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From YouTube: Salt Lake City Council Formal Meeting - 4/6/2021
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B
A
A
The
council
will
consider
adopting
a
joint
ceremonial
resolution
with
madam
mayor
mendenhall,
declaring
between
april
8th
2021
and
may
8
2021
as
days
to
sound
the
alarm
to
help
educate
and
protect
residents
of
our
community
against
home
fires.
I
will
now
turn
the
time
over
to
council
member
valdo
moros
to
read
the
resolution.
C
C
A
D
Madam
chair,
I
move
the
way
I
adopted
joint
resolution
with
the
mayor.
A
E
D
A
Normally,
as
everyone
knows,
when
we
do
a
resolution,
we
would
usually
be
in
the
city
county
building
and
be
able
to
present
this
to
representatives
of
the
organization.
However,
we
are
remote,
but
we
still
have
representatives
here
that
we
would
love
to
acknowledge
and
virtually
pass.
This
resolution
to
that
would
be
del
brady
and
patrick
risk,
and
if
they
are
here
with
us.
A
Okay,
duke
well.
D
A
I
am
so
sorry,
mr
brady,
that
I
did
not
check
to
see
if
you
were
here
before
we
read
the
resolution
we
did
read
and
for
the
public.
Mr
brady
is
the
executive
director
of
the
greater
salt
lake
area
chapter
of
american
red
cross,
and
we
did
read
the
resolution
and
would
like
to
virtually
pass
this
to
you
and
give
you
a
moment
to
say
some
words.
If
you'd
like
thank.
E
You
so
much
council
member
fowler,
I
I
was
actually
lucky
to
be
present,
as
the
resolution
was
read
and
then,
as
the
motion
was
passed
and
then
voted
on.
Thank
you
so
much
for
your
unfailing
support
to
our
families
in
this
wonderful
community
and
to
the
american
red
cross.
Our
sound.
The
alarm
campaign
is
a
free
service
that
we
offer
to
any
and
all
families,
and
especially
in
the
pandemic.
E
A
A
With
that,
I
will
turn
to
agenda
item
number
five
and
madame
mayor.
Of
course
thank
you
for
being
with
us.
As
always,
and
at
this
point
the
mayor
will
present
recommendations
to
the
council
regarding
proposed
community
development,
block
grants,
grant
funding
emergency
shelter,
grant
funding
home
investment
partnerships,
program,
funding
and
housing
opportunities
for
persons
with
aids
funding
budgets.
A
It's
interesting
when
I
say
the
words,
because
we're
so
used
to
using
the
acronyms
that
I
forget,
so
we
did
have
a
discussion
a
little
bit
of
a
discussion
in
this
about
this
in
our
work
session,
but
mayor
I'd,
love
to
turn
the
time
over
to
you.
So
the
floor
is
yours.
Thank
you.
G
Thank
you,
madam
chair
thanks
city,
council
and
I'd
say
tonight,
I'm
presenting
my
recommendations
but,
as
you
mentioned,
they've
already
kind
of
been
a
little
unpacked
in
the
work
session.
So
thanks
for
that
discussion
as
well,
but
this
is
our
annual
hud
entitlement.
It's
our
grant
programs
for
our
coming
fiscal
year
of
2122
and,
as
you
know,
these
are
really
critical
grant
programs
that
provide
a
variety
of
services
and
opportunities
for
our
low
income,
underserved
and
our
vulnerable
communities.
G
This
year
we
received
just
over
nine
million
dollars
in
requests
with
around
6.7
million
available,
to
allocate
I'd
like
to
underscore
that
these
funds
are
the
city's
annual,
regular
allocations
and
they're
separate
from
other
covid
related
funding
that
we've
received
and
we're
will
we
will
be
receiving
and
that
we
designate
toward
covet
relief
programs,
specifically
you're,
going
to
see
that
these
recommendations
are
not
geared
toward
addressing
coveted
needs
in
our
community,
but
instead
they
align
with
advancing
the
goals
of
the
city's
five-year
consolidated
plan.
G
Those
goals
in
the
plan
include
housing,
homeless,
service,
community
resilience,
transportation
and
behavioral
health
and,
as
you've
already
reviewed,
they
there
are
certain
grant
categories
that
align
very
nicely
with
the
funding.
G
That's
available
just
a
minute
honey
dessert,
as
in
past
years,
we're
gonna
continue
to
have
to
make
hard
decisions,
and
those
were
some
of
my
hardest
nights
on
the
city
council,
making
decisions
about
these
precious
hud
dollars
that
go
out
to
our
community
partners
and
there's
never
enough
funding
to
address
all
the
applications,
nor
even
all
the
identified
needs
in
the
community
this
year,
you're
going
to
see
familiar
organizations
and
programs
as
well
as
some
new
ones,
and
we
value
a
range
of
providers
and
services
that
advance
our
city's
consolidated
plan
goals.
G
I
want
to
extend
my
appreciation
also
to
the
city's
advisory
boards.
Those
volunteer
cdbg
boards
that
dedicate
their
time
and
do
a
detailed
review
and
then
issue
recommendations
which
lead
to
the
scores
that
you
see
on
the
charts
that
you
get
also.
I
want
to
thank
the
city's
hands
team
for
conducting
the
public
and
the
competitive
application
process
for
these
funds
and
make
sure
that
our
city
is
in
compliance
with
hud
as
we
distribute
the
dollars
into
the
community.
A
Thank
you,
madam
mayor.
We
appreciate
you
being
here
and
the
hard
work
that
the
teams
have
done
to
make
these
recommendations.
It
is
a
difficult
process,
but
always
look
forward
to
finally
getting
money
out
into
the
community.
So
thank
you
with
that.
We
are
going
to
move
on
to
our
public
hearings
and
I
am
going
to
go
through
what
we
may
have
been
bored
of
hearing
yet
is
so
very
important
in
our
open
meetings
and
in
order
to
have
a
very
good
and
successful
public
hearing
and
community
meeting.
A
We
are
now
at
the
public
hearing
portion
of
our
agenda.
We
take
comments
for
each
of
the
items
scheduled
for
a
council
hearing.
General
comments
will
take
place
after
the
scheduled
hearing
items.
We
are
accepting
your
comments
through
webex
and
for
those
whose
only
option
is
to
call
in
staff
will
be
monitoring
a
separate
telephone
line.
The
city
council
has
always
had
roles
of
decorum
that
are
created
to
advance
the
legitimate
government
objectives
of
having
an
orderly,
efficient
meeting
that
moves
through
the
agenda
and
gives
everyone
the
opportunity
to
voice
their
opinions
in
person.
A
We
will
still
want
to
provide
a
space
for
people
to
feel
comfortable
and
safe
to
participate.
In
order
to
achieve
this,
our
rules
of
decorum
extend
from
the
moment
you
arrive
into
our
virtual
meeting
to
help
facilitate
our
comment
period.
Please
be
respectful,
avoid
yelling
or
making
racial
slurs,
obscene
or
defamatory
remarks.
We
want
everyone
to
feel
safe
in
this
space.
A
The
council
respects
all
points
of
view
and
we
welcome
new
insights.
However,
using
foul
language
and
personal
attacks
make
the
public
comment
forum
uncivil
and
intimidating
for
others,
this
meeting
is
also
being
broadcast
on
television
and
the
internet,
and
so
we
will
more
strictly
enforce
the
use
of
profanity.
A
This
will
be
considered
your
advanced
warning
against
the
use
of
profanity.
If
someone
uses
profanity,
we
will
mute
your
microphone
and
you
will
forfeit
your
opportunity
to
address
the
council
tonight
if
you
feel
you
need
to
use
profanity
to
express
your
point.
You're
welcome
to
email,
council
members
or
call
comment
our
comment
line
at
801
535-7654.
A
A
Please
monitor
the
chat
screen
for
information
and
or
feel
free
to
message
our
staff
with
any
questions
again.
His
name
is
robert
knutsman
isaac.
Canelo
will
be
calling
the
names
of
those
who
wish
to
comment
and
unmuting
lines
once
we
open
the
public
comment.
Isaac
will
announce
three
names
at
a
time
so
that
people
can
have
some
notice
and
be
prepared
to
speak
when
it
is
your
turn
to
speak,
the
meeting
host
will
unmute
your
line.
Please
state
your
name
and
your
two
minute
timer
will
begin
at
the
two
minute
mark.
A
The
host
will
announce
time
and
your
microphone
will
be
muted.
Of
course,
if
you
are
unable
to
complete
your
full
comment
within
the
available
time,
please
feel
free
to
contact
us
again.
You
can
mail,
the
salt
lake
city
council
at
po
box,
145476
salt
lake
city,
utah,
84114,
email,
us
at
council.com,
slcgov.com
or
call
801-535-7654.
A
If
you
do
not
wish
to
speak,
please
message
our
staff
to
let
them
know
or
when
the
host
states,
your
name,
please
just
let
us
know
that
you're
here
to
listen.
Thank
you
all
for
joining
us
and
we
will
begin
the
public
hearing
comments
and
sorry
for
my
little
smirk
earlier
have
a
new
puppy
and
all
I
can
hear
is
pronouncing
outside
of
my
office.
A
A
H
I
A
And
then
I
mute
I
was
muted
with
that.
We
both
owe
a
dollar
to
the
jar.
I
will
turn
the
time
over
to
isaac.
To
start
with
our
first
public
comment
on
this
public
hearing.
A
Thank
you.
It
looks
like
I
am
looking
for
a
motion
with
this,
so
I
will
look
for
a
motion.
D
A
D
D
D
K
A
Our
second
scheduled
public
hearing
is,
regarding
budget
amendment
number
seven
for
fiscal
year,
2020
2021.
Before
we
begin
taking
comments,
I
will
go
ahead
and
turn
the
time
over
to
our
council
staff
policy.
Analyst
ben
ludke
to
give
a
short
introduction
and
are
you
here?
Oh
there,
you
are.
L
K
K
J
I
Okay,
hi
everyone.
My
name
is
crystal
kuh,
I'm
here,
because
I
wanted
to
urge
the
city
council
to
vote
against
budget
amendment
seven.
I
work
with
the
unsheltered.
I
work
with
them
about
three
times
a
week
and
I
can
see
the
increase
of
difficulty.
I
J
Okay,
thank
you
for
your
comment
crystal
next
up.
We
have
liza
mckinney
and
followed
by
brian
hill
and
then
eli
kaufman.
M
Hi,
my
name
is
eliza
mckinney,
you've
heard
from
me
many
times
at
the
city
council
meetings
I
wanted
to
express.
My
concern
is
for
budget
amendment
7,
particularly
the
portions,
that
increase
funding
to
the
police
department
and
take
money
from
the
general
fund.
M
I
also
noticed
in
this
week's
agenda
that
all
of
these
increases
to
the
police
budget
weren't
mentioned
in
the
overview.
I
know
that
this
amendment
is
a
really
large
amendment
and
has
lots
of
really
great
things
in
it,
but
it
felt
misleading
to
not
include
these
huge
budget
increases
to
the
police
department.
In
that
summary,
and
I
would
hope
that
you
would
do
that
in
the
future,
and
I
think
that
that
is
all
I
have
to
say.
Thank
you.
J
K
Thank
you
for
your
time.
As
many
of
you
may
be
aware,
one
of
downtown's
largest
encampments
is
located
directly
across
the
street
from
the
gateway
where
the
former
road
home
is
located.
At
times,
this
encampment
is
included
well
over
40
tenths.
The
gateway
has
been
disproportionately
impacted
by
the
encampment
on
rio
grande
in
terms
of
safety,
cleanliness
and
expense.
K
While
we
appreciate
the
abatement
effort,
it
is
insufficient
and
ineffective.
Without
enforcement,
the
gateway
has
invested
a
considerable
sum
in
revitalizing
downtown
and
we
have
had
to
carry
the
burden
of
paying
for
additional
security
and
janitorial
staff
to
address
situations
including
theft,
violence,
drugs
biowaste
and
vandalism
related
to
the
rio
grande
encampment.
K
We
understand
that
if
funding
is
approved
on
april
20th
that
there
would
still
be
a
time
before
another
abatement
could
be
set
up
in
the
interim,
we
are
requesting
that
there
are
additional
resources
provided
specifically
porta
potties
and
garbage
receptacles
for
those
living
at
the
rio
grande
encampment,
which
will
help
by
limit
limiting
trash
that
blows
in
from
the
encampment
and
biowaste
in
the
gateways,
garages,
stairwells
and
elevators,
and
for
those
residing
at
the
encampment
by
the
gatewaiter.
The
gateway
would
appreciate
your
vote
to
approve
funding
to
enforce
the
no
camping
rule
post
abatement.
J
Thank
you.
Brian
now
we
have
el
sorry,
eli
kaufman,
followed
by
liz
dufrese
and
shane
brooks
eli.
You
are
unmuted.
N
Hi,
can
you
hear
me:
I'm
eli,
I've
been
a
resident
of
salt
lake,
my
whole
life-
and
I
am
a
member
of
wasatch
tennis
united.
I
am
on
here
to
let
you
all
know
that
myself
and
the
entirety
of
wasatch
tenants
thinks
that
you
should
vote
no
on
budget
amendment
7
and,
quite
frankly,
on
any
funding
towards
the
police.
N
Do
you
know
how
exhausting
it
is
to
go
to
work
all
day
and
then
in
my
free
time,
have
to
come
here
and
tell
all
of
you
to
do
your
job
and
have
some
baseline
compassion
for
poor
people?
I'm
telling
you,
as
an
slc
resident
that
I
have
witnessed
too
many
camp
sweeps.
These
camp
abatements
are
violence,
and
I
know
too
many
people
personally,
who
have
been
physically
beaten
by
the
cops
who
you
fund.
The
only
solution
is
to
defund
the
police.
N
What
I
found
most
offensive
about
this
budget
proposal,
though
I
disagree
with
all
of
it-
is
the
protest
costs.
There
is
nothing
more
sinister
than
you
wanting
to
use
our
money
to
reimburse
slcpd
for
traumatizing
our
entire
communities.
You
have
no
idea
the
harm
they
have
done
to
us.
This
money
should
be
used
for
affordable
housing
as
redefined
in
the
wasatch
tenants
demands.
We
are
paying
attention
to
who
votes
for
these
violent
proposals,
and
we
are
more
organized
than
ever.
N
We
will
make
sure
you
do
not
get
reelected
if
you
refuse
to
do
what
is
right
for
the
community.
Once
again,
I
just
want
to
say
that
voting
for
more
money
to
be
given
to
salt
lake
city
police
is
violence
to
our
communities
and
these
homeless
people
are
people,
they
are
not.
They
do
not
need
to
be
cleaned
up,
they
need
to
be
given
housing.
You
can't
push
them
out
of
public
spaces
when
they
have
nowhere
else
to
go.
N
The
solution
to
homelessness
isn't
to
push
these
people
out
of
our
neighborhoods
they're,
my
neighbors
they're,
our
community
members.
They
need
to
be
given
places
to
live
and
until
then
stop
taking
their
tent
stop
making
the
health
department
push
them
out
of
the
places
that
they
have
found
to
camp.
Where
else
are
they
supposed
to
go?
Tell
me
where
else
they
are
supposed
to
go.
Give
me
one
answer
and
if
it's
homeless,
shelters
that
lie
about
their
bed
capacity
and
if
it's
homeless
shelters
don't
have
space
for
everybody
because
of
covet
precautions.
M
Okay,
thanks
yeah,
I
am
just
calling
to
urge
the
city
council
to
vote
against
budget
amendment
number
seven,
as
well
as
a
therapist
who
works
primarily
with
families
impacted
by
the
commercial
system
in
sully
county.
I
know
that
what
the
city
needs
is
not
more
police
funding,
but
funding
which
will
provide
critical
resources
to
families
in
need.
I'm
always
hearing
these
business
owners
call
and
complaining
that
we
need
more
police
because
there
are
homeless
people
near
their
businesses.
M
I
it's
ridiculous
to
me
that
we
think
that
law
enforcement
will
resolve
homelessness.
All
it
does
is
push
people
from
one
area
of
the
city
to
another
and
then
I'm
sure,
as
you're
aware,
you
get
more
calls
from
other
business
owners
mad
that
people
are
now
there
like.
It
seems
pretty
obvious
that
the
police
are
not
going
to
help
with
these
problems,
because
people
need
housing.
People
need
public
bathrooms
right.
If
we
have
like
the
mayor
is
talking
about
earlier
today
that
there's
never
enough
funding
for
all
of
the
identified
needs
in
our
community.
M
Well,
then,
I
strongly
suggest
that
we
stop
pouring
millions
of
dollars
into
the
police,
as
we
know
that
the
police
only
exacerbate
needs
in
our
most
marginalized
communities.
The
police
are
only
a
tool
of
violence
and
intimidation.
They
do
not
prevent
harm,
they
show
up
after
harm
has
already
occurred
and
they
add
further
harm
that
does
nothing
to
alleviate
the
lack
of
needed
resources
creating
the
harm
in
the
first
place.
The
reason
we
don't
need,
constant
police
presence
in
sugar
house
is
because
that
neighborhood
is
privileged
with
resources.
M
If
you
are
concerned
about
increasing
crime
or
homelessness,
then
you
need
to
divest
funds
from
the
police
so
that
we
can
actually
fund
those
basic
resources
like
independent
housing,
food,
clean
water,
public
bathrooms
and
medical
and
mental
health
care.
My
experience
working
with
the
unsheltered
community
members,
has
taught
me
that
jail
style
shelters
are
not
an
answer
because
they
severely
restrict
basic
privacy
and
autonomy,
and
we
have
reports
that
the
shelters
are
dropping
people
off
at
these
camps
because
they
are
full.
M
J
D
Thank
you.
My
name
is
shane
brooks.
Thank
you
for
your
time
tonight,
city,
council
members.
I
want
to
come
here
today
and
say
you
guys
need
to
vote
no
on
budget
amendment
7
when
we
marched
all
summer
long
and
said
defund
the
police.
This
is
what
we
meant
right
here:
650
000
dollars
to
support
the
abatements
when
they
send
down
more
cops
than
what
is
needed
in
the
event
that
one
person
may
get
hostile
because
they
are
being
traumatized
because
their
items
are
being
taken
away
from
them
is
excessive.
D
D
Then
you
can
allocate
money
over
to
mental
health
resources,
education,
resources,
housing
resources,
substance,
abuse
resources
and
you
can
put
the
money
into
the
other
resources
that
the
community
demanded
for
all
summer
long
asking
them
asking
for
500
some
odd
thousand
dollars
to
support
protest
costs.
That's
an
infringement
upon
our
freedom
of
speech
rights.
D
When
they
are
asking
for
that
money
to
protect
our
rights,
u.s
city
council
members
need
to
realize
that
and
say
we're
not
going
to
do
that
when
they're
asking
for
covert
relief
money-
and
they
say
we're
gonna
ask
for
it
from
you,
but
then
we're
gonna
ask
for
it
from
fema.
Let
them
ask
for
it
from
fema.
First
then
ask
for
the
rest
from
you.
J
Thank
you.
Now
we
have
well,
it
appears.
Madison
donnelly
has
left
so
now
we
have
james
niska,
followed
by
lissa,
hey
lisa,
hazel
and
then
emma
goldman
james
you're,
on
muted
yeah.
You
can
hear
me.
K
Okay,
thank
you,
yeah.
No,
nobody
was
responding.
My
name
is
james
miska,
I'm
a
homeowner
homeowner,
a
small
business
owner
and
a
resident
of
salt
lake,
and
I'm
urging
you
to
vote
no
on
budget
amendment
number
seven.
I
would
like
to
reiterate,
or
some
support
for
the
comments
made
by
eli
kaufman
earlier,
I'm
specifically
not
in
support
of
any
increases
whatsoever
to
the
police
department
budget.
This
has
been
an
ongoing
important
issue
to
me,
because
citizens
of
our
city
were
promised
a
decrease
in
police
funding
as
a
result
of
ongoing
peaceful
protests.
K
Last
year,
many
of
which
I
was
a
part
of
many
of
which
I
witnessed
many
of
the
people
who
have
been
killed
by
police
over
the
past
several
years.
A
lot
of
those
whose
faces
now
cover
a
lot
of
the
walls
upon
the
building
at
800,
south
and
300
west
that
haven't
been
painted
there.
Many
of
them
suffered
from
mental
illnesses
and
police
were
responsible
for
acting
poorly
and
murderously
toward
those
folks
and
those
others
that
are
still
painted
up
on
those
walls.
K
So,
rather
than
give
an
additional
1.4
million
dollars
from
the
general
fund
to
the
police,
for
the
many
reasons
already
outlined,
even
such
as
this
absurd
537
337
for
so-called
protest
costs,
I
would
like
the
city
to
fund
community
organizations
that
pursue
restorative
justice
within
their
communities,
such
as
the
rose
park,
brown
berets
or
decarcerate
utah,
or
even
fund
more
affordable
housing.
So
please,
I'm
asking
you
to
remember
the
promises
you
made
last
summer
to
decrease
the
police
department
budget,
not
increase
it.
Thank
you
for
your
time
and.
J
H
Hi,
can
you
hear?
Yes,
I
hear
you,
okay,
hi,
my
name
is
lisa.
It's
with
an
s
like
sam
hazel.
I
am
here
to
ask
the
city
council
to
vote
no
on
this
amendment
7
grant
I
so
I
think
that
the
police
need
to
be
evaluated
based
on
how
well
they
serve
the
vulnerable.
Among
us,
this
includes
ensuring
police
are
using
compassion
to
create
peace
and
loving
attitudes
of
generosity.
Additionally,
garbage
cans
and
porta-potties
need
to
be
provided
as
basic
utilities,
because
they
are
the
most
vulnerable
among
us.
H
The
police
need
to
be
rewarded
for
de-escalating
stressful
and
harmful
situations,
to
minimize
the
use
of
guns
and
other
weapons,
including
training
and
promotions,
based
on
how
many
situations
were
de-escalated,
rather
than
breaking
out
into
into
a
physical
and
or
psychologically
damaging
situation
for
both
the
officers
and
the
vulnerable
shelter-less
residents
that
are
involved
in
this.
I'm
very
upset
to
hear
that
there
that
the
police
is
asking
for
a
650
000
grant
to
continue
hurting
people,
and
this
is
unacceptable
and
we
need
to
be
putting.
J
N
Awesome,
thank
you.
I
am
here
today
to
ask
y'all
to
please
vote
against
this
budget
amendment.
I
am
a
housing
case
manager
and
I
have
been
for
over
three
years.
I
will
often
walk
into
situations
that
police
have
to
ask
for
backup
in,
and
I
go
into
these
situations
completely
unarmed.
N
N
N
I
don't
care
how
many
times
you
all
claim
to
be
building
more
affordable
housing
building.
Another
shelter
will
not
cure
this
crisis
either.
The
crisis
is
capitalism.
I
am
disappointed
and
hurt.
I
do
not,
nor
have
I
ever
felt
as
though
the
police
or
local
government
have
made
have
had
me
in
their
best
interest,
and
this
is
a
clear
message.
N
Y'all
still
don't
also
in
regards
to
the
protest
police
funding,
y'all
already
passed
past
legislation
that
allows
individuals
in
cars
to
run
over
protesters,
and
now
you
want
to
give
more
money
to
police
to
brutalize
side
protesters.
I
just
ask
that
y'all,
please
stop
being
complacent
in
the
face
of
oppression.
J
Sorry
one
second
thank
you.
Now
we
have
amy
hawkins,
followed
by
john
ribbons
and
then
george
chapman
amy,
you're
unmuted.
O
Terrific
thank
you,
hello
city,
council,
member
staff,
members
and
mayor
mendenhall.
Thank
you
for
your
service
and
your
time
this
evening
my
name
is
amy
j
hawkins,
I'm
chair
of
the
ballpark
community
council
and
I
signed
on
tonight
to
express
my
support
for
the
police
funding,
that's
being
discussed
tonight
as
part
of
budget
amendment
number
seven.
I
know
that
not
every
camp
is
the
same,
but
I
did
want
to
relate
our
neighborhood's
experience
with
a
camp
that
was
located
across
the
street
from
challenger
school
at
about
1400
south
main
street.
O
This
camp
was
in
place
for
months,
and
it
was
finally
abated
on
january
14th
this
year,
but
during
the
months
that
it
was
in
place.
I
attended
multiple
meetings
with
administration
from
the
challenger
school
and
including
headmaster,
marcia
garcia,
to
listen
to
her
concerns
about
how
children
as
young
as
four
who
attend
the
preschool
were
exposed
to
the
regular
drug
use
that
happened
at
that
camp.
O
O
Maybe
our
experience
was
completely
unique,
but
we
also
read
news
articles
about
how
a
homeless
a
pardon
me
a
homicide,
suspect
who
was
identified
but
not
arrested,
and
then
read.
We
read
that
that
suspect,
frequents
homeless,
camp
cities
in
salt
lake
city,
our
neighborhoods,
are
feeling
public
safety
effects
of
additional
unsheltered
people,
but
even
more
so
that
those
unsheltered
people
are
feeling
the
effects
of
the
criminal
element
that
infiltrates
our
neighborhood
and
trades
on
them.
J
Thank
you.
Now
we
have
a
sorry,
john
ribbons,
followed
by
george
chapman
and
then
annie
charles
john.
You
are
unmuted
say.
Can
you
guys
hear
me.
L
Yes,
we
can
hear
you
cool
so
first
off,
I
want
to
say
if
this
is
coincidental
excuse
me,
but
as
a
member
of
wasatch,
tennessee
united,
I
think
it's
pretty
heinous
and
cynical
to
attach
funding
associated
with
the
cost
of
police
hospitalizing
protesters
over
the
summer
and
to
increase
funding
with
abatements,
with
also
grants
for
from
hud
to
increase
housing.
Resources.
Just
seems
extremely
cynical
seems
like
an
intentional
move
to
try
to
split
people
who
are
standing
together
in
organizational
unity
on
the
left
in
the
cit
in
the
city.
L
I'll
just
say,
I
live
less
than
three
minutes
walk
from
fleet
block.
If
I
look
out
my
window
right
now,
I
can
see
a
lot
of
people
experiencing
homelessness.
Unlike
you
know,
people,
like
you,
know
the
sections
represented
by
groups
like
the
ballpark
community
council.
I
live
in
this.
I
don't
live
up
the
street.
I
don't
live
in
a
bougie
side
of
town
and
I
don't
live
in
a
little
enclave,
that's
afraid
of
the
homeless.
This
is
my
community
in
this
neighborhood
there's,
probably
as
many
houses
unhoused,
and
when
these
abatements
happen.
L
It
feels
like
someone
came
to
our
community
and
tore
it
up.
There's
people
all
over
the
place.
There's
people
who
need
to
find
new
blankets
for
the
night
new
tents
for
the
night,
and
very
often
it
falls
on
just
like
the
good
graces
of
people
in
the
area
to
like
not
call
the
police.
When
someone's
sleeping
in
the
doorway
I
had
to
give
some
water
the
other
day.
It's
it's,
not.
L
The
city
should
be
making
the
existing
camps
as
stable,
safe
comfortable
as
possible.
They
should
be
giving
safe
injection
sites.
They
should
be
offering
needle
exchanges.
They
should
be
offering
the
you
need
to
acknowledge
the
fact
that
abatements
has
been
a
strategy
for
years
now.
How
long
ago
was
take
shelter
where
activists
had
up
all
kinds
of
resources,
housing,
warming
stations
in
the
middle
of
winter
and
the
cops
came
through
and
tore
it
up
beat
protesters
shot
rubber
bullets
at
us.
L
This
was
in
2019
and
then
over
the
summer
the
cops
spend
an
entire
summer,
hospitalizing
just
people
from
working-class
neighborhoods
for
the
most
part,
the
nights.
When
things
got
really
hairy,
it
was
because
people
were
actually
angry.
It
was
people
from
the
working-class
side
of
town,
not
just
students
who
regularly
come
out
and
protest
and
the
cops
spent-
I
guess,
half
a
million
dollars,
shooting
us
with
rubber
bullets
and
almost
running
us
over
with
medvac
vehicles.
J
P
Can
you
hear
me
now?
Okay,
I
support
bam
7,
except
for
d5,
which
is
the
local
uber-like
transit
system
that
uta
subsidizes
at
over
35
per
provider
per
ride.
The
cost
would
be
better
used
for
one
dollar
bus
fare
and
I
need
to
remind
the
council.
The
southwest
county
area
is
much
much
much
much
much
larger
than
the
salt
lake
city
area
discussed.
P
P
I
urge
the
city
to
allow
camping
in
a
safe
low
barrier
area
near
homeless
services
and
camping
on
the
sidewalk
is
a
sad
commentary
on
a
society
despite
rumors
to
the
contrary,
sugar
house
does
have
crime,
and
thank
you,
the
council,
members
that
have
devoted
your
careers
in
and
out
of
government
to
the
homeless.
I
know
you
care,
despite
rumors
to
the
contrary.
Thank
you.
Those
are
my
comments.
J
Q
Thanks
a
couple
of
things
before
I
comment
no
on
seven
was
that
you
didn't
give
a
very
in-depth
description,
this
time,
which
I've
noted
you
have
started
doing,
and
I
find
that
really
discouraging
kind
of
listing
out
what
this
bill
looks
like,
but
robert
you've
been
doing
a
really
good
job
at
communicating
when
people
are
going
so
way
to
go
generally
no
on
seven,
I
think
it's
a
really
bad
idea
to
be
increasing
the
police
budget.
After
just
last
year,
you
had
committed
to
reducing
it.
Q
You've
actually
gone
over
what
you
originally
said.
You
were
gonna
do,
which
is
super
discouraging.
It
just
feels
like
you're,
saying
things
to
appease
people
in
the
moment
and
then
slowly
going
back
on
that
over
time.
I
don't
think
we
should
be
specifically
funding
the
abatements.
This
is
against
the
cbc
guidelines
again
and
actively
traumatic
for
people
to
be
displaced
and
to
have
police,
even
in
their
presence.
After
a
lot
of
the
trauma
people
have
faced
at
the
hands
of
police.
Q
I
work
with
people
every
day
who
have
experienced
homeless,
who
are
who
I'm
working
with
for
substance,
abuse
issues
and
the
police
have
been
actively
harmful
for
them
and
I'm
having
to
heal
the
trauma
that
they
have
caused.
It's
exhausting,
I
like
want
to
be
able
to
give
a
more
in-depth
comment
tonight,
but
I'm
not
able
to
because
I'm
exhausted
from
the
work
I'm
having
to
do
reversing
the
damage
the
police
have
done
to
people
it.
Just
please
stop
doing
that.
It
doesn't
make
sense.
Q
Even
the
police
chief
said
it's
like
a
nail
and
everything's
a
hammer
and
it
doesn't
work
effectively,
you're
just
funneling
money
into
something:
that's
causing
more
damage
and
harm
to
people.
If
we
don't
want
people
using
outside
of
schools,
let's
give
them
places
to
do
that.
Let's
give
them
the
resources
to
be
able
to
fight
substance
abuse
or
give
the
resources
to
this
root
issues
of
it.
Like
childhood,
trauma
abuse
like
let's
resolve
these
deeper
seated
issues,
instead
of
just
funneling
money
into
the
police
who
aren't
actually
helping
the
issue
yeah,
that's
it.
B
Hi
there,
I
would
also
like
to
please
urge
the
council
to
vote
no
on
this
budget
amendment.
I
do
not
appreciate
police
budgets
being
actively
hidden
within
larger
budgets.
I
think
it's
very
disingenuous.
B
B
Instead,
you
are
using
the
police
budget
increases
as
a
way
to
attack
those
very
same
people.
I
understand
that
there
is
crime
that
is
often
associated
with
the
unsheltered,
but
instead
of
trying
to
address
those
issues
like
people
with
substance,
abuse
issues,
giving
them
places
to
have
safe
injection
sites
or
having
more
resources
put
into
health
care
systems
that
allow
people
to
have
medical
problems
addressed
rather
than
trying
to
cope
on
the
streets
with
available
medications
that
are
not
safe.
B
You
are
instead
punishing
people
and
creating
a
system
in
which
people
are
defunded
of
the
money
that
they
have
and
the
police
are
funded
and
people
are
not
able
to
get
back
into
housing.
They
are
instead
forced
into
a
cycle,
and
this
is
a
huge
issue
that
is
going
to
continue
to
be
a
problem
insult
like
people
are
going
to,
that,
you
put
into
jail,
are
going
to
come
out
of
jail,
people
who
displace
are
going
to
gather
somewhere
else.
This
isn't
something
that
can
be
fixed
with
a
revolving
door.
B
This
needs
to
be
addressed
at
its
root
causes
and
people
need
to
be
cared
for
with
compassion,
and
that
is
how
to
create
a
better
system
for
everyone.
So
I
really
urge
you
do
not
vote
yes
on
this
and
do
not
listen
to
the
time.
J
Thank
you.
Now
we
have
devin
boyle,
followed
by
sorry,
david
o'donnell,
followed
by
dave
kelly
and
then
martha
castillo,
devin.
Sorry
yeah!
Is
it
devin
o'donnell
my
bad
devin?
You
are
unmuted.
E
Great,
thank
you
for
your
time.
So,
yes,
I'm
also
asking
you
all
to
vote
against
this
amendment
as
it
stands.
E
E
The
protests
were
wild,
seeing
violence
come
from
police
unprovoked
when
they
were
not
being
approached
or
attacked,
and
events
prior
to
this,
seeing
people
pushed
against
glass
for
peacefully
standing
inside
granted
inside
a
building,
but
just
protesting
without
any
violence.
So
yeah,
that's
wild
to
me.
Given
the
number
of
times
you
have
heard
people
call
for
defunding
or
reduced
funding
of
the
police
to
even
consider
putting
that
in
and
also
yes,
seeing
the
money
going
towards
abatements.
E
Rather
than
giving
the
unsheltered
services
they
need,
as
people
have
mentioned,
safe
ways
to
access
drug
treatment,
services
and
other
things
that
they
need.
E
It's
very
bold
of
you
to
take
costs
from
covet
funding
to
build
wi-fi
tables
and
then
not
give
any
funding
to
helping
help
the
unsheltered-
it's
just
mind-boggling
to
me.
So
yes
asking
you
to
vote
against
this
as
it
stands.
Also
just
a
quick
comment
to
say
this
publicly,
but
mayor
mendenhall,
your
comment
in
last
meeting
after
we
all
spoke
about
the
excuse
me,
the
rezone
amendment
saying
that
no
one
understood
it
and
that
we
clearly
were
misguided.
E
It
was
was
hurtful
and
offensive
to
our
intelligence
and
our
desire
to
assist
our
community.
That's
all.
Thank
you
for
your
time
for
giving
me
time.
J
We
will
troubleshoot
with
dave
and
come
back
to
him.
Now
we
have
martha
castillo,
followed
by
paul
johnson
and
then
timberland
correa
martha.
You
are
unmuted.
R
Hi,
thank
you.
Thank
you
all
for
your
time,
so
I
am
also
here
today
to
ask
that
you
vote
against
this
amendment
as
it
stands,
and.
R
They
do
a
lot
of
damage
and
as
someone
who's
worked
in
social
work
and
in
healthcare
for
a
long
time,
I
can
say
that
from
experience,
when
are
we
going
to
choose
to
be
a
society
that
can
be
upheld
by
the
way
we
treat
the
most
vulnerable,
and
that
is
our
homeless,
and
that
are?
Is
our
citizens,
the
people
out
there
for
using
their
rights
as
they
should,
because
this
system
is
unjust
to
them
and
unfair?
R
J
K
Yes,
we
can
hear
you.
Thank
you,
I'm
paul
johnson,
I'm
the
chair
of
the
central,
9th
community
council.
Thank
you,
members
of
the
council
and
to
the
mayor
for
your
time.
This
evening.
I
live
right
around
the
corner
from
the
fleet
block
and
I
can
see
the
encampments
from
my
office
window
where
I
am
right
now
I
fill
and
live
the
effects.
These
are
captain
encampments
bring
to
the
surrounding
neighborhoods.
I
support
budget
amendment
number
seven.
K
We
are
living
in
unprecedented
times
and
those
who
live
near
these
areas
deserve
to
feel
safe
in
our
homes
and
neighborhoods.
I
do
not
discount.
There
are
many
good
folks
living
in
these
encampments,
but
it's
unreasonable
for
surrounding
neighborhoods
to
be
expected
to
just
put
up
with
and
not
seek
further
public
safety
when
our
communities
flawless.
J
F
Okay,
hi
everybody
good
evening,
I'm
kim
korea,
I'm
the
ceo
of
the
salt
lake
city-based
nonprofit,
the
in-between.
F
F
That's
exacerbated
by
a
severe
shortage
of
shelter,
beds
and
camping,
happens
for
two
reasons:
the
lack
of
shelter
beds
or
a
person's
unwillingness
to
go
into
a
shelter,
and
if
you
want
to
reduce
encampments,
we
need
to
address
both
these
issues.
F
We
can
use
this
money
to
increase
the
number
of
emergency
shelter
beds,
for
example,
by
having
some
of
the
winter
overflow
shelters
stay
open.
We
could
also
use
some
of
this
money
to
establish
an
organized,
supervised
and
peaceful
camping
area
that
has
the
native
facilities
such
as
toilets
showers,
garbage
and
the
oversight
that
people
need
to
feel
safe
so
that
they
can
go
to
sleep
and
not
fear
that
they'll
be
molested
or
robbed
of
all
their
belongings.
F
The
money
could
also
be
used
to
fund
case
management
services
to
help
the
clients
actually
exit
the
camp
into
stable
housing
or
even
to
get
a
spot
in
a
homeless
resource
center.
So,
in
my
experience
once
a
homeless
person
feels
safe,
they
make
a
dramatic
change
for
the
positive
like
their
whole
personality
changes.
F
The
stress
of
living
on
the
streets
seems
to
be
comparable
to
that
of
living
in
a
war
zone,
and
I
recommend
that
before
making
any
measures
to
you
know
further
traumatize
the
people
living
in
these
camps
that
you
might
go
and
live
in
a
camp
for
a
day
or
a
couple
days
or
a
week,
just
to
see
what
they
go
through
and
to
see
how
how
this
can
really
have
a
devastating
impact
on
them.
Thank
you.
J
M
Hello
as
a
long
time
resident
of
ballpark
and
I've,
I've
lived
here
for
about
15
years
with
my
family.
M
If
you
don't
support,
abatements
and
and
camp
cleanups
by
the
police,
you
really
probably
have
never
lived
y
one,
and
this
is
really
about
compassion,
not
only
for
people
who
are
experiencing
homelessness,
but
for
people
and
residents
of
the
city,
because
these
encampments
that
the
previous
speaker
just
said
are
like
war
zones.
I
think
that's
the
perfect
description,
the
homeless,
as
well
as
residents
of
the
city
we've
been
experiencing
violence,
drugs,
assault,
feces,
everywhere,
discarded
needles
everywhere
blatant
nudity.
M
My
four-year-old
daughter
was
exposed
to
a
man
masturbating
out
in
public,
twice
twice
in
the
past
two
years.
So
what
about
a
vulnerable
population?
What
about
the
innocent
children
of
the
city?
What
about
my
kids
that
you
know
walking
to
school?
They
see
these
things.
I
I
I
don't
know
what
to
say
about
it,
except
for
that
it's
it's
just
becoming
unbearable
in
our
city.
I
think
peaceful
camping
is
this
in
a
in
a
specific
kind
of
defined
area
is
a
good
solution.
I
think
housing
is
the
solution.
M
I
completely
agree
with
that:
getting
people
into
treatment
is
a
great
solution,
but
we
don't
have
that
yet
and
so
in
the
meantime,
public
safety
really
really
has
to
be
number
one.
We
need
to
keep
people
in
those
camps
we
need,
we
can't
have
them
living
like
that
and
we
can't
be
living
by
them.
It's
not
safe
and
it
it's
just
really.
It's
almost
causing
me
to
come
to
the
point
with
my
family,
where
I'm
living
here,
15
plus
years.
M
J
Now
we
have
tara
bobby,
followed
by
jessica
eichbauer,
and
then
I
believe
we
have
dave
kelly
back
terrell.
You
are
unmuted.
D
Yes,
hi,
I'm
terrell
barley.
I
live
in
the
ballpark
community.
I
just
want
to
say
I'm
for
amendment
7..
I
I
think
these
street
camps
are
not
safe
for
the
people
sleeping
in
them,
they're
not
safe
for
the
people
around,
and
we.
J
Now
we
have
jessica
eichbauer,
followed
by
dave
kelly
jessica.
You
are
unmuted.
I
Hi
I'm
against
this,
because
I
am
a
victim
of
police
brutality
and
one
of
the
protests
and
I
have
suffered
mental
health
illness
because
of
it.
I
have
been
evicted
from
my
apartment
because
of
it.
I
do
not
think
you
should
put
the
money
into
the
police
who
have
given
me
a
mental.
Every
single
one
of
my
mental
health
episodes
has
been
caused
by
someone,
not
believing
me,
and
every
time
someone
has
not
believed
me.
It's
been
a
police
officer.
I
Police
officers
are
horrible,
they
literally
base.
I
am
a
special.
I
am
a
former
special
ed
paraprofessional
slc,
deep
pd
shot
lyndon
cameron
he's
a
13
year
old
child.
I
was
his
para.
I
calmed
him
down.
I
never
had
to
shoot
him.
Don't
give
these
more
money,
I'm
against.
J
J
I
apologize
council
members
one
minute,
one.
J
K
First,
thank
you,
council
members.
Thank
you,
mayor
mendenhall.
Thank
you
guys
for
your
service.
Thank
you
guys
for
your
willingness
to
put
yourselves
out
there
and
to
try
to
make
our
city
better.
I
am
I'm
in
support
of
a
met
budget
budget.
Amendment
number
seven
specifically
for
the
camp
abatement.
K
K
That's
really
what
the
abatements
entel
right
is
getting
it
to
where
we
can
get
to
the
people
who
truly
need
help
and
truly
need
a
helping
hand
and
a
shoulder
to
cry
on
and
a
hand
up
and
and
being
able
to
help
where,
without
the
abatement
right,
we
go
back
to
2014
2015
with
you
know:
2500
people
camping
in
the
rio
grande
area,
where
it
was
an
open
drug
market.
It
was
an
open
sex
market.
K
It
was
everything
going
on
was
happening
there,
and
that
is
why
I
really
strongly
support
and
urge
you
guys
to
vote
yes
on
budget
amendment
7
is
to
allow
that
public
safety
which
it's
not
just
for
the
people
in
the
encampments.
It's
for
the
community
at
large,
it's
for
everybody
to
be
able
to
walk
down
the
street
to
be
able
to
feel
safe
and
and
secure
as
they're
walking
around.
Thank
you
for
your
service
and
thank
you
for
your
time.
J
We
actually
have
one
more
person,
I'm
sleepy
mitch.
You
are
now
unmuted.
M
Hi
this
is
ainsley
mensch
and
I'm
calling
to
ask
you
to
vote
no
on
amendment
seven.
I
just
want
to
kind
of
put
this
in
perspective.
What
you
guys
would
be
voting
for
you
guys,
would
be
voting
to
fund
the
abatements
of
camps,
which
you
know,
destroy
the
lives
of
people
who
live
here.
They
are
your
residents,
they
are
the
people
that
you
represent
and
they
are
the
most
vulnerable
members
of
our
community
and
you
guys
are
voting
to
if
you
vote.
M
Yes,
you're
voting
to
traumatize
that
community
we've
tried
abatements
before
and
it
hasn't
worked.
Obviously,
people
have
tried
policing
the
issue
of
homelessness
into
non-existence.
That
hasn't
worked,
and
you
know
maybe
we
don't
have
like
treatment,
centers
or
things
like
that
or
places
where
people
can.
M
You
know,
share
needle,
not
share
needles
but,
like
you
know,
get
have
safe
and
safe
injection
sites
or
something
like
that,
but
we
could
have
that,
but
instead
you
guys
are
choosing
to
fund
the
abate
camp
abatements,
which
leave
people
with
almost
nothing
with
literally
nothing
I've
seen
camp
abatements
where
they
brought
in
bulldozers
or
like
30
cop
cars.
Why
is
that
necessary
to
trauma
further
traumatize,
a
community
that
is
the
most
vulnerable
and
marginalized?
M
I
just
again
I
want
to
emphasize
you
represent
these
people.
They
aren't
just
homeless
people
that
live
here
like
they
are
your
constituents.
They
are
the
people
you
represent
and
if
you
vote
yes
on
this
amendment,
you
are
voting
to
traumatize
those
residents.
Thank
you.
Q
I'd
like
to
also
say,
like
please,
vote
no
on
amendment
7
and
I
believe
that
the
council
agreeing
to
put
more
money
into
the
police
department
after
there's
been
a
year
of
protesting
and
asking
for
defunding
the
police
and
reallocating
those
resources
and
money
towards
literally
anything
else
is
so
unbelievably
tone
deaf
to
me
and
to
my
fellow
citizens,
who
are
demonizing
the
unsheltered
community
and
saying
that
they're
harming
our
children
and
save
my
poor,
rich
white
baby,
because
there's
someone
experiencing
homelessness
is
also
completely
privileged
and
tone
deaf,
and
I
don't
think
you
people
even
understand
that
an
abatement
is
simply
getting
rid
of
these
people's
possessions
and
moving
them
to
someone
else's
neighborhood.
Q
O
A
A
K
A
D
A
We
will
move
on
to
our
second
scheduled
public
hearing.
Oh,
that
was
our
second
one.
Excuse
me:
we
will
move
on
to
our
third
and
last
scheduled
public
hearing,
which
is
item
b3
and
in
regard
to
the
hud
grants,
and
I
will
turn
the
time
over
to
council
staff
and
lucky
for
a
short
introduction.
K
K
The
full
funding
log,
which
shows
the
applications
and
the
different
funding
recommendations
are
available
in
attachment
2.
for
commenters,
please
state
which
grant
and
application
is
being
referenced
at
the
start
of
your
comments.
This
helps
orient
council
members
to
see
which
applicants
have
which
commenters
thank.
A
A
Sorry,
everyone
we
will
thank
you
ben
and,
let's
start
with
our
first
public
comment.
If
we
can
isaac.
J
Yes,
sorry,
I
didn't
realize
I
was
muted.
First
up,
we
will
have
michelle
finn.
It's
around
10
people.
First
up
michelle
flynn,
followed
by
angela
chapman
and
then
sasha
harvey
michelle.
You
are
unmuted.
T
Thank
you
and
good
evening,
madam
chair
council,
members
and
mayor.
I
appreciate
you
providing
some
time
for
us
to
speak
to
these
requests
and
a
timely
time.
It
is
because
we
are
facing
a
lot
of
challenges
in
our
fight
to
end
homelessness
in
our
community.
I
first
want
to
mention.
I
know
this
is
a
competitive
process,
but
I
want
you
to
know
how
closely
we
are
all
working
together
to
end
homelessness
and
how
much
we
support
the
requests
from
our
partner
agencies
as
well.
T
It
is
just
as
important
to
us
that
all
of
the
resource,
centers
and
outreach
are
funded,
as,
as
you
know,
our
own
program,
so
I
want
you
to
know
the
strong
collaboration
we
have
amongst
our
providers
and
and
city
and
county
and
state.
T
J
Now
we
have
sorry
angela
chapman,
followed
by
sasha
harvey
and
then
michael.
B
B
I
certainly
realize
it's
not
an
easy
decision
for
the
members
and
for
mayor
mendel
hall
regarding
these
funds.
As
I
mentioned
earlier,
my
name
is
angela
chapman
and
I
am
the
cfo
at
4th
street
clinic.
I
have
been
in
this
role
for
13
months.
During
this
time.
I
have
seen
the
amazing
work.
Our
staff
accomplishes
every
day
in
providing
vital
and
essential
care
to
our
homeless
community,
including
behavioral
health
health
services.
B
B
B
J
Now
we
have
sasha
harvey
followed
by
michael
ackerlow
and
sahih
ulroy
sasha.
You
are
muted.
R
R
Over
30
years
ago,
local
dentist,
dr
ralph,
montgomery,
started
solid,
donated
dental
services
to
offer
quality,
comprehensive
dental
treatment
for
those
in
salt
lake
city
without
access
to
care,
having
lost
all
of
his
teeth
in
his
early
twenties
due
to
living
in
poverty,
dr
montgomery
understood
firsthand
how
debilitating
it
is
to
lose
your
teeth
and
not
have
the
means
to
replace
them
so
donated.
Dental
was
created
with
a
unique
approach
to
resolving
dental
neglect.
R
We
not
only
assist
our
patients
in
restoring
their
oral
health,
but
also
in
maintaining
it.
Unfortunately,
the
effects
of
the
pandemic
have
sorry
the
effects
of
the
pandemic
on
the
public
health
organizations
that
serve
low
income
and
homeless
populations
have
been
devastating.
R
Two
family
dental
plan
locations
that
cared
for
the
underserved
closed
due
to
to
the
state
budget,
cuts
forestry
clinic
temporarily
lost
their
dentist
and
could
not
afford
dental
care
out
of
five
community
health
centers
that
used
to
offer
dental
services
only
two
still
do
the
average
weight
for
dental
care
in
the
remaining
community
clinics
is
two
to
three
months.
This
puts
a
tremendous
strain
on
the
facilities
like
donated
dental,
as
we
have
the
responsibility
to
continue
fulfilling
our
mission,
especially
in
the
times
of
hardships
and
adversity.
R
We
are
respectfully
requesting
fifty
thousand
dollars
from
cdbg
to
enable
our
staff
and
volunteers
to
continue
providing
dental
care
for
salt
lake
city's
homeless
salt
lake
city
has
been
a
gracious
supporter
of
our
programs,
for
which
we're
continually
grateful,
and
we
believe
that
together
we
can
enhance
and
improve
the
quality
of
life
for
those
who
need
it
most.
We
look
forward
to
continuing
our
partnership
during
the
upcoming.
J
E
E
As
you
may
be
aware,
cdcu
and
the
city
have
partnered
for
a
very
long
time
on
this
program
providing
funding
to
several
hundred
households
in
our
city.
Using
these
funds,
we've
been
able
to
provide
up
to
fourteen
thousand
dollars
in
assistance
to
low-income
households
who
are
purchasing
a
home
in
salt
lake
city.
E
We
are
seeing
a
low
inventory
of
homes
and
very
high
sales
prices,
making
it
incredibly
difficult
for
many,
especially
low-income
households,
to
purchase
a
home.
The
joint
center
for
housing
studies
at
harvard
states
that
the
most
significant
barrier
to
home
ownership
is
a
lack
of
savings
for
down
payment
and
closing
costs
down.
Payment
assistance
also
addresses
the
large
disparities
in
home
home
ownership
experienced
by
racial
and
ethic
minorities
who
have
not
benefited
from
acquired
wealth.
That
is
typically
seen
in
white
households.
E
J
E
Thanks
robert,
my
name
is
sahil
obroy,
I'm
the
director
of
housing
and
case
management
with
utah
community
action.
First
off.
I
want
to
thank
city
council
mayor
mendenhall
to
allow
us
to
have
a
platform
to
speak
a
bit
about
our
programs.
Uc
is
applied
for
four
separate
programs,
three
of
which
are
dealing
with
housing.
E
As
mayor
mendenhall
mentioned,
there
has
there
is
a
deficit
of
housing
available
in
salt
lake
city,
and
we
appreciate
the
recommendations,
the
cdcip
board
and
the
mayor
has
made
one
slight
modification.
We
would
request
to
the
recommendations
that
have
been
made
is
for
19
784
dollars
be
moved
from
our
rapid
rehousing
program
to
the
diversion
program.
E
I
know
that
there
were
some
recommendations,
the
recommendations
that
changed
the
allocations
that
we
wanted.
We
want
to
make
sure
a
diversion
program
is
fully
funded.
This
program
takes
place
at
the
weekend
day
center
and
as
as,
as
we
see
the
homeless
population
increasing,
we
want
to
make
sure
that
folks
have
access
to
this
program.
The
goal
of
this
program
is
to
help
those
that
are
unsheltered,
get
connected
to
other
resources
and
find
alternatives
to
shelter.
E
We
have
been
able
to
provide
alternatives
to
shelter
for
over
200
individuals
this
past
year
and
we're
hoping
to
do
so
by
fund
by
fully
funding
this
diversion
program.
Uca
has
received
additional
funding
from
the
city
for
rapid
rehousing
and
we
believe
that
we
would
be
able
to
meet
the
outcomes
needed
for
rapid
rehousing
for
those
that
are
unsheltered.
E
So
we
would
just
ask
for
that
slight
change
in
the
budget
recommendation.
Thank
you.
J
I
Thank
you.
I
want
to
thank
the
mayor
advisory
board
city
council
and
city
hand
team
for
their
recommendation
of
our
request
for
tenant-based
rental
assistance
under
the
housing
for
people
with
aids
program.
I
J
E
Yes,
madam
chair
council,
members
of
the
year
men
in
hall,
and
thanks
for
the
chance
to
speak
with
you
this
evening,
I'm
the
executive
director
with
assist
inc
and
I'm
speaking
this
evening
regarding
our
request
for
cdbg
funds
to
support
our
emergency
home
repair,
accessibility,
design,
assistance
and
community
design
programs
over
the
past
several
years.
Our
organization
has
seen
steadily
increasing
need
for
these
critical
services
with
a
growing
gap
in
services
each
year.
Housing
costs
are
quickly
outpacing
earning
capacity
which
is
leading
to
an
increase
in
multi-generational
households
and
decreased
discretionary
income.
E
While
these
pressures
are
felt
by
all,
they
are
particularly
for
those
in
the
lower
income
brackets
in
our
community,
and,
as
you
can
imagine,
this
past
year
has
really
exacerbated
these
needs,
as
the
cost
of
construction
and
building
materials
have
doubled
and
even
tripled.
In
some
cases,
my
organization
has
been
able
to
meet
many
of
these
needs
in
stride,
including
structural
repairs
for
households
impacted
by
last
month's
earthquake
and
replacing
electrical
services
for
individuals
whose
power,
mass
and
breakers
were
damaged
during
september's
windstorm.
E
The
mayor
has
recommended
that
assists
receive
700
000
in
cdbg
funding
for
the
2021
fiscal
year,
while
this
represents
a
significant
increase
over
past
year's
funding
levels
as
an
organization,
we
look
forward
to
using
this
funding
to
offset
increased
construction
costs
to
help
address
current
unmet
needs
in
our
community
and
to
continue
to
bolster
the
stability
of
salt
lake
city's
naturally
occurring
affordable
housing.
We're
grateful
for
this
recommendation
and
we're
excited
to
continue
to
serve
the
citizens
of
our
community
in
years
to
come.
Thank
you.
J
D
Thank
you.
I'm
sean
mcmillan,
I'm
the
executive
director
of
first
step
house.
I
want
to
thank
mayor
mendenhall,
her
staff,
the
salt
lake
city
council
and
the
committees
that
were
involved
in
the
process.
This
very
difficult
process
for
cdbg
and
esg
one
year
action
plan,
2021
2022
that
first
step
house
each
program.
Each
service
is
linked
integrated
with
each
each
of
the
others.
This
is
powerfully
true
in
the
instance
of
the
homeless
resource
center
program,
the
peer
support
services
program
and
the
employment
preparation
and
placement
program.
D
They
they
in
turn
those
behavioral
health
treatment
services
in
turn,
link
individuals
with
our
employment,
preparation
and
placement
program
that
helps
an
individual,
achieve
overcome
obstacles
and
achieve
employment
and
sustain
that
employment
once
they're
prepared
to
return
to
the
community
while
difficult
decisions
were
made
this
year
regarding
funding,
first
step
houses
and
very
first
step
house
is
very
grateful
for
the
for
the
funding
that
we
did
receive.
Should
there
be
an
opportunity
to
make
the
funding
request
whole.
That
would
be
very
much
appreciated
our
first
step
house.
Thank
you.
J
I
I
I
With
this
funding,
we
anticipate
serving
100
individuals
with
case
management
services
and
of
30
and
35
households
will
receive
housing
assistance,
50
households
will
receive
danger,
assessments,
50
households
will
receive
housing.
Referrals
to
partnering
housing
programs
and
50
individuals
will
work
with
a
case
manager
to
create
an
action
plan
to
ensure
safety
and
stability
for
context.
Most
of
our
households
continue
seeking
supportive
case
management
services
for
12
months
after
being
housed.
I
O
Thank
you.
I
appreciate
the
time
again.
My
name
is
sandra
stokes
and
I
want
to
say
good
evening,
council
members,
madam
chair
and
mayor
mendenhall,
I
am
the
chief
mission
impact
officer
at
ymca
utah
and
I'm
speaking
to
our
women
in
jeopardy
program,
to
which
we've
requested
a
funding
amount
of
98
035
in
cbdg
funding.
O
I
wanted
to
highlight
that
this
funding
will
help
us
provide
critical,
essential
shelter,
staffing
infrastructure
for
our
181
bed,
licensed
domestic
violence
program
and
residential
shelter.
We
provide
trauma-informed
supportive
services,
wrap-around
service
and
crisis
management.
Just
to
give
you
a
quick
snapshot.
Last
year
we
provided
311
women
and
children
with
wrap-around
services.
260
of
those
folks
were
from
salt
lake
city,
a
quick
snapshot
for
our
survivor,
driven
housing
model.
Our
survivor,
driven
housing
case
manager
and
coordinator
has
assisted
195
clients
with
mobile
advocacy
and
assisted
263
clients
with
securing
long-term
housing.
O
So
what
does
that
look
like?
I
just
want
to
give
you
a
quick
snapshot
in
the
last
five
weeks
alone.
Our
housing
and
economic
empowerment
case
manager
has
slated
23
families
for
housing
and
place
seven
families
into
homes
in
just
five
weeks,
and
that
is
because
survivors
of
domestic
violence
are
immediately
and
on
the
spot,
rendered
homelessness
and
experiencing
homelessness
at
vast
rates.
Our
shelter
advocates
and
that
infrastructure
help
keep
the
women
and
children
on
campus
safe.
O
And
so,
if
we
cannot
have
the
funding
that
we've
requested,
we
will
have
a
staff
shortage
and
that
shelter
advocate
staff.
They
are
monitoring
cameras
watching
gates
and
making
calls
when
perpetrators
actually
come
on
campus.
So
it
is
critical
that
we're
able
to
maintain
safety
and
more
important,
provide
quality
wrap
around
services.
So
we
would
just
like
to
request
that
you
reconsider
our
funding
amount
and
really
think
about
the
staffing
numbers
and
the
infrastructure
we
need
for
our
folks
experiencing
homelessness.
H
Okay
for
this
or
the
cdbg,
I
would
like
to
see
funding
go
toward
the
in-between.
I
noticed
in
the
in
the
grant
recommendations
that
that
is
not
something
that
the
mayor
has
recommended
nor
the
cdcip.
H
H
Well,
experience,
that's
not
something
we
can
really
correct,
because
these
folks
are
dying.
Additionally,
I
am
for
the
funding
for
the
wasatch
homeless,
health
care
doing
business
as
the
fourth
street
clinic.
I
was
listening
to
the
person
that
commented
on
that.
I
think
that
needs
to
be
that
needs
to
be
funded
completely
because
and
oral
health
with
the
lack
thereof.
It
can
cause
a
lot
of
problems
and
both
mentally
and
physically.
H
I
know
because
I
broke
my
jaw
and
not
having
oral
health
or
a
complete
set
of
oral
health
is
very
damaging
to
one's
mental
health
in
general,
and
so
I
am
in
support
of
that,
and
I
think
the
way
to
do
it
is
to
take
five
thousand
dollars
out
of
each
of
these
cdbg
public
services.
Take
five
thousand
dollars
out
of
each
of
these
and
put
it
towards.
Q
Thanks
after
hearing
everybody
talk
and
looking
through
this
bill,
I
find
it
really
upsetting
that
you're
making
these
really
good
organizations
fight
for
funding,
while
you're
giving
all
of
this.
J
So,
after
that
we
have
emily
allworth,
I
believe
they
are
using
the
same
line,
though
we
can
try.
Sorry,
no
you're,
fine
yeah.
So
next
week
we
have
annie
charles
just
said
that
she
is
good
to
speak
down.
J
Okay,
here
we
go
annie.
You
are
unmuted.
Q
Thank
you,
I'm
sorry
about
that.
That
was
my
dog,
but
yeah,
making
people
really
good
organizations
fight
over
money
after
you're,
going
to
give
the
police
millions
of
dollars
for
doing
the
work
that
these
organizations
can
do
and
are
effective
at
it.
I've
heard
so
many
organizations
talk
about
all
the
people
that
they're
helping.
I
personally
work
for
odyssey
house.
They
have
no
funding
given
the
road
home
should
have
more
funding.
The
volunteers
of
america
should
have
more
funding.
Q
The
ywca
should
have
more
funding
first
step
house
should
fourth
street
clinic
like
the
dental
care.
All
these
things
are
super
important
and
should
get
the
funding
that
they
deserve
and
to
give
all
of
that
to
the
police
who
are
ineffective
and
harmful
is
really
discouraging,
and
you
I
think
you
should
really
reconsider
it.
Q
J
So
now
we
do
have
and
troll
sorry
emily
allsworth
emily.
You
are
muted.
B
Hi
there,
I
also
do
not
appreciate
this
weird
thunderdome
approach.
It's
confusing
to
me
that
there
are
people
calling
from
amazing
organizations
that
are
working
directly
with
the
unsheltered
to
give
them
resources
that
the
government
will
not
provide
them
for
free
and
instead
they
are
trying
to
take
it
upon
themselves
to
house
people
and
actually
get
them
into
situations
that
it
seems
like
every
commenter
here
would
prefer
for
those
people
to
not
be
on
the
street
and
to
instead
be
in
safe
and
stable
homes.
B
The
police
not
only
have
enough
funding,
but
they're
consistently
getting
more
and
more
funding,
and
what
I
don't
understand
is
why
we
can't
reallocate
that
money
into
these
programs.
It's
not
just
about
defunding
the
police,
it's
also
about
giving
resources
to
areas
of
our
community
that
are
creating
real
change
and
funding
these
organizations
more
fully.
B
You
have
amazing
organizations
from
talented
people
in
our
community
and
I
hope
that
you
can
increase
funding
to
them
and
that
would
show
the
people
that
you
are
listening
to
them
and
respecting
the
wishes
of
the
people
of
salt
lake
to
not
have
as
many
unhoused
people
without
resources
and
instead
give
the
resources
and
support
people
who
are
unable
to
get
get
it
for
themselves,
and
I
think
that
funding
this
as
fully
as
possible
would
be
the
best
case
scenario.
Thank
you.
I
yield
my
time.
A
This
is
amy
council
member
fowler,
so
I
just
want
to
quickly
remind
everyone
that
this
particular
item
is
simply
in
regards
to
the
federal
funding
and
that
there
are
federal
guidelines
by
which
we
have
to
follow
within
each
of
those
different.
I
don't
want
to
say
silos,
but
groups,
the
cdbg,
the
esg,
the
home
funds
and
the
hapwa,
and
so
as
we're
talking
about
the
funding.
We're
really
because
we're
doing
the
public
hearings
on
each
of
these
different
items.
A
This
particular
public
hearing
is
in
regard
to
the
federal
funding
and
the
way
that
the
federal
fund
guidelines
that
we
have
to
follow
are
being
recommended.
We,
we
certainly
all
wish
that
with
the
federal
funds
that
we
could
fund
all
of
these,
but
unfortunately
we
can't-
and-
and
so
if
we
can
kind
of
focus
on
the
federal
funding
part
of
this
public
hearing.
Please
thank
you.
J
R
R
No
one
wants
this
in
the
community
for
anyone,
and
can
we
just
maybe
look
at
that
as
a
as
a
resolution
to
say
instead
of
giving
this
money
to
the
police,
in
addition
to
these
federal
funds,
we
could
sponsor
these
other
people
and
maybe
see
how
those
things
can
change
and
see
if
we
get
more
progress
because
we're
not
getting
progress
with
the
police
and
abatements.
J
We
have
another
speaker
to
this
item:
kimberlyn
correa.
You
are
now
unmuted.
F
F
F
Therefore,
I
submit
that
our
program
does
merit
cdbg
funding
from
salt
lake
city,
salt
lake
city
strives
to
be
a
compassionate
city,
it's
also
the
heart
of
the
homeless
population.
It's
one
thing
to
see
people
on
the
streets
who
appear
physically
fit.
However,
it's
emotionally
distressing
to
see
people
on
the
streets
who
are
physically
suffering.
F
This
visible
human
suffering
takes
its
toll
on
salt
lake
city's
image.
I
hear
more
and
more
that
people
aren't
going
downtown
because
it's
too
difficult
to
witness
what's
going
on
there,
and
this
is
really
not
what
any
of
us
want.
F
The
in-between
removes
the
most
afflicted
people
from
the
streets
so
that
they
can
either
die
house
not
homeless
or
they
can
recuperate
from
their
illness
or
condition
homeless.
Resource
centers
don't
have
the
capacity,
staffing
or
licensing
to
serve
people
with
high
medical
needs
who
require
frequent
medical
transportation.
F
Medication
management
help
with
their
activities
of
daily
living
and
many
other
specialized
medical
services
on
top
of
traditional
case
management,
and
we
can't
forget
that
the
terminally
ill
need
access
to
hospice
care
and
24
7
caregiver
support
which
can't
be
provided
in
a
shelter.
The
in-between
therefore
supports
the
shelter
system
by
serving
this
population.
F
These
people
need
proper
placement
at
the
in
between
and
the
in
between
needs.
Your
funding
to
meet
our
community
need
for
our
services,
so
we
request
our
program
serve
675
days
and
that
will
serve
between
six
and
as
many
as
48
clients,
depending
on
their
length
of
stay.
So
I
hope
you
will
reconsider
your
funding
recommendation
because
together
we
can
ensure
that
the
most
afflicted
members
of
our
homeless
community
have
the
compassionate
care.
A
Thank
you
isaac
and
thank
you
to
everybody
who
commented
it
commented
this
evening.
Excuse
me,
I
will
look
for
a
motion
on
this
agenda.
D
D
A
D
A
D
A
And
I
am
a
yes
and
that
passes
council
members.
We
have
one
potential
action
item
under
agendas.
Item
c
after
that
we've
been
here
for
almost
two
hours.
I
think
a
little
ten
10-minute
break
before
we
get
into
general
comments
and
the
rest
of
our
agenda.
So
let's
finish
up
this
potential
action
item
I'll,
take
a
little
bit
of
a
break
with
that.
So
with
the
potential
action
item,
it
is
the
ordinance
like
the
library
budget,
amendment
number
one
for
fiscal
year,
2020
2021..
A
D
M
A
D
D
A
A
We
are
at
the
comments
section
and
at
this
point
there
are
questions
from
the
city
council
to
the
mayor
council
members.
Do
we
have
any
questions
for
mayor
mendenhall.
A
I
don't
see
any
mayor,
but
thank
you
again
for
being
here
and
thank
you
for
your
update
on
the
cdbg
as
well.
Well,
the
hud
grants
I
should
say
next
are
comments
to
the
city
council.
A
A
Comment
for
a
public
hearing
tonight
we
are
accepting
comments
through
webex
and
for
those
of
you,
whose
only
option
is
to
call
in
staff,
will
be
monitoring
a
separate
telephone
line
for
those
just
joining.
As
I
shared
earlier,
the
city
council
has
always
had
rules
of
decorum
that
are
created
to
advance
the
legitimate
government
objectives
of
having
an
orderly
and
efficient
meeting
that
moves
through
the
agenda
and
gives
everyone
the
opportunity
to
voice
their
opinions
in
person.
A
A
In
order
to
achieve
this,
our
rules
of
decorum
extend
from
the
moment
you
arrive
into
our
virtual
meeting
to
help
facilitate
our
comment
period.
Please
be
respectful,
avoid
yelling
or
making
racial
slurs,
obscene
or
defamatory
remarks.
The
council
respects
all
points
of
view
and
we
welcome
new
insights.
However,
using
valve
language
and
personal
attacks
make
the
public
comment
forum
uncivil
and
intimidating
for
others,
this
meeting
is
also
being
broadcast
on
television
and
the
internet,
and
so
we
will
more
strictly
enforce
the
use
of
profanity.
A
This
will
be
considered
your
advance
warning
against
the
use
of
profanity.
If
someone
uses
profanity,
we
will
mute
your
microphone
and
you
will
forfeit
your
ability,
your
opportunity
to
to
address
the
council
tonight.
If
you
feel
you
need
to
use
profanity
to
express
your
point,
you're
welcome
to
email,
council
members
or
call
comment
line
at
801-535-7654.
A
A
If
your
registered
name
does
not
meet
this
requirement,
then
our
staff
will
happily
use
the
chat
feature
to
gather
that
information
from
you,
robert
knutsman,
from
our
staff,
is
helping
to
moderate
the
meeting
and
will
be
messaging
with
attendees
to
coordinate.
Please
monitor
the
chat
screen
for
information
and
or
feel
free
to
message
our
staff
with
any
questions
again.
That
is
robert
knutsman
isaac,
canado,
whose
name
shows
up
as
orlando,
so
I
apologize
isaac
earlier
we'll
be
calling
the
names
of
those
who
wish
to
comment
and
unmuting
lines.
Once
we
open
public
comment.
A
Isaac
will
announce
three
names
at
a
time
so
that
people
can
have
some
notice
and
be
prepared
to
speak
when
it
is
your
turn
to
speak.
The
meeting
host
will
unmute
your
line.
Please
state
your
name
and
the
two
minute
timer
will
begin
at
the
two
minute
mark.
The
host
will
announce
time
and
your
microphone
will
be
muted.
As
always,
you
are,
if
you
are
unable
to
complete
your
full
comment
within
the
available
time.
A
Please
feel
free
to
mail,
the
city
council
at
p.o
box,
145,
476,
salt
lake
city,
utah,
84114,
email,
us
at
council.comments
slcgov.com,
or
call
us
at
801
535-7654.
And
if
you
don't
get
that
information
bobby
robert
excuse,
me
has
been
putting
it
in
the
chat
after
every
comment
section.
So
if
you
can't
find
it,
it
is
in
the
chat
or
if
you
didn't
get
it
when
I
said
it
with
that,
I
will
turn
the
time
over
to
isaac
to
go
ahead
and
start
our
general
comment
section.
Thank
you
so
much.
J
Great
no
worries
about
the
name.
First
up
we
have
sarah
balland,
followed
by
annie
charles
and
then
george
chapman.
Sarah,
you
are
unmuted.
J
J
We
will
troubleshoot
with
sarah
and
move
on
to.
Oh
sorry,
what
was
that.
G
G
My
first
comment
is
a
follow-up
to
the
march
16th
council,
formal
meeting
discussing
the
rmf
30
zoning
district
item
a
little
bit
into
that
meeting.
You'll
recall
that
council
member
johnston
made
a
point
of
personal
privilege
and
mentioned
inclusionary
zoning
as
part
of
the
list
of
items
he
would
like
to
see
the
council
explore
throughout
the
continuance
of
future
rmf
30
conversations.
G
I
want
to
express
support
for
the
council
to
follow
up
on
inclusionary
zoning
at
the
state
level.
I
hope
that
salt
lake
city
is
actively
pursuing
statewide
inclusionary
zoning
again
for
the
2022
general
legislative
session,
with
the
utah
legislative
interim
right
around
the
corner
in
the
legislative
management
committee
meeting
next
wednesday
april
14th
at
11
am,
I
believe,
to
discuss
legislative
interim
committee
study
item
assignments
for
the
year.
G
I
invite
you
to
refocus
the
lens
through
which
you
are
pursuing
economic
development,
because
there's
nothing
transformative
about
continuing
to
focus
on
the
skills
that
folks
should
have
as
to
puts
as
opposed
to
what
they
already
do.
Have
I
invite
you
to
explore
alternative
models
for
what
a
successful
startup
ecosystem
looks
like
for
historically
underserved
and
marginalized
communities,
because
cooperatives
are
not
a
new
idea.
They
have
simply
not
been
given
their
time
in
the
sun
to
develop,
like
other
models
have
and
invite
you
and
your
economic
development
team
council
member
rogers.
Q
Q
I
don't
think
it
would
qualify
for
helping
people
in
this
pandemic.
Considering
the
cdc
advises
against
camp
abatements
again,
and
the
second
thing
I
wanted
to
speak
on
was
the
shared
housing
ordinance.
So
I
recently
saw
that
there
is
no
language
guaranteeing
affordability
for
these
units
and
that
one
of
the
developers
had
talked
about
wanting
to
start
this
at
1
300
each
I
that
is
completely
unaffordable.
I
could
not
afford
that
personally
with
the
income
that
I'm
making
and
I
don't
know
why
you
would
create
shared
housing
that
is
again
unaffordable.
Q
We
need
to
be
actually
expanding,
affordable
housing
for
people.
That
is
insane
to
me
that
you
would
create
a
shared
housing
ordinance
and
then
not
mandate
that
it
is
affordable.
I
understand
there's
certain
stipulations
under
utah
law,
or
things
like
this,
but
really
pushing
for
that
to
happen.
Otherwise
we're
going
to
be
creating
substandard
housing
that
is
still
unaffordable.
Q
J
P
P
Communities
want
more
funding
for
the
police
and
they
want
camps
with
criminal
behavior
that
is
exposed
to
kids
abated
again,
hundreds
may
want
to
get
rid
of
police,
but
tens
of
thousands
want
more
police
if
you
want
less
police
funding,
stop
protesting
in
the
street
and
because,
obviously
it
requires
police
to
make
it
safe
to
protest
in
the
street
right
and
stop
demonizing
parents
who
want
their
kids
to
be
able
to
walk
safely
to
school
on
ada
use.
Amy
is
right.
P
Adu
complaints
in
this
city
get
business,
license
applications
not
just
in
her
area
but
in
other
districts.
Instead
of
action
they
get
applications.
That's
really
frustrating
to
neighbors.
Thank
you,
amy
for
mentioning
it.
Adus
are
not
a
solution
to
affordable
housing.
Remember
what
nick
said
on
idling
you
are
ignoring
and
emphasizing
diesels,
their
noise
and
the
inland
port.
P
J
B
Thank
you.
I
would
like
to
first
say
that
I
support
ranked
choice
voting.
I
think
it
will
help
with
our
democratic
system,
and
I
think
it
is
extremely
popular
in
what
I
s
in
areas
where
it
is
being
proposed,
and
I
really
hope
that
salt
lake
can
adapt
that.
I
also
would
like
to
read
a
quote
from
mayor
aaron
mendenhall
that
she
made
to
the
deseret
news.
B
She
said,
even
though
our
coven
19
numbers
have
dropped
and
are
continuing
to
drop
significantly
over
the
last
few
months,
mask
wearing
is
still
vital.
We
are
not
done.
She
said
this
less
than
a
month
ago,
and
yet
there
is
still
no
word
as
to
whether
or
not
salt
lake
city
will
be
having
a
mass
mandate
continue
past
the
deadline
of
the
state
of
utah
lowering
their
mass
mandate.
I
understand
that
there
is
mass
vaccination
going
on
and
that
our
case
rates
are
down
due
in
part
to
vaccination.
B
However,
there
still
are
multiple
variants
going
around
within
our
state,
and
travel
is
continuing
to
pick
up.
There
also
is
not
a
vaccine
that
has
been
approved
by
fda
for
our
younger
students,
many
of
whom
are
still
continuing
to
go
to
school
in
person,
and
I
would
highly
encourage
the
mayor
to
continue
a
mass
mandate
in
salt
lake
city.
B
I
would
also
urge
the
city
council
members
to
put
pressure
on
their
local
government
officials
to
continue
this
mass
mandate
that
has
been
able
to
keep
people
in
salt
lake
a
lot
safer
than
other
areas
outside
of
salt
lake
in
utah
that
have
had
higher
numbers,
even
though
they
have
less
people.
I
think
that
it's
been,
I
mean,
I
know
that
it's
been
shown
that
masks
work
as
a
way
of
preventing
this
disease,
and
I
hope
that
we
don't
let
up
in
this
last
end
of
the
pandemic.
B
I'm
really
hoping
that
this
vaccination
will
work
against
strains.
Thank
you.
S
Hi,
this
is
dave
eltis
from
salt
lake
city.
I
had
several
quick
comments,
one
my
perpetual
comment
to
the
council.
Please
fix
your
email
agendas.
They
still
remain
terrible.
They
don't
have
the
agenda
actually
in
the
email
you
used
to
do
that.
Please
reinstate!
That.
S
S
Then
please
consider
this
proposal
and
work
with
the
airport
and
the
airlines
to
implement
that
next
on
the
streetlight
master
plan,
which
is
coming
before
the
planning
commission,
I
think
next
week
the
plan
ignored
a
lot
of
the
stuff
that
the
that
the
consultants
had
put
forward,
in
particular
regarding
the
color
temperature
of
the
lights,
the
color
temperature
is
remains
too
high
in
the
plan.
It
is
not
worth
the
paper,
it
is
printed
on.
It
needs
to
be
redone
before
it's
even
sent
to
the
planning
commission.
S
I
hope
the
council
rejects
it
soundly,
as
in
the
current
state
that
it's
in
next
off
street
parking,
you
had
a
public
hearing
on
that.
I
sent
comments
in
it's
a
huge
step
backward
for
bicycle
parking.
There
are
no
parking
minimums
for
industrial
errors,
eras
areas
and-
and
you
need
to
revise
that
and
make
sure
there
are
parking
bike,
parking
minimums
for
most
places,
not
just
recommended
amounts.
And,
lastly,
google,
when
they
came
in
from
promised
free
low-speed
broadband
internet
for
people
and
that
promise
seems
to
have
vanished.
S
H
Hi
my
name's,
linda
hazel,
I'm
I'm
here
to
give
a
comment
on
the
drafting
phase
of
the
streetlight
master
plan,
and
I
am
in
opposition
to
the
current
standard
that
has
been
put
forth
by
public
utilities
and
partly
because-
and
they
have
stated
that
they
want
to
have
the
standard
at
3.
000,
k,
color
temperature.
However,
the
consultant
that
was
hired
to
during
the
drafting
phase
and
specifically
said
that
the
lower
the
color
temperature
of
the
streetlights
for
the
better
for
wildlife,
the
better
for
the
public
to
be
able
to
sleep
at
night.
H
I
can
definitely
say
that
since
and
these
higher
color
temperature
bulbs
have
been
put
in
throughout
the
city
that
I
have
had
a
harder
time
sleeping
at
night,
and
I
have
to
use
my
sun
visor
in
order
to
not
get
blinded
and
have
my
eyes
bloodshot
when
I
want
to
go
to
sleep
and
I
support
1400k,
which
is
the
color
temperature
of
a
candle.
And
this
is
very
important
for
wildlife
and
in
terms
of
the
public
utilities
claim
of
wanting
to
support
safety
and
energy
efficiency.
H
And
this
is
actually
less
safe.
To
have
higher
color
temperature
bulbs
according
to
the
consulting
that
was
hired
from
uc
berkeley
and
in
terms
of
energy
efficiency,
and
this
is
a
well.
This
is
something
that
that
the
consultant
is
very
much
for
lowering
color
temperatures
in
areas
for
both
insect
populations
and
wealth
and
human
health,
particularly
in
terms
of
having
a
good
night's
sleep.
L
You
guys
can
hear
me
good,
yes,
cool.
My
name
is
john.
I'm
with
wasatch
tennis,
united,
I'm
here
to
talk
about
the
sro,
slash
shared
living
expansion
going
on.
L
I
think
that,
while
this
proposal
is
fairly
well
intentioned
with
direction
towards
housing,
the
homeless,
I
think
that
I
would
encourage
counselors,
namely
counselor
fowler
and
wharton
who've,
been
pretty
outspoken
about
your,
like
lgbtq
advocacy,
there's
specific,
like
dangers
posed
with
this,
primarily
that
it's
a
deregulation
of
housing
standards
for
the
lowest
income,
meaning
that
this
would
give
land
our
real
estate
developers
the
green
light
to
build
apartments
without
bathrooms,
or
kitchens
in
them
which
could
vary.
Potentially,
you
know
we
talked
about
the
lowest
rung
of
housing.
L
L
Tons
of
developers
have
or
a
handful
developers
that
made
statements
the
contrary.
Additionally,
we
already
have
examples
from
these
going
up
like
right
across
the
street
from
me,
there's
some
that
are
going
for
over
a
thousand.
I
just
moved
into
an
apartment,
that's
250
square
feet,
and
it
is
exactly
what
they
can
charge
for
it.
It's
exactly
what
an
apartment
would
have
cost
here
for
a
full
studio.
Two
years
ago,
that
was
maybe
twice
as
big.
L
I
think
that
without
any
kind
of
regulation
as
to
as
per
like,
how
much
these
are
going
to
cost,
maybe
through
the
uses
of
inclusionary
zoning
or
specific
intention
as
to
what
you're
going
to
be
using
these
buildings,
for
it's
extremely
irresponsible
to
just
trust,
real
estate
developers
to
build
these,
it's
just
a
deregulation,
and
it
poses
some
serious
threats
to
the
dignity
of
working-class
people,
so
yeah.
Thank
you.
N
I
am
with
wasatch
tendency
united,
and
I
would
also
like
to
talk
about
this
shared
housing
proposal,
because
I
find
it
really
interesting
that
the
last
city
council
meeting
we
demanded
affordable
housing
and
your
response
to
that
is
to
take
away
our
kitchens
and
bathrooms,
like
how
sinister
is
it
that
that's
the
best
you
can
do
like?
Is
that
really
the
bar
poor
people
deserve
housing?
N
That
is
not
just
arguably
survivable,
but
in
which
they
can
have
real
lives
in
we
deserve
houses
where
we
can
have
our
friends
over
for
potlucks
dance
with
our
partners
host.
Our
families
have
hobbies,
and
it's
really
disgusting
to
me
that
you
guys
are
claiming
that
this
is
going
to
be
affordable
when
there
is
actually
no
specific
wordage
requiring
shared
housing
to
be
more
affordable
than
a
space
that
has
a
private
kitchen
and
bathroom.
N
So
I
really
think
that
you
guys
need
to
reconsider
this
proposal
and
either
not
pass
it
or
make
it
so
that
somebody
making
minimum
wage
full-time
can
put
one-third
of
their
rent
one-third
of
their
budget
towards
their
rent
and
have
it
covered.
That
means
these
need
to
be
less
than
four
hundred
dollars
a
month,
including
utilities,
because
in
case
you
didn't
remember,
7.25
an
hour
is
still
the
minimum
wage
in
utah
and
those
are
the
people
who
need
housing.
A
Thank
you,
isaac
and
thank
you
for
everyone
who
commented
this
evening.
We
are
on
to
f
in
our
agenda.
I
believe,
is
that,
where
we're
at
no
e
new
business,
this
is
I'm
a
motion
to
ratify
the
determination
that
the
council
will
continue
to
meet
remotely
and
without
an
anchor
location
under
hb5002.
A
If
our
earth
pops
his
head
up,
we'll
change
it,
but
I
think
we're
good.
I
have
a
motion
to
ratify
the
anchor
location
under
hb5002
there.
It
filled
in
the
record
that
motion
was
made
by
councilmember
johnston.
A
second,
I
believe
by
councilmember
dugan,
and
I
will
go
ahead
and
roll
call.
This
council,
member
mano.
K
A
D
A
And
I
am
a
yes
and
that
passes
unanimously.
This
brings
us
to
section
f,
unfinished
business.
F1
is
the
we
will
consider
adopting
an
ordinance
amendment
that
would
increase
the
ongoing
annual
capital
improvement
program,
funding
minimum
for
art
form
from
for
art
from
one
percent
to
1.5
percent.
I
would
look
for
a
motion
here.
F
E
We
adopt
the
ordinance
amendment
making
adjustments
to
the
percent
for
our
increasing
the
adjustments
percent
for
art.
As
stated
in
the
motion
sheet.
A
A
Okay,
I
will
go
ahead
and
roll
call
councilmember
wharton.