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From YouTube: Salt Lake City Council Formal Meeting - 11/12/2019
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A
Thank
you
very
much.
We
would
like
to
welcome
each
of
you
to
our
City
Council
meeting
this
evening.
We
appreciate
that
you
have
taken
time
out
of
your
day
to
attend
our
meeting
to
participate
and
see
your
local
government
at
work
to
start
the
meeting,
we
have
laid
out
some
guidelines
for
decorum
and
civility
to
make
sure
people
feel
comfortable
and
safe
to
participate.
Please
be
respectful
during
other
people's
comments,
avoid
cheering
jeering,
snapping
fingers
or
any
other
disruptive
noise
that
could
cause
someone
to
feel
intimidated.
A
Please
also
help
take
care
of
this
historic
meeting
room
by
not
standing
on
the
furniture
or
leaning
against
the
decorative
pieces.
If
you
have
a
sign
a
prop
or
other
piece
of
equipment,
I
don't
know
if
we
have
any
tonight,
if
you
have
any
of
those
things,
video
equipment,
etc,
etc.
Please
make
sure
that
it
does
not
cost
disruption
or
block
other
people's
views.
Other
people's.
Do
you
excuse
me,
and
signs
wider
than
your
chair
should
be
displayed
in
the
hall.
Please
also
items
like
sticks
and
dolls
are
not
allowed.
A
Please
do
not
approach
the
Dyess
up
here.
If
you
have
something
to
pass
out
to
the
council,
a
staff
member
can
assist
you,
who
are
the
staff
members
here
tonight.
If
you
raise
your
hands
side
over
here?
Okay,
actually,
if
you
have
any
other
questions
tonight
throughout
the
meetings,
we
need
some
assistance.
The
staff
members
can
help
you
out
any
of
those
things
and
just
raise
your
hand,
so
they
know
to
come
in
and
help
you
out.
Also.
A
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,
Salt
Lake,
SLC,
Council
comm,
or
refer
to
the
contact
information
sheets
by
the
speaker
cards
for
information
about
other
ways
to
share
your
comments
with
the
council
via
email
phone
or
mail.
I'll,
probably
reiterate
this
later
during
our
our
public
comment
time.
We
do
ask
to
limit
to
two
minutes.
A
Each
I
know
it's
not
a
lot
of
a
time,
but
with
this
many
people
and
I'll
make
sure
everyone
gets
a
shan't
chance
tonight.
I
have
been
accused
of
being
a
little
too
lenient
about
that
in
the
past.
So
I
apologize
to
those
you
who
have
taken
more
than
two
minutes
of
time,
but
tonight
I'm
gonna
have
to
cut
you
off
at
two
minutes
over
here,
you'll
hear
a
little
beeper
and
Cindy,
or
somebody
will
just
remind
you.
Your
two
minutes
are
up
I
would
ask
you
to
finish
your
sentence,
you're
on
and
then
I'll.
A
Okay
to
begin
with
tonight
we
are
gonna,
do
item
a3
approval
of
minutes
for
the
work
session
meetings,
minutes
of
Tuesday
September
30,
2019,
Tuesday,
September,
24,
2009,
teen
and
Tuesday
October,
8
2019,
as
well
as
a
formal
meeting
minutes
of
Tuesday
October,
8th
2019
and
Tuesday
October
15th
2019.
So.
B
A
We
have
a
motion
by
councilmember
Fowler
second
by
councilmember,
Luke
I,
believe
any
discussion
all
in
favor
aye
any
opposed
that
motion
passes
next
design
of
a
five
regarding
a
ceremonial
resolution
declaring
November
as
Native
American
Heritage
Month
in
Salt
Lake
City
I
will
turn
the
time
over
to
councilmember
Luke
to
read
the
resolution.
Thank.
C
You
mr.
chair
a
little
bit
of
context
on
this,
we've
we've
done
this
before.
But
what
we're
going
to
do
this
year
is
a
little
bit
different
from
what
we've
done
in
the
past.
This
will
become
an
annual
resolution
where
we
will
do
the
same
thing
which
we
traditionally
do
with
December
being
Utah
AIDS
month.
This
is
we're
going
to
be
declaring
every
November
moving
forward
as
Native
American
Heritage
Month
in
Salt,
Lake
City.
C
A
C
A
A
A
Did
fail
to
do
two
things.
One
was
to
excuse
council
members,
Mendenhall
and
Wharton,
who
are
both
unavailable
tonight.
The
second
thing
is
for
anyone
who
parked
in
the
underground
library
parking
garage.
We
do
have
validations
for
you.
If
you
see
a
member
of
our
staff,
they
can
get
one
for
you
tonight.
A
We
will
now
hold
the
public
hearing
portion
of
our
meeting.
We
have
a
few
opportunities
for
public
comment
tonight
and
we'll
call
people
based
on
the
comment
cards
that
have
been
turned
in
I
will
call
people
two
at
a
time.
The
first
person
please
come
forward
to
the
microphone
and
the
second
person
please
be
ready
to
follow.
Comment.
A
Time
is
limited
again
to
two
minutes
per
person,
and
you
cannot
combine
time
with
another
speaker
and
as
a
reminder,
please
create
a
civil
and
respectful
meeting
by
and
not
making
loud
noises
or
other
disruptions,
not
blocking
people's
views,
and
if
you
have
things
to
pass
out
actually
to
us,
our
staff
members
can
pick
it
up
and
hand
it
to
us
as
well.
Just
let
us
know
we
have
some
comment
cards.
I
believe.
A
The
first
hearing
is
b1
regarding
in
an
ordinance
to
rezone
a
property
at
1937,
south
and
12
East
from
RM
F
35,
moderate
density,
FEM
multifamily
to
arm
F
45,
moderate
density,
multifamily
and
I'm
gonna
call
folks
up
again,
like
I
said.
If
you
filled
out
a
comment
card
and
I
call
it
now,
but
you
actually
want
to
speak
to
something
other
than
this
item.
A
D
Good
evening
my
name
is
Judy
shorten
and
the
land
use
chair
for
the
sugarhouse
Community
Council.
The
developer
of
the
parcel
1937
South
1200
East
said
that
one
of
the
reasons
he
wanted
to
tear
the
house
down
and
build
apartments
was
because
the
house,
which
is
a
wonderful
bungalow
of
sugar
house,
was
an
outlier
on
the
street
because
all
the
rest,
our
apartments
and
I'm
sure
that
house
was
there
before
I
need
the
apartments
were
there.
D
D
1200
east
already
has
more
people
on
it,
and
cars
than
the
street
will
hold.
One
of
the
parcels
to
be
redeveloped
actually
holds
paid
parking,
25
spaces
for
people
who
live
in
the
Irving
Heights
apartment
that
will
disappear
under
this
redevelopment,
and
then
there
will
be
25
cars
hunting
for
no
spaces
on
the
street,
so
adding
another
apartment
doesn't
seem
feasible
to
us.
D
The
people
who
live
in
the
neighbors
have
neighborhood
have
talked
about
their
quality
of
life.
They
feel
like
their
children,
can't
play
in
the
front
yards
of
their
street
and
they
don't
feel
comfortable
walking
to
sugar
house
to
run
errands,
so
they
actually
drive
their
car.
If
you
can
imagine
into
the
heart
of
sugar
house
from
12th,
east
or
Ramona,
because
the
traffic
is
so
fast
and
so
frequent
that
they
don't
feel
safe,
so
I
don't
think
adding
another
apartment,
building
and
more
people.
D
D
Hi
I'm
Lynn
Schwartz
vice-chair
community
council,
land
use
and
zoning
committee.
What
we
don't
want
to
see
is
a
line
of
forty
five
foot
buildings
marching
down
twelve
East
over
any
of
the
side
streets
for
that
matter
that
have
managed
to
escape
the
this
fate.
A
mix
of
low
rise
apartments
and
single-family
houses
will
keep
a
rapidly
disappearing
sense
of
livable
scale
in
existence.
D
A
bulwark
if
you
will,
against
the
continued
modification
of
sugar
house
parking
and
traffic,
are
an
issue
now
and
will
only
be
exacerbated
by
the
increase
in
density
that
will
occur
even
with
the
existing
zoning,
not
to
speak
of
even
more
cars
with
a
larger
project.
This
is
an
issue
of
a
community
and
a
larger
issue
of
community
itself.
It
is
time
for
all
participants
in
the
community
to
act
as
if
it
is
a
community
and
not
a
commodity
from
which
to
wring
the
last
penny,
a
profit.
D
There
is
no
groundswell
for
more
luxury
housing
from
the
community.
There
is
a
crying
need
for
affordable
housing,
so
that
folks,
who
work
in
all
these
chain
stores
can
actually
afford
to
live
in
their
community.
There
is
no
reason
that
there
cannot
be
a
mix
of
both
high
priced
and
affordable
even
in
the
same
project.
The
Liberty
Village
project
has
done
this
successfully,
so
it
is
not
a
pie
in
the
sky
idea,
but
I
digress.
The
existing
zoning
was
enacted
with
this
level
of
density
for
a
reason,
and
that
reasoning
still
holds
I.
E
As
you
should
be
aware,
temperatures
are
dropping
in
the
most
marginalized
members
of
our
community.
The
community
that
you
took
an
oath
to
represent
are
being
turned
away
from
the
new
shelters,
as
they
have
400
fewer
beds
in
the
Red
Road
home's
existing
capacity.
Despite
public
pressure
to
keep
the
road
home
open.
This
council
and
the
state
government
have
plan
to
shut
it
down
as
the
final
part
of
operation
Rio
Grande.
E
This
is
an
attack
on
the
homeless
population
in
Salt,
Lake
City,
and
we
are
demanding
that
you
immediately
take
the
following
action:
1
keep
the
road
home
open
through
April
to
have
at
a
minimum
the
equivalent
number
of
beds
made
readily
available
and
accessible
prior
to
closing
the
road
home,
3,
no
arrests,
tickets
or
harassment
for
campers
until
at
least
the
equivalent
number
of
beds
are
made
readily
available
for
change.
The
existing
legislation
to
allow
for
the
new
centers
to
have
more
beds
and
5
free
public
transit
fare
for
all
people
who
stay
in
shelters.
E
A
10-page
report
from
the
American
Civil,
the
Civil
Liberties
Union
of
Utah,
was
released
the
first
week
of
November
not
2019.
In
this
report.
The
long
term
damages
of
operation,
Rio
Grande
are
assessed
and
it
finds
that
the
operation
was
a
disaster.
The
report
noted
that
the
impact
of
arrests
and
fines
do
not
easily
vanish
from
the
people's
list
of
troubles,
especially
those
with
limited
resources,
but
reverberate
often
for
low-level
offenses
that
including
camping,
jaywalking
and
open
container
violations.
E
Non
violent
misdemeanors
that
lead
to
arrest
warrants
often
serve
as
barriers
to
services,
housing
and
jobs,
in
other
words,
operation.
Rio
Grande
not
only
failed
with
its
intent
to
restore
the
order
and
safety
for
those
experiencing
homelessness,
but
is
a
clear
example
of
negligence
and
incompetence
on
part
on
the
part
of
those
involved
in
creating
and
implementing
policies.
That
note
don't.
A
A
A
A
If
that's
okay
with
you
all,
if
you
want
to
speak
of
the
road
home
and
you
have
to
put
a
pink
card
in,
can
you
just
let
me
know
and
I'll
put
it
in
the
stack
for
the
road
home
discussion
and
then
folks,
who
want
to
speak
about
the
zoning
issue
we
can
get
through?
The
zoning
issue
is
that
okay,
Leila
is
next
up.
Okay,.
G
Andrea,
we're
gonna
respect
people's
bodies
right
now,
okay,
so
it
is
all
your
responsibility,
along
with
the
state
government,
to
take
care
of
unsheltered
members
of
our
community
and
we
are
calling
on
you
to
accept
and
immediately
implement
these
demands
as
a
first
step
in
a
long
fight
in
homelessness
of
Salt
Lake
City.
The
adoption
of
these
demands
will
be
undoubtedly
save
lives
this
winter,
since
people
will
be
able
to
go
to
the
shelter
to
stay
warm
and
safe
from
dangerously
low
temperatures.
G
If
the
plan
to
close
the
roads,
home
proceeds,
people
will
die
and
that's
something
that
this
community
will
not
accept,
and
this
is
endorsed
by
black
lives
matter.
Utah,
civil
riot
Dakar,
serrate,
Utah,
Freedom,
Road,
social
organization,
justice
for
Cody
party
for
socialism
and
liberation,
Salt
Lake,
Salt,
Lake,
Democratic,
socialists,
Union
for
Street
solidarity,
University
of
Utah
student
support,
Democratic
Society.
You
talk
against
police
brutality,
Utah
State,
Democratic,
Progressive,
Caucus
and
V.
You
got
a
lot
meghana
right.
G
And
we
and
Johnson,
we
also
understand
that
you
guys
support
the
opening
if
keeping
it
over
over
the
winter.
But
you
know
prayers
and
written
support,
don't
save
lives.
So
we
need
you
guys
to
do
what
we're
doing
and
take
action
and
go
speak
to
the
people
that
do
have
the
power.
You
guys
have
the
political
power
to
make
things
happen
and
resources.
So
we
need
we
need.
We
need.
You
guys
show
up
now
show
up
for
the
community
not
show
up
like
operation,
grill,
Rio,
Grande
style,
but
show
up
community
style
right.
G
Just
just
one
last
thing:
you
know
I'm
in
recovery
right
and
I
work
down
there,
I'm
with
Utah
harm
reduction
coalition.
We
work
with
IV
drug
users
right
and
let's
say
one
last
thing:
okay
and
the
thing
I've
learned
about
recovery.
That
taught
me
anything
else
is
that
you
leave
a
community
better
than
you
found
it.
A
We
want
to
hear
from
everybody
tonight
and
I
can't
keep
having
interruptions
so
we're
going
to
do
this
is
that,
okay,
with
respect
to
a
time
otherwise
I
have
to
I,
have
to
I
have
to
pull
us
out
of
the
room.
Basically,
at
this
point,
so
please
respect
each
other's
time.
We'll
move
through
these.
Everyone
have
a
chance
to
speak
tonight,
hear
everybody
out.
A
E
We
need
to
provide
it
to
all
people,
but
the
zoning
is
restraining
in
so
sugarhouse
in
the
area
that
we're
proposing,
building
more
apartments
is
an
area
that
already
has
apartments.
We
want
to
keep
density
or
density,
belongs
and
not
encroach
on
other
single-family
home
areas,
so
this
area
has
the
block
that
it's
on
is
probably
80%
apartments
and
there's
three
or
four
single-family
homes,
so
we're
suggesting
we
make
better
use
of
the
land
and
produce
more
units
in
this
area.
E
D
So
I
just
want
to
say
thank
you
to
the
council
for
the
time
on
this,
and
obviously
there's
other
issues
that
everyone's
very
passionate
about
a
name.
I'm,
really
glad
that
the
public
is
here
to
speak
about
those
as
well.
I
just
want
to
say
that
we've
tried
really
hard
to
design
a
project
that
we
think
is
appropriate
for
the
area.
Also,
we'll
add
a
housing
and
we
tried
to
do
it
in
a
way.
D
F
Thank
you.
I
live
in
the
property,
that's
just
to
the
north
of
this
area,
so
obviously
I
have
personal
issues
but
I'm
concerned
about
the
demolition
of
the
place
and
the
dusk
and
all
the
things
that
will
happen
with
construction,
but
there's
so
much
traffic.
You
guys
on
the
street.
It's
crazy
and
already
right
now,
I
share
a
driveway
with
my
neighbor
to
the
north,
and
it's
almost
impossible
to
get
out.
F
It's
almost
like
1700
South
trying
to
get
out
I
have
also
a
hydrant
in
front
of
my
place
and
garbage
hasn't
been
taken
out
a
couple
of
times.
There
have
been
times
where
the
garbage
man
won't
take
the
garbage
cans,
because
there's
so
much
cars
in
front
of
my
house,
and
so
that's
an
unsanitary
condition
with
you
know,
I'm
having
it
called
the
the
city
and
say:
hey
I
need
my
garbage.
F
Pails
taken
out,
I
have
to
wheel
my
garbage
back
into
the
driveway
oftentimes,
because
it's
so
compact,
getting
out
of
my
driveway,
is
almost
impossible,
because
the
whoever's
parking
in
front
of
my
house
has
a
little
bit
this
way
over.
My
driveway
and
I'm
unable
to
get
out
or
have
to
scooch
really
hard
I,
take
public
transportation
and
I
bike
most
of
the
time.
I
took
public
transportation
down
here
tonight,
but
it's
still
an
issue
when
I
do
need
to
get
out
of
the
house.
F
H
H
A
A
I
A
J
Good
evening
my
name
is
Sara
Adelman
and
I
am
the
chair
of
the
Liberty
Wells
Community
Council
and
I
specifically
want
to
address
the
budget
amendment
that
would
provide
additional
funding
for
overtime
for
Salt
Lake
City
police
officers
for
park
patrol
first
I
want
to
be
clear
that
individuals
in
crisis
are
not
criminals.
Homelessness
is
not
a
crime
and
addressing
homelessness
is
a
complex
issue
that
requires
a
diverse
set
of
solutions,
most
notably
meaningful
services.
J
However,
over
the
past
two
years,
Liberty
Park
users
have
observed
an
increase
in
overnight
camping,
drug
use
and
conflict
in
the
park.
The
Liberty
Wells
Community
Council
has
engaged
on
this
issue
through
a
community-wide
survey
and
several
meetings
with
community
members
and
city
stakeholders,
for
example,
on
September
4th.
We
were
joined
by
three
other
community
councils,
several
residents
in
the
community
with
for
a
meeting
with
the
police
department
to
address
questions
relating
to
patrolling
and
Public
Safety
in
Liberty
Park.
When
something
goes
wrong.
J
In
a
public
space
like
Liberty
Park,
all
community
members
benefit
from
access
to
public
safety
resources.
The
budget
amendment
request
for
additional
overtime
hours
to
patrol
city
parks
can
help
address.
One
facet
of
a
complex
issue:
it's
not
the
only
solution,
but
it
is
a
part
of
the
solution.
I
echo,
the
questions
the
council
has
put
forward
regarding
this
budget
amendment
request
and
pending
the
answers
to
these
questions,
I
support
the
amendment,
the
budget
amendment
requests.
Thank
you.
K
Good
evening
mr.
chair
members
of
the
council,
I'm
Jason,
Stevenson
I'm,
the
co-chair
of
the
East
Liberty
Park
community
organization
and
actually
Sarah
and
I
would
wanted
to
speak
together
and
in
tandem
because
we
work
together
on
this
issue,
meeting
back
in
September
with
the
community
councils
around
Liberty
Park,
to
figure
out
how
we
could
thread
the
needle
on
this
issue.
It's
a
complex
issue,
as
Sarah
mentioned.
We
don't
think
that
we
can
arrest
our
way
out
of
homelessness
or
any
of
the
social
issues
that
are
associated
with
it.
K
So
it's
a
tricky
thing
and
what
we
figured
out
was
that
community
councils
often
hear
both
sides.
We
hear
from
the
vigilante
side
which
says
you
know
we're
going
to
go
patrol
the
park
on
our
own
and
we're
gonna
kick
people
out.
We
get
those
comments
at
our
community
council
meetings.
We
also
hear
or
actually
the
other
option
is
just
simply
do
nothing
and
hope
for
the
best.
K
We
feel
that
the
second
budget
amendment
the
overtime
that
can
be
allocated
to
Salt
Lake
City
Police,
to
address
this
issue
is
a
good
step
that
trying
to
solve
this
issue,
trying
to
thread
the
needle,
but
it
does
need
some
guardrails
as
well.
One
I
would
recommend
would
be
that
the
police
department
liaison
with
those
community
councils
around
Liberty
Park
to
stay
informed
about
how
it's
going,
what
we're
hearing
from
our
residents,
what
they
can
improve,
what
we
can
adapt
to
make
it
work
better
as
the
process
goes
forward.
K
The
second
is
that
we
would
request
that
the
Salt
Lake
City
police
use
the
coab
responder
model
that
they've
used
throughout
the
city
which
matches
police
officers
with
social
workers.
So
they
can
address
the
issues
that
people
have
and
move
them
towards
the
solutions
that
they
need,
and
one
reason
that
we
think
that
this
could
work
effectively
in
the
parks.
Is
that
people
go
to
the
parks
because
they
don't
want
to
be
found.
They
don't
want
to
be.
You
know
helped
in
some
regard,
and
it's
also
a
place
that
the
hard
to
reach
end
up.
K
So
if
we
can
use
the
co
responder
model
to
reach
out
to
these
hard
cases,
teach
them
about
what
the
new
homeless
Resource
Center's
are
doing.
Let
them
know
that
the
rumors
that,
if
you
have
warrants
or
you
have
probation
you
know
that
the
door
isn't
closed
to
you
at
these
resource.
Centers,
which
we
find
is
something
that
a
lot
of
people
wrongly
believe.
Then
we
can
start
to
turn
the
corner,
as
you
heard
about
this
afternoon
during
your
work
session.
L
L
We
had
six
confirmed
shootings
over
there
last
month
that
doesn't
include
the
six
shootings
that
they
had
earlier
this
summer
that
they
actually
caught
the
guy
that
was
going
around
shooting
in
our
neighborhood
I,
understand
trespassers
or
campers
in
the
park,
but
we
actually
had
bullets
flying
over
their
two
houses
on
either
side
of
me
got
shot
up.
Okay,
no!
L
You
just
spent
four
million
dollars
on
a
hundred
new
police
cars.
There
are
three
three
police
cameras
in
this
entire
city.
There
we
had
two
three
officers
come
to
our
last
community
meeting
and
one
of
them
says
well
they're,
just
shooting
through
the
moonroof
they're,
not
actually
shooting
anything.
Well,
when
you're
hearing
those
guns
go
off,
you
don't
know
where
the
heck
they're
shooting
you
don't
know.
L
If
it's
at
the
house,
you
don't
know-
and
they
said
well,
you
need
to
learn
how
to
better
describe
the
car
it's
at
midnight,
how
many
people
can
see
well
you're,
just
saying
it's
a
black
car.
How
are
we
supposed
to
know?
Riverside
Park
seems
to
be
the
aims
where
they're
hitting
them
Bam
Bam
Bam,
Bam
Bam.
Oh,
that
must
be
a
backfire,
no
five
shots,
it's
not
a
backfire,
but
we
keep
getting
told
how
our
district
is
lowest
in
crime.
L
That's
because
there's
a
thousand
apartments
over
there
between
ninth
out
west
and
I-15,
that
is
not
in
our
district.
The
police
were
over
there.
Last
night
there
were
shootings
there
last
night,
okay,
I
understand
you
want
Park,
Patrol
I
understand
you
want
to
circ
this,
but
we
got
bullets
flying
over
in
our
area
and
by
golly
we're
sick
of
it
and
it's
only
within
a
mile
radius.
L
So
if
we
had
more
police
cameras
and
I
understand
all
they'll
see
the
camera,
then
they
won't
be
driving
by,
but
that's
our
only
way
to
catch
these
cars,
because
you
can
have
an
officer
over
there,
an
officer
over
there
and
if
they
come
down
the
other
street
and
they're
shooting
off,
they
are
not
seeing
who
it
is
they're,
absolutely
not
seen
it
and
right
absolutely
fed
up
with
it.
Thank.
H
I'm
in
support
of
the
budget
amendment
I
urge
you
to
support
it
and
I
urge
you
to
give
the
police
department
plenty
of
flexibility
on
patrolling
parks.
I
know
the
discussion
and
the
concern
you've
expressed
about
cops
in
uniform,
creating
an
uncomfortable
feeling
for
some
demographics
that
doesn't
make
sense
if
the
first
experience,
if
the
first
experience
in
a
kid's
life
or
a
person's
life
with
a
cop,
is
during
a
crime,
our
society
is
not
working.
H
A
park
we
want
cops
that
are
not
trying
to
hassle
anybody,
they're
just
trying
to
understand.
What's
going
on
and
in
a
park,
we've
had
problems
with
criminal
behavior
that
actually
threatens
the
homeless
more
than
the
regular
citizens
that
are
around
the
park.
The
citizens
see
it
they
call,
but
the
homeless
have
nothing
to
do
about
it.
They
get
victimized
too,
and
the
only
way
to
stop
it
is
to
have
regular
police
patrols.
H
Whatever
the
police
chief
thinks
is
necessary
in
uniform
to
patrol
the
parks
so
that
the
homeless,
that
are
there,
aren't
victimized
by
people
who
actually
search
out
homeless,
to
make
victims
they're
easy
victims,
and
that's
why
we
want
walking
patrols
with
cops
in
parts.
I
also
need
to
remind
you
that
Fairmont
Park
the
skate
park
is
selling
a
lot
of
drugs.
The
THC
vaping
cartridges
they're
coming
from
there.
That's
why
the
police
department
wants
Fairmont
Park
Liberty
Park
in
sugarhouse
Park
taken
care
of
with
Park
patrols.
H
A
F
F
You
bit
of
a
change
of
subject
but
I'm
here
to
speak
to
the
public
art
components
of
budget
amendment
to
and
urge
you
to
pass
those.
As
we
all
know,
the
arts
inspire
and
let
us
think
critically
about
our
stories
and
bring
our
communities
and
define
our
communities
and
Salt.
Lake
City
has
a
long
history
of
putting
these
are
in
public
places
so
that
all
Salt
Lake
City
citizens
can
be
a
part
of
them.
F
But
what
we
haven't
had
is
the
funds
to
be
able
to
protect
these
pieces
and
and
work
on
them
when
they
are
in
trouble
from
damage
or
weather
or
even
to
sometimes
a
car
accident
has
damaged
some
of
them
as
well,
and
so
we're
so
thankful
that
you
are
finally
putting
attention
to
this
issue
of
of
maintenance
for
the
public,
art
funds
and
and
I
hope
that
long-term
that
you'll
consider
making
that
a
permanent
fund
for
public
art.
But
thank
you
so
much
for
supporting
Arts
in
Salt,
Lake
City.
A
M
Good
evening
has
been
a
while
since
I've
been
here
thanks
for
the
public
here
that
I'm
in
the
session
this
afternoon
was
really
informative
and
if
I
got
one
thing
out
of
there.
Out
of
that
session
was
one
of
the
things
at
the
end:
homelessness
forever
and
VOA
and
David
look
back
and
the
mayor's
office
put
out.
M
There
was
out
reach
out
reach
out,
reach
out,
reach
out,
reach
and
I,
remember
being
at
a
meeting
and
our
community
council
three
or
four
months
ago,
David,
where
I
was
told
that
the
VOA
outreach
program
was
going
to
take
care
of
the
problem.
The
homeless
deal
with
the
homeless
issue
and
make
it
more
comfortable
for
people
around
the
library
I
work
with
the
homeless.
Everyday
I
would
like
to
see
outreach
in
the
city
that
is
actually
effective
and
works
in
dealing
with
the
homeless
issue.
Effectively.
I
Hi,
my
name
is
Abby.
Basically
I'm
wanted
to
talk
about
the
budget.
Amendment
I,
don't
think
it
makes
a
lot
of
sense
to
increase
policing,
especially
in
Liberty
Park,
if
we're
gonna
have
to
try
to
deal
with
first
of
all,
what's
currently
being
referred
to
as
the
homeless
problem,
because
if
the
homeless
shelter
does
end
up
closing
down,
what
is
your
plan?
Where
are
you
going
to
be
sending
these
people
on
top
of
that
there?
They
aren't
really
doing
anything
to
affect
you.
I
So,
on
top
of
that,
if
you're
gonna
increase
additional
funding
to
police
officers,
you're
gonna
have
to
also
ask
yourself
what
does
policing
look
like
four
different
marginalized
groups
for
people
color
for
queer
folks?
What
how
was
police
and
gonna
affect
them
differently,
just
putting
a
blanket
statement
and
saying
like
oh
we're,
gonna
increase
funding
to
these
police
officers
could
actually
lead
to
a
lot
more
humans
being
harmed.
I
So
on
top
of
that,
if
I
think
it's
really
awesome
that
this
is
being
used
to
help
increase
art
funding
because
I'm
a
big
proponent
of
the
arts.
But
the
thing
is:
if
you're,
not
keeping
your
public
safe.
If
people
are
not
reliably
safe
around
police
officers,
there's
gonna
be
no
one
around
to
really
enjoy
that
art.
So.
N
N
N
So
what
this
picture
that's
being
painted
in
my
eyes
is
a
replica
of
operation,
Rio
Grande
just
being
described
as
something
else,
and
with
the
conversation
from
the
ACLU
being
being
very
definitive
and
based
on
on
factual
data
I,
you
all
were
there
and
I
hope.
Y'all
really
compassionately,
took
that
to
heart
and
consider
that,
because
criminalizing
the
homeless
here,
the
they
are
some
of
the
most
likely
people
to
encounter
police
in
their
day-to-day
lives.
We
also
know
more,
please
me
more
deaths
at
the
hands
of
police.
We
will
not
thank
for
that.
A
O
O
Think
that's
what
the
majority
of
this
problem,
which
is
it's
not
a
problem,
the
majority
of
well,
it
is
a
problem.
I'm,
I'm,
rambling,
ultimately,
more
police
isn't
the
answer.
This
money
would
be
more
effectively
spent
providing
more
services
opening
more
beds
this
winter
to
allow
these
people
to
have
places
of
shelter
and
before
I
before
I
sit
down.
I
would
just
like
to
address
something
that
the
gentleman
on
the
brown
coat
over
here.
O
A
I
With
all
apologies,
I'm
still
coming
over
cold
with
all
due
respect
to
the
community
members
of
the
Liberty
Park
community,
I
think,
while
the
sentiment
of
increasing
police
outreach
in
the
interests
of
helping
people
is
well-intentioned,
I
think
that
it
has
been
pretty
clearly
demonstrated
over
the
last
several
years
that
operations
by
the
police
to
try
and
address
homelessness
has
simply
been
ineffective.
So
putting
more
money
into
the
pockets
of
police
officers.
To
try
and
address
homelessness
is
effectively
just
criminalizing
homelessness.
I
A
D
Undergo
Avalos
hello,
I
am
Diego
Ovilus
with
the
part
for
socialism
and
liberation
in
response
to
the
impending
road
home
closure,
as
well
as
the
police
fund
issue.
I
would
like
to
advocate
against
that,
as
it
would
lead
to
a
criminalization
of
homelessness,
a
crime
that
is
not
supposed
to
be
considered
a
crime
and
that
you
must
respect
people
who
have
no
other
choice
but
to
find
refuge
wherever
they
can
and
that
as
a
person
of
color,
along
with
other
people
that
I
can
speak
for
finding
the
police
make
them
more.
D
D
P
P
P
P
A
C
Thank
you.
Mister
chair
is
the
chair
of
the
Salt
Lake
City
Council
I'll
read
the
statement
on
our
behalf.
The
City
Council
has
been
open
to
communication
and
hard
conversations
regarding
homelessness
and
issues
surrounding
the
closure
of
the
road
home,
including
a
four
hour
work
session
meeting
held
today,
held
with
various
members
of
the
state
county
city,
administration
and
community
organizations
dedicated
to
helping
people
experiencing
homelessness.
C
But
it
is
hard
to
continue
a
conversation
when
there
is
no
respect,
yelling
and
disregard
of
the
many
efforts
of
all
involved,
including
the
council,
to
help
one
less
to
help
our
less
fortunate
neighbors
we'd
plea
with
you
to
have
an
orderly
meeting
to
continue
with
the
items
that
are
a
part
of
the
solutions
to
help
our
homeless
neighbors.
The
demands
that
are
being
requested
are
all
things
we
agree
with,
but
we
have
little
control
over,
at
least
by
ourselves.
C
A
Thank
you.
Mr.
chair
we're
gonna
continue
on.
We
are
on
item
b3
when
we
recessed,
which
was
the
bunch
of
budget
amendment
number
two
for
the
fiscal
year.
I
actually
believe
we
got
throughout
the
cards
at
that
point.
Was
there
anybody
who's?
Still
here,
I
guess
who'd
like
to
speak
to
this
potential.
This
item
b2
the
budget
amendment
okay,
seeing
none,
then
I
will
ask
for
a
motion.
A
I
Q
R
I
A
H
Need
to
preface
my
comments
to
ensure
that
the
chance
of
me
getting
killed
with
my
because
of
my
comments
is
decreased.
I
fought
the
closing
of
the
road
home
alone
at
the
legislature
against
HB
414
Gibson.
Nobody
else
was
there,
so
anybody
wants
to
attack
me
for
seeming
to
be
anti
homeless.
Come
at
me
and
I'll.
Take
you
on
because
you
weren't
around
back
in
2016
when
this
all
started
with
respect
to
the
grant
application.
One
of
the
grants
you're
looking
for
is
to
hire
two
people
for.
H
Engagement
community
engagement
for
the
homeless
in
the
homeless,
Resource
Center,
but
the
communities
are
upset
because
they
don't
want
more
engagement.
They
want
solutions
when
the
homeless
that
are
not
really
homeless,
but
they're
just
hanging
out
to
be
with
their
friends
in
the
shelter's
and
they're
defecating
on
sidewalks,
and
when
we
had
this
meeting
last
week,
the
community
they're
saying
what
do
we
do
about
defecation
on
sidewalks
and
the
person
that
supposedly
is
hired
to
work
with
the
community
is
saying
we
don't
do
that.
Well,
somebody
needs
to
do
that.
H
You
have
a
clean
team
to
do
something
like
that.
You
close
the
the
the
porta-potties
when
people
do
need
to
use
them.
So
now
we
need
porta-potties
near
the
homeless,
Resource
Center.
So
what
I'm
trying
to
tell
you
is
the
grant
application
should
be
flexible
enough
to
pay
for
the
clean
team
or
porta-potties
or
something
around
the
communities
that
are
being
impacted
by
the
homeless,
Resource
Center,
because
all
they're
going
to
end
up
doing
is
hating
homeless
and
that's
the
last
thing
we
want
to
do
so.
H
H
Q
He
goes
guys
so
much
for
your
time
and
for
your
patience
on
hearing
people
that
are
really
passionate
about
about
the
homeless
population.
I
also
am
passionate
about
the
homeless
population
and
one
thing
that
I
will
speak
to
on
item
number
four
I
I
believe
that
having
more
funding
for
VOA
to
go
out
with
police
having
social
workers
with
police
officers
would
be
incredibly
beneficial.
What
this
gentleman
said
earlier
with
people,
you
know
homeless
people
in
the
parks
homeless.
Q
People
are,
you
know
they
are
incredibly
vulnerable
and
yes,
like
people
who
are
dealing
drugs
will
absolutely
prey
on
people
who,
with
high
vulnerability,
if
we
have,
if
we
have
social
workers
that
accompany
the
police
that
are
trained
in
de-escalation
techniques
and
are
familiar
with
the
population,
then
we
could
actually
get
somewhere
with
people
who
the
reality
is.
Is
that
not
everyone
wants
to
stay
in
shelter,
regardless
of
the
of
the
debt
bed
deficit,
which
I
will
speak
on
in
another
comment?
Q
Some
people
just
don't
want
to
stay
in
shelter,
and
that
should
be
okay,
whether
it's
because
of
a
severe
persistent
mental
illness.
Some
people
don't
want
to
stay
in
a
shelter
with
300
other
men.
Some
people
don't
want
to
sleep
in
a
bedroom
or
a
dorm
with
40
other
men,
especially
if
you
have
schizophrenia-
or
you
know
some
kind
of
personality
disorder
it's
hard
and
we
should
have
more
outreach
for
people
who
do
not
want
to
stay
in
shelter.
Q
If
we
provided
more
funding
for
Volunteers
of
America
to
go
out
with
with
police,
then
we
could
provide
more
services
to
people
who
are
generally
service
resistant
and
who
just
don't
get
caught
within
the
net
of
services,
because
they
don't
stay
in
shelter.
So
I
appreciate
your
guys's
consideration
on
this
and
I
want
to
advocate
for
the
grant.
Thank
you
thank.
A
I
A
Have
a
motion
by
councilmember
Roger
is
a
second
by
councilmember
luke,
any
discussion
all
in
favor
aye
any
opposed
that
motion
passes.
We
are
at
potential
action
items.
Our
first
item
is
regarding
an
ordinance
for
an
alley
closure
to
approximately
1,000
South
between
800,
West
and
Jeremy.
Street
do
have
anybody
here
who
wants
to
speak
to
us
tonight.
A
A
A
I
B
A
I
I
A
A
B
Chair,
yes,
I,
move
that
the
Council
adopted
an
ordinance
amending
the
future
land
use
map
of
the
Central
Community
master
plan
and
rezoning
the
property
located
at
500,
4900
east
to
rmu,
35
subjects,
the
applicant
and
the
administration
entering
into
a
development
agreement
to
be
recorded
against
the
property.
That
requires
one
ground-floor
commercial
space
that
will
not
exceed
a
thousand
square
feet.
A
B
A
Opposed
that
motion
passes,
I
forgot.
We
were
not
in
the
public
hearing
any
more
action
items
and
we
are
now
to
a
comments
section
of
our
agenda.
Are
there
any
questions
of
the
mayor,
or,
in
this
case,
deputy
chief
of
staff,
whip
back?
Thank
you
for
being
here
by
the
way
anyone,
okay,
we
are
at
item.
D2
will
be
taking
general
comments
now
excellent.
A
We're
gonna
call
people
two
at
a
time
and
if
you're
here,
please
just
let
me
know
I'll
problem
if
these
a
little
quicker
than
usual
see
who's
still
in
the
building
again,
two
minutes
per
person.
You
cannot
combine
time
with
another
speaker
as
a
reminder.
Please
help
keep
a
civil
and
respectful
meeting.
R
Thank
you
so
much
for
listening
to
my
concerns
about
the
climate
crisis.
Again,
although
I'm
leaving
the
wonderful
city
of
Salt
Lake
without
having
succeeded
in
clearing
out
much
of
our
air
pollution,
it's
consoling
that
our
City
Council
of
mayor's
office
or
it's
committed
champions
as
I.
Am
the
city
alone
can't
manage
to
accomplish
transitioning
off
fossil
fuels
as
quickly
as
we
need
to
at
this
late
stage,
though,
increasing
the
public
push
for
clean
solutions
is
the
only
way
we'll
transform
our
entire
economy
off
of
dirty
energy
and
time.
R
My
work
with
our
national
and
local
legislators
is
bearing
fruit,
but
this
too
is
taking
too
long
in
the
face
of
our
shrinking
carbon
budget,
which
is
why
I've
spent
the
last
year
working
to
help
build
the
youth
climate
movement
too.
While
the
grid
to
Berry
effect
has
been
marvelous
to
watch,
it
too
hasn't
proven
powerful
enough
to
push
our
politicians
past
the
entrenched
fossil
fuel
interest.
R
Yet,
for
example,
the
on
climate
striker
Haven
Coleman
I've,
been
following
post
pictures
of
huge
crowds
when
our
young
Swedish
friend
was
in
town,
but
the
post
from
the
following
week
was
about
a
dozen
strikers.
Our
experience
here
has
been
similar
while
we
had
maybe
2,000
people
at
the
Utah
Capitol
on
September
20th,
the
number
of
strikers
there
on
any
other,
subsequent
Friday's
hasn't
exceeded.
100.
R
To
get
our
legislators
to
take
meaningful
climate
action
to
pull
us
out
of
the
fossil
fuel
age
might
take
tens
of
thousands
of
strikers
on
the
hill
at
the
next
big
strike
on
December
6th
and
then
maybe
hundreds
of
thousands
on
Earth
Day,
while
the
youth
will
have
to
work
to
motivate
their
parents
and
grandparents
to
show
up
there
for
their
future.
A
step
that
the
city
could
take
would
be
to
join
with
52
other
local
governments
in
the
u.s.
R
to
declare
a
climate
emergency
I've
submitted
the
template
for
a
climate
emergency
declaration
from
the
climate
mobilization
campaign,
along
with
a
copy
of
Fort
Collins
resolution
for
the
Council
of
mayor
to
consider
adopting
and
whatever
form
they
choose,
I've
struck
through
the
one,
whereas
that
I
would
strike.
But,
of
course,
your
elected
representatives.
So
it's
up
to
you
related
to
this
question
about
our
proposed
December
6
climate
strike.
It
appears.
I
could
use
some
assistance.
R
It
seems
that
I
needed
to
submit
a
demonstration
permit
request
to
march
on
Main
Street
a
week
ago
and
spontaneous
one
is
in
14
days,
so
I've
submitted
that
information
and
for
your
approval,
partition,
participation
and
promotion,
as
you
feel
fit
thanks
again:
Kevin
Lee,
castor,
a
very
concerned
citizen.
Thank.
G
Yo
Leo
Rogers
has
previously
mentioned
thank
y'all
for
having
a
couple
public
comment.
Section
night,
I
really
appreciated.
That
being
said,
I
did
come
up
here,
planned
with
a
whole
hell
fire
and
brimstone
kind
of
speech
that
make
my
Catholic
ancestors
blush
I'm
gonna
forego
that
with
just
a
little
bit
of
a
caveat
of
y'all,
know
why
this
happens.
Right
I
know
you're,
not
answering
cuz.
This
isn't
a
back
and
forth
so
I'll
just
go
ahead
and
say
no,
and
it's
probably
because
people
don't
really
trust
this
body
to
do
anything.
Much.
G
G
There's
a
lot
of
issues
with
our
local
government
and
90%
of
them
will
boil
down
to
y'all
are
just
not
accessible
enough
for
anybody
to
really
bother.
This
can
all
be
really
avoided
if
y'all
at
least
go
a
little
bit
further.
To
pretend
that
you
care
I
know
that
y'all
probably
really
care
about
what
you
do,
but
there's
a
lot
of
us
that
can't
engage
in
these
regularly
up
until
about
three
months
ago.
I
would
never
be
able
to
this
ever
so.
Most
people
can't
most
people
are
working.
Most
people
have
children.
G
So
moving
these
around
to
different
times
letting
people
show
up
just
having
a
general
open
session
for
people
to
come
and
complain.
Yet
you
it
do
a
lot
to
relieve
tensions,
and
maybe
you
guys
don't
have
people
swarming
the
pulpit
and
standing
on
tables
and
yelling
at
you.
Just
a
little
observation
from
somebody.
Jeffrey
did
not
do
anything.
B
So
I
wanted
to
address
also
this
issue
of
our
neighbors
experiencing
homelessness.
My
family
has
worked
side
by
side
with
many
of
these
neighbors
at
the
Good
Samaritan
at
the
Road
home
and
at
the
youth
Resource
Center,
and
it
is
alarming
to
note
that
the
closure
of
the
road
home
does
come
during
our
coldest
months
of
the
year
and
it
creates
a
tremendous
burden
on
our
human
capital,
on
our
social
resources
and
on
our
financial
resources.
B
I
would
echo
the
comments
of
increasing
funds
for
case
management
for
trauma-informed
social
workers
to
participate
in
that
outreach
for
more
porta-potties
on
in
key
areas
and
I
would
echo
the
demands
of
the
letter
that
was
previously
read
of
keeping
the
road
home
open
through
April
having
a
minimum
of
the
equivalent
number
of
beds
made
readily
available
and
accessible
prior
to
closing
the
road
home
that
no
arrests,
tickets
or
harassment.
For
campers,
until
at
least
the
equivalent
number
of
beds
are
made
readily
available,
a
change
change.
B
The
existing
legislation
to
allow
for
the
new
centers
to
have
more
beds
and
work
for
free
public
transit
fare
for
all
people
who
stay
in
shelters.
I
know
that
you
read
that
you
are
working
with
different
organizations
that
you
can't
do
this
alone,
but
I
would
ask
that
you
use
the
power
that
you
have
collectively
to
really
meet
the
needs
of
this
population
and
to
communicate
back
with
a
public
how
you
intend
to
address
these
needs.
Thank
you.
Thank.
L
Changes
topic:
RDA,
have
you
guys
are
all
on
the
RDA
dive
right
in
the
building
Utah
today,
I
understand
the
homeless
issue,
I'll,
listen
to
the
work
session
today,
but
it's
not
the
city's
responsibility
and
they
also
promised
everybody
a
bit
out
of
the
cold.
So
but
the
RDAs
talk
about
the
public
market.
L
The
Westside
doesn't
have
that,
but
we
really
spoke
up
and
we
really
really
asked
for
that
and
if
the
RDA
could
please
just
remember
that
it
was
the
people
that
spoke
up,
and
you
guys
heard
us
so
before
you
make
any
decisions,
whether
or
not
who's
going
to
get
it
or
both
of
us
are
going
to
get
it
I,
don't
know
and
I
know
it's
not
till
next
year,
but
I
think
it'll
really
help
the
Westside
a
lot.
Thank
you
thank.
H
First
of
all,
those
who
want
to
engage
in
discussions
with
you
I
encourage
all
of
you
to
attend
the
community
councils.
Most
of
the
council
members
attend
regularly
and
you
do
engage
in
arguments
with
us
regularly.
Thank
you
for
listening
and
thank
you
for
arguing
with
us,
but
I
know
you're
working
on
trying
to
keep
the
road
home
open.
Thank
you
very
much
for
that.
But
I
also
want
to
remind
you
that
storage
for
the
homeless
have
been
has
been
full
for
a
couple
of
years.
We've
been
fighting
for
that
without
results.
H
You
really
need
to
do
something
about
that,
because
that's
still
a
problem.
There
shouldn't
be
people
walking
around
with
shopping
carts,
and
you
also
have
seven
of
15
acres
in
the
Depot
district
that
you
own.
Most
of
it's
vacant
has
been
vacant
for
decades.
So
why
can't
you
open
up
a
building
there
and
let
the
homeless
camp
out?
If
they
don't
want
to
go
to
the
road
own
again,
you
can
do
something
I'd
like
you
to
do
a
little
bit
more.
H
You
know
me:
I,
want
more
I
urge
you
to
do
more
on
that
it
needs
more
I,
know
you're.
Trying
I
also
need
to
point
out
that
you
can
ticket
idling
diesel
trucks
with
one
morning
now.
So
if
you
want
to
clean
up
the
air
and
the
inland
port,
if
you
want
to
get
leverage
with
the
legislature,
sorry
James,
do
you
want
to
get
leverage
with
the
legislature?
Start
ticketing,
idling,
diesel
trucks,
it's
real,
simple
and
now
clean
the
air
of
course,
and
finally,
I
want
to
see
cops
in
parks
on
electric
scooters.
B
M
I've
been
to
a
number
of
these
meetings
and
speaking
about
homelessness
and
my
concerns
about
it
in
the
city
for
quite
a
while
now,
and
it
felt
good
to
not
be
alone
too
many
nights.
I
was
here
alone,
was
addressing
some
of
the
issues
and
asking
for
the
council
to
pay
attention
to
what
was
happening
in
the
city,
because
what
was
I
was
trying
to
draw
attention
to
things
that
were
happening,
that
weren't
effective.
M
There
was
a
lot
of
people
that
care
I
may
get
after
David
and
VOA
in
different
places,
but
I
never
questioned
the
fact
that
they
care
and
they're
trying
to
do
something
helpful
to
help
a
very
vulnerable
population,
but
I
do
question
and
rally
against
the
effectiveness
of
what
they're
doing
I
do
not
believe
what
they're
doing
is
helping
them
solve
the
problem.
They're
just
moving
the
problem
around
and
putting
a
bandaid
on
the
problem
and
the
message
they're
using
are
totally
ineffective
in
the
meeting
this
afternoon.
Somebody
mentioned
the
power
of
funding.
M
You
have
the
power
to
fund
people
have
to
come
to
you
for
money.
I
am
going
to
ask
you
to
set
up
a
series
of
standards
by
which
that
they
have
to
meet
before
you
give
them
funding
when
they
say
they
can
accomplish
something
and
they
can
move
people
into
housing
and
Housing
Works.
The
housing
program
is
the
worse
than
the
West.
M
That
is
the
best
thing
you
could
ever
do
for
the
homeless,
because
the
homeless
gets
get
get
blamed
for
the
failures
of
the
system
and
if
the
system
can't
help
them,
we
can't
blame
the
homeless
for
what
is
out
there,
they're
mentally
ill
and
they're
addicted,
and
the
system
is
not
helping
them
use.
The
power
of
please
use
the
power
of
your
funding
to
put
things
in
place
that
measure
the
effectiveness
of
what
the
service
providers
are
saying
saying
they
can
do.
Thank
you
very
much
thanks.
Q
To
kind
of
piggyback
on
the
funding,
we
definitely
need
a
lot
more
funding.
100.
Oh
sorry,
excuse
me.
A
million
dollars
was
recently
given
to
rapid
rehousing
programs
for
up
to
nine
months.
I
think
that
that
is
a
really
wonderful
start.
However,
I
do
feel
that
it
was
a
little
bit
of
a
of
the
city
kind
of
covering
their
butts
because
of
the
massive
outcry,
because
people
don't
want
to
see
people
freeze
to
death
this
winter
I
do
not
advocate
for
the
road
home.
Q
Staying
open,
I
realize
that
that
is
not
a
realistic
solution
and
it's
something
that's
already
kind
of
said
and
done.
I
do
advocate,
however,
for
more
beds
to
be
put
in
the
resource.
Centers
those
resource
centers
are
huge,
and
if
you
guys
can
do
anything
about
the
the
occupancy
maximums,
there
is
room
for
more
people.
It
is
not
a
long-term
solution
to
homelessness.
However,
it
is
often
the
stepping
stone
the
homeless
individuals
need
to
move
on
to
housing
there.
We
expected
this
deficit
in
beds.
Q
It
should
not
have
come
to
a
surprise
to
anyone
and-
and
we
desperately
need
more
beds
to
be
allocated
in
in
those
shelters.
As
a
longer-term
solution,
like
I
said
that
that
1
million
dollars
is
is
a
godsend
for
for
rapid
rehousing,
but
that
needs
to
be
ongoing.
That
should
not
just
be
a
one-time
thing
as
a
reaction
to
the
people
demanding
a
solution
this
winter.
If,
if
ongoing,
funding
could
be
given
to
rapid
rehousing
that
would
that
would
really
help,
as
well
as
permanent,
supportive
housing.
Q
A
M
D
A
J
I
as
I
look
at
this
map
of
the
area
of
Salt
Lake
City
I,
see
that
the
air
quality
on
the
west
side
is
20
to
40
units
worse
than
the
air
quality
on
the
east
side
of
Salt
Lake
City.
This
is
a
public
health
crisis.
I'd
really
really
like
to
see
the
council
do
more
to
address
this,
not
just
from
a
local
perspective.
I
just
read
a
study
that
72
people
will
die
because
of
our
air
quality
this
year,
if
it
would,
if
it
had
met
better
standards
that
wouldn't
happen.
J
If
72
people
were
murdered,
that
would
be
considered
the
foremost
issue.
I
want
to
encourage
you
to
think
about
this
really
really
really
strongly
and
and
do
something
about
it.
I
know
that
it
is
something
that
we
experience
all
winter
long
and
it's
not
only
a
public
health
crisis,
but
it's
also,
you
know.
We
heard
people
come
up
here
today
and
say
that
marginalized
people
experience
things
on
a
different
level,
and
this
is
one
of
them
and
I'd
like
to
see
the
council
do
more
to
address
this
from
multiple
different
facets.
Thank
you.
Thank.
A
S
My
name's
Angela
I
live
in
the
marmalade
district.
My
concern-
and
this
is
something
that
I've
talked
and
I've
talked
to
some
of
some
of
the
people
in
City
Council
and
some
of.
However
many
people
were
running
for
mayor
issue,
I
brought
it
to
them
as
well
is
diversifying
the
police
force
with
the
application
questions
that
are
asked
so
I've
I
didn't
try
to
I.
S
I
didn't
want
to
be
on
the
police
force,
but
I
did
look
at
the
application
and
some
of
the
questions
that
it
does
ask
it
sort
of
seems
like
it's
filtering
people
out,
for
instance,
one
of
the
questions
that's
asked
is:
have
you
ever
paid
a
rent
late?
Have
you
ever
paid
a
bill?
Late?
Have
you
ever
had
a
medical
bill
or
some
sort
of
bill
go
into
collection?
S
And
if
you
answer
some
of
those
questions
in
a
manner,
that's
not
appropriate,
it
will
say
you
cannot
do
the
application
until
another
two
years
and
that's
as
someone
who's
seen
the
FBI
application,
that's
stricter
than
what
the
FBI
asks
to
do:
their
general
law
application,
so
I'm
just
bringing
this
to
your
attention.
If
none
of
you
guys
are
aware
of
this,
I
do
feel
like
if
some
of
those
questions
were
asked
differently
are
not
asked
at
all.
You
can
possibly
get
younger
people
on
the
police
force
and
people
who
possibly
look
like
me.
A
T
Thank
you,
oh
well,
you
have
to
be
here
Saturn.
Why?
Sir?
Thank
you
for
coming
I,
like
everyone
else
who
protests
that
I
am
passionate
about
homelessness
and
the
road
home,
but
I
also
understand
that
nothing
is
going
to
get
done
if
I'm,
just
yelling
and
making
instagram-worthy
posts
so
I
now
going
for
I
work
in
this
field
that
the
world
home
is
not
going
to
be
open.
I
just
asked
that
in
the
future
it
seems
like
what
happens.
T
A
A
B
The
seven
of
us
on
this
council
and
the
administration
do
stay
up
late
at
night,
wondering
how
we're
going
to
save
people
from
freezing
to
death
on
the
streets
because
I've
texted
and
said
what
are
we
going
to
do
and
how
are
we
going
to
fix
this,
and
so
I
know
that
we
are
there
late
nights
working
hard
and
each
of
us
in
our
own
capacities,
do
other
things
in
the
community.
Besides
just
volunteer
to
be
here
and
make
these
difficult
decisions
and
not
volunteer
and
we
get
elected
whatever.
But.
B
It's
emotional
because
I
agree
with
all
of
that
and
I
know
how
difficult
that
this
is
and
I
think
there
are
ways
to
work
together
as
a
community
to
really
start
to
address
it
and,
unfortunately,
having
a
I
completely
understand
the
anger
and
the
sentiment
and
the
they
want
to
to
raise
your
voice
and
and
I
get
that.
But
I
I
feel
so
much
that
I
wish.
Everyone
was
still
sitting
here
so
that
they
could.
B
We
could
hear
and
have
that
dialogue
together
and
could
have
that
conversation
together
and
I
hope
that
somebody's
listening
in
to
like
SLC
TV
that
left
our
early.
Because
of
that
and
is
able
to
come
back
and
reach
out
to
us
because
we
are
all
available
and
I
do
want
and
I
do
believe
that
this
connection
that
we
have
together
can
make
a
change
and
we're
really
striving
and
working
hard
to
fulfill
each
of
those
capacities.
B
And
so
sometimes
my
emotions
just
get
to
me
and
I
can't
help
it
and
I
either
a
better
start,
laughing
or
I
cry.
So
the
crying
won
out
today.
So
thank
you
for
all
of
the
community.
That
was
here
and
for
being
here
and
I
want
to
really
encourage
continuing
these
dialogues.
So
we
can.
We
can
help
all
of
our
community
members
and
thank
you
for
allowing
me
this
time.
I
think.