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A
I
went
to
salt
lake
city's
formal
meeting.
This
is
we're
continuing
to
hold
our
meetings
remotely
due
to
declarations
of
emergency
related
to
the
pandemic
and
earthquake.
While
we
hold
our
meetings
remotely,
we
are
happy
to
have
you
connecting
with
us
online
or
by
phone.
We
refer
to
today's
meeting
as
a
special
limited
meeting.
It's
an
additional
council
meeting
outside
of
our
regular
schedule.
A
The
council
has
only
one
new
item
business
today
and
that
is
to
adopt
a
temporary
land
use
regulation
to
facilitate
a
winter
shelter
on
2300,
west
and
north
temple,
which
is
currently
a
hotel.
There
is
no
general
public
comment
taken
during
special
formal,
limited
meetings,
but
we
do
appreciate
you
joining
us.
A
A
C
A
A
Oh,
thank
you.
Thank
you
second,
from
councilmember
fowler.
Is
there
any
discussion
to
this
just
checking
to
make
yes
councilmember
voldemort.
D
C
And
typically,
I'm
just
going
from
memory
that
on
temporary
land
use
regulations
are
valid
for
six
months
unless
otherwise
stated,
but
I'm
looking
for
katie
lewis's
tile.
Oh
there,
she
is
she's
waving,
hi
council
members.
Jennifer
is
exactly
right.
They
are
good
for
up
to
six
months.
In
this
case
the
expiration
is
april
15th
that
was
modeled
on
the
temporary
land
youth
regulation
that
we
did
last
year
and
the
compelling
countervailing
public
interest
in
this
case
is
both
covid19
and
the
pressures
of
the
winter
and
our
increasing
homeless
population.
A
D
C
C
C
A
And
I
am
a
yes
as
well
that
passes
unanimously.
That
is
our
only
item
of
business.
However,
some
council
members
have
asked
to
make
a
statement,
so
I
will
recognize
anybody
that
wants
to
take
a
moment
of
personal
privilege.
D
Yes,
I
would
like
to
say
a
few
words
to
read
a
few
words,
despite
our
efforts
throughout
the
year
to
request
a
plan
way
earlier
than
december
from
the
from
the
many
church
to
help
those
experiencing
homelessness.
Once
again,
we
find
ourselves
voting
for
a
winter
emergency
shelter
at
the
11th
hour.
My
hope
is
that
we're
not
having
this
same
conversation
again.
Next
year,
salt
lake
city
has
gone
above
and
beyond
hosting
many
shelters
and
providing
resources
to
help
our
homeless
neighbors.
D
This
is
apparent
by
walking
out
my
front
door
looking
outside
the
window
of
my
business
and
by
the
many
reminders
given
to
me
by
residents,
businesses
and
those
visiting
our
city.
Last
year,
district
7
hosted
an
emergency
rental
shelter,
and
this
year
is
it
is
asked
of
district
1
to
do
the
same.
Thank
you
district
7
for
stepping
up
and
thank
you
district
1
for
all
you
do
already
to
help.
D
I
invite
the
residents
of
all
the
districts
to
engage
in
salt
lake
city's
efforts.
I
also
want
to
offer
my
gratitude
to
milcreek's
mayor
silvestrini
for
his
leadership
and
thank
him
for
his
efforts
to
host
a
winter
emergency
shelter.
I
too
agree
with
mayor
silvestrini
when
he
recently
said
quote,
I
feel-
and
I
think
the
council
feels
we
have
a
moral
obligation
to
give
shelter
get
people
off
the
street
in
the
winter
so
that
they
have
shelter
and
don't
freeze.
D
I
echo
his
sentiments
in
again
saying
that
this
is
not
a
salt
lake
city
issue,
but
an
opportunity
for
the
entire
state
of
utah
to
do
what
we
do
best
serve
and
take
care
of
our
neighbors.
This
is
beyond
an
incumbent
issue.
Severe
mental
health
issues
and
drug
addictions
are
very
real
and
we
need
more
resources
to
address
them
in
order
to
prevent
chronic
homelessness.
D
B
Thanks,
I
I
want
to
be
clear.
The
comments
I
will
make
are
mine
and
mine
alone.
They
may
not
necessarily
reflect
the
positions
of
this
council,
the
mayor
or
my
employer,
volunteers
of
america
utah,
but
I
feel
strongly
they
must
be
made
here
and
now
as
a
social
worker
for
over
20
years.
I
am
so
impressed
by
and
thankful
for
my
fellow
city
council
members
mayor
mendenhall,
our
city
staff,
for
their
support
in
making
this
ordinance
happen.
B
My
gratitude
extends,
as
we
said,
by
honor
to
mayor
silverstreeni
and
the
middle
creek
city
council,
for
assisting
in
opening
the
military
temporary
housing
facility.
This
week,
I'm
thankful
from
midville
and
south
salt
lake
for
hosting
homeless
resource
facilities.
Also,
over
the
past
three
years,
I've
attended
most
state
homeless,
coordinating
committee
meetings.
I
have
seen
the
increasing
load
of
homelessness
and
corresponding
requests
for
resources
across
the
entire
state.
B
I
participated
in
forming
the
salt
lake
valley
coalition
to
end
homelessness
and
served
on
several
task
groups.
I
have
seen
their
efforts
to
bring
awareness
to
these
needs
of
those
struggling
without
housing,
proposing
best
practices
and
having
far
too
little
authority
or
resources
to
enact
good
plans.
B
In
the
past
two
years,
I've
supported
the
establishment
of
the
geraldine
king
women's
resource
center,
as
well
as
the
expansion
of
the
homeless,
outreach
programs
and
youth
resource
center
run
by
volunteers
of
america
utah.
I
have
seen
staff
work
far
too
many
hours
placing
themselves
and
their
families
in
harm's
way
throughout
the
pandemic,
just
to
keep
as
many
people
off
the
streets
as
possible.
B
I
have
also
served
on
the
salt
lake
city
council
for
five
years
and
was
a
member
of
the
site
selection
committee
for
the
two,
almost
resource
centers
in
our
city.
I've
listened
to
probably
hundreds
of
hours
of
community
members
input
and
often
blame
salt
lake
city
for
causing
and
we're
not
fixing
this
counting
state
issue
of
lack
of
affordable
housing
and
corresponding
unsheltered
residents.
B
B
I
am
deeply
angry
about
the
blatant
inequity
that
this
situation
highlights.
This
motel
effectively
sits
on
the
border
between
two
of
the
lowest
opportunity
areas
in
our
city.
I
moved
to
poplar
grove
over
a
decade
ago.
I
have
found
it
beautiful,
ethnically
and
racially
diverse,
humble
and
welcoming
full
of
unpretentious
multi-generational
families
who
are
deeply
loyal
and
proud.
B
My
neighbors
work
harder
at
more
back-breaking
jobs
than
anyone
in
this
county
if
there
is
a
place
that
exhibits,
utah
values.
This
is
it.
I
have
also
watched
as
coven
19
has
disproportionately
devastated
these
same
neighborhoods,
I'm
seeing
healthcare
disparities,
shorten
people's
lifespans
by
years
compared
to
more
affluent
communities.
B
B
B
B
This
has
been
true
virtually
since
the
founding
our
city.
It
was
cemented
when
the
railroads
and
later
the
interstate
freeways
effectively
cut
off
these
neighborhoods
in
the
surrounding
areas.
On
all
four
sides,
it
was
overt
in
redlining,
low
income
and
minority
families,
away
from
housing
opportunities
in
the
rest
of
salt
lake.
Even
today,
my
children
experience
some
of
the
worst
air
pollution
in
this
county.
B
None
of
this
is
a
secret.
We
have
known
this
for
years,
and
yet
here
we
are
james
rogers
me
and
this
council
facing
the
unconscionable
choice
between
standing
up
for
our
neighborhoods
that
have
been
offered
so
little
for
so
long
and
demanding
that
this
lack
of
affordable
housing
and
emergency
shelter
be
shared
by
the
entire
county
and
state
or,
alternatively,
allowing
men
and
women
to
experience,
frostbite
hypothermia
and
early
death
this
winter
on
our
streets.
B
I
have
participated
in
the
state
commission
on
housing,
affordability
that
forwarded
a
bill
to
the
legislature
last
session
to
provide
one-time
and
ongoing
money
for
affordable
housing
that
the
market
cannot
and
will
not
create.
Currently,
salt
lake
city
provides
more
than
two
times
the
amount
of
ongoing
money
for
affordable
housing
than
the
entire
state.
B
That
state
funding
would
have
helped
provide
the
opportunity
for
housing.
Many
of
the
people
we
are
currently
trying
to
provide
emergency
shelter
for
this
winter.
No
ongoing
money
was
granted.
I
have
attended
two
separate
salt
lake
county
council
of
governments,
cog
meetings
this
year
for
the
saline
valley
coalition
to
end
homelessness.
Ask
for
help
from
other
cities
in
this
county
to
locate
temporary
overflow
shelters.
No
support
was
offered
the
nine
line
redevelopment
area
has
been
proposed
to
provide
much-needed
economic
support
for
the
84104
zip
code
of
salt
lake
city.
B
B
Almost
every
friday
afternoon
for
the
past
seven
months,
including
a
few
minutes,
I
have
stood
on
the
corner
of
north
temple,
boulevard
in
800
west
meeting
with
residents,
business
and
property
owners,
unsheltered
citizens,
city
department,
representatives,
elected
officials,
police
officers
and
service
providers
to
brainstorm
ideas
and
address
the
illicit
drug
markets,
crime,
homelessness
and
vacant
properties.
In
our
neighborhood,
I
have
seen
firsthand
how
far
our
police,
fire
and
other
emergency
resources
have
been
stretched
and
how
fast
we
are
burning
through
our
city
department
budgets
this
year.
B
I
can
understand
the
economic
struggles
of
many
cities
during
this
pandemic,
but
I
would
strongly
challenge
any
belief
that
salt
lake
city
has
enough
money
or
other
resources
to
care
for
this
county's
unsheltered
residents
and
another
overflow
overflow
facility.
We
do
not.
We
cannot
sustain
the
level
of
investment.
We
are
being
asked
to
make.
B
My
fellow
council
members
and
I
are
approving
and
have
approved
another
overflow
program
in
salt
lake
city
almost
a
year
after
promises
were
made
in
sugar
house,
and
we
would
not
be
asked
to
do
so
again
by
my
count,
excluding
domestic
violence
and
private
facilities
which,
if
they
were
included,
would
increase.
This
number
salt
lake
city
will
host
seven
of
the
ten
sites
for
homeless
services
this
winter
effectively.
All
of
them
are
on
or
west
of
state
street.
B
A
Thank
you,
councilmember
johnson.
I
I
just
sorry.
E
B
E
That,
mr
chair
and
I
just
wanna-
you
know
as
we
say
that
this
is
going
into
district
one,
but
to
be
honest
with
you,
whatever
happens
to
district,
one
really
happens
to
district
two,
and
there
is
no.
You
can't
really
differentiate
between
that,
whether
it's
the
prison,
whether
it's
the
inland
port,
whether
it's
the
the
homeless
issues
that
are
going
on
on
north
temple,
it
is
affects
the
entire
west
side
from
north
to
south
east
to
west.
It
affects
us
completely.
E
I
just
wanted
to
say
that
with
this
going
in
there
and
to
be
honest,
I
being
with
this
body,
the
city
council
body
has
is
some
of
the
most
honest
elected
officials.
I've
ever
worked
with
everything
that
we
set
forth
that
we're
going
to
do.
We
actually
do
we
accomplish
what
we
try
to
do,
and
you
know
if
we
screw
up
it's
on
us
right.
Well,
here
we
are
in
what
I
feel
like
is
a
screw-up,
that's
not
on
us
that
we're
cleaning
up
and
we're
going
to
have
a
real
problem.
E
But
it's
from
outside
our
boundaries,
where
all
of
this
impact
is
coming,
and
I
can't
stress
it
enough
that
it's
not
just
andrew
and
I
who
really
have
to
do
that
and
this
council
has
been
the
most
the
most
outspoken
about
it
about
west
side
importance,
but
we've
got
to
speak
out
even
more
about
it
whenever
we're
in
in
session.
It
can't
just
be
me
or
andrew
everyone's
got
to
talk
about
this
thing.
We've
got
to
stop
this.
We've
got
to
stop
this.
E
We've
got
to
bring
this
up
at
every
opportunity
that
we
can
to
say.
You
know
you
don't
understand.
The
west
side
is
taking
his
burden.
You
know
operation.
Rio
grande
was
great
for
for
pioneer
park
in
that
area,
but
it
wasn't
good
for
everybody
else
right.
It
spread
it
around
everywhere
to
everyone
else's
community.
So
this
is
my
big
concern
is
here
we
are
again.
The
west
side
is
going
to
be
taking
an
over
overflow
shelter,
I'm
going
to
remain
calm
about
it,
but
when
we
go
into
budget
season
we
have
really
got
to
focus.
E
Our
money's,
like
we've,
talked
about
like
we've
spoken
about
put,
focusing
them
on
the
west
side
and
making
sure
that
that
we
are
taking
care
of
these
concerns.
I
mean
you
look
at
whether
it's
a
school
issue,
I
mean
all
of
the
schools
on
the
west
side-
are
title
one
schools
where
they
have
after
after
you
know,
free
lunch
and
and
breakfast
opportunities,
so
we've
got
to
really
look
at.
I
just
I
don't
know
how
we
can
get
these
the
coalition
members
to
see
that
this
is
a
real
issue.
E
It's
focusing
and
concentrating
continual
issues
on
the
west
side,
and
it's
not
like.
Oh,
it's
not
going
to
do
anything.
Well,
it's
going
to
impact
police
times
already
and
we
know
what
the
police
response
times
are
currently.
So,
mr
chair,
that's
why
I
voted.
Yes,
I'm
taking
a
like.
I
said
a
page
out
of
council
member
fowler's
book
and
andrew
well
spoken,
I'm
100
behind
any
letter.
We
need
to
send
out.
A
And
unless
there
are
any
other
comments,
I'd
like
to
just
say
a
few
words
just
that
we're
making
this
temporary
zone
today,
not
because
it's
what
the
community
wants,
because
it
was
carefully
planned
out
well
in
advance
and
because
it's
fair,
in
fact
the
opposite
is
true.
Residents
along
north
temple
want
what
was
promised
to
them
generations
ago,
safer
streets
parks,
trails
and
other
amenities,
equitable
housing,
support
for
small
business
and
a
grand
boulevard
that
welcomes
visitors
to
salt
lake
city.
Today's
action
doesn't
come
with
any
of
that.
A
Only
with
funding
to
mitigate
impacts,
residents
expect
government
to
anticipate
these
needs
and
to
plan
for
them
in
advance
with
careful
analysis,
shrewd
investments
and
a
rope
and
robust
community
input
due
to
circumstances
outside
our
control.
This
plan
had
to
be
put
in
place
in
a
matter
of
days
without
any
of
that.
A
A
A
Thank
you
in
particular
to
council,
member
rogers
and
councilmember
johnston
and
to
the
communities
that
you
represent
andrew.
I
will
be
there
to
stand
with
you
again
today
on
eight
west
and
try
to
explain
this.
This
decision
to
residents
as
best
that
we
can.
I
hope
that
the
comments
that
were
expressed
today
by
by
youtube
in
particular
james
and
andrew,
will
help
your
residents
understand
why
we
had
to
make
the
decision
that
we
did.