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From YouTube: Salt Lake City Council Formal Meeting - 9/15/2020
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A
Welcome
to
tonight's
salt
lake
city
council,
formal
meeting,
we're
continuing
to
hold
our
meetings
remotely
to
due
to
the
declarations
of
emergency
related
to
the
pandemic
and
earthquake.
While
we
hold
our
meetings
remotely,
we
are
happy
to
have
you
connecting
with
us
by
phone
or
watching
along
online
or
on
slc
tv.
Thank
you
for
joining
us
to
begin
we'll,
take
a
moment
of
silence,
as
we
recite
the
pledge
of
allegiance
when
we,
when
we're
done,
I
will
go
ahead
and
turn
the
audio
back
on.
A
Okay,
conducting
our
meetings
electronically
is
different
than
our
regular
in-person
format,
but
we
do
still
have
some
meeting
guidelines
to
make
sure
that
everybody
feels
comfortable
and
safe
to
participate,
which
I
will
cover
under
the
public
comment
section
of
our
agenda.
We
are
now
at
item
a4,
which
is
approval
of
minutes.
A
The
council,
I'm
looking
to
approve
the
formal
meeting
minutes
of
tuesday
august
18th.
2020.,
look
for
a
motion.
A
Thank
you
james
just
kidding
that
was
intentional.
Okay,
I
have
a
motion
from
council
member
johnson,
a
second
from
council
member
dugan.
Is
there
any
discussion
to
this
item,
seeing
none
we'll
go
ahead
and
roll
call
it
councilmember
rogers.
C
D
E
F
A
In
addition
to
the
comments
given
tonight,
our
office
has
received
a
number
of
public
comments
through
email.
Those
will
be
included
as
part
of
the
public
record.
I
want
to
take
a
minute
to
explain
our
electronic
meeting
process,
although
we're
all
joining
the
meeting
electronically,
we
do
still
want
to
provide
a
space
for
people
to
feel
comfortable
and
safe
to
participate
to
help
facilitate
our
comment
period.
Please
be
respectful,
avoid
yelling
or
making
racial
slurs,
obscene
or
defamatory
remarks.
A
A
Once
we
open
public
comment,
our
meeting
host
will
identify
the
names
of
three
commenters
at
a
time
so
that
people
have
some
notice
to
be
prepared
to
speak.
If
you
do
not
wish
to
speak,
please
message
our
staff
and
let
them
know
when
the
host
states,
your
name
or
just.
Let
us
know
that
you're
here
to
listen
when
your
microphone's
on.
A
If
you
do
wish
to
speak,
when
the
meeting
host
turns
or
unmutes
your
line,
please
state
your
name
indicate
which
public
hearing
item
or
items
you
wish
to
speak
to
or
whether
you
have
a
general
comment
and
the
two-minute
timer
will
begin
at
the
two-minute
mark.
The
host
will
announce
time
on
your
microphone
and
it
will
be
muted
if
you
indicated
that
you
want
to
speak
to
on
more
than
one
item.
The
host
will
then
prompt
you
to
move
on
to
your
next
topic.
A
A
Item
b1
is
an
ordinance
that
would
increase
the
building
heights
within
a
portion
of
the
gateway,
mixed-use
zoning
district
located
on
two
separate
blocks
between
500
west
and
the
railroad
tracks,
or
approximately
625,
west
and
200
south
and
400
south
item
b2
is
an
ordinance
that
would
approve
vegetation
reduction
permits
for
wildfire
mitigation
item.
V3
is
an
ordinance
that
would
amend
the
zoning
map
for
several
parcels
located
at
2960,
2964
and
2970
south
richmond
street
item.
A
B4
is
an
ordinance
that
would
amend
the
zoning
map
and
master
plan
for
a
property
located
at
approximately
261
north
redwood
road
item.
B5
is
an
ordinance
that
would
modify
chapter
18.4
fire
prevention
code
to
provide
alternatives
to
the
proximity
to
building
requirements
found
in
appendix
d
of
the
international
fire
code
item
b6
is
an
ordinance
that
would
rezone
the
east
half
of
a
property
at
989
east
900,
south
from
residential,
slash
business.
A
A
G
Council
council
chair
this
is
amanda,
just
checking
we're
starting
the
comments
now.
Is
that
correct?
Yes,
please,
okay!
Thank
you!
So
much,
okay,
one!
Second!
G
Thank
you,
council
chair,
a
quick
note
for
all
of
our
attendees
joining
tonight.
Everyone
who
has
joined
will
be
added
to
the
queue
we
will
be
posting
the
next
10
names
in
the
chat.
So
you
can
see
who
is
coming
next,
if
you're
here
just
to
listen,
feel
free
to
let
us
know
by
sending
a
message
to
robert
knutsman.
Thank
you
so
much
and
with
that
first
off
we
have
brandy
burnham,
followed
by
d
brewer
and
then
eric
parkinson
brandi.
E
A
E
I
think
I'll
listen
this
first
time
and
then
I'll
comment
in
the
future.
I
apologize
for
that
error.
G
Next
we
have
d
brewer,
followed
by
eric
parkinson
and
then
colin
user.
Two,
a
phone
number
has
eight
one:
seven
d,
brewer.
H
Thank
you
very
much,
hello.
Council
members.
It's
nice
to
see
some
of
your
faces
again.
I
am
I'm
here
tonight.
First,
I
want
to
say
thank
you
for
the
funding
you
have
provided
for
programming
that
provides
services
to
people
living
unsheltered
and
we
are
seeing
more
people
living
without
shelter,
and
I
am
concerned
about
that
and
the
downtown
community
is
concerned
about
it.
H
There
are
various
opinions
about
what
we
should
do.
I
know
that
when
I
have
had
friends
and
family
in
crisis,
it
has
been
important
that
we
as
a
community
intervene
and
help
them
find
a
path
that
is
sustainable
and
healthy.
H
H
They
are
in
crisis
and,
in
some
instances,
are
not
in
a
position
to
blaze
that
trail
or
forge
that
path
on
their
own.
So
I
I
conclude
simply
with
that.
Thank
you
for
providing
the
funding
that
you
have
and
I
would
encourage
you
to
continue
that
funding
so
that
as
a
community,
we
can
intervene
and
make
a
difference
and
an
improvement
and
help
individuals
move
toward
that
path
of
a
sustainable
living
environment
and
to
get
the
services
that
they
need.
Thank
you
for
the
time.
I
Hello,
thank
you.
I
also
wanted
to
speak
concerning
the
issues
surrounding
our
shelterless
community
and
I'd
also
like
to
echo
the
comments
that
I
I
think
that
is
incredibly
important
for
us
to
be
putting
as
much
funding
towards
assisting
this
community
as
possible.
But
I
would
like
to
push
back
on
the
notion
of
intervening
on
these
camps,
as
we
saw
during
the
last
winter.
I
Intervening
in
these
camps
does
not
actually
look
like
finding
these
people
resources
and
getting
them
into
places
where
they
are
able
to
get
assistance.
What
it
actually
looks
like
is
confiscating
their
survival
items,
beating
people
arresting
them
and,
ultimately,
just
acting
violent
against
a
community
that
is
already
one
of
the
most
vulnerable
in
our
in
our
city.
I
The
reality
is
that
we
don't
have
the
resources
to
provide
for
everybody
who
has
been
put
onto
the
street,
and
that
is
because
of
funding
cuts
that
have
been
made
to
these
resources
in
the
past
few
years,
and
while
I
am
hopeful
that
we
do
in
fact
see
emergency
shelters
during
the
winter,
the
reality
was
that
last
year
that
was
grossly
insufficient
and
the
announcements
made
by
the
mayor
still
look
to
be
insufficient
for
this
year,
especially
in
light
of
an
oncoming
eviction
crisis
regarding
covet
19..
I
G
Next
we
have
colin
user
2,
followed
by
chris
or
adam
rex,
and
then
gary
schlubus,
oh,
it
seems
collin
user
2
has
oh
there.
You
are
colin
user
2
with
phone
number
has
815
or
817.
E
Yeah,
my
name
is
jordan
talley.
I
would
like
to
absolutely
echo
the
statements
from
the
first
few
callers.
I
mean
I
appreciate
their
willingness
to
speak
on
this.
I
want
to
talk
about.
You
know
the
homeless
encampment
I
would
say
first
I
was.
I
was
at
the
last
abatement
that
was
done.
Last
thursday
I
saw
with
my
very
own
eyes
kind
of
how
it
went
down.
E
I
did
see
that
it
was
met
with
a
lot
of
opposition,
but
what
I
would
like
to
personally
see
is
a
more
transparency
from
the
city
and
how
they
plan
on
taking
care
of
these
abatements
because,
like
like
caller
number
two
said,
I
mean
we've
seen
in
the
past
that
it's
just
been
done
horrifically
it's
inhumane.
It's
it's
sad
to
see.
People
lose
their
belongings
because
they
had
to
go
to
an
apnp
meeting
or
they
had
a
hospital
visit,
or
something
like
that.
You.
H
E
E
I
would
just
like
to
see
the
city
I
guess
be
transparent
about
how
they
plan
on
doing
that
and
how
how
we
can
actually
be
a
resource
to
these
people
instead
of
spreading
them
all
over
the
city,
because
that's
just
going
to
perpetuate
the
problem,
but
that's
I
mean
that's,
that's
all
I
have
for
this
one
here,
but
I
think
I
think
the
first
two
people
kind
of
hit
the
nail
on
the
head
with
that
that
we
need
funding
quick
for
these
people
because
of
the
oncoming
pandemic.
G
We
will
message
emily
to
see
where
she's
at,
if
she'd
like
to
comment.
Next,
we
have
ted
boyer,
followed
by
sam,
say
and
then
colin
user.
Three
phone
number
has
four
six
two
ted.
J
I
am
here,
I'm
just
looking
for
the
appointment
calendar
coming
up
later,
so
I
have
no
comment.
Thank
you.
G
Next,
we
have
sanjay
followed
by
calling
you
user
three
and
then
ava
anderson,
sam.
L
I
just
wanted
to
echo
some
of
the
sentiments
of
the
first
speakers
having
worked
in
homelessness
services
in
salt
lake
city
for
many
years,
just
want
to
add,
through
that,
I
do
believe
funding
more
funding
is
made
as
well
for
programs
to
support
mental
health
and
a
lot
of
the
other
factors
that
lead
to
folks
being
in
shelter
before
any
drastic
measure
is
made
concerning
these
camp
abatements,
as
well
as
the
question
about
more
transparency,
with
the
cost
of
helping
a
few,
which
was
what
operation
mayo
grant
tended
to
do
and
really
it
just
caused
long-term
damage,
so
the
cost
of
helping
fuel
and
advantages
the
whole
sheltered
community.
L
I
don't
believe
those
ends
necessarily
justify
the
means
in
which
that
was
done
and
just
yeah.
I
think
the
previous
speakers
also
hit
the
nail
on
the
head.
We
just
need
funding
quickly
the
effects
of
code
19
on
the
most
vulnerable
population,
as
well
as
all
of
the
things
that
are
also
vulnerability.
Factors
are
just
we
need
to.
I
think,
push
for
funding.
L
Criminalize
being
unsheltered,
because
we
see
that
we've
seen
the
long-term
effects
of
that
causing
damage
to
that
community.
Thanks
for
your.
G
Time
next
we
have
calling
user.
Three
phone
number
has
462,
followed
by
ava
anderson
and
then
emily
allworth
calling
user3.
If
you
could
please
state
your
name
and
then
your
comment.
G
G
L
Hi,
my
name
is
eva
anderson.
I
also
want
to
speak
in
support
of
our
unsheltered
community
and
against
these
camp
abatements
that
we've
seen
are
really
not
helpful,
especially
in
the
long
term,
and
really
harmful
to
these
individuals
as
a
social
worker
in
the
community
I've
I
can
see
the
effectiveness
of
programs
for
mental
health
services
and
substance
abuse
and
other
really
great
programs
that
need
funding
really
severely
and
especially
housing
for
this
winter
that
can
be
distance
and
safe
for
our
community.
Thank
you.
N
Hi
there
I'd
like
to
talk
about
a
few
things.
I
want
to
support
the
appointment
of
dr
ivis,
garcia
and
moana
uvei
hafoka.
I
think
that
both
of
them
made
a
really
great
argument
as
to
why
they'd
be
qualified
and
I'd
love
to
see
them
part
of
our
government.
N
I'd
also
like
to
support
the
future
budget.
Amendment
aaron
mendenhall
has
promised
to
put
in
place
supporting
the
4th
street
clinic.
I
believe
that
that
will
be
a
really
great
help
to
solve
some
of
these
issues
that
are
being
discussed
today.
I
also
would
like
to
personally
call
on
erin
mendenhall
to
address
the
quote
that
she
had
earlier
in
the
meeting
we
were.
N
They
were
discussing
some
of
the
abutments
of
housing
and
moving
around
homeless
people's
things,
and
there
was
a
quote
that
she
said
about
portable
toilets,
not
yet
being
deployed,
and
I'm
kind
of
wondering
why
you
can
find
specific
spaces
that
need
to
be
sanitized
and
have
people's
belongings
moved
around,
but
you
can't
deploy
these
accessible
utilities
to
those
same
places.
N
I
think
that
a
better
solution
to
taking
people's
belongings
when
they
are
in
need
and
have
very
few
things,
would
be
to
provide
accessible,
toilets
and
clean
washing
facilities,
as
well
as
needle
exchanges
for
those
people,
so,
instead
of
having
to
take
their
things
because
they're
soiled
prevent
them
from
being
put
in
that
place.
To
begin
with,
I
think
giving
people
resources
preventively
as
opposed
to
taking
away
things
when
people
are
unable
to
take
care
of
them
themselves,
is
a
better
way
to
approach
the
situation
and
would
really
help
to
solve
some
of
those
issues.
N
I
also
believe
that
the
issues
at
hand
with
hazardous
materials
need
to
be
defined
clearly
on
the
website
and
given
appropriate
notice,
so
that
people
can
to
close
their
belongings.
Thank
you.
G
They
seem
to
have
left
the
call.
Next
we
have
ethan
peterson,
followed
by
colin
user
five
and
then
mia
mcdonald,
ethan.
J
Yeah,
I'm
gonna
echo
what
a
lot
of
other
people
have
already
said,
which
is
that
this
city,
both
the
council
and
the
mayor's
office,
have
a
history
of
neglecting
and
actively
harming
unsheltered
people
in
this
community
and
like
it
needs
to
stop.
J
The
community
has
been
kind
of
battling
you
and
your
police
for
a
long
time
over
this
and
the
hand
ringing
about
the
complexity
of
the
issue
and
the
handwringing
about
the
resources
is
pure
fabrication.
It's
not
real
earlier
callers
expressed
appreciation
for
the
funding
being
provided.
Well,
it's
it's
insufficient
and
it's
immoral
that
you
can't
get
more
funding
to
this.
J
J
J
Last
year
your
police
were
throwing
people's
belongings
and
survival
gear
in
the
garbage
on
a
regular
basis
and
they
were
terrorizing
any
community
members
who
stood
up
to
them,
beating
them
throwing
them
in
cages
and
going
out
and
actively
looking
for
people.
One
woman
was
arrested
last
year
for
a
warrant
for
jaywalking
and
was
thrown
in
a
cage
for
jaywalking.
That
is
not
a
spirit
of
cooperation
or
humanity
or
concern
for
unsheltered
people.
That's
cruelty
and
it's
shows
a
malice
towards
our
unsheltered
neighbors
and
relatives.
J
The
state
recently
with
their
budget.
Pretty
much
gave
25
million
dollars
to
tourism
marketing
and
closed
a
bunch
of
community
clinics.
J
When
your
cops
go
out,
they're
going
out
with
guns,
they're
going
out
with
pepper,
like
pepper
balls
and
with
weapons,
that's
not
to
help
and
the
council
in
the
mayor's
office
are
a
disgrace.
You
need
to
actually
serve
your
constituents.
G
Next,
we
have
mia
mcdonald,
followed
by
nate
housley
and
then
calling
user
six,
but
it
looks
like
mia
is
having
some
mic
issues,
so
we
will
troubleshoot.
G
C
Okay,
yeah,
so
I
want
to
along
with
the
other
callers,
I
want
to
speak
in
favor
of
the
city
council
and
the
mayor.
You
know,
taking
into
consideration
really
the
welfare
of
unsheltered
people
in
our
community.
You
know
stop
clearing
out
the
encampments.
C
C
Is
another
step
in
this
pattern
of
trying
to
you
know,
address
a
symptom
rather
than
a
cause,
and,
and
the
cause
is,
is
you
know,
there's
there's
a
number
of
things:
affordable
housing
is,
is
one
of
the
direct
causes.
C
So
if
we
want
to
see
you
know
if
we
want
to
see
less
home
less
chronic
homelessness,
the
answer
is
not
to
throw
away
people's
belongings
and
shuffle
them
around
to
other
parts
of
the
valley.
You
know
the
closing
of
the
road
home
was
was
an
attempt
to
do
that
and
the
resources
were
not
there.
C
So
we
need
to
see
resources
for
these
very
vulnerable
vulnerable
people.
During
a
pandemic,
and
not
you
know,
as
as
as
a
few
other
callers
have
mentioned,
not
more
money
going
to
police,
not
more
money
going
to
tourism.
C
This
is
life
or
death,
and
I
hope
that
you
will
all
you
know,
consider
on
those
terms-
and
you
know,
address
the
the
root
cause
of
of
people
being
unsheltered.
Thank
you.
G
Next,
we
have
calling
user
six
phone
number
has
eight
five
nine
followed
by
ann
charles
and
colin
user.
Eight
phone
number
has
905
column
user
six.
If
you
can
state
your
name
and
then
your
comment.
E
I'm
not
sure
why
I
don't
know,
but
I
can't
call
her
before
the
last.
I
want
to
say
I
stand
with
about
everything.
He
said
that
it's
inhumane,
the
way
that
they're
being
treated
there's
not
enough
resources.
We
need
mental
health
counseling.
We
need
a
permanent,
long-term
solution
to
the
housing
problem.
There
isn't
even
enough
housing
for
people
that
qualify
for
housing.
I
know
people
who
have
gone
into
the
housing
office
to
try
to
get
housing
that
would
qualify
just
because
they're
on
disability
and
they're
told
there's
years
years
years
years.
E
E
G
Next,
we
have
ann
charles,
followed
by
column,
user,
eight
phone
number
has
905
and
then
we'll
try
to
go
back
to
emily
redevoid
and
charles.
F
Hi,
I
wanted
to
reiterate
a
lot
of
what
others
are
saying.
We
should
stop
the
camp
abatements
until
we
actually
have
a
plan.
We
might.
I
just
wasn't
able
to
find
in-depth
details.
I
listened
to
erin's
air
mendenhall's
talk
that
she
gave
on
the
salt
lake
government
tv
and
there
were
some
vague
plans.
I
just
wasn't
able
to
find
all
the
details
of
what
that
response
was
going
to
be
so
either.
F
It's
just
making
people
feel
a
lot
more
comfortable,
not
having
to
see
a
camp
where
they
are
or
where
they're
walking
michelle
flynn,
the
previous
director
of
the
road
home,
had
a
really
good
op-ed
in
the
salt
lake
tribune,
where
she
was
talking
about
how
housing
is
health
care
and
mayor
mendenhall.
You
had
said
that
health
is
your
priority
in
your
covid
response
winter
plan,
and
so
this
should
be
a
priority:
solving
and
providing
services
to
those
who
are
homeless.
We
need
to
drastically
re-haul
how
we
address
it.
F
Shelters
are
not
going
to
work
right
now
with
a
pandemic.
It's
just
going
to
intensify
the
issues.
I
really
applauded
your
guys's
response
to
the
recent
crazy
weather
that
we
were
having.
There
was
a
ton
of
transparency.
I
knew
exactly
what
was
going
on.
You
should
provide
that
same
transparency
and
information
to
this
issue
and
to
every
issue.
People
should
know
exactly
what's
going
on
what
your
plans
are,
how
they
can
get
services
in
the
same
way.
So
thank
you.
G
Next,
we
have
colon
user,
8
phone
number
has
905.
G
G
Oh
thank
you.
Next
we
have
bridget
dunveck,
followed
by
liz
defries
and
then
colony
user.
Nine
phone
number
has
two
five
four
bridgette
dunbeck.
F
Hi
there,
my
name
is
bridget
dunbach,
and
I
would
like
to
talk
about,
as
everyone
else
has
how
our
unsheltered
community
has
been
treated
over
the
last
few
weeks
and
the
future
plans
that
the
sally
st
council
has
for
them.
I'm
really
concerned,
of
course,
against
the
camp
abatements
and
what
this
is
doing
to
an
already
vulnerable
community.
F
I
was
so
heartbroken
to
see
that
treatment
of
our
unsheltered
community
after
a
devastating
wind
storm
worth
dropping
temperatures
and
people
losing
what
supplies
they
do
have.
I
will
acknowledge,
of
course,
the
effort
to
put
up
that
heating
shelters
to
help
keep
some
of
these
people
warm,
but
the
day,
the
next
day,
when
you're
going
around
and
taking
people's
stuff,
it's
just
not
great,
especially
as
we're
now
going
to
be
seeing
an
increased
homeless
population
due
to
covid
and
people
experiencing
economic
troubles.
F
F
I'm
really
concerned
that
I've
spent
30
minutes
on
the
website
on
your
website
and
was
not
able
to
find
any
information.
I
was
a
meeting
with
coworkers
and
they
were
like
that's
not
happening
no
way.
That's
not
how
we
do
things.
I
was
like
wait
pause.
F
Let
me
find
it
and
I
couldn't
and
that's
not
appropriate
and
that's
especially
for
someone
who's
who's
spending.
Time
searching.
I
think
it's
good
to
communicate
openly
with
the
populace,
especially
about
things
that
are
contradictory
and
create
big
emotions.
So.
G
P
You
I
just
wanna
again
echo
the
voices
of
fellow
activists
by
saying
that
I
vehemently.
K
Immediate
reinvestment
of
the
budget
to
address
the
root
causes
of
housing
and
security,
including
affordable
health
care,
employment
and
renters
rights.
We
demand
the
city
council
utilize
harm
reduction
strategies,
including
legal
campsites
and
more
public
restrooms
and
showers.
I'd
also
like
to
take
a
moment
to
respond
directly
to
the
mayor's
facebook
post
earlier
today,
as
there
are
some
that
were
around
this
issue,
is
there
some
clear
inaccuracies
in
the
stated
goals
of
the
project
and
the
actual
realities
of
these
camp
abatement
projects?
K
Her
first
point
states
quote:
people
will
have
proper
advance
notice
that
a
cleaning
event
will
happen.
End
quote:
the
city
has
repeatedly
posted
notices
with
no
dates
or
times.
Additionally,
health
department
officials
have
actually
told
activists
that
they
don't
have
to
give
notice
anymore
and
our
second
point
states.
We
will
provide
outreach
and
offer
available
services
to
campers.
This
is
also
inaccurate.
There
has
been
no
evidence
of
outreach
attempts
at
any
abatement
so
far.
K
So
if
this
is
happening,
it
needs
to
be
happening
on
a
much
larger
scale,
and
there
needs
to
be
evidence
of
this
because
we're
not
seeing
that
the
mayor's
third
point
states.
We
cannot
and
will
not
require
people
experiencing
unsheltered
homelessness
to
permanently
move
without
having
an
option
for
where
they
could
go.
End
quote,
but
really
abatements
are
only
phase.
One
phase
two
was
camp
closures,
enforced
by
salt
lake
city
pd.
K
Also,
when
councilman
johnson
asked
the
mayor
where
campers
were
supposed
to
go,
the
mayor
and
her
chief
of
staff
said
they
hoped
the
county
will
have
warming
stations
so
where's
the
plan
for
it.
For
any
of
this,
the
fourth
point:
the
health
department
will
only
dispose
of
items
that
have
been
abandoned
or
determined
to
pose
a
health
risk.
The
problem
with
this
is
that,
rather
than
helping
to
sanitize
repair
items,
the
city
is
just
throwing
out
necessary
items
like
sleeping
bags,
tents
and
blankets,
and
there's
really
no
safe
options
with
covid
and
this
pandemic.
K
The
fifth
point:
campers
will
not
be
cited
for
being
homeless
as
part
of
cleanups.
We
weren't
aware
you
could
be
excited
for
being
homeless.
We
were
aware
that
city
officials
have
repeatedly
threatened
to
arrest
those
who
try
to
protect
long
age
during
abatements,
basically
council,
to
recognize
the
realities
and
harm
caused
by
these
statement.
Plans.
Not
just
the
ideals
you
are
hoping
for,
but
are
not
actually
happening.
Thank
you.
G
G
I
Thank
you
for
your
time,
I'd
like
to
make
a
comment
about
the
way
policing,
intersects
with
injustice
and
the
way
that
you
communicate
with
your
constituents.
I'm
continually
frustrated
by
the
abdication
of
responsibility
by
the
mayor,
the
chiefs
of
police
and
the
council
in
regards
to
the
violence
and
injustice
that
we
see
in
our
police
department.
I
We
saw
this
with
the
grotesque
attempted
murder
of
a
child
lyndon
cameron
who
is
in
need
of
mental
health
resources,
and
we've
been
seeing
it
for
years
and
years
with
our
most
vulnerable
neighbors
experiencing
homelessness,
whose
belongings
are
stolen,
under
the
guise
of
order
and
public
health
they're
charged
with
crimes
for
even
attempting
to
survive
in
a
city
that
sees
them
as
the
problem,
rather
than
the
lack
of
affordable
housing,
health
care
and
support.
So
I
want
to
draw
attention
to
a
pattern
at
every
opportunity.
I
Our
leadership
and
representatives
claim
that
the
issues
that
we
see
with
policing
and
the
current
housing
crisis
are
either
a
rooted
in
policies
and
laws
for
which
they
have
no
direct
responsibility
or
b
addressable
by
via
symbolic
art,
piece
or
a
watered-down
reforms
that
will
actually
do
nothing
to
address
the
systemic
part
of
synthetic
injustice.
The
end
result
looks
like
the
reforms
that
the
mayor
spelled
out
a
few
weeks
ago,
the
same
tired
arguments
about
body
cams
and
de-escalation.
I
This
is
unacceptable.
I
believe
that
you
lack
the
will
to
stand
up
for
anyone,
but
developers
and
business
owners,
and
you
mask
this
by
engaging
in
a
long-term
shell
game
until
the
heat
dies
down
or
until
you're
out
of
office,
when
the
public
focus
shifts
from
the
police
officers
to
the
council
from
the
council
to
the
mayor
from
the
mayor
to
the
d.a
from
the
d.a
to
the
legislature,
I'm
sure
that
you
breathe
a
sigh
of
relief,
but
I
do
not
share
your
relief.
I
Finally,
I
want
to
note
that
the
mayor
tweeted
a
photo
of
her
and
james
rogers
touring
the
devastation
in
rose
park
after
the
storm.
While
I
appreciate
this
I'd
like
to
request
that
instead,
each
of
you
on
the
council
make
a
point
to
be
present
for
the
dehumanizing
camp,
abatements
and
closures,
so
we've
seen
criminalizing
folks
experiencing
homelessness
in
the
pandemic,
especially
as
we
anticipate
phase
one
and
two
of
the
mayor's
covid
19
winter
plan.
Thank
you
very
much
for
your
time.
M
Hello,
so
my
name
is
jinx
and
I
am
a
committee
member
for
the
sex
workers,
outreach
project.
We
are
a
local
non-profit
and
we
have
a
homeless
outreach
prog
program
that
we
built
from
the
ground
up
at
the
beginning
of
the
pandemic
and
all
of
us
with
swap
and
everyone
that
I
know
who
is
doing
homeless.
Outreach
right
now
is
pretty
infuriated
at
the
mayor
and
the
salt
lake
city
police
department.
To
echo
a
lot
of
the
previous
speakers.
M
The
house
folks
from
the
community
who
are
going
out
and
trying
to
protect
them
is
an
abomination,
and
I
just
really
would
like
the
mayor
to
step
up
and
allocate
less
funding
for
the
police,
more
funding
for
homeless
resources.
You
know
every
winter
for
the
past.
I
don't
even
know
how
many
years
we've
had
multiple
homeless
folks
die
on
the
street,
because
we're
prioritizing
developments,
we're
prioritizing
the
police
and
not
getting
resources
to
the
folks
who
need
them.
Who
are
marginalized.
M
You
know,
and
with
the
pandemic
and
more
evictions
happening,
more
people
are
going
to
be
homeless
and
I
think
if
people
took
a
second
to
think
that
they're
a
lot
closer
to
homelessness
than
they
realize,
maybe
they
would
have
a
little
bit
more
empathy
for
unsheltered
folks,
and
maybe
they
would
try
a
little
bit
harder.
G
G
We'll
go
ahead
and
move
to
the
next
person,
alison
anderson,
followed
by
terry
van
duren
and
then
cal
morse,
allison
anderson.
L
Hi
hi,
my
name
is
ally,
anderson
and
I
wanted
to
speak.
I
wanted
to
speak
about
the
unsheltered
encampments,
so
I
want
to
start
off
by
saying
I
understand
the
need
for
the
camp
abatement
when
it
comes
to
the
health
and
safety
of
the
community
human
waste,
and
things
like
that.
Discarded
syringes
like
those
do
need
to
be
cleaned
up
and
living
on
the
streets
can
be
traumatizing.
L
So,
however,
we
can
help
our
folks
on
the
street.
Help
them
get
out
of
that
situation
is,
is
very
much
needed,
so
I'm
an
outreach
worker
and
I'm
concerned
about
making
sure
we
have
adequate
resources
for
them.
I
actually
have
a
long
list
of
individuals
that
want
housing
right
now,
but
they
just
have
simple
barriers.
Another
thing
is
treatment
beds
right
now,
most
most
treatment
centers
have
long
waiting
lists,
except
with
the
exception
of
a
few
and
most
unsheltered
individuals
that
I
speak
with
these.
L
So
I
want
to
speak
in
support
of
increasing
funding
for
these
programs
if
there's
any
way
to
simplify
the
processes,
to
make
it
easier
for
them
to
access
these
resources,
and
I
wanted
to
mention
like
possibility
of
a
safe
zone
somewhere
where
they
can
have
some
stability
where
we
could
have.
I
don't
know
if
it's
porta
potties
sinks
somewhere,
where
we
can
go
and
find
them,
because
right
now,
they're
all
over
the
place
and
when
they're,
when
there's
nowhere
stable
for
them
to
be
like
the
reality,
is
right.
L
Now
there
are
a
lot
of
unsheltered
individuals
out
there
and
it's
going
to
take
time
to
get
them
all
into
housing
or
get
them
all
the
resources
they
need.
So
right
now
any
way
that
we
can
provide
stability
for
them.
So
they
don't
have
to
be
in
constant
survival.
Don't
have
to
worry
about
their
stuff
being
stolen.
Constantly.
L
I'd
also
like
to
encourage
the
city
to
be
very
thorough,
with
outreach
with
the
outreach
phase
of
the
plan
rather
than
criminalizing
unsheltered
individuals,
and
I
also
want
to
say
I
I
support
increased
transparency
on
the
processes
for
camp
abatements.
That'd
be
really
helpful.
E
Q
They
come
to
salt
lake
city
cemetery,
also
to
see
relatives
and
other
famous
people.
My
family
and
I,
the
visiting
on
memorial
day,
has
been
up
there
along
with
christmas
and
thanksgiving
and
the
last
couple
of
years.
We
have
not
been
able
to
do
it
because
we've
sustained
damage
to
our
cars
trying
to
drive
through,
because.
Q
Funding
for
repairing
the
roads
or
repaving
those
roads
so
that
it
can
be
a
place
of
beauty
with
it
being
one
of
the
largest
publicly
or
city-owned
cemeteries
for
people
to
be
able
to
come
and
really
enjoy
it
and
the
spirit
that
is
there.
That's
all.
I
have.
E
G
B
Hello,
I
also
want
to
speak
on
behalf
of
the
unsheltered
community
in
salt
lake
city.
I
do
outreach
weekly
at
least
I've
seen
the
struggles
that
these
people
go
through,
and
I
just
want
to
say
that
the
disgusting
unethical
treatment
of
them
by
the
mayor
and
the
city
is
more
harmful
than
good
at
all.
I
want
camp
abatements
to
stop
now
or
we
will
continue
to
shut
them
down.
They
are
a
waste
of
money
and
everybody's
time.
B
I
want
you
to
pull
money
from
the
murderous
police
department
and
use
that
to
fund
your
raise
up
slc
instead
of
asking
for
donations
when
we've
all
been
contributing
to
mutual
aid.
All
year
long,
we
need
safe
zones
for
these
people
to
camp
city.
Permit
city
permitted
camp
zones
where
you
can
drop
off
bathrooms
and
showers
and
hand
wash
wash
stations
needle
exchange.
B
We
need
more
resources
from
the
city
for
these
people
and
less
police
involvement
and
harassment.
I'm
regularly
harassed
by
the
police
department
for
handing
out
supplies
to
the
unsheltered
community,
and
it's
honestly
disgusting.
It
feels
totalitarian
mendenhall.
You
need
to
step
up.
You've
lost
everybody's
respect
that
you
represent,
and
the
only
way
you
can
save
your
career
from
here
on
is
doing
something
revolutionary.
A
G
F
Hi,
I
want
to
discuss
mendenhall's
covet
19
plan.
I
am
so
deeply
frustrated
that
we
are
here
again
that
year
after
year
the
city
continues
to
do
the
same
plan
that
has
no
effect
that
has
no
lasting
change,
that
traumatizes
people
and
that
wastes
hundreds
of
thousands
of
dollars
not
only
of
the
city's
money
but
of
these
unsheltered
individuals
who
have
to
pay
these
legal
fees
for
ridiculous
charges
that
they
get
during
these
abatements,
I'm
so
frustrated
with
the
abatements
and
how
they're
being
handled.
F
I'm
really
frustrated
that
when
andrew
johnston
asked
the
mayor
and
rachel
otto
where
these
people
are
supposed
to
go,
there
was
no
answer
that
instead,
you
gave
hopes
you
gave
expectations
for
the
county
of
what
they'll
do,
but
there's
been
no
plan
put
in
place
of
where
these
people
will
go.
You
keep
investing
in
the
appearances
of
solutions,
instead
of
actually
investing
in
lasting
change.
F
I
can't
express
enough
how
desperately
these
people
need
help.
We
are
in
a
pandemic.
There
aren't
resources
for
them.
We
cannot
go
in
and
say
that
we're
giving
them
resources
by
having
social
workers,
hand
out
flyers
with
a
list
of
phone
numbers
to
call
that's
not
resources.
The
money
needs
to
go
towards
actual
resources.
For
these
people.
We
need
more
public
restrooms,
we
need
stations
where
people
can
shower
and
wash
their
clothes.
We
need
warming
and
cooling
stations,
we
need
legal
campsites.
F
G
Next,
we
have
calling
user
13
phone
number
466,
followed
by
calling
user
14
phone
number
898
and
then
call
in
user
16,
691
call
in
user
13.
If
you
can
say
your
name
and
then
your
comment.
E
Hi,
my
name
is
nancy
johnson
I
actually
was
just
listening,
but
I
think
I
am
gonna
throw
a
couple
of
comments
out
this
evening.
One
thing
that
I
have
seen
is
I've
seen
the
police
out
on
bmw
motorcycles.
E
E
E
G
E
Okay,
my
name
is
mia,
and
I'm
also
here
to
talk
about
our
own
shelter.
Population
status
of
that
population
is
a
sign
that
our
city
is
failing
as
a
community,
and
the
solution
is
not
to
sweep
the
camps
and
to
prioritize
funding
to
programs
that
will
actually
treat
the
root
causes.
So
again,
I'm
here
to
advocate
for
the
end
of
the
camp
abatement.
Thank
you.
That's
it.
G
E
I
wanted
to
start
off
by
saying
that
I
do
appreciate
how
the
abatements
are
now
being
handled,
as
do
our
unsheltered,
neighbors
and
friends.
They've
actually
spoke
directly
to
us
about
some
members
of
the
health
department
coming
out
the
day
ahead
and
meeting
with
them
individually,
sitting
down
with
them
and
talking
to
them
instead
of
how
they've
been
handled
in
the
past-
and
I
also
want
to
echo
some
of
the
comments
about
the
need
for
increased
funding
for
housing
for
treatment
and
things
of
that
nature.
E
We
have
had
a
number
of
people
on
housing
lists
and
they're
not
able
to
get
in
for
a
number
of
reasons,
a
number
of
barriers,
and
I
do
think
that
we
do
need
increased
funding
for
that.
But
I
do
want
to
say
that
I
do
support
these
abatements
and
I
do
see
where
they're
necessary
and
I
do
want
to
give
kudos
to
the
health
department
and
also
to
the
police
department
as
well.
Thank
you.
E
People
who
are
all
ready
without
help
without
shelters,
by
continuing
to
do
these
things,
we're
just
wasting
more
money,
doing
the
same
old
thing
that
we've
seen
does
absolutely
nothing
it
just
shuffles
people
around
and
puts
them
at
more
and
more
risk,
especially
down
right
before
winter.
This
is
going
to
be
without
without
any
help
these
people
that
are
sentencing
them
to
death.
E
It'd,
be
so
much
better
to
be
using
this
money
to
be
helping
these
people
to
actually
be
getting
real
outreach
to
be
to
focus
on
the
actual
issues
of
why
there's
public
health
concerns
here
of
why
there's
mental
health
concerns
all
these
things?
Thank
you.
G
E
E
G
K
Elena,
I
would
also
like
to
speak
in
support
of
unsheltered
people.
P
E
G
P
Hi
there
I
just
would
like
to
speak,
as
so
many
have
already
tonight
about
the
proposed
homeless,
encampment
abatement
plans
and
strategies.
I
agree
with
so
many
who've
already
have
already
spoken,
that
this
is
a
misguided
and
ineffective
approach
to
supporting
our
homeless
community
members,
and
I
just
feel
like
they're
you.
You
are
our
city
council
and
our
mayor
that
I
feel
as
though
we
as
a
community
keep
getting.
P
It
feels
like
you're
passing
the
buck
off
onto
us,
saying
we
need
to
fix
this
problem,
but
you're
our
elected
officials
and
we're
not
seeing
these
problems
addressed
or
taken
care
of
in
a
productive
way.
Operation.
P
Rio
grande
was
a
disaster,
and
I
would
just
like
to
call
for
compassion
to
our
unhoused
community
members
and
just
a
reminder
that
you're
serving
us
and
that
you
have
power
to
to
accomplish
things,
and
we
would
like
to
see
some
some
more
effective
policy
put
in
place
to
support
this
really
vulnerable
portion
of
our
community.
Thank
you.
G
E
Hey,
I
just
want
to
express
just
how
deplorable
I
really
find
the
actions
of
the
city
and
the
police
over
the
past
few
weeks
and
months.
E
You
know
we're
in
the
middle
of
a
pandemic.
We've
been
experiencing
hurricane
level
winds
here
and
we're
taking
this
opportunity
to
torment
the
homeless
people
of
our
city
and
take
their
stuff
force
them
out
of
the
only
place
that
they
really
have
to
sleep
right
now.
I
I
don't
know
how
we
can
justify
that
the
salt
lake
city
police
recently
shot
a
neurodivergent
child
as
far
as
I'm
concerned
he's
still
in
the
hospital
to
me.
E
This
demonstrates
that
the
police
have
shown
themselves
to
be
ineffective
and
I
believe
that
we
should
heavily
defund
the
police,
if
not,
abolish
them
and
use
that
money
to
support
our
community
and
support
the
people.
At
the
end
of
the
day,
your
guys's
job
is
to
help
us
and
not
to
shoot
us
or
to
force
us
out
of
our
homes
out.
E
A
That
is
to
tackle
the
root
causes
of
it.
E
I
do
not
want
to
be
ashamed
of
the
fact
that
I
voted
for
you,
but
if
we
don't
start
to
see
real
change
in
the
city,
I
think
that
might
be
the
path
that
we're
headed
down
thanks
for
your
time.
L
Hi,
can
you
hear
me.
E
P
Thank
you,
I'm
just
calling
to
express
kind
of
the
same
thing
everyone's
talking
about.
I
just
wanted
to
call
for
you
guys
to
reconsider
the
coven
19
winter
plan.
I
think
it's
only
going
to
aggravate
the
already
desperate
situations
that
homeless
people
are
dealing
with
downtown
and
around
salt
lake,
and
I
think
the
compassionate
thing
to
do
for
that
community
is
to
provide
safer
environments
for
them,
while
they
navigate
the
programs
that
are
meant
to
help
them.
P
That
means,
like
some
people
have
mentioned,
allowing
a
permanent
legal
camp
space
providing
safe
bathrooms.
If
sanitation
is
the
concern
which
it's
been
said,
that
the
sanitary
conditions
are
a
reason
that
these
cleanups
are
happening,
give
them
help
keeping
them
clean,
give
them
resources
to
keep
their
spaces
clean.
I
went
and
helped
organize
some
of
the
camps
last
week
down
at
rio
grande
so
that
the
health
department
would
come
and
take
all
their
stuff.
There
was
a
woman
who
was
holding
on
to
stuff
that
was
hers,
her
sons
and
her
daughter-in-laws.
P
Her
son
was
in
jail
for
something
he
didn't
even
do,
because
he
was
in
the
hospital
when
that
thing
happened
like
these
are
people
who,
like
this
is
all
they
have
and
they're
coming
in
literally
just
throwing
their
stuff
away.
P
So
I
mean,
if,
if
we
care
about
sanitation,
where
are
we
throwing
away
people's
belongings
we're
not
throwing
away
trash,
throwing
away
their
belongings,
the
only
things
they
have
out
on
the
streets
which
they
can't
get
out
of,
because
we
are
not
allocating
any
resources
for
them
or
enough
resources
them
to
actually
get
off
the
streets,
find
housing
find
jobs?
I
think
that
stemming
the
flow
of
homelessness
in
the
face
of
covet
is
also
really
important
to
consider.
P
That
means
providing
more
secure
housing
for
people
all
over
salt
lake,
more
health
care
and
access
to
it
more
employment
opportunities
and
expanding
renters
rights,
which
means
ending
evictions,
at
least
for
right
now,
because
evicting
people
during
a
pandemic
is
literally
evil
and
the
fact
that
you
guys
are,
I
know
that
we
can't.
I
know
there
are
laws
and
stuff
and
it's
complicated,
but
like
not
at
least
trying
to
stop
evictions
from
happening
is
contributing
to
more
people
being
homeless.
P
B
Hello,
I
am
roberto
and
I
am
with
the
brown
berets.
I
have
come
out
to
speak
today
against
the
cover
19
winter
plan
and
the
early.
B
As
the
brown
berets
we're
against
the
unfair
treatment
of
unsheltered
people
by
salt
lake
city,
we
want
everyone
involved
in
the
decision
making
process
to
prevent
the
displacement
of
campers
and
the
stealing
of
their
property
by
the
city
police.
We
do
not
want
shelter,
people
to
be
arrested
or
given
citations.
We
want
less
money
in
the
police
budget
and
more
money
in
harm
reduction,
programs
and
services
such
as
warming
stations,
shelters
and
legal
campsites
that
many
other
people
have
talked
about.
B
We
see
the
unsheltered
population
as
a
product
of
social
and
economic
systems,
these
social
and
economic
systems,
prioritize
private
property
and
profit
over
people
and
their
lives.
This
system
has
a
lack
of
employment,
health,
health
care
and
renters
rights,
and
then,
obviously,
one
further
manifestation
is
housing
and
security.
So
it's
also
out
of
this
context
that
we
demand
an
end
to
the
early
development
in
worlds
park.
We
know
for
a
fact
that
cw
irvine
is
not
interested
in
the
betterment
and
the
betterment
of
our
community.
B
B
We
think
it
would
be
most
beneficial
for
the
community
if
the
plot
of
land
was
given
back
and
that's
why
we
are
fighting
the
the
ellie
development
and
also
fighting
against
verification
as
a
process
and
its
impacts.
Thanks.
K
Hello,
I
am
calling
in
regard
to
the
mayor's
so-called
covet
19
winter
plan.
I
demand
an
immediate
end
to
this
program,
as
well
as
a
moratorium
on
cleanups
throughout
the
winter.
At
the
very
least,
I
want
to
see
that
money
reinvested
into
addressing
the
root
causes
of
housing,
insecurity
and
directly
supporting
our
unsheltered
communities
like
providing
hotel
vouchers
to
avoid
unnecessary
deaths
this
winter.
I
want
to
see
harm
reduction
practices
utilized
to
protect
people
who
live
in
these
camps.
K
Erin,
I
don't
know
whether
you're
completely
naive
or
if
this
is
just
you,
assuming
that
your
constituents
are
we're
going
to
call
things
what
they
are.
This
winter
plan
is
a
thinly
veiled,
re-up
of
the
inhumane
operation.
Rio
grande,
these
cleanups
are
raids
on
our
community
members
and
the
thread
that
you
tweeted
out
today,
I
assume
in
an
attempt
to
call
our
anger
at
the
city.
Council
meeting
was
ripe
with
misinformation.
K
C
Hi,
thank
you.
This
is
alex
jennifer
gurkey,
I'm
just
here
to
speak
in
support
of
our
unsheltered
neighbors.
I
believe
that
the
the
camp
abatements
are
unpre
productive
right
now
and
that
we
need
to
move
forward
with
a
plan
to
normalize
or
at
least
sanction
urban
camping
sites.
C
It
was
exciting
to
see
a
community
center
converted
into
an
overnight
shelter
last
week,
but
then,
at
the
same
time,
it's
frustrating
to
see
that
you
know
these
community
centers
have
been
closed
for
the
last
six
months,
where
unsheltered
neighbors
often
come
to
use
the
facilities.
C
So
as
far
as
a
health
plan
to
help
stop
the
spread
of
covet,
it's
understandable
that
they're
closed,
but
then,
when
looking
at
the
health
concerns
of
our
unsheltered
neighbors,
I
feel
like
they
were.
They
were
neglected
during
this
planning
process
in
the
long
term
scale
of
things-
and
I
feel
like
this
winter
plan
in
itself
too,
is
just
kind
of
furthering
a
continuation
of
problems
that
haven't
been
solved.
P
Okay
and
I
am
aerial
genovese,
I
would
also
like
to
speak
about
the
camp
abatement,
and
I
feel
strongly
this.
This
should
stop.
I
feel
that
a
low
bar
compassionate
thing
to
do
is
provide
a
legal
space
for
our
unsheltered
neighbors
to
camp
with
access
to
bathrooms
and
spaces
to
wash
and
clean
them
their
belongings.
P
P
At
this
moment,
given
kovid
creating
unsafe
situations
in
the
shelters-
and
I
would
say
that,
if
you
in
your
homes,
which
you
have
been
privileged
to
have
through
the
circumstances
of
your
life,
through
the
access
to
health
care
and
mental
health
care
to
careers,
to
support
networks,
it
would
be
radical
if
someone
took
your
belongings
and
took
your
shelter
and
we
should
see
taking
the
shelter
and
belongings
of
our
unsheltered
neighbors
as
more
radical
than
the
perfect
compassionate
compromises
of
providing
the
places
where
they
can
rest.
Thank
you.
L
Hi
I'm
natasha,
I
live
in
salt
lake.
I
want
to
reiterate
what
everyone
else
has
already
said:
I'd
like
to
call
for
an
immediate
end
to
this
coveted
winter
plan.
I
think
camp
abatements
alone
are
problematic,
let
alone
camp
closures.
L
I
think
your
stated
explanations
for
campaignments
are
simply
not
true
for
the
most
part,
if
notice
is
given,
I
know
that
it's
certainly
not
clear
what
date
or
time
abatements
are
going
to
happen.
The
outreach
that
you
claim
to
do
is
giving
a
lot
of
resources,
telephone
lists
and
nothing
physical
or
material,
and
if
anything
is
done,
it's
above
all
else,
something
that's
reactive.
It
doesn't
actually
provide
support
in
the
first
place
in
a
preventative
manner
that
can
prevent
people
from
being
on
the
streets.
L
I
don't
understand
how
taking
unsheltered
folks
belongings
breaking
up
their
encampments
and
bringing
the
very
same
police
that
just
shot
a
13
year
old
in
your
city
to
ensure
what
you
call
safety
is
serving
our
community.
Again
and
again,
your
government
has
shown
the
callousness
towards
our
most
vulnerable
members
of
the
population
and
your
social
justice
lip
service
aside
and
claims
for
concerns
of
public
health.
L
Aside,
it's
astonishingly
clear
that,
ultimately,
it
is
the
profit,
the
interest
of
developers
and
gentrifiers
and
the
sources
of
environmental
degradation
in
our
city
and,
above
all
else,
the
aesthetic
of
salt
lake.
That
is
your
interest,
not
its
conditions
or
adjusting
anything
to
ensure
that
human
life
can
thrive
here.
L
If
you're
concerned
with
public
health,
I
think
you
should
give
us
outreach
in
the
form
of
public
restrooms
stations
for
washing
warming
stations,
legal
campsites,
needle
exchanges,
cuts
in
the
police
budget,
resources
for
low-income
housing
and
homeless,
shelters
and
rent
support.
Homelessness
is
symptomatic
of
greater
economic
equality,
and
if
you
fail
to
see
this,
it
is
short-sighted
and
naive
to
believe
that
abatements
or
camp
closures
will
solve
any
of
these
problems.
A
Thank
you,
natasha,
just
council
staff.
Can
we
post
the
number
for
the
a
lot
of
these
comments
have
been
related
to
public
health
just
for
people's
ease
of
access?
Can
we
post
a
phone
number
for
them
to
contact
the
health
department,
state
and
county
thanks.
M
Hi,
my
name
is
michelle
maurer,
I'm
also
calling
about
these
camp
abatements.
I
really
hope
that
you
guys
will
end
the
kovid
19
winter
plan.
M
You
know
stop
that
where
it
is
instead
of
using
money
for
that
using
that
budget
instead
for
the
root
causes
of
housing
and
securities
like
health
care
and
employment
and
mental
health
resources.
M
It's
been
stated,
and
it's
been
discussed
tonight,
but
it's
that's
just
really
horrifying
to
me
that
it's
those
police
who
are
you
know,
shooting
13
year
old,
kids
and
murdering
members
of
our
community
and
those
resources
and
that
money
needs
to
be
used
elsewhere.
So
yeah.
I
just
really
hope
you
all
will
end
the
coven
19
winter
plan.
M
M
It's
really
it's
really
horrifying.
What's
what
police
are
doing
and
what
the
city
is
doing
to
unsheltered
people
in
our
community
they're
a
really
vulnerable
population?
If
we,
as
we've
heard
and
people
have
said
tonight,
yeah,
please
yeah
find
some.
G
Council,
chair
and
capitol
hole
just
to
give
an
update.
We
have
25
about
25
names
remaining.
Currently,
if
there's
interest
in
a
break,
please
let
me
know.
G
G
G
G
F
Hi
yeah,
my
name
is
leah
joyner
and
I
wanted
to
speak
against
the
kova
19
winter
plan
from
the
city.
F
I
want
to
echo
the
sentiments
that
other
callers
have
made
about
this,
but
I
also
want
to
draw
the
council's
awareness
to
research
that
has
been
conducted
in
our
community
that
actually
indicates
that
camp
abatements
really
do
just
perpetuate
homelessness
and
that
even
the
folks
who
are
managing
public
lands
and
our
parks
and
doing
the
camp
abatements
and
cleanups
themselves
have
observed
that
the
abatements
really
do
just
perpetuate
homelessness
and
are
not
an
effective
use
of
city
funds.
F
So
I'd
like
to
see
the
council
take
research
like
this
into
consideration
and
maybe
reach
out
to
folks
at
the:
u
doing
this
type
of
work
and
incorporate
that
into
your
plans
to
fund
affordable
housing,
increase
access
to
bathrooms
and
water
and
put
a
stop
to
police
harassment
of
unsheltered
people.
Thank
you.
G
Next,
we
have
fly
on
the
wall,
blm
followed
by
call-in
user
28
phone
number
has
706
fly
on
the
wall,
blm.
D
Hi,
my
name
is
natasha,
I'm
also
here
to
advocate
for
the
unsheltered
community
being
someone
who's
been
out
there
for
months,
handing
out
clothes,
food,
water,
helping
helping
when
they're
actually
being
moved
and
humanely
abruptly
unjustly
it's
disgusting,
I'm
just
a
college
student
giving
the
clothes
off
of
my
back,
giving
the
little
money.
I
have
giving
the
food
the
little
food
that
I
have
to
the
unsheltered
community.
That
is
what
community
looks
like
salt
lake
city.
D
Does
not
salt
lake
city
likes
to
pretend
and
present
itself
as
a
safe,
clean,
respectable
progressive
family
oriented
might
enjoy
the
expense
of
the
people,
but
all
these
things,
and
so
on
the
people
of
salt
lake
city
know
that
it's
not
true.
Salt
lake
city
only
cares
to
protect
and
preserve
its
money,
power
and
buildings,
not
their
people.
I
would
be
remiss
if
I
did
not
mention
the
lack
of
diversity
on
this
panel
as
well.
You
sit
up
there
with
your
nose
held
high,
look
bored
you're,
looking
patient.
D
My
only
understanding
you,
you
guys,
must
be
cold-blooded,
reptiles
to
sit
there
listening
to
the
people
you're
supposed
to
be
representing
the
people
you're
supposed
to
be
looking
after
we
are
telling
you
we
want
better.
We
are
telling
you
that
what
you
are
doing,
the
way
you
are
using
your
power
to
move
unsheltered
people
to
call
their
stuff
trash
is
inhumane.
Disgusting
and
deployable
deplorable
men
and
whole
do
better
fight
harder,
if
not
for
the
people,
fight
harder
for
another
term.
We
have
given
you
so
many
solutions
and
suggestions.
D
We
want
better
from
our
elected
officials
and
remember
you
guys
are
elected
officials.
We
are
telling
you
once
and
for
all.
We
are
tired
of
the
actions
that
you
continue
to
show
to
unsheltered
people.
There
are
humans,
just
like
you,
just
like
your
family,
just
like
your
children
show
some
respect
and
decency,
humane
decency.
They
need
food,
shelter
and
care
because
they
also
suffer
suffer
from
kova
just
like
anyone
else.
They
also
suffer
from
depression
and
they
also
need
mental
health
resources.
Just
like
anyone
else
do
better.
G
E
My
name
is
mackenzie
wolf,
and
I
am
calling
in
to
express
my
concern
about
the
camp
abatement
and
the
overall
covid
19
winter
plan.
I
had
been
impressed
by
the
utah
by
utah's
plan
for
homelessness
in
the
past.
I
remember
we
were
an
example
for
the
nation,
so
I
know
that
we
can
do
better.
I've
heard
so
many
people
calling
in
today
with
solutions
so
clearly
there
are
other
things
to
be
done
rather
than
these
cleanups,
which
clearly
are
not
solving
any
problems.
E
They
are
just
hiding
it
from
those
who
don't
want
to
see
it.
I
am
concerned
as
well
with
the
presence
of
the
police
at
these
cleanups
if
they
are
just
for
public
health
and
for
sanitation
reasons.
I
do
not
know
why
we
would
need
police
to
be
there
if
the
health
department
is
feeling
unsafe.
That
would
be
one
thing,
but
I
feel
like
it
is
just
an
attempt
to
criminalize
homelessness
and
intimidate
these
people.
E
E
I
would
just
like
to
reiterate
the
things
that
I've
heard
earlier
today.
All
these
plans
harm
reduction
and
for
any
business
owners
or
residents
of
salt
lake
city
who
are
listening.
I
want
you
to
find
in
your
hearts,
compassion
and
understanding
for
these
people
and
maybe
think
about
why
you're
so
uncomfortable
with
them
and
if
you
really
want
them
to
be
out
of
their
camps
because
of
public
health
or
for
other
reasons.
Thank
you
for
your
time.
A
Let's
go
ahead
and
take
a
break
and
then
we'll
continue
with
the
comments
in
let's,
let's
take
15
minutes,
or
is
that
too
long
do
people
just
want
10?
Let's
just
do
10,
okay,
see
you
in
hand.
L
O
O
O
G
Comments
thanks,
council
chair,
let's
see
next,
we
have
antonio
jf,
followed
by
nikita
abraham
and
then
marina
marchesa
antonio.
L
R
Okay,
cool
yeah,
I'm
antonio,
representing
the
rose
park,
brown
berets,
I'm
I'm
here,
you
know
just
to
speak
out
to
stop
the
camp
abatement.
Talk
about
the
ellie
as
well.
You
know,
just
you
know,
unsheltered
folks,
stuff
stuff
needs
to
stop
to
getting
jacked.
You
know
by
the
police,
you
know
what
I'm
saying
by
the
feds
by
these
organizations.
R
You
know
what
I'm
saying
like
we've
been
fighting,
you
know
we
were
there
last
year,
protecting
the
shelter
folks
we're
still
here.
You
know
what
I'm
saying
when
we
try
to
protect
them.
You
know
who
comes
and
harasses
them.
It's
the
pigs.
So
that's
how
I'm
saying
that
yeah,
you
guys
spence.
Let's
have
a
big
huge
budget.
You
know
for
the
police
department
or
like
there's
no
budget
like
for
there's,
not
that
much
same
amount
of
money
for
housing
and
for
resources
for
where's
all
the
mental
health
professionals
as
well
social
workers.
R
You
know-
and
I
also
want
to
talk
about
the
gentrification
as
well,
because
it's
connected
to
gentrification,
like
the
early
development
we've
been
fighting
that
since
march-
and
you
know
you
guys
totally
ignore
the
petition
that
you
know
the
folks
of
rose
park.
You
know
signed,
and
you
know,
cw
urban
they're.
They
are
not
from
rose
park,
they
are
from
centerville.
They
do
not
represent
our
community.
Everything
that
they
do
is
for
profit
not
for
the
people.
It's
nothing
affordable,
and
you
know
what
we
need
is
affordable.
Housing
here
because
rose
park
and
glendale's.
R
The
last
are
the
last
places
in
slc
that
are
the
most
affordable
places.
So
you
know
gentrification
leads
to
homelessness.
You
know
a
lot
of
our
family
that
live
in
that
section,
a
housing
right
next
to
the
cw
urban,
where
they
the
early
development.
What's
going
to
happen,
you
know
they've
been
in
and
out
of
the
shelter
you
know
and
the
mayor
to
to
to
not
beetle
that
you
know
not
to
not
veto
the
ordinance.
R
You
know,
that's
not
disrespectful
to
us.
You
know
the
mayor
came
to
rose
park.
You
know
like
before
photo
op.
You
know
acting
like
she's
some
kind
of
savior
for
our
community,
but
now
we
were
out
there
helping
out
the
people
take
out
the
trees.
You
know
mayor,
you
don't
get
no
respect
from
rose
park
and
please
put
the
stop
to
that
early
development
and
put
a
stop
to
the
camp
abatement.
Thank
you.
D
Hi,
my
name's
nikita
I'm
calling
today
to
comment
on
mayor
mendenhall's,
camp
abatements
and
the
future
plans
of
hers
that
clearly
aim
to
destabilize
and
harm
the
unsheltered
community.
D
I
demand
the
ends
of
these
the
end
of
these
plans,
as
well
as
the
reinvestment
of
funds
into
resources
and
services
that
can
help
the
unhoused
community
better.
This
includes
housing,
security,
employment
services
and
both
physical
and
mental
health
care.
This
should
be
a
very
obvious
thing,
but
everybody
deserves
safe
housing
by
forcing
people
who
do
not
have
safe,
stable
housing
to
leave
the
temporary
shelters
that
they
have
been
able
to
make
and
taking
the
precious
items
that
they
have
for
their
survival.
You
are
further
disenfranchising
and
traumatizing
them.
D
D
I
volunteered
at
a
couple
of
different
free
clinics
and
part
of
my
job
was,
is-
was
to
help
people
find
resources
for
housing,
affordable
medication,
access
to
access
to
employment,
as
well
as
access
to
health
care.
I
can
say
pretty
confidently
that
there
are
not
enough
resources
and
the
resources
that
do
exist
are
distributed
so
widely
across
the
valley
that
it
is
nearly
impossible
to
find
reliable
transportation
to
these
resources
unless
you
have
a
car.
D
In
addition,
much
of
the
unsheltered
community
has
to
navigate
a
wide
range
of
both
mental
mental
and
physical
health
concerns
that
can
prevent
them
from
accessing
stable
transportation
or
from
being
able
to
even
use
these
resources
like
making
appointments
is
really
difficult.
Accessibility
is
a
huge
issue
and
something
that
needs
to
be
considered
and
addressed.
D
G
Next,
we
have
marina
marchesa,
followed
by
john
c
strand
and
then
colin
uses.
The
thirty
phone
number
has
eight
one:
nine
marina
hi.
Can
you
hear
me.
M
Yeah,
my
name
is
marina
marchesa
and
I'm
just
gonna
start
with
the
fact
that
the
thing
with
being
houseless
is
that
you
do
not
have
a
place
to
put
your
things
right,
so
you
are
throwing
away
literally
people's
belongings.
So,
let's
start
there,
the
plan
for
the
winter
is
not
a
plan.
It
perpetuates
the
same
violence.
They
got
here
in
the
first
place,
like
y'all,
really
put
up
a
heating
shelter
the
day
after
an
apocalyptic
storm,
and
then
it
was
right
back
to
harassing
homeless
people.
M
The
way
the
slc
terrorizes
people
for
literally
being
poor
is
horrifying.
It's
just
devoid
of
empathy.
I
need
everyone
here
to
think
about
how
many
paychecks
you
are
away
from
becoming
houseless.
These
people
need
resources.
We
do
not
need
more
policing,
slcpd
can't
even
help
themselves
from
shooting
a
13
year
old
white
child.
Do
you
think
they
won't
kill
a
houseless
person
downtown?
I'm
sorry.
M
A
If
you
take
comments,
you
need
to
follow
the
rules.
Everybody
else
that's
commented
so
far
has
felt
very
strongly
about
the
topics
that
you're
talking
about
and
they've
managed
to
follow
the
rules.
So
please
respect
them,
and
this
council
and
plea
and
and
make
your
con
find
a
way
to
express
yourself
without
violating
the
rules.
Thank
you.
E
M
Chris,
all
right,
so
you
can't
put
up
a
black
lives
matter,
mural
and,
in
the
same
breath,
criminalize
homelessness
during
a
global
pandemic
and
oncoming
winter.
I
know
so
many
incredible
local
organizers
and
artists
and
we're
watching
you
and
your
actions.
We
will
not
stand
for
this
and
we
will
not
work
with
you.
Erin
girl.
I
know
you
wanted
to
be
a
part
of
the
craft
lake
city,
salty
exhibition
panel.
M
I
just
need
you
to
know,
I'm
the
one
that
made
sure
you
will
not
use
queer,
poc
voices
and
art
to
make
your
images
more
palatable.
We
see
what
you're
doing
and
the
people
are
supporting,
unsheltered
folks
putting
money
into
mutual
aid,
even
though
we're
the
ones
unemployed,
because
the
city
is
just
putting
more
and
more
money
to
the
police
instead
of
just
15
million
towards
homelessness.
It's
just
horrifying.
I
refuse
to
support
such
compassionless
systems,
stop
harassing
homeless
people
and
abolish
slcpd.
G
Next,
we
have
john
c
strand
followed
by
calling
user
30
phone
number
has
819
and
then
colon
user
33
phone
number
has
8
22.
john.
H
H
But
first
before
I
come,
and
I
just
want
to
say
thank
you-
I've
known,
amy
fowler
for
a
long
time
and
just
listening
tonight,
I
I
can't
think
of
a
better
person
to
be
balancing
all
these
issues
and
I
just
want
to
say
thank
you
to
amy
and
the
council
and
the
mayor
for
all
you're
doing.
I
think
you're
going
to
do
great
things
together
and
I'm
very
optimistic
and
look
forward
to
working
with
you
in
the
future.
H
There's
a
lot
of
land
around
the
station,
the
hub
station,
that's
a
prime
location
for
development,
and
I
think
that
area
could
really
be
a
catalyst
development
for
the
entire
wasatch
front,
not
only
salt
lake
city
and
a
great
example
of
how
we
could
use
some
of
the
public
land
like
the
uta
land
and
the
rda
land
to
create
affordable
housing
and
transit-oriented
development
that
supports
clean
air
initiatives.
H
H
H
Salt
lake
troubling
recently
highlighted
that
they're
50
million
dollars
over
budget
for
what
will
be
an
obsolete
fuel
tech
center.
There's
other
means
of
transportation
they're
on
the
horizon
that
are,
will
make
this
clean
fuel
tech
center
obsolete.
So
we
wish
you
would
take
that
into
consideration
and
find
a
way,
encourage
danny
walls
and
the
rda
and
the
city
to
find
a
way
to
have
the
uta
cooperate
more
with
the
other
land
owners
and
stakeholders
in
the
area.
I
think
it's
a
great
opportunity
now
is
the
time
to
really
create
great
transit,
oriented
development.
A
G
Next,
we
have
call-in
user
30
phone
number,
819,
followed
by
call
user,
33
phone
number
has
822
and
then
column
user
34
phone
number
has
980.
call
in
user30.
If
you
can
say
your
name
and
then
your
comment.
E
E
I
do
not.
I
do
not
think
that
the
police
are
a
useful
or
helpful
solution
to
be
investing
so
much
money
in
especially
considering
the
pale
amounts
that
you
invest
in
helping
the
unhoused.
They
are
people
too.
They
need
shelter.
They
need
places
to
keep
warm,
especially
with
the
record-breaking
windstorm.
E
My
power
went
out
in
the
place
that
I
lived
and
I
was
lucky
enough
to
have
a
roof
over
my
head,
and
I
just
want
to
say:
if
you
really
want
to
make
salt
lake
city
a
people
place
that
people
care
to
live
about,
you
would
clearly
care
about
the
most
vulnerable
vulnerable
populations
by
not
getting
rid
of
their
things
by
building
access
to
more
areas
where
they
would
feel
safe
to
stay,
because
housing
is
a
human
right.
You
fund
the
police.
Thank
you
very
much.
G
Next,
we
have
call
in
user33
phone
number
has
822
followed
by
calling
user
34
phone
number
has
980
and
then
maeve
hagerty
call
in
user33.
You
can
say
your
name
and
then
your
comment.
E
Okay,
my
name
is
alison
douglas.
I
am
here
to
support
what
a
lot
of
people
previously
have
stated.
I
am
simply
confused
I'm
confused
why
this
is
being
proposed.
It
does
not
make
sense.
This
is
a
very
vulnerable
community.
They
are.
We
need
to
give
more
than
take
away
from
them.
If
we
are
concerned
about
the
health
of
other
humans,
which,
hopefully
our
city
council
would
be
concerned
about,
we
need
to
be
providing
these
individuals
with
resources,
and
I
just
I
just
want
to
echo
what
so
many
other
people
have
said
before
me.
E
This
is
not
something
that
should
be
done.
This
is
not
james.
These
individuals
are
are
human
and
they
need
to
be
treated
as
such
and
they
need
our
help.
Thank
you.
G
G
P
E
The
sentiments
we've
been
hearing
of
putting
an
end
to
the
homeless
camp
pushes.
G
K
I
kind
of
want
to
echo
some
sentiments
essentially
that
homeless
encampments,
the
cdc,
does
not
recommend
clearing
homeless
encampments
because
it
can
spread
covet.
So
in
terms
of
maintaining
the
health
and
safety
of
the
community.
It's
not
really
in
line
with
those
recommendations.
Additionally,
the
funding
just
doesn't
make
sense.
We
need
another
shelter
or
we
need
a
permanent
camping
place.
K
Homelessness
is
also
a
race
issue.
There's
african-americans
are
560
more
likely
to
be
homeless.
American,
indian
and
alaska.
Natives
420
hawaiian
pacific
islanders,
129
hispanic
120,
and
it
shows
that
minorities
are
less
likely
to
be
housed
and
receive
services
as
well,
and
this
is
from
a
2017
county
report
from
hemis.
So
we
really
need
to
be
focusing
on
funding,
shelters
and
creating
more
sustainable
solution,
because
people
don't
get
housed
when
they're
on
the
street,
their
things
get
thrown
away
their
vital
documents
get
thrown
away.
K
P
P
That's
the
first
step
in
reintegrating
these
people
into
society
with
us.
We
can't
just
leave
them
and
have
them
fend
for
themselves
like
we
have
been
as
the
person
before
me
just
mentioned.
This
is
an
intersectional
issue.
Minorities
are
much
more
likely
to
be
facing
these
issues
and
that
also
correlates
with
the
higher
rates
of
brutality
that
they
face,
meaning
if
there
are
police
around
those
police
like
they
might
not
cite
them
for
homelessness,
but
they
might
cite
them
for
priors
or
anything
else.
P
When
these
people
are
literally
just
trying
to
live,
we
are
criminalizing
people
who
need
our
help,
and
this
entire
plan
is
isn't
preventative.
It
needs
to
be
preventative.
We
need
to
start
at
the
issue
and
work
from
there.
It's
reactionary
and
it's
beautification.
This
isn't
a
bike
lane.
You
can't
just
pour
some
concrete
over
it
and
pretend
this
issue
doesn't
exist.
We
need
to
allocate
funds
to
it
specifically
housing.
First,
like
I
said
we
need
to
focus
on
harm
reduction.
P
We
need
to
make
mental
health
issues
more,
accept
our
services
more
accessible,
all
of
those
things
if
you're
unwilling
to
do
housing.
First,
then
even
just
a
safe
zone
where
camping
is
permitted.
These
people
need
community,
as
nikita
mentions
their
services
are
so
widespread
that
they
can't
access
them.
They
need
that
centralization
of
those
services
in
order
to
be
efficient,
otherwise
you're
just
wasting
the
money
that
it
seems
like
y'all
love.
So
much.
P
I
guess
that's
all.
Thanks.
G
K
Hi
so
hello,
I
mean
obviously
we're
dealing
with
a
lot
of
issues,
as
other
callers
have
expressed.
I
think,
like
some
of
the
big
issues
that
that
the
council
and
the
mayor
need
to
be
addressing
right
now
and
are
not
doing
a
sufficient
job
of
addressing
or
relating
related
to
housing.
So
like
these
are
multiple
intersecting
issues.
First
of
all,
we
don't
have
enough
shelters
with
reduced
shelter
capacity
this
winter.
This
is
during
a
pandemic.
K
This
is
during
volatile
weather
seasons,
and
this
is
during
a
time
when
it's
especially
unsafe
for
people
to
be
crowded
together
in
buildings
where
the
capacity
is
at
its
limit.
So
the
city's
plan
for
dealing
with
this
so
far
has
been
shuffling
folks
from
temporary
campsite
to
temporary
campsite
without
enough
notice
abruptly.
K
So
that's
one
issue.
The
second
issue
is
that
a
lot
of
folks
in
salt
lake
are
still
struggling
with
employment
and
with
being
able
to
afford
the
housing
that
they
live
in.
I
don't
know
how
often
the
folks
on
the
council
look
at
rent
prices,
maybe
y'all
own
your
houses,
but
it
costs
a
lot
to
live
here
and
we're
not
doing
a
lot
to
deal
with
that.
The
city
is
not
doing
a
lot
to
slow
the
pace
of
evictions.
K
You
guys
could
literally
stop
evictions
and
that's
not
happening,
and
while
all
of
this
is
going
on,
the
number
of
luxury
housing
complexes
are
are
rapidly
increasing.
So
to
me,
this
says
that
salt
lake
city
is
placing
a
priority
on
the
people
who
are
able
to
afford
this
and
saying
everybody
else
should
get
out
of
this
city.
K
Utah
is
a
state
that
has
prided
itself
on
its
ability
to
deal
with
homelessness,
its
ability
to
welcome
immigrants
and
other
people.
But
this
is
not
the
plan.
A
Thank
you,
naomi.
I'm,
sorry,
your
your
time
is
up.
We
will
have
staff,
we
can
get
you
contact
information
to
your
state
representatives
and
we
can
get
you
the
statute.
That
shows
that
we
actually
cannot
regulate,
rents
or
stop
evictions.
G
E
G
G
Q
Yeah,
I
have
comments
on
seven
separate
agenda
items
and
it's
your
fault
council,
because
you
are
discussing
and
deciding
so
many
important
issues,
but
don't
get
a
big
head
on
the
gmu
height
limits
again
salt
lake
city
should
require
buildings
higher
than
40
feet,
to
have
a
certain
amount
of
affordable
units
over
100
feet.
It
should
be
20
you
can
put
in
affordable
units
now
by
requiring
that
for
this
project
and
for
the
sears
project
stop
holding
onto
property
thinking,
you
can
develop
it
better,
affordable
housing.
Q
Now
now
now,
next,
chris
wharton
agenda
item
is
wildfire
vegetation,
fuel
reduction
dan
heads
up
again.
This
city
needs
to
be
more
flexible
on
allowing
you
to
call
the
hall
for
wildfire
mitigation
efforts.
Scrub
oak
elimination
should
be
allowed
to
use
call
to
hall
next
chris
wharton
agenda
item
the
richmond
street
rezone
again.
Q
I
think
this
is
an
illegal
contracted
rezone
effectively
done
several
months
ago,
when
the
city
council,
as
the
rda
board,
gave
permission
to
buy
the
property
with
the
understanding
that
it
would
be
rezoned
that
is
illegal
and
you're
going
to
join
tooele
in
being
shot
down.
If
anyone
sues,
stop
ignoring
affordable
housing
and
pass
the
inclusionary
zoning
ordinance,
there
is
not
and
should
not
be
parking
on
richmond
street.
Q
Instead
of
mixed
income,
which
is
supposed
to
be
city
policy,
you
are
putting
in
what
could
become
a
mini
cabrini,
green
next
to
single
family
homes.
Instead
of
conclusionary
zoning,
you
are
creating
what
looks
like
to
me.
A
low
income
ghetto.
Stop
it.
The
next
chris
wharton
agenda
item
is
the
fire
prevention
text
amendment.
There
should
be
no
flexibility
in
relaxing
firefighting
standards
and
requirements
for
high-rise
buildings
next
to
cycle
tracks.
Q
Q
Q
Salt
lake
city
is
inadvertently
helping
increase
or
decrease
affordable
housing
by
permitting
and
allowing
refurbishment
of
apartment
buildings,
which
first
kick
out
low-income
residents.
Please
stop
these
permits.
Hawthorne
apartments
is
one
of
them
and
salt
lake
city
is
going
to
be
losing
a
lot
of
low
income,
affordable
housing
because
you're
permitting
developers
to
do
that.
Please
stop
that
and
the
mobile
mental
health
crisis
outreach
team
is
still
not
operating
effectively
in
salt
lake
city.
Q
The
previous
callers
haven't
seen
your
efforts
in
the
last
eight
years
trying
to
help
and
solve
the
homeless
issues.
I
agree,
amy
andrew
all
of
you
are
really
trying
hard
and
I
respect
that.
It's
a
complicated
problem,
but
the
mayor
deserves
credit,
ensuring
that
there
are
more
services
offered
to
homeless
camps
well
before
county
health
removes
the
camps
in
accordance
with
the
state
and
county
laws.
I
remember
several
mayors
ago,
right,
forgiving
homeless,
george.
A
A
B
I
I
understand
a
lot
of
the
concerns
that
folks
have
talked
about
with
unsheltered
camp
abatements
and
other
issues
with
unsheltered
homelessness
and
the
system
in
general
and
there's
some
truth
to
what's
being
said,
there's
also
probably
not
a
full
understanding
of
the
the
city
in
relationship
to
the
county
and
the
coalition
in
the
state's
plans.
B
The
mayor's
plans
to
my
understanding
are
really
city
specific
for
some
basic
outreach
within
this
city.
The
salt
lake
valley
coalition
to
end
homelessness-
and
I
put
the
link
in
the
chat
box,
has
been,
has
researched
and
has
put
forth
chef
practices,
recommendations
for
winter
overflow
for
a
shelter
for
the
winter
and
they're
actively
seeking
a
location
for
that.
B
The
city
did
that
last
year
and
they're
looking
for
other
cities
as
well
too,
to
assist
this
year
in
the
county.
So
that
is
also
happening
concurrently
and
in
coordination
with
salt
lake
city,
and
I
also
want
to
put
a
plug
in
for
that
coalition,
because
that
is
where
they're
actively
meeting
subgroups
on
small
topics
on
big
topics:
lobbying
the
legislature
and
cities.
For
all
the
things
we're
talking
about
housing,
emergency
shelter,
health
care.
They
lobbied
hard
for
medicaid
expansion
a
couple
years
ago.
B
It's
a
good
group,
it's
open
to
anybody
who
wants
to
be
a
member
and
join
and
participate
any
way
you
want
to.
It
also
helps
coordinate
things
from
the
state
all
the
way
down
to
all
the
regions
down
to
salt
lake
city.
So
I
put
a
big
plug
into
that
because
it
could
really
help
with
more
voices
advocating
together
for
these
things
at
all
levels
of
government.
B
So
I
appreciate
that,
if
you
have
more
questions,
I'm
sure
the
city
can
give
you
information
towards
that
group
or
I
can
help
out
as
well.
So
thanks.
A
Thank
you,
and
thanks
for
writing
that
information,
andrew
or
councilmember
johnson,
so
unless
there
anybody
else
want
to
make
a
comment
or
a
point
of
personal
privilege.
A
Okay,
then,
let's
go
move
on
to
item
agenda
item
b1,
which
is
an
ordinance
to
increase
the
building
heights
within
a
portion
of
the
gateway,
mixed-use
zoning
district.
I'll
look
for
motion.
B
Mr
chair,
yes,
I
moved
the
council
closed.
A
E
E
A
E
A
And
I'm
a
yes
as
well
that
passes
unanimously.
We
will
move
on
to
agenda
item
b2
vegetation
reduction
permits
for
wildfire
mitigation.
Is
there
a
motion.
E
A
B
E
E
A
E
B
A
E
A
Okay,
we'll
go
ahead
and
roll
call
it
councilmember
rogers.
H
E
H
A
E
A
B
A
B
E
A
Q
A
F
A
And
I'm
yes
as
well
that
passes
unanimously.
We
are
now
at
item
b5,
which
is
an
ordinance
that
would
modify
chapter
18.44
of
the
fire
prevention
code.
Is
there
a
motion.
E
A
E
A
Mano,
yes,
dugan.
Q
A
L
A
And
I
am
a
yes
as
well:
we
are
at
item
b6,
which
is
an
ordinance
that
would
rezone
the
east
half
of
a
property
located
at
989,
east
900,
south
I'll.
Look
for.
B
E
A
I
have
a
motion
councilmember
johnson,
a
second
from
councilmember
voldemort,
so
wait
is
it
to
close
the
public
hearing
or
continue
public
hearing?
Second
public
schedule.
A
Okay,
second
for
er
motion,
room,
councilmember
johnson;
second,
from
councilmember
baltimore.
Any
discussion
to
this
item.
Seeing
none,
we'll
roll
call.
Voter
council
members.
E
E
E
A
E
A
And
I'm
yes
as
well!
That
brings
us
to
item
b7,
an
ordinance
that
would
update
the
transportation
section
of
the
city's
impact
fees
facilities
plan.
I
will
look
for
a.
A
B
E
A
J
A
Yes-
and
I
am
a
yes
as
well,
that
brings
us
to
yes.
C
B
On
the
prevailing
side
and
being
a
time
issue
with
the
tax
credits,
I'd
like
to
go
back
to
that
and
redo
my
motion
to
adopt
tonight.
Instead
of
to
close
the
public
hearing
and
and
defer,
I'd
like
to
amend
that
to
close
and
adopt
I'll.
Second,
that
again.
A
A
Great
okay,
so
the
motion
is
to
reopen
agenda
item
b3
and
to
go
ahead
and
approve
that
tonight,
instead
of
continuing
for
another
public
hearing,
is
there
any
discussion
to
this?
A
Seeing
none?
Let's
we'll
go
ahead
and
roll
call
it.
So
this
is
just
to
to
revoke
councilmember
rogers.
Yes,
johnston,
yes,
voldemort.
E
E
A
E
A
B
A
Johnston,
yes,
baldomoros.
E
E
A
Council
members.
We
are
going
back
on
track
to
the
agenda.
We
are
at
section
c,
which
is
the
comments
portion
of
our
agenda.
We've
already
addressed
item
c1,
which
is
general
comments
to
the
city
council.
That
brings
us
to
item
c2,
which
is
questions
for
the
mayor
mayor
mendenhall.
Thank
you
for
being
here
tonight.
Do
duny
council
members
have
any
questions
for
the
mayor,
councilmember
rogers,.
B
F
Thanks
councilmember
rogers,
the
public
services
team
is
amazing
and
their
commitment
to
the
public
and
doing
the
best
they
can
with
everything
they
have
is
is
enormous.
So
it's
my
hat's
off
to
the
public
services
team
and
every
other
department
of
division
and
four,
maybe
more
than
that.
Other
cities
who
came
parade
brought
their
tools
and
their
professionals
out.
So
it
was
a
pretty
awesome
effort
by
salt
lake
city
team.
A
Thank
you,
I'd
like
to
second
that
and
for
district
3.
We
lost
some
really
beautiful
trees
at
the
capitol
and
in
the
cemetery,
and
some
of
the
damage
in
the
cemetery
was
more
than
just
cosmetic.
It
actually
opened
up
some.
I
saw
one
photo
that
had
actually
partially
opened
up
a
tomb,
so
just
the
just
the
cement
part.
So
nothing
came
out,
but
it's
I've
never
seen
anything
like
that
before.
A
So
I
appreciate
our
city,
crews
for
coming
and
helping
and
to
get
those
down
because
they
also
were
really
dangerous,
and
you
know
it's.
The
houses
are
a
lot
closer
up
here
and
they
were
falling
on
with
people's
roofs
and
knocking
over
power
lines.
Power
lines
were
snapping
in
half.
So
thank
you
for
for
to
you
and
to
your
administration
and
public
services
for
all
their
hard
work.
E
Same
thing
here
I
wanted
to
thank
the
mayor
and,
and
the
administration
in
general
and
all
of
the
departments
involved
these
last
six
months.
I
have
been
super
tough
with
different
issues.
Different
things
have
happened
when
you-
and
you
guys
have
heard
us-
you
guys
have
heard
us
complain.
You
guys
have
also
brought
solutions
and
and
ideas
to
to
to
deal
with
the
things
I
have
to
deal
with
in
the
city.
So
I
appreciate
mayor
appreciate,
chief
of
staff,
rachel
and
the
rest
of
the
city
and
the
cruise
and
then
on
a
positive.
E
No
more
positive
note.
Congratulations
on
the
opening
of
the
airport.
Today,
it
is
a
beautiful
airport.
Is
one
of
the
positives
out
of
all
this
hard
circumstances
that
we
have
all
had
to
do
with
the
last
six
months,
and
I
just
wanted
to
thank
the
airport
staff
for
the
work
and
all
the
things
that
they've
been
able
to
do
and
incredibly
four
years
and
the
but
the
impressive
budget
and
how
they
stayed
within
it.
E
And
you
know
the
things
that
go
behind
closed
doors,
I
guess
or
or
all
the
work
that
that
people
do,
that.
The
public
doesn't
get
to
see
and
we
don't
either
and
we
see
the
final
results.
But
thank
you
thank
you
again
and
I'm
excited
for
this
airport.
F
Thank
you,
mr
chair,
can
I
just
comment
that
the
airport
is
a
really
good
example
of
how
billion
dollar
and
even
four
plus
billion
dollar
projects
take
a
really
long
time
and
dozens
of
council
members
and
many
mayoral
administrations.
So
it's
it's
an
honor
to
be
in
the
position
that
I
am
and
that
we
are
right
now
and
be
able
to
celebrate
that.
But
I
have
to
take
my
hat
off
to
everyone.
F
A
All
right,
thank
you
also
mir,
thanks
for
offering
to
when
we
set
up
the
temporary
homeless,
shelter
offering
to
go
out
and
drive
around
with
me
and
try
to
do
outreach
and
offer
people
a
ride
to
the
shelter
if
they
wanted
one
needed
one
all
right.
Let's
move
ahead
to
item
d,
which
is
a
potential
action
item,
and
that
is
budget
amend
amendment
number
two
for
the
fiscal
year
2020
to
2021.
A
B
Mr
chair,
yes,
I
moved
the
council
of
dotson
ordinance
amending
the
fiscal
year,
2020
2021
final
budget
of
the
salt
salt
lake
city
for
items,
a2
8
15,
as
requested
by
the
administration.
Second.
A
Q
E
A
And
I
am
an
enthusiastic
yes
as
well
that
passes
unanimously.
Let's
move
on
to
section
e,
which
is
new
business.
We
have
no
new
business
on
tonight's
agenda
item.
Section
f
is
unfinished
business.
We
have
sec
item
f1,
a
resolution
that
would
approve
an
interlocal
agreement
with
the
redevelopment
agency,
rda
of
salt
lake
city
for
the
diversion
of
property
tax
for
the
nine
line
community
reinvestment
project
area.
B
E
A
E
E
Q
A
N
A
I
A
E
E
A
E
A
A
Thank
you
councilmember
fowler,
and
I
did
I
hear
a
second
from
councilmember
rogers.
Thank
you.
Any
discussion,
cnn,
we'll
roll
call
it
councilman
rogers.
E
A
Johnson,
yes,
voldemort,
sorry
it
is
getting
brown.
O
O
A
O
A
And
I'm
yes
as
well
that
passes
unanimously.
This
concludes
our
formal
meeting
for
this
evening
and
thank
you,
council
members
and
thank
you
mayor.
We
will
stand
adjourned.