the
continued
support
of
Salt
Lake
City
Thank.
A
K
Thank
you
for
the
opportunity
to
speak
with
you
guys
today.
I
really
appreciate
it.
I'm
here
on
behalf
of
the
housing
authority
of
the
county
of
Salt
Lake,
which
I
am
also
excited
to
say,
is
as
of
last
Thursday
doing
business
as
housing
connect.
I
am
here
representing
our
HOPWA
program.
Our
hop
our
program
is
housing
opportunities
for
persons
with
HIV
and
AIDS.
I
would
like
to
thank
you
for
your
recommendation
of
HOPWA
funds
for
four
hundred,
eight
thousand.
K
So,
with
these
habo
funds,
we
provide
long-term
tenant
based
rental
assistance
and
housing
placement
assistance
for
residents
with
some
of
the
highest
barriers
to
housing
stability.
Those
are
persons
living
with
HIV
and
AIDS
in
our
community.
Eighty-Five
percent
of
the
households
that
we
serve
are
extremely
low.
Income
earning
under
30%
of
ami,
affordable
housing
means
that
they
can
afford
their
rent.
They
are
stable
right,
so
we
know
that
there
is
a
clear
link
between
accessing
medical
care
and
when,
when
a
household
is
stable,
they're
more
likely
to
access
that
medical
care,
that
is
critical.
K
We're
saving
lives
with
this
housing
assistance.
We
also
know,
though,
that
there's
not
near
enough
funding
to
support
all
of
the
households
in
need.
So
as
of
this
week,
there
were
56
households
still
on
the
wait
list
for
assistance
that's
up
from
19
last
year,
so
the
need
is
the
need
continues
to
exist.
Our
organization
partners
with
salt
lake
city
as
well
as
Utah
AIDS,
Foundation
you're,
talking
to
the
action
in
clinic
1a,
we've
partnered
for
years
on
this,
and
we're
excited
to
continue
that
partnership
into
the
coming
year.
We
are.
K
A
N
N
They
helped
in
us
and
the
reason
we
went
there
is
because
we
don't
have
the
resources
to
pay
the
real
estate
agent
or
financial
agent
anywhere
Ron
loan
officer
and
I
came
here
to
request
funds
for
NeighborWorks
for
affordable
housing
for
neighbor
and
people's
I'm,
a
residents
from
Salt
Lake
City,
who
are
looking
for
places
to
live
for
the
children
we
are
in
our
family.
We
have
five
I
mean
we
are
fine,
their
family
and
thanks
to
neighbor
world,
we
are
place
where
we
can
live
and
be
safe.
N
We,
the
one
amoun
from
ross
par
Janesville
first
part,
but
we
instead
of
living
in
England
L.
We
live
in
Glenda
when
we
came
here
to
select
city
and
we
love
the
hood.
Glendale
rose
bar
and
I.
Just
for
your
consideration
to
headphones
for
other
immigrants.
Like
me,
they
could
have
homes
and
is
not
just
immigrants
and
not
their
people.
From
Colossians
of
other
people
here
in
the
United
States,
thank
you
thank.
A
N
Arthur
and
I
am
here
on
behalf
of
NeighborWorks
and
my
family.
If
I
walked
into
neighborhood
to
neighbor
works
now,
I,
don't
think
that
I
would
qualify.
N
O
N
O
Sorry
I
just
want
those
same
opportunities
for
other
families.
R
Council
appreciate
this
opportunity
to
speak
just
for
a
minute
I'm
here
on
behalf
of
NeighborWorks,
a
former
board
member
have
worked
with
CDBG
programs
in
three
different
communities.
This
is
the
first
time
that
I'm
aware
in
my
work
that
a
community
that
I've
worked
in
in
these
three
different
communities
in
two
different
states
has
not
awarded
CDBG
funding
to
NeighborWorks
they've
been
a
part
of
your
community
for
forty
two
years.
R
It
has
been
communicated
that
the
the
funds
that
they
they
have,
these
revolving
funds
and
that
they
work
on
that
revolving
loan
program
and
work
through
that
they
will
get
the
funds
out
and
assist
and
continue
this
partnership
once
again,
42
years,
it's
so
important
to
partner
with
this
great
organization.
That's
done
so
much
good
in
your
community.
Thank
you.
Thank.
A
Q
My
name
is
Dorothy
Owen
and
I
am
co-chair
with
Richard
Holman
of
the
Westside
coalition
and
when
I
see
Richard
I'm
going
to
tell
him
that
his
excuse
of
going
to
another
meeting
was
fallacious
because
you
know
he
could
have
been
here
by
now
giving
this
meeting
the
lenses.
So
you
may
be
saying
to
yourself:
why
would
anybody
stay
in
this
room
for
two
hours
just
to
come
up
here
and
say?
Q
Thank
you
to
you
guys
I
mean
you
know
a
lot
of
people
care
I
mean
and
when
you
go
having
done
this
process,
I
used
to
do
be
staff
for
Salt
Lake
County
in
this
great
allocation
process,
and
as
you
all
know,
it's
very
rigorous
I
mean
you
go
to
the
community
with
the
citizens.
You
go
with
the
mayor,
you
go
to
the
council,
I
mean
any
rational
person
would
figure
out
that
this
is
way
more
work
than
the
small,
relatively
small
amount
of
money
you
get
out
of
it.
Q
It's
not
you
know
it,
but
they
do
it
and
and
then
they
stay
for
two
hours,
so
they
can
say.
Thank
you
to
you.
Even
if
you
don't
give
them
the
money,
why
would
they
do
that?
And
it's
because
it's
not
about
all
about
the
money,
and
it
took
me
a
staff,
a
long
time
to
figure
that
out
it's
about
the
relationship
and
they
know
that
it's
really
important
to
have
that
relationship
with
the
county,
the
city
with
government
in
general,
because
the
general
public
looks
at
this
process.
Q
Our
concern
with
zero
funding
for
neighborhood
works
is
that
it
sends
this
message
that
somehow,
in
this
very
tumultuous
time
where
things
are
changing
on
the
Westside
is
that
maybe
the
city
is
coming
back
on
their
commitment,
and
we
know
that's
not
true,
and
what
we
really
are
going
to
ask
you
is
that
in
this
intervening
time,
you
think
about
how
to
strengthen
the
partnership
with
neighborhood
works
and
how
important
neighborhood
works
is
to
helping
all
the
other
Westside
organizations
grow.
Thank
you.
Thank.
A
D
D
Revitalization
and
does
a
lot
of
what
the
city
does
as
well,
but
they
do
it
in
a
community
building
way.
I
think
someone
said
it
earlier
very
well
that
they
they
are
embedded
in
the
community,
and
so
they
know
they
know
what
the
community
needs.
You
know,
over
50%
of
the
board
are
community
members
on
the
west
side
of
Salt,
Lake,
City
and
they've
been
they've
been
doing
this
for
since
the
80s
been
committed
to
our
to
our
neighborhoods
on
the
west
side.
L
J
L
Heard
is
all
night
long
is
and
listen
to
a
lot
of
people
that
care
and
care
about
other
people
care
about.
Helping
people
would
like
to
do
and
change
the
world
and
really
get
something
done
and
impact
the
people
they
care
about
and
their.
That
is
an
amazing
thing
to
have
that
going
for
us
in
the
city,
but
I'm
going
to
make
a
strange
request.
L
But
what
we
hear
from
the
homeless,
individuals
is
their
histories
and
we're
going
to
be
partnering
with
Salt
Lake
City
or
us
Salt
Lake
Community
College,
to
initiate
a
study
to
find
out
how
many
people,
how
often
people
in
the
homeless
community
interacted
with
social
services
from
the
time
they
were
6
years
old
and
I.
Think
what
we're
going
to
find
out
is
they
interacted
with
social
services
and
the
available
services
had
at
least
10
to
25
times
to
interact
with
these
individuals
that
ended
up
on
the
street
homeless.
L
To
me,
that
speaks
solely
to
the
effectiveness
and
the
efficiency
of
the
system
itself.
That's
put
in
place
to
help
the
kids
and
the
auditors
job
and
one
they
went
through
the
system.
They
pointed
out
that
there
wasn't
many
much
proof
that
anything
we
were
doing
was
actually
helping.
People
trying
and
working
hard
and
caring
is
a
great
part
of
the
whole
process,
but
it's
only
part
of
the
process.
It's
not
a
dozen
speaking
results,
so
I'm
asking
you
with
state
for
the
city
funding.
L
A
N
Good
evening,
grateful
for
this
this
opportunity
for
the
City
Council
team
want
to
take
NeighborWorks,
Salt,
Lake,
City,
Maria
Garcia
and
her
staff
I'm.
One
of
many
stories.
N
Since,
since
being
there
and
hearing
of
the
other
success
stories
of
NeighborWorks,
they
really
revived
the
community.
It's
not
like
it's
just
something
that
happens.
There's
a
lot
of
successful,
successful
things
that
come
out
of
NeighborWorks
and
I'm.
Just
I'm
here
you
know
just
to
ask
on
their
behalf
that
that
will
that
you
guys
will
be
able
to
continue
to
help
them
and
funding
to
wait
so
that
they
could
be
able
to
continue
to
do
what
they
do.
N
A
S
A
T
Hi
my
comments
are
going
to
be
a
lot
like
me,
short
and
sweet
mr.
Rogers,
we
raised
our
family
in
the
hood
and
we
loved
it.
So
it's
a
good
area.
A
T
T
It
probably
is
a
result
of
a
time
back
in
the
80s
when
businesses
would
come
in
and
their
parking
lots
would
be
all
blacktop,
and
so
the
City
Council
back
there
back
van
you
know
took
the
pendulum
that
was
way
over
here
and
swung
way
over
here
and
now
well,
I
mean
we've
always
had
a
water
problem
and
there's
really
no
reason
that
we
should
have
this
ordinance.
We've
been
working
with
Amy
Fowler
and
we
would
like
to
suggest
that
the
City
Council
changed
its
ordinance.
T
Well,
you
don't
receive
a
citation
unless
someone
complains-
and
that
seems
like
a
strange
ordinance
to
to
just
go
around
and
arbitrarily
pick
people
to
you
of
two
fine,
and
so,
if
there's
any
way,
you
guys
could
take
care
of
this
ticket.
For
us,
that
would
be
great
because
it's
it's
ridiculous
and
we
I
hope
you'll
change.
The
ordinance.
A
T
E
The
Sprague
library's
closing
this
week
and
it's
going
to
the
new,
the
old
fire
station,
there's
no
sidewalks
in
front
of
it
and,
more
importantly,
there's
a
curve
where
the
McLellan
trail
was,
and
there
used
to
be
planters
blocking
off
the
trail
from
the
curve
and
the
road
and
the
traffic
which
is
really
really
dangerous.
Now
the
planters
are
gone,
they've
moved
up
to
help
with
the
vitek
Boulder
ventures
project,
but
those
planters
are
a
safety
issue.
They
need
to
go
back.
E
A
G
A
By
councilmember
Wharton,
second,
by
councilmember,
Mendenhall
any
discussion,
all
those
in
favor
aye
and
that
motion
carries
we're
on
to
the
consent
agenda.
Just
so
we're
all
aware
we're
going
to
be
removing
item
number
two,
which
is
the
ordinance
for
2058
north
2,200
West
zoning
map
amendment.
So
the
consent
agenda
is
1/3
for
those
items.
Some
motion
by
councilmember
Luke
second
by
council
member
Johnson
in
any
discussion,
those
in
favor
aye
aye
motion,
carries
her.