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From YouTube: Salt Lake City Council Formal Meeting - 4/23/2019
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A
A
Thank
you.
We
would
like
to
welcome
each
of
you
to
our
meeting
this
evening.
We
appreciate
you've
taken
time
out
of
your
day
to
attend,
participate
and
see
your
local
government
at
work.
I
would
like
to
highlight
that
we
have
business
tonight
as
a
local,
Building
Authority
and
the
City
Council
I
want
to
make
that
distinction
for
the
public's
understanding
and
to
ensure
we
have
a
clear
record.
A
little
known
fact.
Council
members
don't
just
serve
on
the
City
Council
when
we're
elected
were
elected,
also
to
serve
as
the
local
Building
Authority
board.
A
Think
of
it
as
the
council
wearing
two
different
hats,
we
are
beginning
with
the
business
of
the
local
Building,
Authority
or
LBA,
and
then
we'll
move
on
to
city
council
business
to
start
tonight's
meetings.
We
have
laid
out
some
guidelines
for
decorum
and
civility
to
make
sure
people
feel
comfortable
and
safe
to
participate,
so
please
be
respectful
during
each
other's
comments
avoid
cheering
or
jeering,
because
it
could
cause
someone
to
feel
intimidated.
Please
also
make
help
take
care
of
this
historic
meeting
room,
but
not
standing
on
the
furniture
or
leaning
against
decorative
pieces.
A
If
you
have
a
prop
or
a
sign,
see
Manila's
tonight,
please
make
sure
that
does
not
cause
disruption
or
block
other
people's
views
and
signs
wider
than
your
chair
will
be
displayed
in
the
hall.
Please
also
items
like
sticks
and
dolls
are
not
allowed
in
the
room.
Please
do
not
approach
the
Dyess.
This
area
appear.
If
you
have
something
to
pass
out
to
the
council,
a
staff
member
can
assist
you
or
our
staff
members
tonight
raise
your
hands
all.
A
Also,
we
recognize
that
two
minutes
of
common
time
may
not
be
long
enough
to
get
all
of
your
thoughts
outlined
tonight.
Please
visit
our
website,
SLC
Council
comm,
or
refer
to
the
contact
information
sheets
by
the
speaker
cards
in
the
hallway
for
information
about
other
ways
to
share
your
comments
with
the
council
via
email,
phone
or
mail.
A
For
those
of
you
who
have
not
been
here
before
spoken
you'll
get
two
minutes
and
then
a
little
buzzer
will
go
off
and
our
staff
will
tell
you
time's
up
I'll,
try
to
make
sure
that
we
don't
catch
off
too
abruptly.
But
if
you
give
me
respectful-
because
we
have
a
lot
of
folks
here
tonight
who
want
their
turn
to
speak
as
well,
last
thing
I
may
repeat
this
later
on
the
meeting
as
well.
A
For
those
who
have
parked
in
the
underground
library
parking
garage
across
the
street.
We
do
have
parking
validations
for
you.
So
please
see
a
staff
member
before
you
leave.
If
you'd,
like
that,
all
right
as
the
LBA,
we
have
no
public
hearings,
potential
action,
items,
comments,
new
business
or
unfinished
business,
but
we
are
now
at
the
consent.
Portion
of
our
LBA
agenda
set
the
dates
for
Tuesday
May,
21st
and
Tuesday
June
4th
to
accept
public
comment
regarding
the
lvl,
be
a
budget
for
fiscal
year.
2019
2020
wait.
B
Mr.
chair,
before
we
want
to
say
really
quickly
because
I
have
a
microphone
and
I
can
that
a
lot
of
people
that
are
here
there
are
my
friends,
no,
my
that
my
dad
passed
away
a
week
ago
today
and
he
lived
in
Salt,
Lake,
City
housing
and
in
that
in
our
facility
on
1992
south,
and
he
lived
there
because
he
was
a
realtor
all
of
his
life.
B
But
he
made
a
huge,
huge
investment
right
before
the
mark
housing
crash
in
20
2008
and
lost
everything
in
that
and
had
to
declare
personal
bankruptcy
and
his
business
also
was
bankrupt
and
after
that
he
wouldn't
have
had
anywhere
to
go
and
would
not
have
had
housing
without
Salt,
Lake,
City,
and
so
just
because
it's
on
my
mind
and
because
I
think
what
what
we
do
is
the
local
housing
authority
is
important.
I
just
wanted
to
say
that
and
to
thank
the
city
for
providing
a
home
for
him
for
the
last
eight
years.
A
D
E
A
F
H
H
Came
to
speak
in
favor
of
the
green
bike
grants.
This
is
the
right
agenda
item
right.
So
I
think
this
is
a
wonderful
news
that
Salt
Lake
City
is
putting
so
much
into
the
green
bike
program
been
vaulty
has
done
an
amazing
job
in
growing
this
over
the
years
and
it's
become
just
an
incredibly
important
part
in
downtown
transportation.
I'm,
really
glad
to
see
that
it's
gonna
expand,
half's
downtown
in
the
coming
year
and
I
hope
you
vote
for
these
bonds.
H
I
also
hope,
especially
that
the
mayor
will
put
more
resources
into
more
bike
infrastructure
to
support
more
green
bike
and
support
safer
conditions
for
all
cyclists
throughout
the
city.
There
are
many
places
in
downtown
Salt
Lake
for
South
7th
South,
for
example,
that
you
could
go
in
and
put
in
bike
lanes
tomorrow
without
having
to
re
stripe
or
do
anything
and
we
need
more
infrastructure
to
support
more
green
bike
and
I
may
be
preaching
to
the
choir
here.
H
But
I
hope
that
the
council,
as
they
come
to
the
budget,
can
work
with
the
administration
and
continue
to
increase
the
budget
for
more
bike
lanes
and
further
to
you
know,
expand
green
bike
to
the
Westside
I'm,
not
sure
how
much
the
proposal
that
Ben
has,
that
is
for
green
bike
to
go
to
the
west
side
of
town.
But
this
is
one
of
the
things
mayor,
boo
scoopski
indicated
when
she
was
campaigning
that
she
wanted
to
increase
the
amount
of
bikes,
green
bikes
on
the
west
side
of
town.
H
Currently
we
only
have,
as
West
is
like
sixth
west
and
north
temple.
There's
nothing
on
north
temple,
there's
nothing
by
the
Jordan
River
Parkway,
there's
nothing
at
ninth
West
and
nine
south,
where
these
would
all
be
wonderful
places
for
green
bike
stations
and
I
hope.
The
mayor
can
maybe
look
into
the
coffers
and
find
some
budget
for
that
too.
Thank
you.
Thank.
A
Motion
by
councilmember
Mendenhall,
a
second
by
councilmember
Fowler,
any
discussion
on
this,
all
those
in
favor
aye.
Any
opposed
that
motion
passes.
I
failed
to
also
notify
everyone
here
that
we
have
more
seating
across
the
hallway
in
our
work
chambers,
and
if
you
are
seated
over
there,
you
can
still
comment
and
get
a
card
to
us
and
we'll
call
you
over
I'll
try
and
give
you
a
heads-up.
So
if
you
feel
crowd
crowded
in
here,
there
is
room
over
there.
It's
live
streamed
as
well.
J
K
J
F
C
A
N
A
A
Our
third
public
hearing
tonight
is
a
proposed
ordinance
regarding
single
room
room,
occupancy
text.
Amendments
and
I
do
have
cards
on
this
one
I'm
going
to
start
out
by
reading
out
two
names.
First
person,
please
come
up
for
your
two
minutes.
The
second
person
just
to
get
ready
to
come
up
and
we'll
keep
going
through
them
in
order
and
I
apologize
in
advance
for
slaughtering
any
names
pronunciation,
we're
gonna
start
with
Brent
Willis
and
second
up
will
be
Amy.
Jay
Hawkins.
O
Yes,
I'm
Brent,
Willis
I,
currently
the
SRO
in
Kearns,
and
we
operate
the
home
in
Rio,
Grande
Hotel
that
we
operate
through
long-term
lease
with
the
RDA
we
are
in
support.
We
we
worked
closely
with
the
Planning
and
Zoning
Commission
to
get
the
recommendations
that
we
felt
were
necessary.
We
had
visitors
from
the
Planning
Commission,
as
well
as
the
housing
of
Neighborhood
Development.
They
came
and
pamela
atkins.
She
did
a
tour
at
our
facility.
O
We
feel
like
that.
We
have
operated
a
successful
program
where
90%
of
the
people
who
move
into
our
facilities
eventually
moved
to
better
housing.
We
know
it
comes
down
to
proper
organization
and
the
and
running,
and
they
accepted
our
recommendations
of
cameras
throughout
the
building
and
24-hour
service
and
as
well
as
the
size
of
rooms
and
common
areas
and
common
bathrooms
and
kitchens,
and
things
like
that.
We
feel
like
that.
O
P
Hello,
my
name
is
Amy
Jay,
Hawkins
and
I
served
my
neighborhood
as
chair
of
the
ball
park
community
council.
Unlike
the
vast
majority
of
the
eastern
side
of
the
city,
the
ball
park.
Neighborhood
has
the
potential
to
be
strongly
impacted
by
the
SRO
policy
revisions,
ball
parks
already
home
to
a
variety
of
social
services,
affordable
housing
and
starting
in
July,
the
mixed-gender
homeless
resource
center
on
paramount
Avenue.
P
We
also
host
several
of
the
city's
notorious
low
budget
motels
on
state
and
Main
Street,
while
I
recognize
that
these
motels
serve
a
function
within
the
ecosystem
of
temporary
housing
in
Salt,
Lake
City,
they
harm
our
neighborhood.
They
present
real
risk
to
some
of
the
people
who
use
them
like
the
woman
who
was
strangled
to
death
at
the
Main
Street
motel
on
October,
8th
2018
I
hope
that
the
motivation
for
this
proposal
is
that
these
unsafe
crime,
ridden
properties
could
be
functionally
replaced
by
managed
SROs
I
think
that'd
be
a
huge
improvement.
P
It
sorts
of
needed
purpose
as
we
confront
a
shortage
of
affordable
housing
in
our
city.
However,
I
have
concerns
that
the
qualifying
provisions,
while
they
may
work
in
currents
having
a
property
manager
on
site
24
hours
a
day,
communal
areas
being
monitored
by
cameras
for
us
or
use,
may
be
those
are
not
enough
to
ensure
tenant
safety.
P
It's
not
at
all
clear
to
me
how
the
city
intends
to
prevent
the
same
problems
that
plagued
the
low
budget
motels
at
these
new
SROs,
how
these
properties
can
be
meaningfully
distinguished
from
the
motels
in
terms
of
how
they're
regulated
and
as
for
the
actual
locations,
permitted
Wow.
What
a
disappointment
and
demonstration
that
the
whole
city
isn't
committed
to
this
issue
I
understand
that
there
are
no
provisions
that
would
prevent
the
concentration
of
SROs
in
any
one
area
of
the
city
if
we
really
want
to
represent
SROs
as
a
neutral
solution
to
the
housing
issue.
P
A
M
Name
is
Adam,
diamond
and
I
believe
that
it's
important
that
housing
is
considered
as
a
right,
not
a
privilege,
and
a
lot
of
apartment
complexes
around
here
are
being
built
where
the
rent
is
over
a
thousand
two
or
three
thousand
dollars
a
month
and
they're,
calling
that
affordable
housing
but
at
the
same
time
there's
a
lot
of
apartments
as
well.
That
have
housing
like
this,
but
yet
their
amenities
that
everyone
pays
for,
no
matter
what
is
actually
not
100%
wheelchair
accessible
for
people
with
disabilities.
A
K
My
name
is
Brooks
Bergman
I'm
speaking
on
behalf
of
both
the
people
of
Salt
Lake
that
have
experienced
homelessness.
Individuals
like
myself
that
have
grown
up,
for
example,
with
parents
that
had
terminal
illnesses
such
as
cancer
had
to
move
over
20
times
in
their
childhood,
had
to
be
able
to
steal,
break
the
law.
K
So
fine,
gentlemen
and
women
in
the
corner
here
can
arrest
us
simply
because
we
don't
have
access
in
the
means
of
housing
in
the
first
instance
right,
there's
a
plethora
of
problems
that
exist
in
Salt,
Lake
City
regarding
the
anti-porn
nature
of
the
policies
that
are
in
place
with
regards
to
tendency.
One
might
note,
for
example,
that
there
is
a
lack
of
protections
regarding
tenants,
capacity
to
actually
go
to
court
and
the
first
instance,
given
that
we
actually
have
to
pay
the
attorney
fees
for
the
landlords
if
we
lose
as
well.
K
There's
a
lack
of
housing
availability
in
the
first
instance
for
these
individuals,
as
well
as
well
as
a
problem
of
them
in
general,
whereas
the
majority
of
people
in
the
United
States
are
two
paychecks
away
from
homelessness.
If
we
are
really
going
to
be
having
a
conversation
in
which
we're
talking
about
the
severity
of
homelessness
and
the
possibility
of
homelessness
in
Salt
Lake
City,
we
need
to
be
understanding
the
grounds
on
which
is
happening
and
the
severity
at
which
it
is
at
for
the
majority
of
working
class
people
that
are
renting.
K
Therefore,
I
think
it
is
significant
that
we
advocate
for
an
increase
in
single
residence
occupancy,
precisely
because
the
problem
is
only
getting
worse
as
y'all
are
investing
continuously
with
groups
such
as
Zions
Bank
chase.
The
rest
of
us
are
being
left
behind
and
we
are
suffering.
I
have
never
seen
this
community
come
together.
More
United
over
an
issue
than
I
have
seen.
K
People
with
regards
to
tenancy
I
know
so
many
people,
both
personally
as
well
as
people
in
general,
through
social
media
that
are
afraid
to
talk
to
the
landlords
about
dealing
with
black
mold
I
am
one
of
those
individuals.
I
have
seen
people
whose
rent
have
been
raised
up
and
up
and
up
because
suburban-style
housing
is
being
built
in
areas
such
as
Mill,
Creek
of
which
y'all
are
having
a
battle
in
regards
to
residency
and
zoning
as
well.
L
Good
evening,
mr.
chair
and
members
of
the
council,
my
name
is
Jean
Hyatt
and
I.
Am
the
policy
director
for
the
Utah
Housing
Coalition
I'm
here
today,
to
speak
in
favor
of
Salt
Lake
City
passing
an
ordinance
that
would
allow
SRO
housing
units.
However,
I
am
speaking
against
the
currently
proposed
plan.
The
Utah
Housing
Coalition
is
very
much
in
favor
of
passing,
an
ordinance
that
allows
SROs
in
Salt
Lake
City
SR
owes
traditionally
are
advocated
for
as
housing
options
for
people
transitioning
out
of
homelessness.
L
However,
these
types
of
housings,
along
with
housing,
along
with
other
alternatives
such
as
accessory
dwelling
units,
are
a
viable
option
for
people
of
all
income
types
to
address
our
affordable
housing
crisis.
I
bring
this
up
because
we
are
all
aware
of
the
rise
of
NIMBYism
in
our
city
and
nationwide,
pushing
back
against
affordable
housing
density
and
folks
experiencing
homelessness.
My
concern
with
the
proposed
SRO
plan
hinges
on
the
NIMBY
pushback,
in
the
fear
that
any
attempt
to
put
affordable
housing
options
in
residential
areas
other
than
those
designated
will
receive
pushback
from
citizens.
L
The
challenge
with
this
is
the
continued
concentration
of
poverty.
There's
a
history
of
a
development
in
our
city
that
I
fear
has
not
been
considered.
I
would
like
to
draw
your
attention
to
the
map
that
I,
provided
you,
residential
security,
Maps
or
redlining
maps
were
created
by
the
homeowners
Loan
Corporation
in
the
1930s.
They
were
used
by
238
cities
in
the
United
States
as
a
tool
to
determine
where
home
loan
mortgages
should
be
extended.
Areas
were
color-coded
based
on
the
perceived
risk
of
lending.
L
In
that
area,
area
codes
were
considered
the
highest
risk
that
were
labeled
hazardous.
As
you'll
see,
this
practice
came
to
be
known
as
redlining.
The
same
criteria
were
used
across
the
nation
to
grade
neighborhoods
areas
that
are
listed
in
green
or
marked
as
a
were
considered
hotspots
areas.
Where
lending
was
great.
We
wanted
to
see
home
investment
going
in
second
grade
or
be
areas.
L
Color
coded
blue
had
been
completely
developed
and
while
they
were
good
areas
to
live
in,
they
weren't
what
new
homeowners
were
seeking
third
grade
or
see
areas,
colored,
yellow,
becoming
we're
becoming
obsolete
and
experiencing
decline
and
areas
that
were
red
or
graded
d.
Our
neighborhoods
that
had
lower
rates
of
homeownership,
poor
housing
conditions
and
detrimental
influences
in
a
pronounced
degree.
The
area
D
one
that
you'll
see
at
the
center
of
the
map
located
I
immediately.
East
apologies,
okay,
thank
you.
I'm
gonna
leave
some
materials
with
staff
for
your
library
as
well.
Thank.
P
Thank
you
for
allowing
theoretically
accessible
alternatives,
but,
aside
from
reevaluating
our
collective
understanding
of
affordability,
we
need
to
rent
control
SROs
so
that
we
don't
get
schemes
rented
like
ubers
to
tech
professionals
in
San,
Francisco,
we're
neo
capitalists,
landlord
conglomerates
like
home
share
and
a
billionaire
club
of
god-knows-who
are
laughing
all
the
way
to
the
bank,
while
they
subdivide
apartments
into
segments
and
lease
each
segment
at
standard
rent
prices,
which
are
too
damn
high
under
a
formal
system.
These
units
should
be
actually
affordable.
P
What's
happening
in
San,
Francisco
is
arguably
informal
and
by
rent
price
alone,
exploitative,
perhaps
Salt
Lake
City
is
trying
to
have
it
both
ways,
believing
we
can
have
categories
of
demographics
operating
under
separate
physical
laws
and
then
I
didn't
know
what
to
write
after
that.
So
I'm
gonna
just
stand
up
here.
Q
Name
is
Pamela
ikenson
and
I'm.
A
community
advocate
and
I've
been
looking
at
SROs
now
for
the
last
three
years,
we've
had
focus
groups
with
our
homeless
friends
and
we've
listened
to
what
they
had
to
say.
It's
certainly
a
trend
across
the
country
and
what
we
are
pledging
if
this
amended
the
text
amendments
go
through.
What
we're
pledging
is
that
we
will
be
very
accountable
that
these
are
Sorrows,
unlike
the
ones
in
the
1980s
and
1990s,
we'll
never
ever
become
flophouses
and
our
homeless
friends
are
very
interesting.
Q
Many
of
them
receive
SSI
and
we'll
be
paying
30%
of
the
rent,
but
many
of
them
also
know
that
there
are
several
kinds
of
SROs
ones
here,
maybe
for
those
that
are
self-sufficient,
that
we
already
have
here
and
then
the
others
where
people
have
a
little
bit
of
mental
disability
or
physical
disability,
but
people
have
different
needs
and
the
SROs
will
be
run
according
to
their
needs.
There
will
be
security.
There
will
be
a
strict
visitor
policy
and
strict
policies
regarding
use
of
drugs
and
alcohol
within
them.
Q
O
We
need
options
like
this
I'm
kind
of
amazed.
I
haven't
even
heard
of
this
until
a
couple
weeks
ago,
until
I
heard
about
this
event.
It's
just
the
rant.
It's
it's
too
high.
Why
do
we
give
so
much
of
our
money
and
our
time
and
our
income
to
a
landlord
that
provides
nothing
except
for
a
roof?
It's
not
a
right!
It's
a
it's
a
necessity!
It's
an
element
of
life,
food,
water,
shelter,
so
they
teach
you.
So
it's
not
why?
O
It's
first
of
all,
like
they
don't
build,
affordable
houses
anymore.
It's
like
all
these
ivory
homes
and
they're,
getting
bigger
and
fancier
and
more
expensive
who
can
afford
it,
like
the
housing
market
in
general,
has
gone
up,
shot
up
in
Salt,
Lake
City
Salt
Lake
County
over
the
last
four
years,
and
they
just
keep
building
nicer
and
nicer.
Nice
where's,
just
four
walls
and
a
roof
I
can
buy,
so
I
can
have
shelter
why?
Why
isn't
it
affordable?
O
That's!
My
only
question
is:
where
is
the
affordable
housing?
What
options
do
people
have
just
to
put
a
roof
over
their
head,
so
they
can
lay
down
at
night
and
have
shelter?
That's
all
people
want.
They
don't
need
all
these
fancy.
You
know
multi
thousand
square
feet
ivory
homes
and
that's
I,
don't
need
a
name
drop
they're
all
awful.
O
R
As
you
know,
I
work
with
a
number
of
people
from
the
street
every
day.
Five
days
a
week,
crossed
streets
in
the
library
in
front
of
City
Hall
and
we've
grown
our
program
to
be
quite
quite
to
the
enterprise
in
that
community.
We
have
the
respect
of
the
homeless
community
and
in
my
discussions
with
the
homeless
community,
they
have
mixed
reservations
about
anything
anything.
The
system
doesn't
anything
to
help
them.
Nothing
is
working,
nothing
seems
to
help
them.
R
There
was
no
data
according
to
the
state
legislators
that
support
anything,
that's
being
done
in
the
city
as
to
its
effectiveness.
So
my
reservations
about
this
are
questionings
about
the
programs
they're
going
to
support
this
housing.
It's
all
right
for
college
students
and
it's
all
right
for
a
number
of
people,
but
people
with
addiction
issues,
people
with
mental
health
issues.
If
there
are
not
programs
in
place
that
actually
demonstrate
to
help
them
putting
him,
the
housing
is
just
going
to
be
something
that's
not
going
to
work.
R
R
That's
that
is
40
feet
long
and
it's
all
signatures
of
homeless
individuals,
thanking
the
auditors
for
stepping
up
and
demanding
that
we
get
information
about
how
programs
work
so
I
would
ask
you
not
to
pass
anything
or
pass
trial,
Pro
a
trial
program
for
two
units
and
if
anybody
suggests
use
that
are
different
than
a
very
limited
use
that
would
be
accompanied
by
the
collection
of
data,
has
the
effectiveness
of
all
the
programs
that
are
connected
with
the
housing.
Thank
you
very
much.
Thank.
N
I'm
concerned
that
the
proposed
programs-
let's
the
rest
of
the
valley
off
the
hook-
I,
don't
see
I,
don't
see
in
writing
or
in
the
papers
for
every
place.
I
read
that
Murray
made
vow
Cottonwood,
Heights,
Draper
Harriman.
All
long
tracks
are
doing
anything
except
filling
in
their
spots
as
fast
as
they
can,
so
the
state
won't
come
and
tell
them.
They've
got
to
put
in
affordable
housing
sandy
city,
seventh
east.
They
just
pushed
through
the
City
Council
over
who
they're
planning
and
zoning,
because
they
were
terrified
that
the
state
would
say.
N
Okay,
you
got
to
put
it
in
affordable
housing,
they're
building
so
fast
and
I.
Just
don't
want
the
city
to
keep
having
to
pull
in
everybody.
We
already
have
problems
with
housing
that
slumlords
are
in
control
of
that
is
poor.
Poor
housing
and
we
can't
get
I,
have
two
houses
on
my
street
that
are
so
badly
done,
but
they
are
rented
out
under
government
housing
because
there's
no
other
place
for
them
to
go
and
there's
nobody
forcing
them
to
clean
these
places.
Up
and
I
just
wished.
N
The
mayor
and
the
City
Council
would
push
the
valley.
I
mean
for
the
county,
I,
don't
know
if
the
county's
got
a
program
going,
but
I
would
think
that
it
would
help
disperse
it
further
out.
They
need
jobs,
they
need
housing,
they
need.
You
know
it's
not
just
Salt
Lake
City's
responsibility
to
take
care
of
this
situation,
but
the
rest
of
the
valley
seems
to
be
allowing
Salt
Lake
City
to
take
the
brunt
of
this.
Thank
you
thank.
J
All
right,
hello:
well,
my
name
is
Krista
Bobby
agus
I'm
a
resident
here
in
Salt
Lake
City
I
do
want
to
know
that
about
two
weeks
ago,
when
a
person
came
here
and
spoke
and
chair,
it
was
a
councilmember
Andrew
Johnson
there
was
a
chair.
Y'all
y'all
allowed
four
minutes
for
a
person,
who's,
affiliates
police
officers
to
speak
and
y'all
didn't
stop
them.
So
I
also
demand
the
same
respect
as
that
person
and
going
to
talk
for
four
minutes,
because
that's
what
y'all
allowed
that
person
to
do
so.
J
My
name
like
I,
said
it's
cristobal
Villegas
and
we
are
sick
of
this
injustice
and
inequity
happening
here
in
Salt,
Lake
City.
The
mayor
can
throw
lots
of
money
around
and
make
sure
we
have
programming's
make
sure
we
have
great
initiatives
and
make
it
a
great
press
release,
but
that
doesn't
go
far
enough.
J
It
really
hurts
that
every
time
we
go
through
downtown,
there
are
individual
sleeping
out
there
and
making
sure
they're
trying
to
live.
It's
I
feel
guilty
I
feel
guilty
because
I
do
have
a
roof.
Above
my
head
and
single
room
occupancy
like
June
Hyatt,
was
saying,
although
it's
a
step
in
the
right
direction,
it
is
not
enough.
So
I
ask
you
what's
the
plan?
J
Yes,
you
ought
to
have
that
five
year,
growing,
Salt
Lake
City
plan
and
it's
great.
Oh,
what's
the
real
plan
today
during
your
work
session,
I
saw
and
I
heard
a
lot
of
you
talk
and
with
more
than
ecstatic
emotion,
I
route,
that
about
the
seven
million
dollar
hotel.
That's
gonna,
be
built
by
Rio
Grande
because
of
what?
Because
people
don't
live
there
anymore,
how
come
because
the
operation
Rio
Grande?
Why?
Because
of
businesses?
J
These
people
come
into
our
city
and
demand
that
they
can
have
a
nine
percent
loan
of
some
certain
interest
rate?
And
yet
people
like
us
have
to
go
and
try
to
do
the
best
we
can
to
qualify
for
a
house
for
a
home
a
gentleman
today.
They
made
sure
that
he
came
and
they
say
you
know
what
they
said.
They
said
that
their
income,
because
it's
worker
compensation
it
didn't
count
as
income
because
landlords
didn't
accept
it
even.
K
J
J
A
S
Charlie
welcome.
Did
you
tell
everybody
about
the
skyline?
Motel
has
somebody
on
site
the
owners?
Very
responsible
people
were
trying
to
keep
the
crime
out
of
the
area
and
they
failed.
They
tried
they
were
really
heroic,
trying
and
that's
what
you're
trying
to
do
now,
you're
trying
to
implement
something
that
doesn't
work.
You
have
a
policy
of
mixed
income
housing
for
a
reason.
The
experts
told
you
that's
what
stops
criminal
behavior.
It
doesn't
enable
or
encourage
crime
mixed
income
housing.
What
happened?
S
I'm,
quoting
former
councilmember
kharlamov
I
for
four
years
you've
been
going
around
in
the
circles
about
State
Street
State
Street,
according
to
your
staff,
has
the
best
potential
for
housing
and
you've
gone
around
in
circles
for
four
years
about
it
and
then
you're
talking
about
putting
in
SROs
the
closest
thing
to
Sorrows.
Right
now
are
the
motels,
the
low-cost
motels
on
State,
Street
and
North
temple
that
you've
been
trying
to
close
Erin
you
put
in
a
civil
penalty
ordinance
to
try
and
stop
it.
S
It
didn't
work
and
that's
the
problem
we
have
with
potential
Aceros
until
we
get
our
act
together
with
hiring
enough
cops,
we
don't
have
any
extra
cops.
We
don't
we
hired
Katie.
Last
year
we
lost
eighty,
so
we
cannot
solve
the
problem
with
the
crime.
Magnum
hotels,
you
shouldn't
be
even
talking
about
s
Saros,
do
we
need
housing
or
do
we
need
housing
you're?
The
reason
we
need
housing.
You
talked
about
fee
waivers
to
encourage
mixed
income
housing
and
what
you
do
you
set
it
off
to
the
side.
You
could
have
a
lot
more
housing.
S
We
need
7500
more
units.
Four
years
ago
we
told
you
that,
and
you
haven't
done
anything
when
we
lost
the
impact
fees
for
a
while.
We
significantly
increase
housing
starts.
You
need
to
go
back
to
the
fee
waivers.
You
need
to
go
back
to
State
Street.
You
need
to
encourage
form-based
mixed
use,
mixed
income
housing
on
State
Street
that
has
the
best
potential
to
increase
housing.
Srl,
our
crime
magnets.
You
shouldn't
be
even
thinking
about
it.
Thank
you
for
listening.
David.
A
G
I'm
gonna
be
reading
from
my
phone.
Mainly
my
name
is
Ethan
Peterson
I
live
just
a
couple
blocks
from
here,
as
always,
I'm
an
acknowledge
that
we're
having
this
meeting
unoccupied,
she's
shown
ego
shoe
pie,
a
new
territory,
I
think
that's
really
relevant.
We
talked
about
affordable
housing
because
if
you
spend
any
time
in
Salt,
Lake
you've
seen
how
many
indigenous
people
are
unsheltered
right
now,
which
is
a
freaking
crime.
Okay,
that's
a
crime.
G
I'm,
not
an
expert
on
affordable
housing.
I've
had
personal
experiences
with
struggle
trying
to
afford
it
right
now,
I'm
in
a
house
with
three
bedrooms:
five
adults
live
in
that
house
and
we
have
hosted
unsheltered
people
numerous
times
in
our
living
room
on
our
driveway,
and
that
is
not
something
they
should
fall
to
already
low-income
people
in
the
City.
There
are
ways
around
this:
okay
right
now.
Wealth
quality
in
the
US
and
across
the
world
is
at
near
gilded
age
levels.
G
The
world's
26
richest
people
on
as
much
of
the
world's
poorest
50
percent,
which
means
that
26
people
have
roughly
the
wealth
of
3.8
billion
people.
That's
insane
it's
despicable,
it's
unforgivable!
Meanwhile,
people
must
live
on
sheltered
and
go
hungry,
while
others
on
multiple
massive
homes
which
are
unoccupied
much
of
the
time,
while
Utah
tranqs
is
one
of
the
least
unequal
places
in
the
United
States,
we
serve
master
strollers,
addressing
child
hunger,
unsheltered
people
and
poverty,
which
has
been
repeatedly
shown
to
disproportionately
impact
women
and
children.
G
The
racial
and
gender
disparities
and
wealth
inequality
have
been
obvious
for
a
long
time
and
they've
been
demonstrated
empirically.
We
have
not
solved
these
issues.
Additionally,
individuals
who
have
LGBT
sexual
identities
and
non-binary
gender
I.
Didn't
these
frequently
face
discrimination
and
employment
and
housing.
They
should
be
made
clear
that
this
is
not
because
these
are
intractable
problems,
that
the
world
is
just
trying
to
wrap
its
head
around.
We
have
enough
food
and
space
to
feed
and
shelter
everybody.
G
This
is
a
problem
because
there's
a
lack
of
political
will
there's
a
problem
because
there
is
a
tiny
fraction
of
extraordinarily
greedy
and
selfish
people
who
make
decisions
and
influence
politics
to
such
an
absurd
corrupt
degree
that
others
are
left
hung
out
to
dry
with
regard
to
a
Sarles,
inclusionary
zoning
and
render
protection
I
haven't
studied
them
in
any
great
depth.
But
if
changing
the
way
that
SOS
are
defined
in
the
way
that
the
city
is
known,
increased
his
housing
for
people,
then
we
should
do
that.
G
If
inclusionary
zoning
was
less
privileged,
people
in
lower-income,
people
have
more
secure,
accessible
housing,
and
we
should
do
that.
It
should
not
even
need
to
be
said
that
we
should
always
fight
for
stronger
renter
protections
and
for
individuals
who
rent
many
of
whom
are
middle
and
low
income.
There
should
be
affordable
legal
representation
when
housing
disputes
arise,
nobody
should
lose
their
home
simply
because
they
cannot
afford
legal
representation.
Thank.
G
2018
research,
brief
by
the
Kenzie
Gardner
Policy
Institute
at
the
University
of
Utah,
said
that
quote
the
current
affordable
housing
crisis
crisis,
being
their
word
in
Utah,
is
concentrated
in
households
with
income
below
the
median.
Of
course,
this
is
the
case
as
those
of
us
that
are
low
income
have
been
stripped
of
political
power.
Mister.
G
A
I'm
gonna
hold
on
one
second
before
mr.
Christian
comes
up.
We've
got
a
lot
of
people
in
here
tonight.
A
lot
of
people
want
to
speak
as
well.
I'm
sure
ever
has
a
chance.
I
understand
frustration,
but
everyone
else
is
also
here
to
speak.
So
let's
please,
if
we
could
respect
each
other,
you
can
have
another
two
minutes
later
on.
The
meeting
we've
got
open
comment
later
on
as
well.
You're
welcome
to
do
that.
So
I
appreciate
that
next
up,
Steven,
Michael,
Christian
I
believe
thank
you
and
Dave.
Hilt
is
following
him.
F
Second,
time's
a
charm
all
right,
my
name
is
Steven
Michael
Christian
I'm,
here
to
like
many
other
people
here
to
support
SROs
along
with
inclusive
housing
and
tenants.
Rights
to
counseling
housing
must
be
a
right,
not
a
privilege,
as
others
have
said
tonight,
but
I
want
to
address
everyone
here
tonight
more
than
the
City
Council,
because
I
would
rather
speak
the
truth
to
the
powerless
than
to
the
privileged
and
affluent.
F
What
we
are
demanding
is
important,
but
compared
to
what
people
need
and
can
demand,
they
are
timid,
I
assume
that
we
demand
these
timid
issues,
because
we
are
facing
a
timid,
City
Council
and
a
state
government
that
obstructs
cities
from
more
systemic
solutions.
I
think
that
many
of
us
are
concerned
that
the
problems
we
face
with
housing
are
going
to
be
concerns
of
ongoing
inequities.
We
need
to
resist
gentrification.
We
need
to
oppose
pivoting
to
landlords
and
to
people
will
see
the
tenants
who
will
live
in
them
as
criminals
needing
surveillance.
F
To
be
clear,
we
don't
have
a
criminal
problem.
We
have
a
criminalization
problem.
We
must
resist
the
concentration
of
poverty.
We
need
to
avoid
redlining.
We
need
to
avoid
the
further
segregation
of
our
neighborhoods.
We
need
tenants
units,
we
need
public,
/,
private
housing
and
we
need
rent
control.
Fighting
for
housing
is
a
public
good
and
a
right
must
be
a
socialist
cause.
F
The
capitalists
sure
have
done
a
half-ass
job
at
it,
and
it
is
a
fight
against
ableism
against
racism,
against
the
violence
of
settler
colonialism
against
structural
violence
that
deprives
people
of
basic
decency
and
jettisons
them
in
ongoing
precariousness.
The
demands
people
are
here
making
are
important,
but
in
Safed
I
go
for
people
to
join
activist
groups
and
coalition's
fighting
for
tenants
rights
if
they
do
not
exist,
or
they
just
suck
form
them.
If
you
cannot
for
them
to
know
that
you
are
no
less
deserving
of
basic
human
decency
and
human
rights.
Thank
you.
Thank.
A
H
Name
is
Dave
Altis
with
cycling.
Utah
wanted
to
in
general
I'm
in
support
of
SROs
and
I.
Haven't
studied
this
particular
ordinance
fully,
except
for
one
section
of
this,
which
is
the
parking
requirements.
The
ordinance
proposes
just
a
simple
rewording:
change
to
the
parking
requirements
of
1/2
space
per
unit,
Salt
Lake
City
has
an
oversupply
of
parking.
H
You
have
an
unreleased
parking
study
that
the
administration
has
refused
to
release
I,
don't
really
know
why,
but
that
shows
that
each
parking
spot
in
multifamily
units
raises
rent
by
approximately
$240
per
unit
the
parking
minimum
in
this
it's
a
parking
minimum
of
1/2
spot
per
unit.
So
if
you
take
that
and
divide
that
out,
that's
the
parking
minimums
are
causing
a
hundred
and
twenty
dollars
per
unit
in
increased
rent,
for
whatever
SRO
happens
to
go
in.
H
If
you
don't
remove
the
parking
minimum,
you
need
to
revisit
this
and
look
at
an
assessment
by
need
for
parking
rather
than
blanket
parking
minimum.
The
parking
minimum
McNutt
makes
no
sense
they're
going
away
throughout
the
entire
country,
and
you
sorry
and
you
need
to
you-
need
to
look
at
removing
that
section
of
the
ordinance.
H
Not
just
a
simple
rewording
change,
thank
you
very
much
and
oh
sorry,
and
and
replace
the
parking
by
having
an
requiring
appropriate
bike
and
other
mobility
solutions,
storage,
safe
storage
for
bicycles,
safe
storage
for
scooters
or
other
choices
that
people
have
that
are
non
motorized
and
non-car
based.
Thank
you.
Thanks.
F
Just
have
something
really
quick
to
say,
as
a
homeless
person
I
think
it's
really
easy
to
fix
homelessness,
stop
treating
the
symptoms
or
stop
treating
the
symptoms
and
just
treat
the
problem.
If
you
have
drug
addicts
out
there
put
them
in
rehab
that
gives
them
somewhere
to
live,
and
it
also
gets
them
off
drugs
and
puts
them
forward
into
the
future
for
actually
having
a
future
also
for
the
mentally
ill
put
them
in
mental
institutions
that
gives
them
somewhere
to
stay,
and
it
also
helps
them
control
their
illness.
F
E
Hello,
this
is
my
first
time
doing
one
of
these
so
kind
of
nervous.
My
name
is
Mariela
Mendoza
Cardenas
I
am
an
immigrant
from
Lima
Peru
I
came
here
as
a
12
year.
Old
and
I
am
also
a
survivor
from
homelessness.
I
lived
on
the
streets
and
on
and
off
and
a
homeless
shelter
up
in
Ogden,
because
I
did
not
have
proper
documentation
as
an
immigrant
to
even
get
into
a
homeless
shelter.
I
bring
this
up
because
I
think
I've
heard
from
several
people
now
about
the
homeless
problem
right.
E
You
talk
about
us
like
we
are
a
burden,
and
that's
disgusting
to
me.
I.
Don't
think
that
my
people
are
a
burden
I,
don't
think
that
my
people
even
asked
for
this
I
think
that
the
condition
of
homelessness
is
one
that
is
imposed
into
an
individual
by
a
capitalistic
society.
I
think
it
is
a
condition
that
is
actually
coming
from
a
bigger
problem.
I
think
it
is
a
condition
that
is
forced
unto
us
just
as
poverty
is
forced
onto
us,
just
as
displacement
is
forced
onto
us
now,
I
know
that
might
sound
like
a
rant.
E
You
might
here
on
Facebook,
but
I
am
here
in
front
of
you
telling
you
this
from
my
own
experience.
I
did
not
deserve
to
live
on
the
streets,
and
neither
do
you.
Nobody
deserves
to
live
on
the
streets.
Nobody
deserves
to
have
to
fight
for
home
for
a
home.
So
when
we're
here
talking
about
if
sorrows
and
somebody
talks
about
them
as
crime
magnets,
excuse
me,
what
is
a
crime
magnet
just
exactly?
What
does
that's?
What?
What
is
the
definition
of
that
I
did
not
understand.
Most
of
the
criminals.
E
Are
bankers
aren't
even
bigger
buildings
that
are
criminals
have
more
homes
than
the
home
that
I
will
ever
get.
I
have
friends
who
have
been
detained
and
held
in
ice
facilities
because
of
petty
crimes,
because
they
stole
groceries,
so
they
could
feed
themselves
and
their
daughters,
and
yet
justice
is
not
something
that
is
normal
for
them.
Justice
is
a
foreign
term
to
them.
Just
as
I
am
a
foreigner
here,
but
I
guess.
My
time
is
not
happen.
So
I
hope
you
take
this
with
you
we're
here.
You
can't
get
rid
of
us.
R
A
F
Hello,
my
name
is
Carlos
Martinez
I
am
a
member
of
the
Rose
Park
Brown
Berets
and
I'm
here
to
speak
to
the
working
class
in
regards
to
this
housing
crisis
that
were
experienced
in
Salt
Lake
City.
First
I
think
we
need
to
understand
that
housing.
This
housing
crisis
is
a
systemic
issue,
like
some
other
speakers
alluded
to
earlier
today.
It's
a
bigger
issue:
it
cannot
be
covered
up
by
band-aids
and
top-down
solutions.
F
House
house,
lessness
is
a
is
a
threat,
a
threat
which
the
elite
used
to
control
and
manipulate
us
into
into
participating
in
the
system
of
a
race
to
a
bottom.
We
need
to
understand
our
collective
solidarity
and
understand
that
we
all
are
experiencing
this
housing
crisis
together.
We
need
to
organize
mobilize
and
get
ready
for
the
impending
crisis.
That
always
happens
every
ten
to
twelve
years,
because
the
system
is
meant
on
instability
to
to
rape
and
pillage
our
people.
F
So
please,
the
working
class
understand
that
these
top-down
solutions
that
these
politicians
and
these
peddlers
try
to
try
to
feed
us
are
not
going
to
work.
They
never
worked.
History
has
proven
that
human
rights
are
not
given
from
the
top
down;
they
are
tooken.
We
need
to
take
our
human
rights
back
our
human
rights
to
have
a
house.
F
L
My
name
is
shir
Shirley
rays
from
the
Rose
Park
Brown
Berets,
and
today
I
wanted
to
talk
a
little
bit
about
the
West
Side,
specifically
about
tenants,
rights
and
tenants,
not
knowing
their
rights
or,
if
they
do
their
landlords.
Take
the
initiative
to
Vic
their
tenants
for
complaining.
Brown
berries
are
specifically
working
with
families
in
low-income
housing
and
the
conditions
that
we
found
were
horrendous.
We
met
landlords,
saying
things
like
you
want
to
fix
your
dishwasher.
L
L
They
do
absolutely
nothing
when
they
come
landlords
that
neglect
the
up,
keep
up,
keep
up
the
grounds
and
landlords
that
cuts
out
children
toddlers
when
they
complain
about
the
ways
of
how
their
housing
looks
like
the
children
deserve
better
living
conditions
and
just
because
a
family
or
individual
lives
in
section,
8
or
HUD
housing
does
not
mean
they
deserve
less.
In
fact,
they
deserve
more.
They
deserve
a
lot
more.
L
Our
children
are
part
of
the
reason
why
we
wanted
to
do
this
and
because
they
saw
that
we
told
them
that
they
deserve
better,
they
knew
that
they
deserved
more,
we
told
them
to
organize
and
they
did
and
they
organized
and
they
got
themselves
a
new
playground,
so
they
wouldn't
catch
anything
and
they
wouldn't
hurt
themselves
anymore.
I
just
wanted
to
say
that
this
is
an
issue.
L
K
Antonio
represent
the
Rose
Park
Brown,
Berets
and
I
come
here
speaking
for
the
youth
from
the
Westside
from
Rose
Park
from
Glendale
from
West
Valley,
and
you
know,
we
see
the
things
changing
at
Rose
Park.
We
see
these
expensive
apartments
coming
near
our
communities
where
nobody
in
Rose
Park
can't
afford
them
who
the
hell
could
pay
$1,000
a
month
for
an
apartment
in
Rose
Park.
Nobody
can
and
instead
of
putting
green
bikes
on
the
west
side,
we
need
a
for
affordable
housing
and.
K
K
K
You
know
they
deserve
better
than
this.
You
know
I
come
from
Rose
Park
and
you
know
that
you
know,
rent
you
know
paying
paying.
The
bills
is
getting
harder
and
harder
each
day.
You
know,
and
you
know
last
year,
I
was
here
as
well
and
you
guys
put
more
money
to
the
police
department
and
I
called
you
guys
all
criminals,
and
you
guys
are
criminals.
Why?
A
N
My
name
is:
excuse
me.
My
name
is
Tara
Rollins
and
I'm
with
Utah
Housing
Coalition
I'm.
Here
to
finish
you
in
statement
for
decades,
redlining
maps
were
systematic
barrier
to
homeownership
wealth
accumulation
for
for
black
or
african-american
citizens.
Redlining
neighborhoods
today
still
have
very
high
mark
segregation
in
Salt
Lake
City.
We
also
have
the
highest
rates
of
vacancy
lowest
quality
of
health,
lowest
rates
of
educational
achievement
in
lowest
median
family
income.
The
map
that
has
been
drafted
by
the
Planning
Office
shows
where
zoning
changes
would
be
permitted
to
allow
SROs.
N
Many
of
the
permitted
areas
are
historically
red,
lined
as
red
or
yellow
areas
and
currently
have
the
highest
concentration
of
poverty
per
census.
Tracts
in
our
city
I
bring
this
up
because
we
are
facing
a
deep,
affordable
housing
crisis.
Not
only
do
we
need
new
housing
units,
but
we
need
to
work
to
alleviate
current
residents
that
are
severely
cost
burdened
paying
more
than
half
of
it
in
comes
to
housing.
These
families
must
make
difficult
choices
between
paying
rent
buying
health,
healthy
food
or
seeking
medical
care.
N
The
city
has
the
ability
to
address
these
challenges
and
make
a
positive
impact
through
zoning
by
choosing
to
do
things
differently.
Continuing
to
concentrate
poverty
only
perpetuates
these
economic
hurdles
not
only
for
existing
residents,
but
the
new
residents
that
would
move
into
these
communities.
I
encourage
you
to
work
with
HUD
in
the
disability,
Law
Center,
to
alleviate
any
fair
housing
concerns
that
may
rise
from
the
concentration
of
poverty
outlined
in
the
current
proposed
SRO
plan,
and
to
consider
the
historic
decisions
made
long
before
any
of
you
sat
in
these.
N
F
F
I,
don't
claim
to
speak
for
entire
populations,
but
I'd
like
to
take
this
opportunity
to
read
an
excerpt
from
Martin
Luther
King
jr..
At
this
time
it
is
necessary
for
me
to
be
vigorous
and
condemning
the
conditions
which
cause
persons
to
feel
that
they
must
engage
in
riotous
activities.
That
is
for
me
to
condemn
riots.
I
think
America
must
see
that
riots
do
not
develop
out
of
thin
air.
Certain
conditions
continue
to
exist
in
our
society,
which
must
be
condemned
as
vigorously
as
we
condemn
riots.
F
But,
in
the
final
analysis,
a
riot
is
the
language
of
the
unheard
and
what
is
it
that
America
has
failed
to
hear?
It
has
failed
to
hear
that
the
plight
of
the
poor
has
worsened
over
the
last
few
years.
It
has
failed
to
hear
that
the
promises
of
freedom
and
justices
have
not
been
met.
It
has
failed
to
hear
that
large
segments
of
society
are
more
concerned
about
tranquility
and
the
status
quo
been
about
justice,
equality
and
humanity,
and
so
in
a
real
sense
of
so
in
a
real
sense.
F
R
I'm
Jeff
Williams
I
live
here
in
Central,
City
and
I
was
homeless,
I
had
my
housing
for
a
year,
I
live
down
by
Sears
and
that's
a
beautiful
old
building.
It
was
a
first
large
building
bill
in
Salt,
Lake
City
after
World
War
two
and
it's
just
sitting
down
there,
bacon
I
think
you
guys
ought
to
take
a
look
at
it.
R
It
could
be
you
know,
and
you
know,
I,
don't
know,
I
thought
you
could
do
something
like
a
Resource
Center
out
of
it
or
something
you
know
so
serious
isn't
gonna
use
it
they're,
just
opening
small
stores
now
so
I
think.
Is
it
just
something
I
think
you
gotta
take
a
look
at
maybe
a
short
stopgap.
You
know
for
like
some
of
the
homeless,
you
can
put
army
cots
in
there
or
I.
Don't
know
it's
a
beautiful
building.
R
C
B
A
C
Yeah
Thank
You
mr.
chair
I
want
to
just
thank
you
all
for
coming
out
tonight.
We
actually
enjoy
listening
to
you
and
I've
had
conversations
with
some
of
you
with
other
council
members
leading
up
to
tonight.
We
appreciate
the
thoughtfulness
I
appreciate
the
thoughtfulness.
I
can't
speak
for
all
my
peers
of
that
you're.
You've
put
into
these
things
that
we're
considering
I
love
the
passion
that
you
bring
to
equity
in
housing
in
this
city,
to
geographic
equity,
in
access
to
housing,
and
also
to
the
elimination
of
the
concentration
of
poverty.
That
is
systemic.
C
It
is
historic,
it
is.
It
continues
in
many
regards
and
I
just
really
appreciate.
The
momentum
you
bring
to
us
tonight.
I
also
want
to
mention
that
in
my
years
on
the
council,
I
would
say
that
this
is
the
least
timid
council
in
Salt
Lake,
City's
history.
When
it
comes
to
affordable
housing,
we've
allocated
21
million
dollars
and
more
to
a
leap
to
addressing
this
crisis.
We
are
in
and
I
think
another
example
that
gives
me
heart
in
these
conversations
is
that
this
is
the
only
city
as
to
my
knowledge,
in
the
state
of
Utah.
C
That
has
a
citywide
accessory
dwelling
unit
ordinance.
We
did
that
in
December.
That
was
looking
at
a
concentration
of
accessory
dwelling
units
and
a
very
specific
and
neck
WA
tubulin.
My
opinion
area
of
the
city
and
this
council
body
said
no
we're
gonna
do
this
citywide.
We
did
that
in
December,
so
I
think
that
what
you're
bringing
to
the
conversation
is
really
relevant,
I,
don't
think
it's
falling
on
deaf
ears.
C
A
P
Hello,
my
name
is
Silvia
nibbly
I
am
a
resident
of
Salt
Lake
and
the
chair
of
the
Warm
Springs
Alliance
we're
a
non-profit
formed
to
protect
the
Warm
Springs
landmark
site
in
Hot
Springs
Preserve,
the
Wasatch
plunge
building
at
840
North
Beck
Street
and
re-established
its
role
as
a
public
gathering
place
that
serves
the
whole
community.
We're
a
large
alliance
with
broad
support,
working
on
a
viable
plan
for
a
public-private
partnership
to
make
Warm
Springs
a
valuable
asset
for
the
community
and
City
again.
P
The
studies
you're
voting
on
tonight
are
an
important
step
in
determining
what
it
will
take
to
restore
and
protect.
This
has
this
important
historic
site
by
assessing
the
condition
of
the
hot
spring,
the
condition
of
the
building,
including
the
leaking
roof,
and
will
tell
us
what
we
need
to
know
to
return
this
city
asset
to
full
use
for
the
benefit
of
everyone
in
the
community.
We're
here
to
support
the
city
in
preserving
the
valuable
and
unique
site
and
hope
you'll
vote
YES
on
budget
amendment
5.
P
We
look
forward
to
continued
conversations
and
positive
collaboration
for
many
years
to
come
and
really
appreciate
your
consideration.
I've
also
got
a
public
letter
here
with
31,
more
supporters
of
the
Warm
Springs
Alliance
vision
that
weren't
able
to
be
here
tonight
and
I'd
love
to
just
invite
anyone
in
the
room
here
who
would
love
to
see
the
hot
springs
brought
back
and
the
Wasatch
plunge
building
preserved
to
give
a
raise
of
hands.
So
we
can
kind
of
have
a
sense
of
community
sentiment
on
this.
Thank
you.
We
also
have
a
gift
for
you.
P
F
H
F
From
the
Navy,
maybe
you
guys
are
old,
but
the
idea
is
that
this
restoration
project
we're
asking
to
restore
it.
So
we
bring
that
health
and
wellness
back
to
the
people.
The
Indians
have
used
it
for
hundreds
of
years
to
get
well
and
they
come
from
all
of
the
United
States
and
the
1800s
and
not
nineteen
hundreds
to
get
well
I
know.
We
think
we
can
do
that
again
and
make
it
a
piece
of
joy
and
peace
and.
T
David
Shearer
I'm
an
architect
and
urban
planner,
and
a
founding
member
of
the
Warm
Springs
Alliance.
A
few
minutes
ago,
Sylvia
spoke
about
the
Alliance's
vision
for
the
Wasatch,
plunge
building
and
grounds
I've
spent
a
great
deal
of
time,
studying
the
construction
drawings
of
the
building
and
I've
spoken
with
a
structural
engineer,
acquaintance
of
mine
about
how
the
structural
part
of
the
restoration
ought
to
be
done.
T
If
you
approve
the
budget
amendment
tonight,
it's
important
that
the
RFP
for
the
engineering
services
be
written
and
so
as
to
elicit
the
specific
information
needed
to
accurately
estimate
the
cost
of
the
structural
restoration.
This
building
is
unique
and
the
engineering
study
should
be
tailored
to
its
particular
structural
system,
its
age
than
the
requirements
for
an
historically
sensitive
restoration,
the
building
opened
in
1922.
T
At
the
time
it
was
an
adventuress
structure,
now
very
commonplace
of
reinforced,
concrete
frame
and
slab,
but
no
one
knows
whether
the
structure
meets
current
codes
or,
if
not,
what
work
is
needed
to
make
it
safe
and
bring
it
up
to
code.
Since
the
steel
reinforcement
which
is
hidden
inside
the
concrete,
is
an
essential
part
of
a
structure.
Answering
this
question
requires
x-raying
each
column,
beam
and
slab
of
the
frame
to
see
the
location
and
sizes
of
the
reinforcing
bars,
and
especially
the
connections
between
them.
T
Historic
tax
credits
can
be
used
to
significantly
reduce
the
cost
of
restoring
this
building,
but
to
qualify
for
these
tax
credits,
the
restoration
has
to
be
done
with
a
minimum
of
visible
change.
Common
methods
of
seismically
stabilized
in
buildings
such
as
cross
bracing,
do
not
meet
this
criterion.
The
RFP
for
the
engineering
study
should
specify
that
only
methods
compatible
with
historic
restoration
standards
be
used.
T
The
results
of
the
engineering
study
should
be
a
detailed
description
of
the
work
required
such
that
a
contractor
can
give
an
estimate
of
the
cost
of
doing
the
work
that
is
sufficient
to
allow
accurate
budgeting
for
the
restoration,
since
conditions
will
vary
throughout
the
building.
This
will
require
a
piece-by-piece
analysis.
T
N
It
looking
down
on
a
beautiful
building
and
people
are
thinking
as
they're
going
up
the
Capitol
Hill.
What
is
that?
What
is
that
cool?
Looking
building
over
there?
Oh
wow,
let
us
tell
you
all
about
the
Warm
Springs
Building,
and
then
you
have
the
beautiful
parks
that
they're
right
next
to
it.
This
place
is
worth
it.
I
worked
across
the
street
for
16
years
over
steel
manufacturing
place
that
and
we've
heard
how
they
were
going
to
turn
thinking
about
putting
a
rec
center
a
long
time
ago.
I
think
the
county
was
talking
about
that.
N
Then
you
guys
want
to
put
seven
stories
of
apartment
buildings
back
there
with
all
the
water
table
problems
we
had
across
the
street
rebuilding
our
building.
We're,
like
you
guys,
were
nuts,
absolutely
not
so
I.
Remember
telling
the
council
that
that
night,
it's
worth
saving
I,
think
it's
an
interesting
building.
We
have
so
many
glass
buildings
in
this
city.
Everybody
puts
in
glass,
glass,
apartments,
glass.
Everything
I
can't
wait
for
that.
One
tremor
that
they're
all
going
to
go
shatter
even
the
safety
buildings
glass.
It
may
be
earthquakes.
N
Airport
is
still
glass,
but
this
is
unique.
Building
and
I.
Think
it'll.
Have
you
know
next,
a
beautiful
park
is
better
than
apartments,
definitely
better
than
apartments,
but
I
hope
you
guys
can
at
least
look
into
it
to
see
what
needs
to
be
done
even
with
the
water
table.
It's
still
standing
and
but
thank
you
thank.
S
Why
the
heck
do
you
think
we
need
a
four
hundred
thousand
dollar
transit
hub
on
second
south
and
seventh
East?
That
doesn't
make
sense.
You
want
one
on
the
west
side
too,
which
actually
makes
more
sense,
but
so
you're
spending
money
on
projects
instead
of
service.
You
should
be
trying
to
increase
ridership
and
that's
not
how
you
increase
ridership,
300,
West,
you're,
taking
out
the
money
using
427,
south
and
15
South.
It
needs
sidewalks
you're,
putting
in
two
new
routes,
bus
routes
in
August.
S
S
But
what
you
really
need
is
not
pretty
roads,
you
need
better
buildings
and
mixed
use
mixed
income
right
when
you
took
over
the
Capitol
motel
on
17th
south,
it
stopped
the
crime
magnet
that
was
there
before.
You
need
to
do
that
and
encourage
development
on
State
Street
more
than
you
need
transportation.
S
Transportation
on
State
Street
should
be
after
prioritizing
for
more
housing
to
increase
housing
development
with
form
based
zoning.
We
talked
about
this
for
four
years,
where's
that
housing
on
State
Street.
Why
aren't
we
closing
the
motels
there
and
putting
in
low-income
mixed
income,
mixed-use
walkable
neighborhoods
on
State
Street?
You
have
wider
sidewalks
and
you're
prettifying
the
road,
but
what
about
the
housing?
Four
million
dollars
for
prettifying
the
roads
on
State
Street?
S
J
J
Thank
you.
Thank
you
for
your
time.
I
will
buy
it
to
the
two
minutes
now.
I
just
want
to
make
sure
I
proved
that
point
so
I
do
appreciate
I
just
wanna
say
thank
you
to
listening
to
all
different
voices
that
came
up.
This
was
a
response
of
the
multi-month
campaign
on
housing.
Justice
so
expect
more
so
should
be
exciting,
but
on
the
budget
last
time
I
came,
I
spoke
about
the
census,
worker
and
I
didn't
see
any
edits
done.
J
That's
been
provided
in
your
and
the
work
agenda
for
our
the
formal
agenda
for
this
session,
so
I
wanted
to
make
sure
that
again
I
voice
in
it's
also
on
the
record
that
the
person
who
becomes
the
census
worker
needs
to
understand
the
dynamics
of
the
marginalized
population.
I
think
this
week
or
it
was
a
yesterday.
The
Supreme
Court
is
listening
to
the
different
definition
for
citizenship.
Can
this
person
navigate
that?
Are
we
making
sure
this
person
can
advocate
again?
J
The
job
description
is
not
up
to
my
what
I
think
again:
I'm
just
a
Salt,
Lake,
City
resident
I'm
not
supposed
to
I,
don't
get
paid
for
this,
but
it's
not
meaning
my
expectations
of
what
a
solid
city
employee
can
have
in
the
requisites
to
conduct
and
coordinate.
The
sense
is
across
the
city,
especially
making
sure
that
if
that
question
does
exist,
that
people
don't
feel
afraid
to
answer
that
question
and
unfortunately,
that's
where
it
has
been
used
historically
to
single
out
people-
and
we
know
this
from
from
history.
So
again,
I
just
implore.
J
F
This
building
caught
my
eye.
I
was
like
my
god.
What
is
that
that
is
really
unusual,
it's
beautiful
and
what
is
it
so
I
like
pulled
over
and
tried
to
walk
around
it
and
find
out
what
it
was
and
I
had.
No
idea,
of
course,
well
later
on,
I
found
out
all
about
how
Warm
Springs
was
very
historic
site.
Most
cities
don't
have
a
Springs
right
in
their
in
their
city,
I
mean
it's
a
wonderful
unusual.
H
There's
a
ton
of
great
alternative
in
active
transportation,
a
pieces
of
this
budget
amendment
and
it's
really
cool
to
see.
There's
the
sugarhouse
circulation
plan,
which
hopefully
will
reduce
congestion
in
sugarhouse,
there's
27
South,
which
is
there
there
was
there,
were
a
lot
of
public
hearings
and
it
looks
like
the
administration's
actually
gonna
do
pretty
good
stuff
on
27
south,
which
is
nice
to
see
life
on
state
disagree
with
mr.
Chapman
that
you
shouldn't
pay
attention
to
the
road.
You
absolutely
should
pay
attention
to
the
road
State
Street
as
the
roadway
is
a
disaster.
H
It's
speeds
are
high.
There's
too
much
congestion
there
too
much.
There
are
too
many
lanes
on
State
Street
and
it's
despite
the
fact
that
tons
and
tons
and
tons
of
people
use
that
for
bike,
transportation,
scooter,
transportation
and
walking.
The
street
itself
is
dreadful,
and
so
please
do
fun
fully
life
on
state
and
please
communicate
with
you
dot
and
ask
you
dot
to
change
their
obstinate
stance
on
lane,
wits
and
number
of
lanes
so
that
you
can
turn
State
Street
into
a
real
Street
instead
of
something
that
is
just
uncomfortable
for
everyone
to
be
on.
F
Name
is
John
Wilkes
I'm,
a
brother
named
Murray
I
live
very
close
to
State
Street
I'm,
not
sure
if
this
applies
to
this
amendment.
But
one
thing
that
is
of
great
concern
to
me
as
a
terminal.
Pedestrian
is
crosswalks
safe
places
for
people's
across
the
street
on
State
Street
other
than
you
know,
major
intersections
there
just
aren't
any
okay.
We
wait
till
someone
gets
killed
like
happen
in
South
Salt
Lake,
to
put
in
a
signal,
crosswalk
I
think
that
a
lot
more
we
talk
about
walkable
communities
and
that
I'm
just
not
seeing
that
happening.
A
F
A
D
That
the
council
a
duck
excuse
me
close
the
public
hearings
and
adopt
an
ordinance
amending
the
FY
2018
2019
final
budget
of
Salt
Lake
City,
as
proposed
by
the
administration
with
the
following
at
dishes
and
changes
that
we
add
item
8a
to
the
hiring
of
a
temporary
full-time
census.
Coordinator
position,
we
modify
item
e5,
the
Salt,
Lake,
County,
regional
transportation,
transportation,
choice,
fund
life
on
state
design
and
catalog
catalytic
site
implementation
and
that
we
add
council
added
items,
i1
and
i2
with
the
tuition
reimbursement
program.
A
F
My
name
is
Carissa.
This
is
my
first
time
making
public
comment
here
at
the
City
Council
on
and
I
am
a
little
nervous.
So
please
bear
with
me
I
appreciate
all
the
passion
that's
been
shared
at
this
microphone
this
evening
and
I
impassionate
about
this
issue,
but
maybe
not
as
you'd
see
and
I
apologize.
If
my
passion
comes
off
as
anger,
that
is
not
my
intent.
F
A
little
while
ago,
a
friend
shared
a
link
to
the
I
believe
it's
called
your
work
meeting
and
at
that
work
meeting
several
new
dog
parks,
while
I
certainly
feel
that
dog
parks
and
additional
dog
parks
are
should
be
welcomed.
Here
in
our
city,
I
was
a
little
dismayed
to
learn
that
some
of
you,
certainly
those
that
are
cat
owners,
did
not
raise
the
issue
of
a
potential
for
any
sort
of
cat
park.
F
This
was
frustrating
to
me
because
this
is
a
City
Council
that
prides
itself
on
diversity
and
inclusion,
and
me,
as
an
advocate
that
is
a
cat
advocate,
was
frustrated
that
this
was
not
brought
up,
and
so
I
would
ask
that
the
council
please
in
the
future.
Please
consider
our
feline
friends
in
these
types
of
discussions.
Thank
you.
Thank.
N
I've
written
council
about
dog
parks,
I
know
you
guys
seen
them
good
luck,
no
matter
what
you
do.
They're
gonna
be
complaints,
no
matter
what
anybody
does
is
gonna,
be
complaints.
I've,
worked
and
took
care
of
the
mill
race,
one
before
I
moved
to
Salt
Lake
eleven
years
ago
and
you're
the
lucky
ones.
I
moved
to
Salt
Lake
took
care
of
that
one
until
Taylorsville
kicked
him.
Are
you
people
out
and
locked
it
down
infant
and
decided
to
charge
a
fee,
but
when
they
did
that
it
also,
the
people
figured
well.
N
If
we
have
to
pay
to
come,
they're
not
gonna,
help
clean
it
up
and
the
place
has
really
gotten
bad.
I've
talked
to
the
Park
Service
numerous
times
about
this,
and
they
even
went
looked
at
the
situation
but
I'm
just
saying
no
matter
what
you
do,
no
matter
what
you
do.
You're
gonna
get
hit
with
complaints
from
all
sides.
So
just
good
luck
and
the
Rose
Park,
the
one
going
next
to
rosewood.
N
It's
just
gonna
be
gravel.
It's
just
gonna
be
a
fenced
off
gravel
with
no
water
with
no
shade,
with
no
trees
with
no
grass.
It's
a
field
of
gravel
$300,000,
but
it
is
a
good
location
because
there's
the
bathrooms
there
I've
walked
my
dog
at
roses.
Right
now
will
always
continue.
Walker
on
the
grass
and
rosewood
I
go
at
6
a.m.
N
but
we
were
told
it
was
supposed
to
been
built
last
year,
but
I
guess
they're
still
working
on
it,
because
it's
on
top
of
aliens
and
the
EPA
is
still
doing
a
study
from
what
we
were
told
to
see
whether
or
not
it's
leeching,
but
it's
just
gonna
be
gravel
and
it's
just
kind
of
a
shame
because
it
could
be
so
much
more.
Millrace
is
an
example
that
was
a
perfectly
designed
multi-terrain
anyway,
three
times
tonight.
N
F
F
Q
My
name
is
Ann
cannon
and
I'm,
a
resident
of
Wasatch
Hollow
community
I'd
like
to
thank
the
council,
especially
charlie
and
Aaron,
for
persisting
with
the
ordinance
and
these
amendments.
I'm
grateful
to
the
council
will
still
be
involved
in
future
decisions.
I
understand
the
need
to
repeal
the
resolution
52
that
established
guidelines
up
to
this
point,
I
appreciate
the
care
taken
to
build
on
what
worked
and
rethink
what
did
not
I
believe
the
specific
naming
of
parks
and
wetlands
will
greatly
improve
the
city
and
County's
ability
to
enforce
the
regulations
that
will
benefit
all
users.
Q
I
welcome
the
attention
to
allowing
for
additional
future
parks.
However,
I
remain
concerned
about
the
vandalism
of
signage
that
seems
to
allow
those
users
who
don't
agree
with
the
regulations
to
destroy
them.
Thus,
seemingly
circumventing
the
law.
I
do
hope
that
the
future
attempts
to
educate,
if
necessary
by
fines,
will
be
a
success
for
the
future
of
our
parks
and
public
lands
and
I.
Thank
you
and
ask
that
we
continue
to
work
together
to
enjoy
now
and
preserve
for
the
future.
Q
I
Good
evening,
I'm
Nancy
von
Allmen
and
I'm
really
happy
to
be
here
with
you.
The
party's
historic
Nature
Park
committee
has
concerns
about
removing
resolution
52.
We
stakeholders
who
wrote
it
wonder
what
will
replace
it.
Can
an
off-leash
area
truly
be
decided
by
the
city,
mayor
or
parks
director
with
an
expected
approval
by
the
City
Council.
Will
there
be
citizen
input?
There
was
a
huge
impact
when
parlays
Nature
Park
was
designated
off-leash.
It
had
been
donated
by
Harvey
Hansen
as
a
Nature
Park
and
dedicated
by
Governor
Scott
Matheson.
As
a
Nature
Park.
I
It
was
wrong
to
make
it
an
off-leash
area.
It
was
chosen
because
it
was
big
at
88
acres.
It
was
a
gulley,
so
dogs
couldn't
run
away.
It
had
shade
and
Creek
water
for
hot
days.
All
was
really
perfect
for
off-leash.
It's
so
perfect.
There
are
now
about
3,000
dogs
a
day
who
enjoy
this
rather
abused,
definitely
overlooked,
/
loved
part.
It's
so
overcrowded
many
others
no
longer
come
due
to
the
smell
of
urine
and
fecal
matter.
I
Existing
nature
is
impacted
when
an
off-leash
area
is
created.
Parlays
Creek
was
perfect
for
dogs,
but
for
the
trampled
trees.
Bushes
in
native
plants
all
is
gone
for
wildlife
and
nesting
birds
using
the
riparian
habitat
for
centuries.
All
was
lost
off.
Leash
use
was
a
disaster
for
nature.
Today,
the
day
after
Earth
Day,
we
begged
the
City
Council
to
create
a
guide
line
to
protect
environmentally
sensitive
areas,
be
mindful
of
wild
wildlife.
Habitats
zones
create
artificial
ponds
instead
of
using
natural
springs
and
streams.
T
Good
evening,
I
am
Louis
chief
of
Salt
Lake,
County,
Animal,
Services
and
County
Animal
Services
are
in
favor
of
off-leash
dog
parks.
We
would
ask,
given
the
number
of
the
public
and
dogs
that
utilize
these
facilities
and
how
difficult
it
is
to
enforce
ordinances
and
and
implement
violation
justifications
we'd.
Ask
that
Salt,
Lake
City
Council
would
consider
supplying
enough
financial
resource
that
would
enclose
the
area
to
provide
safety
for
the
dog
owner
and
the
dogs,
as
well
as
making
it
easier
for
agencies
to
enforce
ordinance
is
set
for
by
your
city.
Thank
you.
Thank.
D
A
D
Chair
I
moved
that
the
council
closed
the
public
hearing
and
adopt
the
proposed
ordinance.
I
further
moved
that
the
following
information
becomes
part
of
the
ordinance,
a
contingency
to
allow
the
council
to
choose
to
take
action,
including
the
review
of
additional
information
from
the
administration,
as
well
as
to
hold
public
hearings
within
30
days
of
the
date
that
the
administration
notifies
the
council
of
a
proposed
new
off-leash
area,
which
already
has
completed
a
12-month
test
period
and
received
public
input.
A
L
C
D
B
Yes,
I
move.
The
council
approved
the
attached
appropriations
resolution
adopting
the
one
year
action
plan
for
fiscal
year,
2019
2020
and
allocate
CB,
CDBG
ESG
home
and
a
HOPWA
or
hopw
a
funds
except
for
CDBG
housing.
Number
five
CDBG
Public,
Services,
number,
four
and
ESG
part
one
and
number.
Seven
I
further
moved
that
all
CDBG
project
allocations
will
be
decreased
by
the
percentage
basis
for
the
overall
overall
award
change
from
HUD,
while
maximizing
the
in
ministry
and
public
services
categories
and
maintaining
the
$30,000
minimum
funding
level
for
each
funded
project.
Second,.
D
D
B
Chair
I
move
that
the
council
approved
the
attached
appropriations
resolution
allocating
fiscal
year,
2019
2020
funding
for
CDBG
housing,
number
5,
neighborhood
works
home
ownership
and
real
estate
development
services,
subject
to
the
percentage
adjustment.
Reference
in
motion
1a
further
move
that
the
council
allocate
$50,000
to
be
immediately
available
for
NeighborWorks,
home
ownership
and
real
estate
development
services
and
50,000
to
hold
an
account
to
be
released
to
neighbor
works
as
of
January
1st
2020.
If
the
city
and
administration
confirms
that
the
neighborhood
that
neighbor
works
has
one
addressed
any
funding.
B
A
T
And
I
would
like
to
recuse
myself
and
stated
it's
not
a
conflict,
but
the
reason
I'm
excusing
myself
using
myself.
I
am
the
director
of
a
non-profit
that
specializes
in
providing
employment
to
people
with
intellectual
disabilities.
Columbus
Community
Services
is
a
member
of
that
organization,
which
is
why
I'm
stepping
away
appreciate.
B
D
A
C
A
A
A
That's
from
chair
Luke:
would
you
have
any
questions
you
know
not
tonight.
Anyone
else
all
right,
Thank
You,
mr.
David
Litvak
for
being
here
tonight,
appreciate
that
we
are
at
item.
D2
will
be
taking
general
comments.
Now
those
are
the
yellow
cards.
I
will
call
people
based
on
the
comment.
Cards
have
been
turned
in.
A
Okay,
just
like
public
hearings,
I
will
call
two
people
at
a
time.
The
first
person
please
come
forward
to
the
microphone
and
the
second
person
please
be
ready
to
follow.
Common
time
is
two
minutes
per
person.
You
cannot
combine
time
with
another
speaker
as
a
reminder.
Please
help
create
a
civil
and
respectful
meeting
by
being
respectful
during
other
people's
comments.
No
loud
noises
or
disruptions
do
not
block
other
people's
views,
please
with
signs
or
other
items
and
let
council
staff
help
pass
out
any
handouts
that
you
may
have
tonight.
C
My
name
is
officer
Murray
Beck
I
work
for
Sully
Police
Department,
currently
in
a
patrol
capacity,
I'm
also
set
on
the
board
for
the
Salt
Lake
Police
Association
as
the
treasurer.
You
know
why
I'm
here
to
speak
about
wages
for
the
police
department.
Housing
is
very,
very
important.
Subject:
housing
for
us
we
directly
see
it
impacts
us,
as
many
officers
are
currently
on
section
8
housing
here
in
the
city.
It
is
too
expensive
in
Salt,
Lake
City
for
me
to
live
here
with
my
wages.
C
That's
why
I
live
30
miles
north
and
I'm
charged
$180
a
month
to
bring
my
police
car
home,
but,
like
I
said
housing
is
a
very,
very
important
subject:
21
million
dollars
we're
asking
for
less
than
a
quarter
of
that
to
fund
the
raise
that
we're
asking
for
I
like
to
ask
a
simple
question:
who
looks
out
for
those
who
protect
others
in
this
instance
for
wages?
That
is
you
guys.
C
You
know
why
I'm
here,
like
I,
said
wages
were
we're
not
competitive
in
the
state
we
used
to
be.
We
used
to
lead
in
wages
for
police
officers.
Now
we're
eight
to
ten
below
every
day,
I
go
to
work,
I
kiss
my
kids
goodbye.
Knowing
that
I
may
not
come
home.
I
answer
calls
for
help.
I
stand
up
for
those
who
cannot
stand
up
for
themselves.
I've
been
given
the
power
to
be
able
to
do
so.
Councilmembers
you
have
the
power
to
be
able
to
stand
up
for
us.
C
C
R
Members
of
the
Salt
Lake
City
Council
I'm
Kevin
Murray
I'm,
currently
assigned
to
the
graveyard
Patrol
of
the
east
side
of
the
city.
As
an
officer
I've
seen
the
darkest
most
unforgettable
things
that
a
person
can
possibly
experience.
I've
seen,
victims
of
violent
crimes
died
before
my
eyes,
while
pleading
with
me
to
save
them.
I've
lied
to
a
light
next
to
a
fellow
officer,
while
his
life
slipped
from
this
world,
I've
told
parents
many
times
that
their
children
have
died
from
traumatic
ways.
R
I've
had
to
remove
crying
children
from
parents
arms
because
the
parents
have
mistreated
their
child,
I've
saved
lives
and
I've
taken
a
life
members
of
the
City
Council
I
do
not
list
these
instances
for
the
purpose
of
a
resume.
But
to
give
you
an
example
of
what
an
average
police
officer
experiences
on
a
regular
basis,
I,
don't
know
of
an
officer
that
Chai's
away
from
these
situations,
because
we
would
all
rather
bear
the
burden
of
experiencing
these
horrible
things
in
order
to
spare
others
from
seeing
them.
R
Since
moving
down
to
Salt
Lake
City
Police
Department
I
have
not
been
able
to
help
people
as
much
as
I
feel
I
should,
as
a
Salt,
Lake
City
police
officer,
I
can
only
take
home.
My
patrol
vehicle,
if
I
live
within
35
miles
of
the
city
in
my
career
I
have
always
been
allowed
to
bring
home
a
police
car
in
many
cases,
while
driving
to
work
I've
had
opportunities
to
help
citizens
and
traffic
accidents
or
other
emergency
situations.
R
I
currently
have
47
miles
away
from
the
border
of
city
and
as
such,
I'm
not
allowed
to
bring
a
police
vehicle
home
during
my
commute,
I
often
face
situations
that,
as
a
police
officer
I
should
intervene,
however
I'm
not
able
to
since
I
am
in
a
personal
vehicle.
Two
of
these
examples
are
I
was
driving
to
work
in
my
personal
vehicle,
dressed
in
my
uniform
in
a
heavy
snowstorm
on
I-15,
as
I
was
driving.
I
observed
a
large
suburban
roll
off
the
freeway
since
I
was
in
my
personal
vehicle.
R
I
did
not
have
emergency
lights,
cones,
flares
or
even
a
first-aid
kit
to
assist
in
any
way
do
the
lack
of
emergency
equipment
I
could
not
help
the
people
involved,
as
I
was
trying
to
find
a
way
to
get
to
the
accident.
Many
people
passed
me
in
my
uniform
and
looked
at
me
not
doing
anything.
It
was
at
that
time.
I
felt
the
shame
to
be
in
a
police
uniform
seconds.
The
second
instance
was
one
night:
I
was
driving
into
work
time.
O
Good
evening,
City
Council,
and
thank
you
again
for
this
opportunity
to
speak
with
you.
As
most
of
you
know,
I'm
Steve,
winters
and
I
am
a
Salt
Lake
City
Police
Department
Association
president
on
April,
2nd
I
stood
before
you
and
ask
for
your
support.
Dealing
with
the
current
salary
inequity.
I
am
very
aware
of
the
City
Council's
policy
pertaining
to
discussion
with
us
during
negotiations.
I
want
you
to
know
salary
negotiations,
although
moving
forward,
are
they
dangerous
crossroads
and
reaching
enormous
frustrations
when
I
stood
you
before
you?
O
The
last
time,
I
mentioned
that
Salt
Lake
City
police
officers
to
call
for
services
or
twice
what
other
agencies
do
officer
Salt
Lake
are
subject
to
assaults
more
often
than
other
agencies,
so
it
looks.
The
police
officers
have
to
deal
with
a
full
house
of
law
enforcement
issues
that
other
agencies
do
not.
Although,
while
we
do
this,
we
do
reduce
pay
rate.
Currently
offices
in
Salt
Lake
City
are
more
likely
to
be
involved
in
critical
incidents.
Critical
incidents
like
April,
8th
and
just
a
few
weeks
shortly
after
I
spoke
with
you.
O
Officers
in
Salt
Lake
City
had
to
deal
with
our
first
ruling
active
shooter.
Currently
Tim
Salt
Lake
City
police
officers
remain
on
administrative
leave
from
that
incident
was
15
total
officers
involved
in
that
critical
portion.
This
is
just
a
small
illustration
as
to
what
police
officers
in
Salt
Lake
City
do
on
a
regular
basis.
O
M
My
name
is
Adam
Gaiman,
and
one
of
the
things
was
I've
noticed
with
housing.
Issues
is
the
fact
that
a
lot
of
apartment
complexes
have
a
lot
of
rules
that
a
lot
of
people
can
be
kicked
out
because
I
listen
to
some
of
the
other
comments
that
were
being
made
about
housing
in
that,
and
the
thing
is,
is
a
lot
of
rules
that
are
made
are
actually
against
our
constitutional
rights
and
especially
in
the
low-income
housing
community.
That
actually
is
a
big
thing.
M
Knowing
is
the
that's
the
thing
where
you
have
to
have
a
birth
certificate,
but
yet
in
order
to
get
your
birth
certificate,
you
have
to
have
an
ID,
but
yet
I
know
that
these
things
are
put
in
the
place
on
purpose
plus.
The
other
thing
I
have
to
say
is:
there's
been
a
big
problem
with
these
scooters
that
are
on
the
sidewalks
I've
personally,
almost
been
hit
by
multiple
people
that
are
using
them
that
people
leave
these
scooters
in
the
middle
of
the
sidewalks
in
front
of
curb
cuts
and
where
you
hit
the
light.
B
E
When
it
comes
to
renting
how
many
of
you
have
heard
of
a
lease
initiation
fee,
you
have
great
okay
leaves
initiation
fees
have
become
commonplace
in
Utah
over
the
past
three
years
and
they
should
make
you
mad.
I
spoke
with
three
property
management
companies
today,
boardwalk
Ameri,
true
and
rise.
All
three
explain
that
these
fees
pay
to
process
the
lease
paperwork,
marketing
and
pay
for
the
property
manager
to
inspect.
To
move
out.
Boardwalk
said
their
250
dollar
fee
pays
for
the
property
manager
to
prep
and
process
the
lease
and
to
do
a
move-out
inspection.
E
I
asked
if
I'm
paying
the
employee
salary
in
their
answer
and
I
quote.
Yes,
that
is
what
it
is
for.
The
other
two
were
more
hesitant
to
own
up
to
this
fact,
but
their
answers
were
the
same
processing
the
lease
and
marketing
efforts
to
get
the
unit
rented.
Let's
break
down
some
numbers
to
better
understand
why
these
fees
are
spammy
and
need
to
be
abolished.
The
national
median
salary
for
a
property
manager
is
roughly
fifty
thousand
dollars
a
year,
which
is
roughly
twenty
four
dollars
an
hour.
E
Splitting
the
average
lease
initiation
in
half
of
$250
would
make
a
hundred
and
twenty
five
to
process
a
lease
at
another
hundred
and
twenty-five
to
inspect,
to
move
out
at
twenty
four
dollars
an
hour.
A
property
manager
would
need
to
process
a
lease
for
a
little
over
five
hours
to
equal
a
rate
of
a
hundred
and
twenty
five
dollars.
While
I
have
not
processed
a
lease
before
it's
hard
to
imagine,
it
would
take
more
than
half
the
day
to
do
so.
E
There
are
no
statutes
or
municipal
codes
regarding
this
fee,
with
the
majority
of
deposits
equal
to
one
month's
rent,
adding
additional
fees
to
pay
the
employees
not
hired
by
the
tenant
is
unethical.
These
initiation
fees
disproportionately
affect
lower-income
residents,
I'm
almost
done
making
the
basic
right
to
shelter
increasingly
out
of
reach.
It
isn't
enough
to
argue
that
landlords
won't
get
too
unreasonable
because
they
can't
rent
their
property.
The
entire
nation
is
in
a
housing
crisis
and
it
hasn't
stopped.
Anyone
from
raising
rent
housing
is
and
should
always
be,
a
human
right.
A
M
F
Can't
tell
this
working
so
I'm,
just
gonna
talk
really
loud
and
we're
gonna
go
back
to
housing
and
a
lots
been
said,
but
not
enough
ever
gets
said
about
that
I'm
very
lucky
and
I
heard
some
very
sad
stories,
and
some
of
you
know
that
about
homelessness.
I've
worked
with
some
of
you
on
after
requesting
some
very
fine
people
on
some
very
fine
committees,
and
some
progress
has
been
made
through
channels,
but,
as
we
learned
recently
in
this
legislative
session
channels,
don't
always
work
and
majority
of
our
legislature
doesn't
give
a
damn
what
we
say.
F
So
sometimes
we
got
to
go
beyond
channels
anyway,
we're
going
to
stay
within
the
rule
tonight,
not
enough
is
being
done.
You
know,
I
have
an
issue.
Now,
that's
quite
serious
to
me,
involving
you,
know
the
loss
of
my
rent
checks.
This
is
the
second
time
has
happened.
I'm
a
section
8
voucher
resident
at
a
complex
in
Murray.
Try
to
get
someone
at
the
Housing
Authority
on
the
phone
doesn't
happen,
not
gonna
happen.
If
you
go
up
there,
you
might
be
able.
F
Emails
haven't
been
answered
so
on
so
forth,
I
guess
what
I'm
saying
here
is
that
developers
and
and
management
companies
and
landlords
seem
to
have
more
rights
than
people
looking
for
housing.
You
know,
and
three
to
five
years
is
way
too
long
to
wait
when
you're
on
the
street
trying
struggling
to
survive
every
day
and
want
to
get
into
a
home
and
have
the
means
to
do
that.
But
it's
just
not
available
or
what
is
available
is
not
affordable.
I
applaud
all
the
fine
people
that
I've
worked
with.
F
You
know
some
that
were
here
earlier
and
spoke,
you
know,
and
but
they're
doing
you
know
some
good
work
and
some
some
little
progress
is
being
made.
But
it's
just
not
enough.
More
needs
to
be
done
and
you
need
to
hear
more
of
these
personal
stories
in
sort
of
crunching
numbers
and
collecting
data,
and
you
know
know
what
it's
really
like,
because
those
who
do
and
and
in
our
suffering
now
we
do
know,
and
we
need
you
to
know.
T
Hello,
my
name
is
Winston
Siler
I'm
here
to
talk
about
the
fourth
Avenue
well.
Project
I
am
a
resident
on
Canyon
Road,
but
I
think
that
those
of
us
from
Canyon
Road
advocate
for
the
many
thousands
who
enjoy
the
canyon,
road
and
memory
grove
parks,
I'm,
also,
geologists,
have
planned,
designed
and
drilled
just
shy
of
300
Wells
myself.
Therefore,
general
comments
I'd
like
to
make
about
the
project.
First,
the
well
can
be
relocated
further
up
the
canyon
above
Canyon
Road,
a
memory
grove
parks
and
be
expected
produce
similar
volumes
of
fresh
drinking
water.
T
There
are
multiple
grade
locations
where
new
well
could
be
easily
plumbed
into
the
existing
water
main
well
place
upstream.
The
canyon
will
draw
from
the
same
aquifer.
Second,
if
the
well
is
to
be
updated,
its
current
location
there's
reasonable
opportunity
to
decrease
the
plan
footprint
by
about
thirty
percent
with
the
use
of
modern
high
accuracy.
Mass
flow
meters
such
as
Coriolis
effect
meters
and
electromagnetic
flow
meters,
manufacturers
by
companies
like
Emerson,
Crone,
Yokogawa
and
Omega.
T
This
is
just
to
say
that
they're
commercially
and
readily
readily
available
off-the-shelf
solutions
to
significantly
reduce
the
pump
house
footprint
from
it's
currently
as
planned.
Third,
the
use
of
electric
submersible
pump
could
require
no
air-conditioning,
create
no
noise,
that
the
pump
would
be
several
hundred
feet
deep
within
the
well
and
could
decrease
the
height
and
footprint
of
the
building
from
its
current
design.
And,
finally,
the
current
architectural
design
meets
a
low
bar
for
a
structure,
that's
supposed
to
last
a
hundred
years.
T
So
in
summary,
I
think
the
geology
supports
the
viability
of
a
well
in
a
different
location,
up
the
canyon
producing
the
same
water
volumes.
Secondly,
they're
reasonable
and
existing
technology
and
engineering
that
can
decrease
the
footprint
by
about
thirty
percent.
If
it's
got
to
be
at
this
current
location
and
finally,
the
current
plan
submitted
or
not
at
an
aesthetic
that
generations
would
look
fondly
upon
through
the
anticipated
100
year
lifespan
of
the
well
and
when
future
generations
look
at
the
history
history
of
Public
Utilities
projects.
T
F
Hi
I'm
homeless,
a
little
about
me.
I
lived
in
a
3400
square
foot
home
that
I
rented
by
myself
for
six
years
before
I
lost
my
fingers
in
a
workplace.
My
job
was
to
take
parts
blueprints
from
engineers
and
program
industrial
robots
to
make
them
I
have
been
homeless.
Pretty
much
since
the
loss
of
my
fingers,
because
I
am
now
stuck
on
workers,
compensation,
I,
don't
qualify
for
food
stamps;
I,
don't
qualify
for
disability;
I,
don't
qualify
for
apartments
due
to
not
having
verifiable
income.
F
F
F
F
F
O
F
D
This
is
in
regards
to
the
fourth
avenue
wealth
project.
Two
years
ago,
we
bought
our
one
hundred
sixteen
year
old
home
that
overlooks
the
park
that
this
well
is
going
to
be
updated,
and
this
Park
belongs
to
everyone,
and
I
can
attest
that
everyone
uses
this
park,
all
walks
of
life.
All
people
I
know
this
because
I
talked
to
them.
I
give
them
water
I,
pet,
their
dogs
I,
we
care.
We
are
stewards
of
this
park.
D
People
love
coming
here
because
of
the
mature
trees,
the
park
like
setting
the
the
safe
environment
and
the
happy
vibe
of
people
that
are
spending
time
with
family
friends
or
just
seeking
solace
and
peace.
When
we
bought
this
house,
we
did
our
research
and
knew
what
our
stewardship
and
limitations
would
be
in
regard
to
living
in
this
neighborhood
and
this
designated
historic
district,
it
seemed
worth
it
as
we
knew.
The
integrity
of
the
neighborhood
would
be
stable
and
protected
by
the
standards
which
everyone
must.
D
We
willingly
assume
the
responsibility,
knowing
that
it
would
require
more
time,
energy,
creativity
and
expense.
We
did
this
with
the
knowledge,
trust
and
expectation
that
the
city
would
abide
by
the
same
standards
that
we
all
have
to
and
be
willing
also
to
invest
more
time,
energy,
creativity
and
expense,
if
needed,
in
preserving
the
historic
personality
of
this
Park
in
neighbourhood.
We
all
agree
that
clean
water
and
safe
working
conditions
are
vital.
D
I
believe
that
we
can
balance
the
needs
with
the
historic
boundaries
I've
talked
with
hundreds
of
people
from
all
over
the
world,
literally
and
all
demographics,
all
living
situations
and
discussed
the
needs
and
the
current
plans
for
this
park.
Not
one
person
thinks
this
is
a
good
idea.
We,
as
neighbors
and
community,
have
drawn
on
experience,
resources
and
expertise
in
gathering
and
presenting
viable
options
that
would
reduce
the
negative
impact
on
this
historic
park.
We
respectfully
ask
you
to
take
them
into
consideration.
I
will
close
with.
E
Hi,
my
name
is
Vicki
Walker
I
also
live
on
Canyon,
Road
and
I'm
here
to
talk
about
the
fourth
well
project
I.
Thank
you,
miss
Mendenhall,
for
your
thoughtful
consideration
today,
I.
Thank
you,
Chris
for
your
time
and
energy
that
you've,
given
us
and
I'd
like
to
encourage
everyone
to
read
the
the
well
program,
the
alternative
situations
that
they
proposed
today
and
here's.
Why
I'm
going
to
save
you
2.5
million
dollars?
E
And
if
you
read
that
you
can
realize
how
you
can
save
2.5
million
dollars,
because
2.5
million
dollars
can
go
to
a
lot
better
use
than
a
new
well
pump
that
the
neighborhood
doesn't
want.
Here's
how
you
save
your
money
option
number
one
leave
the
well
in
place
at
a
new.
Well,
liner!
Your
cost
is
a
hundred,
and
fifty
two
thousand
dollars
extends
the
life
of
the
well
seventy-five
to
a
hundred
years.
E
If
you
say
we
put
a
new
casing
in
it,
the
cost
of
the
the
new
well
that
they
want
to
build
is
two
million
six
hundred
sixty-eight
thousand
dollars
the
reason
they
want
to
build
the
new
well
as
they
say
that
its
workers
safety.
They
are
the
reason
they
want
to
build
and
and
well
pump
house
is
a
misnomer.
It's
not
a
well
pump
house,
it's
a
chlorination
facility
and
there's
mendon
how
you
were
absolutely
right.
The
whole
problem
with
it
is
that
it
has
chlorine
and
that's
what
we
don't
want
in
our
neighborhood.
E
We
have
two
problems
with
it
number
one,
the
size
and
the
footprint
that
it
takes
up
nearly
two-thirds
of
the
park,
and
if
you
have
a
building
there,
you
have
six
avenues
of
parking
coming
into
that
one
space
it
sits
down
in
a
canyon
and
it
that
is
where
everything
merges.
So
you
have
a
traffic
problem.
You
already
have
a
traffic
problem
on
weekends
and
then
you
have
a
visual
problem
caused
by
their
new.
Well,
so
that's
the
number
one
problem
is
the
size
of
the
building.
E
The
other
problem
that
we
have
with
the
with
the
house
is
that
it's
a
chlorination
facility
and
Ike
will
write
to
you
about
the
problems
with
the
chlorination
and
you're
absolutely
right,
miss
Mendenhall.
You
can
chlorinate
in
another
place
with
no
problems.
I
I
also
will
email
you
this
put
out
by
the
state
of
Utah
March
1st
2019.
They
were
not
aware
of
this
rule.
Thank
you.
Thank.
A
F
Hi,
my
name
is
Adair
and
I'm.
Gonna
talk
about
affordable
housing
like
a
number
of
people
here
today
and
I
want
to
talk
about
how
we're
building
housing
in
this
city
right
now
so
I
live
in
sugarhouse
I
can
see
a
lot
of
luxury
apartments
going
up.
People
even
in
Rose
Park,
can
see
them
starting
to
encroach
on
their
area.
F
Think
the
city
has
the
power
to
just
stop
permitting
housing
to
actually
respond
to
this
housing
crisis
and
say
you
know
what
we're
gonna
put
a
moratorium
on
development
of
high
income
housing
until
we
have
enough
housing
for
those
people
who
are
on
the
streets
who
are
disabled,
who
are
currently
worried
about
getting
kicked
out
of
their
current
housing,
and
these
things
are
linked.
When
we
have
these
high
high
cost
apartments
coming
in
even
existing
housing
in
the
area,
the
prices
go
up.
F
We
see
local
businesses
that
have
to
move
or
clothes,
as
well
as
people
who
have
to
move
out
of
their
neighborhoods.
We
see
communities
that
have
culturally
existed
in
an
area
for
a
long
time
now
no
longer
exists.
The
local
businesses
that
were
part
of
their
community
no
longer
exists.
They
can
no
longer
live
near
the
other
people
that
have
been
in
their
community
for
so
long.
F
So
we
do
not
need
more
luxury
apartments
and
we
should
not
be
permitting
these
to
be
built.
We
also
see
problems
with
the
concentration
of
wealth
talking
about
concentration
of
poverty.
What
about
the
concentration
of
wealth
where
we
have
people
moving
in
and
they
want
to
Vic
people
from
homeless,
shelters
from
homeless
hospices
and
for
bringing
on
the
streets
when
they
have
no
other
option?
Thank
you.
Thank.
B
Hi,
my
name
is
Victor
I'm,
a
local
poor
person
that
lives
in
the
valley.
I
came
here
here
today
to
express
the
extreme
need
to
alleviate
the
housing
crisis.
That's
growing
in
the
city,
the
utah
and
all
over
the
country.
Really,
I've
seen
really
nothing
done
about
increasingly
unhappy.
Polier
operation
great-grand
failed,
even
though
it
wasn't
really
a
solution.
To
begin
with,
it
seems
like
the
city's
content
to
ignore
the
problem,
and
when
that
problem
increases,
it
seems
like
it
tries
harder
to
ignore
it.
B
Smoke,
scale,
solutions
and
initiatives,
aren't
really
gonna
cut
it.
Tens
of
thousands
people's
across
the
valley
struggle
to
pay
their
rent
every
month,
they're
forced
to
pay
their
landlords
dinner
instead
of
their
children's
dinner
and
that's
fundamentally
unjust.
Just
building
more
housing
will
not
fix
this
problem.
We
need
smart
policies
that
give
power
back
to
the
tenants.
They
are
the
ones
mostly
most
directly
affected
by
the
housing
market,
not
the
property
owners
and
not
the
speculators.
There
are
so
many
options.
B
Moving
forward,
there's
been
talk
about
SROs,
inclusionary
zoning,
giving
renters
right
to
counsel
and
ending
the
criminalization
of
homelessness.
The
truth
is,
we
have
to
do
all
of
this
and
more.
The
problem
is
too
large
to
just
have
one
or
just
even
a
few
solutions.
My
hope
is
that
you
will
leverage
the
power
that
you've
been
entrusted
to
be
bold
and
have
courage
and
do
something,
because
this
crisis
will
not
go
away
on
its
own.
Thank
you.
Thank.
D
Hi,
my
name
is
Casey
Fralick.
Excuse
me,
I'm
a
worker
I'm,
a
student
I'm,
a
Salt,
Lake,
City,
resident
and
I'm
here
today
in
solidarity
with
my
friends
to
advocate
for
housing,
equity
and
justice,
but
really
quick
I
also
want
to
say
that
I
also
oppose
the
fourth
Avenue
well
project
I
love
that
park,
so
much
I
walk
through
there
every
day
and
I
just
met
the
cutest
pugs
in
the
world.
They're
like
two
days
ago
is
the
best
thing.
D
D
I
would
also
like
to
advocate
for
a
citywide
single
room,
occupancy
the
right
to
counsel
for
individuals
at
eviction,
court,
more
City
funding
for
NeighborWorks,
Salt
Lake
and
the
decriminalization
of
people
experiencing
homelessness
when
I
lost
my
housing
after
a
breakup
a
year
ago,
which
is
something
that
happens
to
a
lot
of
people.
I
was
able
to
move
back
in
with
my
parents,
and
I
was
so
fortunate
that
they
had
room
for
me
and
we're
willing
to
take
me
in
which
is
not
something
that
can
be
taken
for
granted.
D
As
a
queer
woman,
the
homeless,
youth
Resource
Center
says
that
50%
of
the
youth
that
they
serve
our
LGBTQ
plus-
and
this
is
a
huge
huge
issue
in
our
community
I-
want
you
to
like
really
understand
that.
They're.
The
reason
that
my
situation
ended
up
differently
than
so
many
youth
who
are
now
housing,
insecure
or
homeless,
had
nothing
to
do
with
any
choices
that
I
made
or
any
kind
of
personal
worthiness.
It
was
all
due
to
circumstances
that
were
out
of
my
control.
P
Should
have
just
read
this
all
earlier:
this
is
the
other
half
of
what
I
was
gonna
say
earlier,
so
it
seems
like
there
are
two
paths
that
cities
can
actually
choose.
Logically
speaking,
they
can
choose
the
formal
system
or
they
can
choose
the
informal
system.
If
a
city
chooses
the
formal
system
as
signaled
by
Salt,
Lake
City's
housing
first
program,
it
must
not
permit
rough
sleeping
Salt.
Lake
City
met
a
goal
to
how
the
portion
of
a
demographic
under
housing.
O
My
friends,
they
bring
up
some
good
points.
You
can't
get
an
apartment
anymore.
Without
this.
For
me,
it
was
an
administration
fee.
It's
just
like
200
to
250
dollars.
You've
got
to
pay
just
to
do
the
lease.
It's
a.
How
much
does
that
really
take
if
you
read
through
it
with
them
in
like
five
minutes,
so
why
are
we
paying
$200
$250
for
this
fee
just
to
get
an
apartment
if
you
can
afford
it
in
the
first
place?
It's
ridiculous,
and
also
this
raises
another
one
Brissac
an
excellent
point.
This
is
a
feminist
issue.
O
If
people
don't
have
access
to
affordable
housing,
they're
trapped
inside,
they
feel
trapped
in
abusive
relationships
if
they
can't
escape
they're
stuck
with
this
abusive
individual
or
you
know,
if
they
can't
afford
to
leave,
they
can't
afford
leave
they're
stuck
in
this
abusive
relationship
and
it's
not
great.
It's
it's
criminal.
You
know.
That's
that's
no
way
to
live.
O
How
many
of
us
actually
own
a
home
like
this
son
have
been
affordable,
housing
and
as
far
as
the
landlords
and
rent,
why
can't
we
just
own
houses,
where's
the
affordable
houses
to
buy
like?
Why
are
we
always
subjected
to
other?
It's
not
just
through
our
bosses
at
work,
then
you
come
home
to
his
place.
That's
supposed
to
be
your
home,
where
you
unwind,
relax,
no
you're
still
subject
to
a
landlord.
He
that's
their
property,
that's
they
can
come
in.
They
can
do
whatever
they
want.
O
They
can
make
rules
and
again,
of
course,
there's
laws
that
protect
you
and
stuff,
but
again
you're
under
their
will.
As
far
as
let
us
kick
you
out
and
there's
some
technicality,
you
know
it's
it's
their
property,
it's
their
deed.
They
they
have
all
the
say
and
all
that
control
how
many
people,
how
many
buildings
do
we
think,
are
empty
in
downtown
Salt,
Lake
City
within
like
a
mile
radius
of
this
right
now,
just
a
mile
radius,
probably
good
number
right
how
many
people
are
in
pine.
R
Hello,
my
name
is
Evan
Smith
I've
been
a
resident
of
memory
Grove
for
the
past
28
years.
We're
a
proposed
pump
house
is
slated
to
be
built
across
the
street
from
my
house
I'm
here
with
a
question:
why
would
the
city
spend
millions
of
dollars
over
the
past
25
years
to
tear
out
asphalt
parking
lots
at
the
entrance
to
memory
grove
connecting
walking
paths
from
Temple
Square,
all
the
way
to
City
Creek
Canyon,
an
engineer
way
to
bring
the
creek
above
ground
to
meander
through
thoughtfully
landscaped
island
parks?
R
R
So
why
then-
and
this
is
what
confuses
me
with
the
city-
try
to
cram
and
out
of
proportion,
Jiffy
Lube,
like
structure
into
the
mouths
of
memory,
Grove
I
understand
there
are
safety
issues
with
our
current
well,
but
why
do
improvements
come
at
the
expense
of
visual
serenity?
Do
100
year-old
trees
have
to
be
cut
down
for
a
cinderblock
pumphouse
memory.
Grove
is
a
gem.
I
know
it
is
possible
to
build
a
safe,
discreet
facility
that
does
not
compromise
the
historic
oasis
that
his
memory
grove
I
know.
R
J
Happy
Earth
Day
for
the
people
I
used
today.
So
once
again,
thank
you
so
much
for
listening
to
us.
I
want
to
thank
all
the
bodies
that
came
here
to
voice
their
opinions
and
experiences
and
stories
of
their
housing
and
Justices
and
housing
and
securities.
The
difficulty
to
come
to
these
meetings
in
the
evenings
of
a
work
week
is
more
burdensome
to
those
already
systemically
marginalized.
I
just
want
to
take
a
moment
of
silence
to
honor
their
sacrifices
for
tonight,
because
they
do
not
get
compensated
to
be
here
tonight.
J
I'm,
giving
you
all
an
opportunity
to
reach
out
I
had
the
great
opportunity
to
meet
with
councilmember
Mendenhall
about
the
Morrow's
gracias.
Thank
you.
They
heard
our
concerns,
but
we
not
only
want
to
sit
with
you
at
your
table,
but
we
want
to
sit
at
our
table
as
well.
I
know
we
cannot
offer
you
a
view
of
the
Vivint
arena
nor
the
temple
through
the
large
windows
of
a
hotel
on
the
second
floor
at
the
gateway.
But
what
I
can
offer
are
real
people
living
in
your
city
with
all
their
majesty
and
courage?
J
I
want
you
all
to
really
take
a
hard
look
at
what
our
city
can
be.
We
are
small
enough.
We
are
small
enough
where
I
can
meet
with
each
of
you
within
a
month,
but
we
are
large
enough
where
corporations
playing
are
paying
attention
and
want
to
take
advantage
of
our
naivete
ways
and
system
y'all.
When
we
were
talking
to
Athens
that
you
all
asked,
you
know
why
I
saw
the
city
and
and
what
they
said,
because
you
are
all
up
and
caught
up
in
the
coming
city.
That's
a
direct
quote
from
them.
J
During
a
work
session,
so
I
want
you
to
all
to
not
only
think
about.
You
know
how
much
money
to
put
into
one
program
or
another
I
want
you
to
talk
about.
Rent
control,
I
want
you
to
talk
about
inclusionary
zoning
I,
want
you
to
talk
about
people
owning
homes
and
being
with
each
other,
I
want
you
to
control
growth
and
don't
let
growth
control
us.
Thank
you.
Thank.
A
F
C
Is
a
topic
that
plays
a
massive
role
in
our
school?
We
started
this
project
in
her
history
class,
which
alone
has
75
percent
of
students
working
in
about
half
with
full-time
jobs
and
going
to
school.
This
has
started
to
affect
our
schools,
grades
and
attendance,
and
we
want
to
break
the
cycle
of
children
having
to
support
their
families.
We
want
all
students
to
have
a
chance
to
succeed
and
make
their
future
bright.
Hi.
P
C
C
We
also
had
another
student
in
her
class
that
had
a
shift
that
ended
up
12
o'clock
and
she
tried
to
change
shift
to
an
earlier
time
and
they
wouldn't
let
her,
which
is
perfect,
affecting
her
performance
in
school.
She
came
to
school,
tired,
wasn't
able
to
finish
all
her
homework
and
that's
starting
to
play
a
big
role
in
our
school
with
attendance,
and
we
just
want
everyone
in
school
to
have
their
chance
with
their
future
and
be
able
to
succeed
without
having
to
be
the
ones
to
support
their
families.
S
Your
next
action
item
is
on
Lincoln
towers
are
going
to
give
them
a
loan.
Please
make
sure
that
when
you
do
the
contract
they
are
not
allowed
to
raise
the
rent,
because
invariably
any
kind
of
redo
on
a
senior
housing
project
like
that
they
raise
the
rent.
Please
don't
let
him
do
that.
Let's
talk
about
cops,
Charlie.
Remember
when
a
couple
of
years
ago
you
had
to
fight
the
administration
to
hire
more
cops,
I,
remember
David,
ever
at
ordering
chief
Ross
to
not
allow
you
to
hire
more
cops.
S
Admittedly,
the
administration
is
doing
a
good
job,
making
sure
more
cops
are
on
the
street.
Thank
you
David,
but
we're
not
with
more
cops.
No
more
cops.
You
promised
us
more
cops
and
the
problem,
obviously,
is
we
have
17
18
different
municipalities
here
we're
competing
for
cops.
You
need
to
increase
the
salary
and
we've
been
saying
this
for
years.
You
have
not
enough
cops.
We
want
more
cops.
They're
cops
here
that
have
arrested
the
same
person
a
hundred
times,
that's
unsatisfactory.
That's
so
frustrating
I'm
surprised.
S
We
can
keep
any
cops,
so
I'm
asking
you
counsel
and
the
administration
and
the
Union
to
not
just
submit
a
proposed
budget,
but
to
work
right
now
on
fixing
the
situation
finding
a
solution.
If
we
wait
until
you
provide
the
budget,
it's
too
late,
because
invariably,
every
single
year
for
the
last
decade,
you've
waited
until
last
day
to
finally
finalized
the
salary
for
officers.
It
doesn't
make
sense.
You
should
be
working
right
now
to
save
Public
Safety,
ensure
Public
Safety
and
ensure
that
we
actually
get
more
cops.
A
T
We've
heard
a
lot
of
people
talking
about
housing
and
the
problems
where
you
have
with
housing.
Here's
a
solution
don't
give
up
the
properties
to
the
capitalists.
You
do
that.
You
end
up
with
the
high
prices
that
we
have
already
you're
asking
for
it.
You're
looking
into
a
whole
new
building
structure,
do
not
give
up
the
property
to
set
up
a
board
that
oversees
these
houses
and
their
rent
goes
into
a
public
fund
to
be
used
for
the
city
and
it
stays
in
the
city.
It
doesn't
go
through
some
capitalists
offshore
account.
T
Well,
that
was
even
faster
than
I
thought.
It
was
nothing
eat
so
anyway,
just
know
that
we
appreciate
your
efforts
on
what
what
you're
doing,
but
let's
start
hanging
on
to
the
properties
and
not
turning
it
over
to
people
who
only
want
profit.
C
Hello
I'm
here
to
add
my
lone
voice
to
all
the
other
voices
you've
heard
here
today.
Speaking
on
the
issue
of
affordable
housing,
I
could
not
think
of
a
single,
more
pressing
issue
facing
the
people
of
this
city
locally.
Today,
I
myself
worked
two
jobs.
Almost
everyone
I
know
works
two
to
three
jobs.
Some
people
I
know
work,
full-time
and
sell
their
blood
just
to
be
able
to
have
a
roof
to
put
over
their
children's
heads.
I
also
work
on
a
weekly
basis
with
the
houseless
population
and
I've
met.
C
People
who
become
houses
do
too
just
becoming
ill
I've
met.
Women
who've
had
to
choose
between
exposing
their
children
to
house
lessness
and
continuing
to
have
their
children
in
a
home
with
a
man
who
is
being
violent
with
either
her
or
with
them,
and
I
am
just
here
begging
to
any
of
you
who
would
listen.
Please
we
need
the
single
room
occupancy
is
we
need
rent
control?
We
need.
G
I'll
keep
this
one
short
since
I
went
over
the
last
time,
I
made
the
comments
about
this
are
already
elves
made
couple
comments
about
big-picture
context.
If
local
state
and
federal
governments
continue
to
disregard
low
and
middle
income,
people,
especially
the
working
class
I,
don't
think,
there's
a
better
illustration
of
the
direction
that
our
society
is
going
and
the
working
high
schoolers
who
just
spoke
and
I
think
we
should
really
think
about
the
fact
that
high
schoolers
had
to
come
in
here
and
talk
about
the
fact
that
they're
not
getting
enough
sleep.
G
G
People
are
becoming
more
frustrated
by
remarkable
inequality,
they're
frustrated
by
our
endless
wars,
they're
frustrated
by
the
continued
destruction
of
the
planet
and
they're,
absolutely
tired
of
the
racial
and
gender
hierarchies
and
they're
exhausted
from
feeling
and
left
behind.
We
did
not
ask
to
be
born
into
a
world
where
we
have
to
pay
for
food,
water
and
shelter.
If
business
leaders
and
elected
officials
continue
to
step
on
people,
people
are
going
to
organize
to
make
the
elites
workdays
hell
will
strike.
G
We
will
block
the
streets,
we
will
shut
down
meetings
and
will
remove
people
from
office.
Nobody
wants
to
spend
hours
in
these
meetings
or
participating
civil
disobedience.
We
want
vocations
and
we
want
to
pursue
our
dreams,
but
we
are
being
left
with
no
other
recourse
at
this
point.
I
don't
want
to
see
another
homeless
person
harassed
by
law
enforcement,
especially
while
the
ultra-wealthy
buy
campaigns
foreclose
on
people
for
profit
and
pillage
the
planet
so
to
reaffirm
my
purpose
for
being
here.
Housing
is
a
human
right.
Thank
you.
Thank
you.
H
Hi,
my
name
is
Dave
eltis
just
wanted
to
echo
the
folks
living
next
to
the
City
Creek
Park
on
Canyon
Road
I
frequent.
That
area
use
that
area
a
lot,
and
it's
beautiful.
Please
find
an
alternate
solution
for
this
issue,
but
I'm
here
mainly
to
talk
to
you
about
streetlights
I've,
come
here
since
the
end
of
2017,
asking
that
Salt
Lake
City
develop
a
policy
and
plan
to
deal
with
LED
streetlights
Salt
Lake
has
no
plan
in
place.
I
met
with
I
met
with
a
number
of
people
in
Salt,
Lake
City
last
June.
H
Absolutely
nothing
has
happened
in
regards
to
developing
a
policy
for
safe,
acceptable,
healthy
streetlights,
Salt
Lake
continues
to
replace
streetlights
with
overly
bright
high
color
temperature
streetlights
that
caused
people
to
lose
sleep.
They
caused
birds
to
run
into
buildings,
they're
bad
for
wildlife,
they're
bad
for
safety
because
of
the
high
contrast
and
they're
awful
for
dark
skies.
You
can
no
longer
see
this
guy
and
so
like
City,
you
lose
your
connection
to
the
rest
of
the
world.
As
a
result,
public
utilities
has
no
leadership
on
this.
They
have
done
absolutely
nothing.
H
H
Leds
are
okay,
but
appropriate
ones,
ones
that
are
low,
color
temperature
ones
that
are
low
enough
lumens,
so
that
you
don't
have
an
incredibly
high
contrast
and
ones
that
are
safe
for
people
better
for
dark
skies
and
such
and
we
we
need
to
move
forward
with
that,
and
we
need
to
look
at
a
long-term
replacement
of
the
terrible
choices
that
Salt
Lake
City.
Public
Utilities
is
making.
H
L
My
name
is
Aaron
Shoop
and
I
wanted
to
extend
my
sympathies
to
you,
mr.
Wardin,
about
your
dad
I'm.
Sorry
for
that
loss.
I
had
the
opportunity
a
few
weeks
ago
to
address
you
about
how
this
police,
my
husband,
is
a
police
officer.
I
had
the
opportunity
to
talk
to
you
about
how
this
department
reflects
the
community
that
they
serve
and
apparently
even
down
to
the
housing
issues
through
circumstances.
L
We
are
a
police
family
that
does
have
the
opportunity
to
live
here
in
Salt,
Lake,
City
and
and
to
live
in
a
community
that
my
husband
polices
and
I
can
tell
you
that
Brad
is
a
favorite
friend,
a
favorite
counselor
and
a
constant
representative
in
our
neighborhood.
He
is
a
person
that
people
turn
to.
They
want
advice.
They
want
his
friendship
and
it's
a
really
awesome
opportunity
that
we
have.
L
You
know
that
he
has
to
be
a
constant
representative
in
our
neighborhood
and
the
car
is
a
pretty
good
to
turn
to
we're
pretty
lucky
to
have
a
car
in
the
city.
People
find
us,
and
it
is
a
good
deterrent.
I
just
wanted
to
make
one
point
that
I
hadn't
heard
quite
yet
that
with
the
growth
that
we're
obviously
seeing
right
now
and
that
has
been
predicted
for
us
with
the
growth
that's
happening
right
now,
we're
not
able
to
attract
the
kind
of
police
officers,
the
kind
of
candidates
that
we
want.
L
We
need
to
be
more
competitive
if
we're
able
to
be
more
competitive,
we're
going
to
be
able
to
have
the
candidates.
Now
that
we
want
that,
we
want
as
police
officers,
we
want
to
have
the
best
candidates.
We
want
to
have
the
continuation
of
the
best
police
officers
and
if
we
can't
attract
them
now,
then
we're
not
going
to
be
able
to
attract
them
later
when
this
growth
has
already
progressed
and
is
continuing
to
progress.
L
A
B
I'd
like
to
offer
a
descent
to
the
discussion
of
officers,
wages,
police
brutality
and
police
shootings
are
a
common
occurrence
in
our
state.
I.
Remember
the
story,
a
few
years
back
of
the
University
of
Utah
nurse
and
a
police
officer
that
made
national
news.
That's
still
in
people's
memories.
They
still
remember
that
I
believe
that
we
need
alternatives
to
police
office.
We
need
more
funding
towards
community
policing,
volunteer,
policing
and
I
feel,
like
the
poor
people
of
our
city,
want
that
they
do
not
want
more
police
officers.
They
do
not
trust
the
police
officers.
A
R
My
name's
Jace
Povich
grew
up
here
in
Salt
Lake
City
Utah
I'd
also
like
to
offer
a
dissent
from
the
increase
in
officer.
Wages
heard
numerous
comments
about
increasing
the
safety
of
communities
and
well,
that
might
be
true
for
the
safety
of
the
police
officers,
communities
and
those
of
the
privileged
class.
While
I'm
recognizing
I
am
a
privileged
white
male.
They
do
not
regularly
protect
the
communities
as
a
whole,
including
folks
with
disabilities,
POC
neighborhoods,
trans
and
queer
communities,
houseless
communities
that
the
council
has
and
numerous
times
offered
that
we
are
trying
to
support
tonight.
R
I
would
like
to
offer
using
those
wages
in
other
spaces
to
support
more
community
ventures,
I'm
a
schoolteacher
and
regularly
see
how
police
officers
interact
with
schools
I
see
when
they
show
up
to
schools.
I
have
students
missing
on
a
daily
basis.
I
have
test
scores,
drop
I
have
things
like
that?
I
have
to
offer
the
dissent
that
increased
in
police
officers
as
a
whole
and
their
wages
is
not
helping
the
larger
communities.
Thank
you.
Thank.
A
You
anyone
else
like
to
speak
tonight:
okay,
well
that'll.
In
the
public
comment
section
of
our
meeting.
We
are
going
to
move
on,
there's
no
City
Council
new
business
tonight,
so
we
were
at
section
F,
unfinished
business
items.
Our
first
item
is
regarding
a
resolution:
Housing
Trust
Fund
loan
to
Lincoln
tower
Houser.