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From YouTube: Salt Lake City Council Formal Meeting - 4/7/2020
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A
B
Okay,
hello,
everybody
welcome
to
our
are
we
online?
Are
we
on
everything
good.
C
B
So
welcome
everyone
to
the
Salt,
Lake
City
Council
formal
meeting,
if
you're
just
tuning
in
we
are
holding
our
meeting
remotely
due
to
declarations
of
emergency.
We
met
earlier
today
for
the
council
work
session
for
some
briefing
items
which
and
we're
now
convening
for
our
formal
meeting.
The
typical
order
of
items
on
the
formal
meeting
agenda
has
been
adjusted
to
accommodate
the
electronic
meeting.
B
Even
though
we
are
asking
you
to
join
us
remotely,
we
ask
that
public
comments
please
still
be
respectful
and
that
you
avoid
yelling
or
making
any
offensive
or
racial
slurs
I'm,
seeing
or
defamatory
remarks.
All
comments
are
limited
to
two
minutes.
We
recognize
that
two
minutes
of
comment.
Time
may
not
be
enough
to
get
all
of
your
thoughts
at
outline
tonight.
B
Other
ways
to
share
your
comments
are
always
below
combined
and
mailing
us
at
p
o--
box,
one
four,
five
or
seven,
six
Salt
Lake
City
Utah,
eight
four
one,
one,
four,
five,
four:
seven,
six
or
emailing
us
at
council
comments
at
SLC
go
comm
or
by
calling
our
24-hour
comment
line.
The
number
for
that
is,
eight
zero
one,
five,
three
five,
seven,
six,
five
four.
Also
written
comments
submitted
to
the
City
Council
on
any
of
the
topics
digits
for
today's
hearing
have
been
removed
or
excuse.
B
During
the
meeting
we
are
at
item
a3,
which
is
approval
of
minutes,
so
we'll
be
approving
the
work
session,
minutes
of
Tuesday
February
18th
2020,
as
well
as
the
formal
meeting
minutes
of
Tuesday
March
3rd
2020
and
Tuesday
March
17
2020
I'll,
look
for
a
motion
so
moved.
Second
I
have
a
motion
from
councilmember
Rogers
and
second
from
councilmember
Johnston.
Is
there
any
discussion
on
this
motion?
B
A
B
B
And
I
mean
yes
as
well,
so
those
will
be
approved.
Motion
passes
we're
at
the
public
comment,
hearing
portion
of
our
council
meeting
as
I
mentioned
earlier.
The
standard
order
for
the
formal
meeting
agenda
has
been
adjusted
to
accommodate
the
electronic
meetings
just
review
and
reassure
members
of
the
public.
All
written
comments
that
were
submitted
to
the
council
on
any
topic
scheduled
for
today
have
already
been
shared
and
they've
been
gained
by
council
members,
but
they
will
be
included
as
part
of
the
public
record
and
they
will
be
posted
on
the
council's
website.
B
Soc
council
comm
by
the
end
of
tomorrow,
so
that
other
members
of
the
public
can
view
them
since
we're
connecting
electronically.
There
may
be
some
delay
in
people's
comments
and
discussion
items
more
so
than
usual
city
council
meetings
have
guidelines
to
make
sure
that
people
feel
comfortable
and
safe
participate
in
our
new
way
of
connecting
and
conducting
the
public's
business.
B
Please
be
respectful
and
avoid
yelling
or
again
we're
racial
slurs,
obscenity
or
any
defamatory
remarks
for
tonight's
hearing.
Our
staff
is
going
to
be
conducting
a
poll
to
see
which
attendees
are
here
to
discuss,
which
public
hearing
items
if
you're
joining
over
the
Internet
please
stay
tuned
for
those
polls,
so
that
you
can
indicate
whether
you
want
to
speak
during
or
which
public
hearing
item
you
want
to
speak
to.
B
We
will
be
working
with
members
of
the
public
who
are
calling
in
to
include
their
comments
as
well
I'm
going
to
read
the
list
of
hearing
items
and
our
staff
will
do
a
poll
for
the
first
hearing
item.
This
is
a
new
polling
option,
so,
if
it
doesn't
work,
then
we'll
instead
open
the
comments
for
all
individuals
who
sign
in
via
WebEx
just
to
comment
on
any
public
comment
item
and
not
at
the
designated
time.
B
B
Please
send
those
additional
comments
to
the
email
address
or
the
phone
number
that
I
just
gave
above
so
the
first
item
we
have
is
item
d1,
it's
a
hearing
regarding
an
ordinance
that
would
rezone
the
partials
located
at
402
and
406
East
900
South,
oh
so
that
was
our
first
item
that
was
scheduled
on
the
agenda,
but
that
has
been
postponed.
So,
if
you're
here
to
comment
on
that
item,
you
don't
need
to
comment
today
and
we're
postponing
that
item.
So
we'll.
B
Among
many
other
items,
item
b6
is
a
continued
hearing
from
March
24
a
resolution
to
update
the
city's
2020
to
2024
consolidated
plan,
as
required
by
the
US
Department
of
Housing
and
Urban
Development
item
d7
is
a
continued
hearing
from
March
24th
regarding
a
one-year
action
plan
for
Community,
Development,
Block
Grants
and
other
federal
grants
for
fiscal
year,
2022
2021
item
B
5
excuse
me
b8
through
b12,
involve
grant
applications
and
will
be
heard
as
one
public
hearing.
These
are
all
related
to
transportation
funds
cindy-lou.
C
D
C
C
E
C
F
A
A
C
That
in
the
if
I
could
just
have
Shannon
I'm
gonna
direct
this
to
you
and
we'll
see
if
we
can
make
this
work
Shannon
up
in
your
meeting
event
window,
there's
a
view
button.
Yes,
ma'am.
If
you
select
a
view
and
go
down
to
panels,
does
it
give
you
the
option?
Actually
I'm?
Sorry,
it
should
be
on
your
right
when
you
have.
A
F
Poll,
question:
okay,
but,
and
the
poll
did
get
bigger
and
I'm,
not
sure,
which
is
that,
when
I
turn
hold
on
it
looks
like
I
chose
the
big
window
with
the
little
bubble
at
the
bottom
right.
Okay,.
C
Thank
you
yeah,
so
can
you
participate
in
the
poll
now
share
right
side
of
your
screen,
so
the
attendees
that
are
here
go
ahead.
Shannon
I'll
go
ahead
and
mute
for
those
of
you
who
are
here
to
participate
in
public
comment.
If
you
will
go
down
to
your
floating
menu
button
on
the
bottom
of
your
event
screen
there
is
a
button
that
looks
like
a
person.
C
C
E
E
C
C
B
So,
unfortunately,
since
the
poll
option
isn't
working
and
we'll
go
ahead
and
just
take
all
public
comments
at
the
same
time,
so
staff
will
be
working
through
the
list
of
people.
Who've
joined
the
meeting
and
will
be
on
call
with
each
person,
and
this
one
comment
period
will
include
all
of
the
scheduled
hearing
items
for
the
general
comment
period.
B
So
if
you
want
to
to
comment
on
something
now,
we'll
just
take
whatever
comments
you
have
on
whatever
item
right
and
home
and
then
after
we've
heard
all
the
public
hearings
we'll
go
back
and
go
through
each
one
of
the
motions
and
approve
or
take
action
on
any
of
the
motions.
So
if
a,
if
you
look,
please
state
your
name
and
then
please
indicate
which
item
you're
wanting
to
speak
on
and
we'll
start
your
time
as
soon
as
you've.
Given
us,
those
two
things,
Thank.
C
F
Most
of
the
women
we
serve
have
extremely
high
ace
scores,
adverse
childhood
experiences
most
of
the
women
we
serve
coming
out
of
prison
in
jail,
then
sexually,
because
at
some
point
in
their
life
most
is
children
and
the
self
medicating
starts
and
it's
downhill
roll
from
there
in
the
addiction
world
there's
a
lot
of
interpersonal
violence
and
sexual
exploitation
trafficking.
So
there's
lots
of
layers
of
trauma
to
unwind
with
those
women
we've
worked
with
over
2000
women
and
their
families
in
the
last
six
years,
and
we
have
17
percent
recidivism
out
of
our
prison
program.
F
F
We
have
stopped
over
200
women
from
ending
up
in
in
the
downtown
Salt
Lake
City
shelter
system,
and
we
need
as
much
funding
as
we
can
get
to
continue
to
keep
women
out
of
that
sexual
assault
to
Prison
Pipeline
we're
now
working
with
girls
that
are
aging
out
of
juvenile
justice
services
that
have
been
sexually
exploited
and
right
now
they
are
slated
to
go
to
your
VOA
youth,
homeless,
shelter,
which
is
a
very
dangerous
place
for
trafficked
girls
that
are
gay
members.
There
may
be
homeless,
maybe
not
that
are
trafficking.
C
E
So
it's
my
Kayla,
Cox
and
I
also
am
with
journey
of
Hope
Utah
here
on
the
for
the
CDBG
and
and
I
would
tell
you
what
journey
of
Hope
does,
but
she
hadn't
covered
it.
So
I'll
just
jump
right
into
it.
I
am
a
survivor
of
incarceration
as
well
as
child
and
adult
sexual
abuse,
and
physical
abuse
and
journey
of
Hope.
Shanon
Cox
gave
me
my
first
job
out
of
incarceration
and
because
of
my
experiences
at
Jamie
Hope,
and
all
that
I've
learned,
a
journey
of
hope.
E
I've
been
able
to
work
with
harmed
women
and
girls
that
are
coming
home.
Incarceration
settings,
as
well
as
being
the
product
of
foster
care
system
working
with
girls,
aging
out
of
juvenile
justice
services,
and
we
could
do
so
much
more
in
this
state.
We
could
flip
the
recidivism
rate
that
is
growing.
We
are
the
highest
in
the
country.
We
could
flip
that
on
its
ear,
if
we,
if
journey
of
hope
and
community
partners
like
journey
of
hope,
doing
the
work
that
we're
doing
had
access
to
more
funding.
E
It
is
very
difficult
to
pull
people
out
of
poverty
to
pull
people
out
of
dangerous
settings
if
we
don't
have
enough
hands-on,
committed
partner,
community
partners
and
or
commute
committed
employees
willing
to
do
this
work,
and
there
are
quite
a
few
organizations
that
are
doing
bits
and
pieces
of
the
work.
There
are
not
as
many
organizations
that
are
willing
to
go
into
all
settings
to
complete
this
work,
and
journey
of
hope
is
that
nonprofit
that
organization?
E
That's
willing
to
do
all
of
that
and
with
Shannon's
expertise
being
a
former
police
officer,
retired
officer
of
the
criminal
justice
system.
She
completely
understands
the
systems
that
are
oppressing
these
populations
and
has
done
an
amazing
job
at
hiring
survivors
and
then
he'll
in
us
to
turn
around
and
help
those
that
are
coming
out
of
settings
that
we
were
once
in.
So
please
consider
funding
funding
organizations
that
are
doing
this
kind
of
work,
because
we
can't
do
enough
without
funding.
Thank
you.
B
C
A
Over
30
years
and
I'm
probably
gonna
die
here,
so
everything
that
they
do
is
gonna
affect
me.
I'm
I
have
to
drive
my
work
truck
in
and
out
of
the
alleyway
every
day,
so
that's
gonna
affect
me
and
all
the
other
neighbors,
my
other
neighbors
and
ruin
to
the
north
of
this
development
are
gonna,
be
really
affected.
A
Many
of
the
others
I'm
sorry
for
my
I'm
sorry,
you
can't
see
me
right
now.
I
can't
see
you
I'm
disappointed
with
the
way
the
meetings
going
and
this
thing
I
can't
see
you.
Nobody
can
see
me
I,
don't
think
all
the
neighbors
here
are
very
concerned
about.
What's
going
on,
we're
opposed
I
have
to
use
that
word
because
it
doesn't
seem
in
this.
I
say
it
that
it's
gonna
matter.
A
A
A
C
C
C
Jennifer
Campbell
is
next:
following
Jennifer,
I
have
Josh
Newton
Jennifer
I'll
start
your
timer
after
you
speak
your
name
and
your
topic.
Please
sure
I'm
Jennifer
Campbell,
the
executive
director
of
South,
Valley,
Services
and
I'm
here
to
speak
in
regarding
the
CDBG
funding
great
go
ahead:
okay,
Oh
Pelly
services,
where
domestic
violence
for
the
provider
that
offers
shelter
and
supportive
anyone
victimized
by
domestic
violence.
C
Our
shelter
is
located
in
West
Jordan
and
we
have
a
community
resource
center
and
library
city
halls
throughout
Salt,
Lake
County
and
the
road
home
family
felt
her
I
first
wanted
to.
Thank
you
all
for
the
opportunity
to
speak
with
you
today
and
for
consideration
of
our
further
partnership.
We
fully
support
committee
and
mayor's
recommendation
of
30,000
for
South
Valley
services
and
CDBG
funds
to
provide
case
management
in
the
thought,
Lake
City
library
and
at
the
Geraldine
King
Women's
Resource
Center.
C
With
these
funds,
SBS
will
have
a
full-time
advocate
that
will
partner
with
the
BOE
Geraldine
King,
a
woman
creature
center
and
a
default
lake
city
library
provide
survivor,
driven
and
trauma-informed
services,
rather
than
expecting.
Those
survivors
to
me
advocates
that
our
agency
xbs
is
advocates
not
the
potential
everything
400
TV
survivors
per
year
in
public
city.
This
advocacy
leads
to
improvement
and
he
be
survivors
ability
to
access
community
resources,
including
housing,
social
support.
Thank
you
from
abuse
and
overall
quality
of
life
and
I
just
want
to
say.
C
G
Right
can
I'm
I'm
with
Eric
I
want
America
my
gonna.
Let
me
say
that
I'm
opposed
to
the
zoning
change
and
the
setback
change.
You
know,
I'm
on
this
street
I've
seen
the
traffic
and
the
people
that
go
up
and
down
this
street
and
I
think
by
changing
those
setbacks
from
you
know
the
that's
allowable
to
current
ones,
which
is
reason
by
half
to
five
and
a
half
feet
that
creates
an
unsafe
environment
for
the
people
that
are
walking
on
that
Street.
The
streets
are
already
narrow,
with
one
side
of
parking
allowed.
G
G
Five
units
to
seven
units
you
know,
is
a
big
jump
and
I
think
that
everyone
in
the
neighborhood
wants
to
see
something
built
nice
on
that
lot,
and
you
know,
helps
the
community
and
I
feel
that
this
design
that
all
the
driveways
facing
out
to
the
streets
and
not
you
know
incorporating
the
neighborhood,
feel
everyone
that
has
a
porch.
You
know
and
again
you
can
walk
by
and
engage
each
other
is
kind
of
missed
on
that,
because
now
the
whole
community
is
faced
that
little
development
is
facing
inside
each
other.
G
So
it's
kind
of
making
a
micro
community
and
not
allowing
those
new
residents
to
engage
with
the
other
residents
to
you
know
get
this
nice
corner
lot
to
really
affect
everyone
on
the
street.
Now
it's
just
gonna
make
it
an
isolated
element.
You
know
that's
not
participating
with
the
rest
of
the
neighborhood,
so
I
feel
that
we
shouldn't.
G
First
of
all,
you
know
not
allow
those
zoning
change
which
it's
not
next
to
a
you
know
the
public
transportation,
so
I
think
we
need
to
look
at
the
zoning
change
and
not
allow
it
and
then
the
setbacks
and
then
also
maybe
the
current
design
of
you
know.
Maybe
having
these
things
engage
the
community
instead
of
trying
to
face
each
other
and
not,
you
know,
work
with
us.
So
that's
my
two
cents.
H
I'm,
my
name
is
Michael
Reid
and
new
to
pose
has
only
changed
for
the
Elliott
plan,
development
and
plumeria
planning.
H
The
addresses
on
it
are
not
not
correct
because
they
over
extend
other
people's
property
lines,
and
so
a
lot
of
people
understand
what
it
was
about
and
I
feel
like
putting
so
many
to
some
high
density
of
the
units
in
without
it,
and
and
asking
to
have
adjustments
on
setbacks
for
front
doors
makes
it
not
a
very
good
plan.
I,
we
were
trying
to
work
something
out
buying
that
property
to
have
like
a
playground
or
a
soccer
field.
I
know
they
have
one
of
Jackson,
but
that's
not
one
that
kids
could
play
soccer
on
anyway.
H
I
am
there's
been
a
lot
of
racial
tension,
the
building
at
three,
the
building
next
door
houses.
A
lot
of
people
come
out
of
a
shelter
and
case
managers
from
the
shippers,
shelter
and
roll
call,
and
section
eight
and
trying
to
work
with
those
people
they're
very
diverse,
and
there
are
over
a
hundred
children
that
live
in
25.
Three
and
four-bedroom
townhouses
and
I
I've
got
a
lot
of
racial
tension
from
some
of
the
neighbors.
Even
today,
I
was
passed
out.
Think
so.
H
The
neighborhood
good
good
comment
and
and
I
had
a
man
told
me
never
to
even
step
on
a
sidewalk
out
front,
because
he
knows
what
kind
of
people
live
in
this
in
this
complex,
which
is
gang
members,
drug
dealers
and
suits,
none
of
which
I
think
are
there.
But
they
I
was
told
that
if
this
complex
goes
through,
they
will
make
sure
that
the
complex
is
closed
and
they
will
complain
and
have
the
city
close
it
down,
which
I'm
not
sure
can
actually
happen.
But
I.
H
A
Mike
Reid
was
talking
about
I.
Think
I
missed
that
mr.
C
C
H
My
name
is
Ryan
McMullen
resident
of
Blair
Street
for
the
last
10
years,
I'm
a
licensed
architect
here
in
town
work
at
a
JC,
X
I'm,
a
principal
there,
so
typically
I'm
on
the
other
side
here
tonight
to
talk
about
Cleveland
core
item
number
beef
for
I.
Think
it's
interesting.
If
you
open
the
staff
report
that
this
developers
asking
for
a
master
plan,
amendment
zoning
map
amendment
and
a
planned
development
amendment.
H
Typically,
it
would
be
a
little
for
us
to
overcome
any
of
these,
let
alone
all
three
so
I
think
it's
you
know,
I'm
speaking
with
resident
here,
I
think
there
are
some
issues
with
the
density
increase.
We've
got
an
it's
already
zoned
as
a
multi-family
project,
with
low-density
residential
in
a
very
single-family
residential
neighborhood
I
think
that
there
are
more
than
enough
opportunities
to
work
within
the
current
RMF
zone
without
needing
the
full
change
into
a
form-based
development
process,
and
then
what
I
think
is
the
most
interesting
part
is.
H
This
would
be
the
first
project
that
I'm
aware
of
in
town
where
a
developer
would
be
granted
form
based.
Zoning
on
sort
of
an
island
in
town
I
think
that
sets
a
precedent
that
puts
control
and
power
in
the
in
the
developers
hands
once
they
start
to
find
parcels
around
town,
they're,
just
maximize
density
and
I
think
there's
appropriate
places
for
density
along
transit
lines,
but
I
think
we
need
to
respect
and
appreciate
the
fabric
that
we've
got
in
town
on
single-family,
residential
and
I.
H
C
C
C
A
A
A
D
Karuna
representing
century
financial
and
the
Cleveland
Court
project,
I
just
want
to
make
sure
you
can
hear
me.
Yes,
thank
you.
So
we've
we've
seen
this
book.
Our
century
purchased
this
property
from
a
prior
owner
who
had
a
five
five
unit
plan
with
large
units.
We
decided
we
bought
it
that
ten
units
versus
five
larger
units
was
a
better.
Yet
it
creates
four
additional
bedrooms
on
the
property.
The
courtyard
design
was
intended
actually
to
create
community
between
residents,
not
make
it
an
insular
community
and
it's
an
environmentally
sustainable
project.
D
This
was
supported
by
the
Community
Council
at
their
meeting,
and
the
zoning,
as
was
mentioned,
is
currently
RMF
35,
which
is
a
multi-family
zoning
which
allows
a
35,
but
building
or
three
stories
are
proposed
to
us:
twenty
seven
and
a
half
feet
or
two
stories
and
under
the
thirty
RMF
thirty-five
zoning,
our
original
had
a
less
than
1/10
foot
yard.
In
the
back
now
it
has
greater
than
a
15
foot
yard.
So
some
of
the
folks
were
complaining
about
the
setbacks,
but
this
actually
creates
a
larger
yard
and
a
greater
separation
from
the
property.
D
Next
to
us,
some
of
complained
of
a
complain
about
density,
but
within
three
blocks
of
this
property
there
are
44
properties
with
four
more
units,
there's
also
10
properties
with
8
or
more
units.
So
this
isn't
strictly
a
single-family
neighborhood
and
originally,
as
I
mentioned,
the
project
was
five
large
units
which
would
have
been
high-priced
units.
Seven
units
with
meets
the
city's
goal
for
more
affordable
units
and
admitted
missing
middle
housing,
and
it's
virtually
on
the
same
footprint
so
we're
actually
not
creating
larger
buildings
in
the
footprint.
I
C
I
C
I
B
Well,
right
and
under
normal
circumstances,
we
wouldn't
do
it
that
way,
but
because
of
the
constraints
that
we
have
when
we
have,
and
actually
let
me
let
me
consult
really
quick
with
be
and
what
they
a
council
executive
director
and
the
attorney
and
see
if
we
can
see
what
their
recommendation
is.
Thank.
C
B
Okay,
yeah
after
Ken's.
B
So
I
think
that
Dave
mr.
just
raises
a
good
point
that.
B
C
I
Thank
you
that
would
be
great
I
wanted
to
speak,
I'll
just
two
three
and
then
nine
and
ten
or
I
guess
a
combo,
cuz
they're
together.
So
two
on
the
zoning
change
on
2200
west
from
agricultural
to
light,
industrial
I
think
this
is
a
terrible
idea.
2200
West
is
right
near
the
Jordan
River,
it's
home
to
a
lot
of
wetlands
there
that
over
the
years
I've
brought
this
up
to
the
council.
I
Previously
wetlands
there
have
been
filled
in
probably
illegally,
probably
against
the
the
wetlands
act,
and
this
is
just
further
development
in
an
area
that
really
ought
to
be
floodplain
and
riparian
area
for
the
Jordan,
River,
Parkway
or
Jordan
River,
and
it's
just
more
incremental
damage
to
the
environment
out
there
I
also
have
seen
you
know
many
of
the
people
out.
There
have
fought
against
the
highway
ization
of
the
you
know,
legacy
parkway,
and
this
is
just
one
more
step
towards
more
traffic
in
that
neighborhood.
I
I
I
Regarding
the
Washington
Street
alley,
vacation
I
know
that
mayor
Mendenhall,
when
she
was
on
the
council,
spoke
against
the
idea
of
continually
vacating
alleys.
I
think
this
is
a
incredibly
bad
for
the
council
to
continue
allowing
the
vacation
of
alleys
without
a
plan
in
place
to
deal
with
citywide
alleys,
as
they
have
the
potential
to
be
important.
I
Pedestrian,
and/or,
bicycle
routes
that
are
limited
in
traffic
they're
safer
and
the
city
has
no
plan
addressing
this.
Yet
the
council
continually
seems
to
approve
these
alleys
over
time,
and
you
know,
for
example,
there
are
some
that
are
perpendicular
to
the
McClellan
Street,
the
the
McClellan
pathway.
I
That
would
make
wonderful
connecting
ways
to
the
McClellan
trail
and
I'm,
not
sure
exactly
on
the
Washington,
Street
and
Holly
how
this
fits
in,
but
I
think
the
council
has
absolutely
no
business
to
approve
an
alley
without
there
being
a
citywide
alleyway
plan
to
figure
out
how
you're
gonna
address
this,
how
alleys
can
fit
in
with
better
biking
and
better
walking
throughout
the
city
and
better
neighborhoods,
and
this
piecemeal
approach
is
just
not
a
workable
thing.
So
I'd
ask
you
to
please
not
allow
that
whatsoever.
I
I
Thanks,
so
these
are
the
grant
applications
for
800
East
neighborhood
by
way
and
2100,
south
bike
and
ped
crossing
the
2100
south.
Basically,
it
sounds
like
a
great
idea
on
800
East,
Salt
Lake
again
has
really
a
very
backwards
way
of
doing
these
neighborhood
byways.
If
you
go
to
one
of
them,
for
example,
on
600
East,
the
signs
are
about
8
inches
square.
You
can
barely
tell
that
this
is
a
neighborhood
byway.
I
The
entire
neighborhood
byway
program
in
Salt
Lake
needs
to
be
revamped,
brought
up
to
the
level
of
a
place
like
Berkeley
California,
where
on
the
road
they
they
do
bicycle
boulevards
in
Berkeley
and
they
have
you
know
they
have
icons
on
the
road
markings
on
the
road
that
are
8
feet
wide
by
10
feet
the
other
direction,
and
it
makes
it
very
clear
that
this
is
actually
a
neighborhood.
By
way
they
and
bike
boulevard.
They
have
traffic
diverters.
They
have
a
lot
of
amenities
for
these,
whereas
Salt
Lake
is
very
timid.
I
Signature
streets
and
we
have
this
sort
of
half
measure
that
really
doesn't
work
and,
although
I
think
you
should
approve
the
grant,
I
think
you
also
need
to
give
direction
to
the
transportation
division
that
the
transportation
division
needs
to
come
up
with
a
better
and
solid
plan
for
how
to
address
neighborhood
byways,
because
it's
completely
and
utterly
inadequate.
At
this
point.
So
thank
you.
C
E
Thank
you.
This
is
Amy
Stoker
and
about
the
court
in
court.
Was
it
the
cleveland
quartzite?
It
was
my
husband
Ken
Grossman
as
well
great.
E
I
just
want
to
oppose
the
addition
of
making
it
seven
units
versus
five
units
we've
been
here
for
over
ten
years,
and
we
love
this
neighborhood
and
I
feel
like
seven
units.
Will
it's
just
too
many
people,
especially
on
that
tiny
little
Street
Cleveland,
it's
tiny.
It
shouldn't
have
that
many
units
on
there,
ken
hi.
A
I'm
Ken
Grossman
I
am
Amy's
husband
and
I
watch
you
guys
his
faces
now
and
I
could
not
imagine
showing
up
hungover.
Okay,
you
guys
you're
listening
is
incredible.
You
have
to
listen,
dare
and
I
hope,
you're
feeling
better
I
live
next
to
Eric,
and
just
south
of
us
is
a
four-plex
and
just
to
the
south
of
that
is
Andrew
and
Amanda,
and
the
nurse
of
this
a
lot
that
they
want
to
develop.
A
We
know,
what's
gonna
happen,
we
know
what's
coming,
but
this
neighborhood
showed
up
at
the
Planning.
Committee
Darrin
was
on
that
Planning
Committee
and
it
was
20
to
1
against
I
asked
for
the
councilman.
What
happens
if
it
would
have
been
five
hundred
to
one
against,
and
he
said
you
know
if
the
developer
dots
his
ice
and
crosses
his
T's
there's
nothing.
You
can
really
do
that's
heartbreaking.
A
A
B
C
E
My
name
is
Shirley
and
I
would
like
Maurice
and
I
would
like
to
speak
against
the
rezoning,
so
the
narrative
of
people
creating
inaccessible
spaces
has
led
to
the
displacement
of
low-income
and
people
of
color.
Historically
and
today,
the
comments
of
certain
neighbors
calling
individuals
thugs
gang
members.
Drug
addicts
is
racial
profiling
and
a
discrimination
of
wealth
to
judge
individuals
that
have
suffered
under
a
system
that
has
failed
them
and
then
to
discard
them
by
building
another
unnecessary,
expensive
apartment
does
no
one
if
anyone
from
Rose
Park
any
good.
Only
those
who
profit
from
this.
E
We
are
talking
about
people's
livelihoods,
families
and
children.
These
are
the
people
who
make
our
community
and
further
record.
Those
who
claim
to
have
our
best
interests
at
heart.
Do
not
say
things
like
quote:
Rose
Park
is
very
attractive
to
a
lot
of
young
people
because
of
the
community
feel
and
the
close
proximity
to
downtown.
That
is
a
comment
from
a
gentrify
er.
That
is
exactly
the
kind
of
intentions
and
the
kind
of
actions
that
lead
to
gentrification
and
the
displacement
of
our
people.
C
A
E
E
E
C
B
A
E
C
A
C
I
I
This
is
a
great
opportunity
for
Salt
Lake
to
do
that
and,
in
addition
to
make
that
permanent
push
buttons
are
a
very
anti
pedestrian
makes
intersections
very
more
unsafe
for
pedestrians
and
they
actually
encourage
people
to
walk
through
the
lights
right
now.
It's
actually
a
public
health
hazard
and
those
should
be
deactivated
so
that
the
walk
sign
always
comes
on.
The
second
is
at
some
point,
I
think
you're
going
to
be
getting
to
a
king
master
plan
for
Salt
Lake
City.
I
It
was
never
released
yet
Salt,
Lake,
City
spent
I,
don't
know
I
think
in
the
neighborhood
of
seventy
five
thousand
and
had
a
presentation
on
that.
But
then
the
study
was
never
released
to
the
public
and
whether
this
was
actually
included
in
the
master
plan.
I
don't
know,
but
it
certainly
should
be
made
public
so
that
anybody
trying
to
review
the
the
parking
master
plan
would
have
access
to
that.
The
parking
master
plan
is
not
ready.
I
B
Thank
you,
mr.
Otis.
All
right
and
that
concludes
the
public
comment
portion
of
our
meeting,
and
so
thank
you
for
everybody
who
did
tuned
in
to
give
your
feedback
and
again
and
if
there
is
more
information
that
you
do
want
to
provide.
You
can
do
that
and
through
by
emailing,
the
City
Council
and
the
email
address,
provided.
Let
me
get
it
free
again
and.
B
B
B
A
E
E
A
B
B
B
A
B
A
B
B
B
A
A
B
A
B
A
A
B
Thank
you
and
I'm
es
as
well,
so
that
passes
unanimously,
we'll
move
on
to
budget.
Excuse
me
to
item
number
five
and
the
ordinance
for
budget
amendment
number
for
fiscal
year,
2019
2020.
This
includes
funding
to
mitigate
impacts
related
to
the
ongoing
copa90
outbreak
and
several
other
items
or
many
other
items.
Actually.
Is
there
a
motion.
A
C
A
B
Yes
as
well
that
passes
unanimously,
let's
go
ahead
and
move
on
to
item
b6,
and
this
is
a
continued
hearing
from
our
sorry,
not
a
hearing.
This
is
a
resolution
that
would
update
the
timeline
for
the
city's
2020
to
2024,
consolidating
the
plan
as
a
required
by
HUD
and
the
consolidated
plan
details
the
city's
goals,
objectives
to
build
healthy
and
sustainable
communities,
communities
through
our
federal
grants
and
also
our
CDBG.
Our
emergency
solutions.
Grants
are
and
are
a
program
or
motion.
B
A
A
A
A
B
A
A
G
B
A
B
A
A
B
I'm,
yes,
as
well
now
items
b83,
b12
and
those
were
the
grant
applications
and
we'll
just
go
ahead
and
read
them
really:
quick
grant
application
request
that
would
fund
a
two
hundred
twenty
eight
thousand
dollars
from
the
transit
transportation
investment
fund
for
TIFF
for
the
600-700
north
frequent
transit
network
improvement,
near-term
project
and
next
was
grant
application
request.
That
would
find
two
hundred
and
ten
thousand
from
the
transportation
investment
fund
or
TIF
activation
projects
and
transit
transportation
investment
fund.
B
Then
we
had
one
a
grant
application
for
a
request
that
would
fund
ten
thousand
dollars
from
the
Utah
Division
of
State
history
and
the
grant
application
request
from
the
Salt
Lake
City
Fire
Department
for
grant
monies
that
would
be
used
to
fund
medical
supply
for
the
fire
department.
Do
I
have
a
motion.
Mr.
B
A
A
A
B
A
B
A
B
B
B
A
Just
wanted
to
clarify
something
so
that
the
public
knows
is
not
that
we
don't
talk
to
the
mayor
all
whatsoever
and
we
don't
have
questions
it's
because
earlier
we
had
a
work
session
and
sometimes
we
have
small
group
meetings.
Now
we
talked
to
her
or
her
staff,
so
we're
pretty
well
informed
and
in
any
communications
with
her.
So
we're
here
at
this
point
were
like,
but
we'll
have
some
more
questions
in
the
future.
It's.
C
B
Okay,
so
we'll
now
move
on
to
section
D
of
our
agenda
and
potential
action
items.
Our
first
item
d1,
is
regarding
an
ordinance
that
would
amend
the
zoning
map
pertaining
to
three
parcels
of
property
located
at
347,
353
and
359
north
seven
hundred
west,
so
he's
on
the
far
cells
from
SR,
one
special
development,
powdered,
residential
RMF.
Thirty-Five,
moderate
density,
multi-family,
residential
I'll
look
for
a
motion.
B
G
Gonna
be
voting
no
on
this,
just
because
I
think
considering
the
circumstances
I
feel
the
same
way
with
Cleveland
Court
as
well,
but
I
don't
want
to
approve
anything
in
the
current
scenario
that
we're
at
with
kovat
19
I.
Just
think
that
it's
we're
in
a
point
where
it's
harder
for
maybe
specifically
West
West
Side
residents
to
get
the
digital
divide
that
we've
got
in
the
community
in
to
get
online
and
be
able
to.
You
know,
come
on
these
meetings
and
see
what's
going
on
so
I.
G
B
B
A
A
B
I'm,
yes
as
well:
let's
go
ahead
and
move
to
item
d2.
It
is
an
Oni
map,
amendment
to
840
East
6th
Avenue.
This
is
an
ordinance
that
would
amend
the
zoning
up
or
the
property
located
at
486
avenues
and
special
development.
Counter
residential
district
press
r1,
hey
to
small
neighborhood
business
district.
A
B
A
B
B
B
A
A
B
Yes
as
well
so
that
will
be
approved
unanimously,
move
to
I'm
an
unfinished
business.
We
have
no
unfinished
business,
so
that
brings
us
to
Section
G
a
consent
portion
of
our
agenda.
I'll
know
it
for
a
motion
to
approve
the
consent
agenda.
Mr.
chair
I
move
that
we
approve
the
consent
agenda.
Second
I
have
a
motion
fowler
second,
from
councilmember
Johnston.
Is
there
any
discussion
to
this
issue
a
seeing?
None
we'll
go
ahead
and
roll
call.
It
councilman,
Rodgers,
yes,
Johnston!