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From YouTube: Salt Lake City Council Formal Meeting - 7/20/2021
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A
B
C
C
One
you
guys
love
my
singing
to
get
us
started.
Don't
you
welcome
everyone
to
today's
city
council,
I'm
just.
C
C
C
I
mean
given
the
status
of
the
world
at
any
one
time.
We
are
truly
grateful
for
the
public's
patience
but,
most
importantly,
we
are
glad
you
are
joining
us
today,
whether
virtually
or
in
person,
I'm
so
incredibly
happy
to
be
back
on
site
with
my
council
colleagues
and
with
the
public
being
able
to
attend
today's
meeting
in
person.
C
All
for
the
public
comment
opportunities
today,
we
are
accepting
your
comments
through
webex
and
for
those
whose
only
option
is
to
call
in
staff
will
be
monitoring
a
separate
phone
line.
Of
course
we're
also
accepting
comments
in
person
if
you're
here
before
we
begin
moving
through
our
agenda,
I
just
want
to
mention
and
review
our
rules
of
decorum.
C
C
In
order
to
achieve
this,
our
rules
of
decorum
begin
from
the
moment
you
arrive
into
our
in-person
meeting
or
our
virtual
meeting.
The
council
respects
all
points
of
view,
and
we
welcome
new
insights
while
giving
your
comments,
please
be
respectful,
avoid
yelling,
profanity
or
making
racial
slurs,
obscene
or
defamatory
remarks.
If
you
use
profanity
during
your
comment,
if
you're
online,
your
line
will
be
muted
and
if
you
are
in
person,
we
will
ask
you
to
stop.
C
If
you
feel
you
need
to
use
profanity
to
express
your
point,
you're
welcome
to
email,
council
members
or
call
our
comment
line.
In
addition,
our
staff
will
request
for
your
name
during
the
registration.
That's
whether
you're
filling
out
a
comment
card
in
person
or
if
you're
filling
something
out.
If
you're
registering
in
our
virtual
meeting
to
limit
disruption.
Your
name
cannot
include
a
message
or
violate
our
rules
of
decorum.
C
If
your
registered
name
doesn't
meet
this
requirement,
then
you
will
not
be
if
you're
in
person
we'll
work
with
you
to
get
a
name
that
does
meet
the
requirement
and
if
you
are
virtual,
then
we
can
use
the
chat
feature.
C
Isaac
canado
from
our
staff
is
helping
to
moderate
the
meeting
and
will
be
messaging
with
attendees
to
coordinate
on
questions
with
your
commenting.
Registration
staff
is
handling
a
number
of
tasks.
Please
limit
messages
to
technical
issues
and
minimal
changes
to
your
registration,
especially
now
as
we're
doing
this
hybrid
meeting,
we
have
staff
working
on
all
issues
in
all
areas,
both
virtually
and
in
person,
so
please
be
respectful
of
their
time
as
well
as
they
try
to
make
sure
that
everybody's
needs
are
being
met
as
quickly
and
efficiently
as
possible.
C
The
council
will
consider
adopting
a
joint
ceremonial
resolution
with
mayor
mendenhall
mayor.
Thank
you
for
joining
us.
Virtually
it's
good
to
see
you
declaring
racism
as
a
public
health
crisis.
B
A
E
B
Choice
we're
texting,
but
he
must
not
have.
G
D
C
Yeah,
okay,
we
don't
have
council
member
mono
with
us
right
now,
so
I
will
read
this
resolution.
C
And
whereas
racism
is
a
serious
public
health
threat,
because
racism,
both
interpersonal
and
structural,
is
proven
to
have
harmful
impacts
to
the
mental
and
physical
health
of
communities
of
color.
And
whereas
racism
is
declared
as
a
public
health
crisis
that
directly
impacts
salt
lake
city
residents,
resulting
in
health
disparities
that
are
both
measurable
and
preventable.
C
And
whereas
racism
affects
where
one
lives
learns,
works,
worships
and
plays,
which
creates
inequities
in
access
to
a
range
of
social
and
economic
benefits
such
as
housing,
education,
wealth
and
employment,
which
are
often
referred
to
as
social
determinants
of
health
and
racism
is
a
key
driver
of
the
determinants
of
health.
Shaping
access
to
research.
Resources
such
as
education,
housing,
employment
and
health
care
that
creates
opportunities
for
health
and
whereas
outcomes
from
the
structural
inequities
can
be
seen
through
increased
exposure
to
environmental
toxins.
C
C
C
C
Be
it
further
resolved
that
salt
lake
city
commits
to
utilize
work
with
county
health
officials
and
data
partners
to
report
and
review
public
health
data,
including
city
health,
metrics,
current
tasks
to
be
done.
Next,
steps
to
address
poor
outcomes
make
public
health
data
available
online
increase
transparency,
utilize
city
equity
staff
to
work
with
the
county
health
partners
to
address
systemic
barriers
to
health,
including
racism.
C
Sorry-
and
that's
all
for
that
at
this
point
I
would
see
if
there
is
a
motion
to
adopt
this
resolution.
C
I
Of
the
council
to
do
this,
we
all
we
don't
have
to
tell.
C
Read
everything
that
it's
going
on-
and
this
is
a
great
sign
to
to
those
communities
of
colors
that
we
are
doing
our
best
and
we'll
continue.
C
C
I
would
also
at
this
point
at
this
time
like
to
take
just
a
moment
to
recognize
the
dedicated
efforts
of
the
following
individuals
who
we
understand
were
instrumental
in
helping
to
draft
this
resolution.
Language
kevin
nguyen,
so
I'm
just
going
to
list
I'm
going
to
read
out
a
list
of
names
that
all
were
very
instrumental
in
this
resolution.
C
C
You're
welcome
with
that.
I
do
believe
we
have
kevin
nguyen
here
who
understand,
brought
forth
this
resolution
with
the
mayor's
office,
and
that
kevin
would
like
to
say
a
few
words
before
we
move
on
to
the
public
hearings.
C
G
G
Thank
you
so
much
mayor
and
the
council,
and
all
the
community
members
that
are
present,
along
with
everyone,
who's,
really
put
an
effort
to
make
this
resolution
happen.
It
was
definitely
a
team
effort.
It's
it's
incredible
to
hear
it
read
out
loud.
G
You
know
the
the
work
that
was
put
into
this,
the
thought,
the
care,
the
emotions,
the
feelings
and
the
dedication
to
the
city
of
salt
lake
and
our
community
members,
and
I
can't
tell
you
how
much
I
appreciate
you
know
the
mayor
and
the
council
and
everyone
who
is
part
of
this,
to
really
set
an
example
for
our
state.
I
want
to
first
you
know
thank
representative
hollins
for
leading
this
effort
and
acknowledging
our
efforts
from
a
statewide
perspective
to
to
declare
racism
as
a
public
health
and
moral
health
crisis.
G
G
All
this
is
done
on
their
own
time,
and
I
want
to
acknowledge
that
I
am
speaking
for
them,
but
they
get
just
as
much
credit
in
in
part
of
this,
along
with
the
city
staff,
who
have
been
really
fantastic,
huge
shout
out
to
weston
and
the
crew
for
bringing
me
along
and
allowing
us
the
opportunity
to
to
help
create
this
wonderful
resolution.
G
I
want
to
also
honor
margarita
satini
and
our
past
leaders,
who
have
been
huge
community
advocates,
change
makers
and,
most
importantly
friends
to
myself
and
everyone
else
who's
a
part
of
this
as
well.
You
know
margarita
passed
away,
as
you
know,
due
to
covid,
as
she
was
working
to
to
change
the
inequities
that
we
know
many
of
our
racial
and
ethnic
minority
communities
face
during
this
pandemic,
and
really
this
resolution
I
want
to
say,
is
most
importantly,
for
our
community
members
for
our
community
members
across
the
city
of
salt
lake.
G
Hopefully
this
brings
a
light
of
hope,
knowing
that
our
city
cares
for
us
and
wants
to
make
a
difference,
and
I'm
glad
that
I
was
able
to
be
part
of
this
process
and
once
again
you
know.
Thank
you
so
much
for
the
opportunity,
mayor
and
council
and
everyone
else
who
was
involved.
I
can't
thank
you
all
enough.
C
If
I
may
ask
that
you,
if
you
would
like
to
get
in
touch
with
a
council
staff
and
give
us
your
contact
information,
so
we
can
send
you
a
copy
of
the
resolution
for
you
to
have
so
if
you
can
just
get
in
touch
just
call
the
council
office,
somebody
will
help
you
but
we'd
like
to
we'd
like
to
make
sure
you
have
a
copy
of
this
resolution
as
well.
Okay,.
C
Thank
you,
council
members.
I
see
darren.
I'm
sorry
darren
that
we
didn't
have
you
here
earlier
to
read
the
resolution,
but
thank
you
for
popping
on.
C
Okay,
somebody
text
with
him
with
that
before
we
get
to
the
the
rest
of
our
agenda,
I
would
like
to
take
a
point
of
personal
privilege.
C
We
didn't
really
get
to
be
all
together
to
really
appreciate
and
enjoy
the
the
those
changes
and
two
of
those
changes
are
that
that
andrew
decided
that
the
mayor's
office
was
cooler
than
ours
or
something,
and
so
he
took
left
our
city
council
for
an
amazing
opportunity
and
job
at
the
mayor's
office
and
if
anyone
tuned
in
to
the
work
session
earlier
or
any
time,
I've
talked
about
this-
I
I
said
dang
it
mayor
mendenhall,
you
can't
take
andrew
and
then
she
did
and
it
was
it
is
the
perfect
fit.
C
So
I
want
to
welcome
andrew
into
our
city
council,
and
I
would
love
to
welcome
his
wife
and
children,
clarissa
jackson
and
caroline
for
being
here
as
well
andrew.
We
have
a
couple
of
little
things
for
you.
C
So
I
don't
know
if
many
of
you
know
this
but
andrew
was
he
loved
to
he
would
during
like
the
holidays
for
his
newsletter.
He
would
make
that
he'd
have
his
picture
be
a
different
thing
all
the
time
and
since
you
have
two
young
children
and
we
love
everybody
knows
children
love
to
play,
match
games.
C
C
There
are
just
as
a
highlight
there
are
such
things
on
here
as
andrew,
the
vampire
andrew,
the
leprechaun
and
I've
seen
a
few
others
in
there.
So
I
think
that
you
guys
will
all
have
fun
playing
those.
The
other
thing-
and
many
of
you
may
know
that
andrew
and
I
believe
james
was
instrumental
in
coming
up
with
sort
of
this
west
side
logo
and
that
andrew
is
rides
his
bike
everywhere.
I
don't
even
think
I've.
J
C
Time
down
by
the
river,
yes,
we
were
in
a
van
down
by
the
river
and
every
other
time
he's
been
on
his
bike.
So
we
got
these
paneers
for
your
bike
with
your
west
side
logo
on
them.
So
now
you
can
carry
all
the
tools
you
need
to
solve
homelessness,
while
you're
on
your
bike
in
your
pin
ears
with
your
westside
logo,.
C
C
Thank
you
for
your
service
here
on
the
council
and
your
continued
service
for
salt
lake
city.
This
second
big
change
that
happened
that
we
didn't
like
get
to
fully
appreciate
was
our
former
chair
chris
borton
chris
was
yep.
C
That's
why
chris
j
is
here
now
you
get
it
I
get
it
now.
So
we
would
love
to
welcome
chris
councilmember
wharton
former
chair
of
member
wharton,
his
husband
chris
j,
thank
you
for
being
here
and
for
supporting
our
chris
during
quite
the
colla
clamatous
year.
C
While
you
were
chairperson,
I
know
from
discussions
with
you
how
difficult
it
was
how
often
times
while
it
probably
felt
lonely
to
many
of
us,
while
we
were
sitting
in
our
offices
with
the
responsibility
of
being
chair
and
that
weight
on
your
shoulders,
how
incredibly
lonely
that
must
have
felt
at
times,
and
you
still
went
through
it
with
the
humor
and
grace
and
puns
that
you
are
so
famously
known
for
here
with
our
council,
and
so
we
wanted
to
give
you
and
I'm
not
gonna,
I'm
gonna.
Let
you
open
it.
E
C
This
is
a
gavel
if
anybody
tuned
in
to
any
of
our
virtual
meetings.
Last
year,
chris
was
very
known
for
hit
making
sure
that
we
adjourned
with
the
gavel
so
chris.
This
is
from
one
of
this
gif
the
gavel
and
the
stand
is
made
from
one
of
the
true
downed
trees
during
the
september
8th
wind
storms.
I
know
that
our
staff
worked
very
hard
with
the
with
paul
russell,
the
artist
to
create
this
gavel
and
the
piece
that
is
on
the
stand.
What
is
that
thing
called
that
this.
C
E
C
And,
of
course,
I
just
in
closing,
I
just
want
to
say
thank
you
both
so
much
for
your
service
and
thank
you
to
your
families
and
to
the
council
members
as
a
whole.
Thank
you
to
all
of
you
and
all
of
your
families,
as
we
are
slowly
hopefully
knock
on
wood
returning
to
somewhat
normalcy.
It
was
our
families
and
friends
standing
by
us
that
I
think,
got
us
through
the
last
year
of
of
all
of
that.
So
thank
you
both
and
that's
that.
E
B
H
E
C
He
was
going
to
complain
about
his
council
member
all
right,
everybody.
We
are
going
to
begin
with
our
public
hearings,
taylor,
hill
and
our
staff
will
be
calling
the
names
of
those
who
wish
to
comment
and
unmuting
lines.
C
There's
not
really
anybody
there's
a
couple
people
here.
I
think
to
make
general
comments
eventually
we'll
get
to
that.
Okay,
when
it
is
your
turn
to
speak,
taylor
will
say
your
name
unmute
your
line,
and
you
may
begin.
Please
state
your
name
and
the
two
minute
timer
will
start
at
the
two
minute
mark.
The
host
will
announce
time
and
your
microphone
will
be
muted.
C
If
you're
unable
to
finish
your
comment,
please
refer
to
your
chat
screen
and
our
staff
will
post
our
contact
information
now,
just
as
a
friendly
reminder,
this
is
our
public
hearings
portion.
So
we
will
only
be
taking
comment
on
the
public
hearings
that
are
listed
in
the
agenda.
We
will
get
to
the
general
comments
section,
wherein
you
can
tell
the
council,
whatever
you'd
like
to
tell
them
outside
of
the
public
hearings.
C
So
our
first
public
hearing
is
regarding
a
grant
application
request
from
the
emergency
management
to
the
utah
division
of
emergency
management.
C
If
awarded
this
grant
would
fund
the
planning
and
updating
of
emergency
preparedness
plans,
conducting
exercises
and
producing
materials
for
public
education
and
outreach
pertaining
to
emergency
preparedness,
we
have
like
salt
lake
city,
has
no
history
in
emergencies,
so
I
would
turn
the
time
over
to
sylvia
richards
council
staff
to
give
a
short
introduction.
I
think,
unless
I
just
gave
it.
B
Yeah,
thank
you.
Thank
you,
madam
chair.
You
did
a
wonderful
job,
so
I'll
just
say
something
briefly
about
grants
in
general,
which
is
that
the
city
applies
for
and
receives
grants
which
help
to
support
and
fund
some
city
programs.
Each
grant
application
is
reviewed
and
then
receives
a
public
hearing
which
gives
the
public
an
opportunity
to
comment
on
them
and,
as
you
mentioned
there
is
that
one
emergency
grant
for
public
hearing.
Thank
you.
H
E
C
Aye
aye
any
opposed,
hey
darren;
okay,
there
are
no
opposed
that
passes
unanimously.
C
Our
second
public
hearing
item
b2
is
regarding
an
budget
amendment
number
one
for
fiscal
year,
2021
2022.
Before
we
begin
taking
comments,
I
will
turn
the
time
over
to
ben
ludke
council
staff
policy
analyst
to
give
a
short
introduction.
Hi
ben.
L
L
The
items
include
using
american
rescue
plan
act,
that
is
arpa
funds
for
police
officer
salaries,
salary
adjustments
for
non-represented
city
employees.
This
is
the
general
fund,
as
well
as
enterprise
funds,
additional
emergency
rental
assistance
funds
from
the
federal
government
and
for
anyone
that
is
listening.
If
you
know
a
renter
that
could
use
help
paying
their
rent,
they
can
go
to
rentrelief.utah.gov
to
apply
the
administration's
proposal
and
the
staff
memo
are
all
available
in
today's
meeting
packet.
C
C
C
K
K
I
have
been
part
of
the
salt
lake
tennis
community
for
over
45
years.
I
have
lasting
memories
of
these
two
facilities.
From
my
childhood
as
an
instructor,
I
see
how
these
public
facilities
have
given
thousands
of
community
members
over
the
years.
An
affordable
and
accessible
means
to
play
the
lifelong
sport
of
tennis,
which
truly
is
a
lifelong
sport,
since
I've
seen
children
as
young
as
two
three
and
four
playing
all
the
way
into
people
in
their
80s
and
90s
participating
and
there's
very
few
activities
in
sports.
K
Like
this,
I've
been
told
many
times
from
people
that
I've
met
through
tennis,
that
it's
saved
their
life
either
through
their
health,
improving
or
a
sense
of
community
and
friendship
through
the
sport
of
tennis.
So
these
two
well-managed
facilities,
wasatch
and
liberty
park.
K
At
a
time
when
community
dollars
have
been
raised,
a
city
investment
would
ensure
that
these
facilities
continue
to
offer
our
city
and
state
a
means
to
participate
in
the
lifelong
sport
of
tennis,
and
there
are
very
few,
and
I
can't
think
of
any
really
public
facilities
like
this
in
our
city
and
state.
Thank
you
for
your
time.
K
B
B
B
C
B
Was
going
give
me
one
second.
C
C
B
B
Sorry,
we
were
figuring
out
the
host
roles
and
who
can
you
work
almost.
M
Okay,
thank
you
for
budget
amendment
one
and
for
the
more
more
appropriate
salary,
obviously
for
cops.
M
There's
no
substitute
for
a
cop,
as
I've
said
many
times
before,
even
the
fire
department
asked
for
a
cop
to
respond
during
many
drug
overdose
calls,
but
we
don't
have
enough
cops
now
to
even
hire
and
utilize
more
social
workers.
That's
how
bad
it
is.
We
don't
have
enough
cops
to
do
homeless,
camp
cleanups
with
the
county
health
department,
without
begging
for
voluntary
overtime.
M
M
We
need
to
get
back
up
to
staffing
levels
that
the
citizens,
businesses
and
voters
demand.
So
I'm
asking
you
again
to
put
in
a
sign-on
and
retention,
bonus
system
or
it'll
take
almost
five
years
to
get
back
up
to
appropriate
staffing
levels
with
cops
that
are
well
trained
and
very
well
experienced
at
de-escalation.
M
B
N
Thanks,
I
want
to
oppose
this
amendment.
It
gives
millions
of
dollars
to
the
police
from
the
american
rescue
plan,
which
was
supposed
to
directly
help
our
citizens.
We
can
invest
those
dollars
in
more
housing,
more
homeless
services,
more
just
basic
direct
access
to
housing,
shelter,
food
resources
to
our
community.
N
Someone
george
chapman
was
just
speaking
about
how
we
don't
have
enough
cops
for
the
social
workers.
We
can
just
hire
more
social
workers
or
for
homeless
camp
cleanups.
If
people
have
housing,
you
won't
need
to
clean
homeless
camps
or
emergency
services.
We
can
hire
more
paramedics
for
our
community.
You
just
said
that
racism
is
a
public
health
crisis
that
directly
impacts
our
residents,
and
you
talked
about
the
systemic
and
structural
inequities
that
are
in
place,
and
you
are
directly
funding
that
and
you
are
directly
funding
the
disparities
involved.
N
That's
just
using
the
rhetoric
that
you
know
is
popular
right
now
to
mask
these
actual
decisions
that
you're
making.
You
said
that
you
have
a
moral
duty
to
work
against
the
systems
that
hold
this
in
place,
and
you
are
not
doing
that
by
increasing
funding.
You
should
not
give
this
to
the
police
for
pay
increases.
When
we
have
over
30
officers
who
have
had
multiple
shootings,
we
should
make
sure
that
our
community
is
safe
and
that
this
money
can
go
directly
to
it.
Thank
you.
M
G
Thank
you
very
much
good
evening,
council
members,
my
name
is
nigel
swaby
and
I
am
speaking
in
support
of
this
budget
amendment.
I
think
I
you
guys
pulled
out
a
hail
mary
with
the
police
by
offering
them
a
raise
and
that
will
go
towards
retention,
which
is
something
that
we
definitely
need
with
salt
lake
pd,
but
we're
gonna
have
a
real
problem.
If
funding
and
culture
within
the
department
doesn't
improve-
and
I
I
don't
know
what
the
solution
is
going
to
be,
but
I
we've
got
a
nice
band-aid
here.
D
B
Okay,
maybe
I
think
that
wasn't
the
right
mike
I'll
unmute
her
in
one
second,
I
apologize
for
all
the
technical
difficulties.
C
J
J
All
right,
I
would
like
to
speak
in
opposition
to
this.
I
do
not
believe
that
this
is
a
good
use
of
funds.
From
what
I
understand
about
this
amendment,
there
would
be
money
from
the
emergency
management
performance
grant
and
it
be
used
for
the
department
of
public
safety
and
specifically
for
funding
the
police.
J
I'm
sure
everyone
here
is
familiar
with
the
defund,
the
police
movement
and
the
pleas
from
citizens
to
reallocate
money
into
the
community
versus
continuously
giving
money
to
a
system
that
is
clearly
not
working.
We
are
consistently
giving
more
and
more
of
our
budget
to
policing
and
it
is
not
working
because
we
are
not
solving
the
problems.
Police
are
consistently
disappointing
everyone,
even
the
people
who
are
speaking
for
this
amendment,
are
saying
that
they
are
disappointed
with
how
long
it
takes
for
police
to
respond
to
issues.
J
I
believe
that
having
police
show
up
after
an
issue
as
a
curd
and
merely
trying
to
address
the
issue
after
it
has
happened,
is
not
an
appropriate
way
of
handling
issues
within
our
community.
I
think
we
need
to
start
addressing
them
as
they
happen.
This
means
giving
more
funding
to
people
who
are
unsheltered,
giving
more
funding
for
education,
which
our
state
is
continually
funding,
giving
more
funding
to
our
libraries,
which
we
are
redirecting
to
different
systems.
J
I
think
that
we
need
to
reallocate
this
money
and
instead
of
using
government,
grant
money
on
paying
police
officers.
I
think
that
we
should
instead
use
it
on
the
things
that
it
can
be
used
for,
such
as
providing
outreach
to
people
who
have
suffered
financially
with
copa
19
and
actually
retaining
other
people
within
our
system.
I
think
that
people
who
are
doing
social
work
and
people
who
are
doing
work
within
our
community
to
de-escalate
situations
should
be
getting
a
raise.
J
I
do
not
believe
a
department
that
is
continuously
responsible
for
inappropriate
actions
and
is
putting
our
city
in
a
negative
light
by
shooting
people
is
not
appropriate.
The
average
base
rate
salary
of
a
police
officer
in
salt
lake
city
is
23.39
per
hour.
That
is
a
lot
of
money,
and
I
think
that
it
is
far
too
much
honestly.
I
don't
think
people
need
to
raise.
D
Madam
chair,
we
don't
have
any
other
comments
tonight.
I'd
like
to
make
a
motion.
I
move
the
council
close
the
public
hearing
and
adopt
an
ordinance
amending
the
fiscal
year
2021-22,
but
final
budget
of
the
salt
lake
city,
including
the
deployment
staffing
document,
is
shown
on
the
motion
sheet.
C
Second,
I
have
a
motion
by
council
member
rogers
in
a
second
by
council
member
of
aldemoros
any
discussion
on
this,
all
those
in
favor
aye
that
passes
unanimously.
Thank
you.
We
are
on
to
item
b3.
It
is
regarding
the
mosquito
abatement
district's
intent
to
levy
a
property
tax
increase
for
fiscal
year
2022.
C
B
B
The
state
established
process
for
the
district
to
consider
a
property
tax
increase
is
to
present
the
information
to
the
city
council
and
receive
public
comment
through
your
meeting.
Although
the
council
does
not
have
a
formal
role
in
approving
or
denying
the
property
tax
increase,
this
hearing
serves
as
an
opportunity
for
additional
public
information,
the
district
manager
and
several,
if
not
all,
of
their
board.
Members
are
here.
Listening
to
the
comments
this
evening
as
well,
and
that's
all
I
have
thank
you,
madam
chair
thank.
C
You
leihua
isaac,
or
are
we
still
with
isaac,
calling
names,
okay,
isaac?
We
can
return
to
our
first
commenter
on
this
year.
C
F
K
O
I'm
dr
brian
minch
last
week
the
council
listened
to
a
27-minute
presentation
by
the
mosquito
abatement
district,
trying
to
justify
their
intent
to
levy
a
significant
tax
increase
on
property
owners.
A
lot
of
impressive
words
were
used
like
scientific
precision,
proactive,
environmentally
rational
and
atmospheric
modeling.
Some
alarming
words
were
also
used
like
yellow
fever,
zika
and
twenty
thousand
mosquitoes.
In
a
single
night,
you
saw
a
graph
that
showed
drops
in
mosquito
populations
after
airplanes
spread
pesticides
over
thousands
of
acres.
O
But
there
is
another
side
you
are
not
shown
in
slick
meds
presentation.
There
is
not
a
single
slide
about
medical
science,
not
a
single
sentence
written
by
a
physician,
not
a
single
word
about
the
hundreds
of
medical
studies
that
indicate
repeated
use
of
pesticides
is
a
public
health
hazard
or
that
almost
certainly
every
resident
of
the
salt
lake
valley
is
contaminated.
O
B
Hello,
my
name
is
tina
rohr.
Do
we
the
people
of
salt
lake
city
and
you,
the
representatives
of
our
city,
want
to
allow
the
slick
med
to
raise
taxes
to
pay
for
spraying
of
neurotoxins
over
the
most
heavily
populated
part
of
the
state,
a
state
that
has
one
of
the
highest
rates
of
autism
in
the
country.
The
pesticides
used
by
salt
lake
city
and
mosquito
abayment
district
are
neurotoxins
which
cause
damage
to
our
health
and
the
health
of
our
children,
especially
our
unborn
babies.
B
Pesticides
are
now
found
in
amniotic,
fluid
fetuses
and
mother's
breast
milk,
pesticides
cross
the
blood-brain
barrier
and
contaminate
the
womb,
including
the
baby's
brain,
and
impair
the
fetus's
development
permanently
insecticides,
work
by
infecting
the
nerve
cells
of
insects,
but
also
work
the
same
way
on
human
impedances
and
infants.
The
babies
nerve
cells
are
damaged
by
the
neurotoxin
sprayed
on
purpose
in
our
salt
lake
valley.
The
damage
to
the
nervous
system
from
organophosphate
is
comparable
to
that
from
the
banned
pesticide
ddt
and
is
associated
with
impaired,
brain
development,
loss
of
intellect
and
behavior
problems.
B
The
research
showing
the
toxicity
of
organophosphate
and
links
to
autism
is
comprehensive
attention.
Deficit
disorder,
abnormal
reflexes,
mental
and
motor
delays
and
decreases
in
iq
and
children
are
also
associated
with
pesticide
exposure.
The
evidence
is
clear.
Pesticide
spraying
damages
developing
fetuses
and
contributes
to
autism
and
children.
Salt
lake
city,
mosquito
abatement
district
should
discontinue
the
spring
of
poisonous
chemicals
into
the
air
that
we
and
our
babies
breathe.
We,
the
people
of
salt
lake
city,
do
not
want
dangerous
toxins
sprayed
into
our
air.
K
B
I
am
a
resident
of
salt
lake
city.
You
have
heard
a
great
deal
now
about
the
toxicity
of
the
pesticides
being
used
by
our
mosquito
abatement
district.
If
those
same
toxins
are
banned
in
europe
and
many
other
cities,
why
have
other
options
not
been
explored
further?
If
slick
med
is
able
to
raise
the
taxes,
they
will
not
change
their
behavior,
there's
no
incentive
for
them
to
change
their
behavior,
so
it
will
just
continue
a
counterproductive
quagmire
of
more
and
more
toxins
and
more
toxin-resistant.
Mosquitoes
makes
no
sense
thanks.
M
I'm
gonna
have
to
keep
asking
the
question.
Obviously,
okay,
I'm
against
the
mosquito
tax
increase.
I
actually
spoke
against
the
big
50
increase
in
2016..
I
remember
that
because
that
was
a
really
big
insult,
so
this
tax
increase
for
mosquito
abatement
is
another
insult,
especially
when
the
inland
port
should
be
funding
an
increase
in
mosquito
abatement.
I
mean
duh,
why
should
salt
lake
city
taxpayers
be
forced
to
pay
a
big
tax
increase
to
benefit
the
inland
port?
M
The
inland
port
should
be
paying
for
this,
and
I
also
remind
the
council
of
the
mayor
and
carlton
christensen
and
the
mosquito
board
that
the
district
increased
taxes
in
2016
by
over
50
percent.
You
missed
that
the
mosquito
board
presentation
missed
that
and
convenient
left
it
out
in
the
presentation
that
was
wrong.
That's
a
misdirection!
I
think
that's
disrespectful.
M
This
tax
increase
for
an
area
that
salt
lake
city
citizens
are
not
allowed
to
be
responsible
for
is
an
insult.
The
city
shouldn't
just
take
it.
I
recognize
the
legislature
gave
the
authority
to
do
it
to
the
board,
but
this
city
should
be
fighting
against
it.
This
is
not
ethical
or
responsible,
and
I
urge
the
city
to
continue
to
fight
this
at
the
board
and
at
the
legislature,
just
don't
take
it
sitting
down.
This
is
a
big
problem
for
us.
Please
keep
fighting
against
it.
Those
are
my.
N
Thank
you.
I
agree
fully
with
george
in
what
he
is
saying.
We
should
make
the
inland
port
pay
their
fair
share.
What
are
we
as
a
community
gaining
from
this,
as
because
the
mosquito
abatement
is
directly
for
the
inland
port,
and
you
were
just
talking
about
environmental
racism
within
this
comment
that
you
just
gave
gave
and
within
that
communities
of
color,
like
other
speakers
previously
said,
will
be
directly
impacted
not
only
by
the
inland
port
war,
but
also
by
the
mosquito
abatement
war.
They
are
getting
the
brunt
of
this
impact.
N
You
are
currently
gaslighting
us
as
a
community.
You
are
saying
things
that
say
you
are
for
equity
and
justice,
and
then
you
are
doing
things
that
are
counter
to
that
as
a
therapist
who
helps
women
move
out
of
abusive,
manipulative
relationships.
That
is
how
I'm
feeling
you
are
interacting
with
us
as
a
public
right
now.
It
is
extremely
frustrating,
and
I
don't
know
why
you
would
vote
for
this
increase
for
us
to
pay
more
for
something
the
inland
port
should
follow
along.
We
should
not
be
continuing
to
fund
this
thing.
G
Thank
you
again.
My
name
is
nigel
swaby
and
I
I
agree
completely
with
george
chapman
on
this.
This
is
absolute
abuse
of
power
by
the
state
to
try
and
force
a
tax
increase
on
the
citizens
and
property
owners
of
salt
lake
city
for
mosquito
abatement
that
benefits
their
property
at
the
inland
port
and
at
the
state
prison.
G
This
should
be
the
bill
if
and
I'm
not
even
addressing
the
the
health
concerns
that
have
been
put
out
there,
but
if
there's
a
bill
for
increased
abatement
at
those
properties,
it
should
go
to
the
state
and
to
the
inland
port.
I'm
completely
opposed
to
this,
and
I
know
that
city
council
has
no
say
on
this,
but
I
think
this
should
go
in
as
an
additional
exhibit
in
the
city's
lawsuit
against
the
inland
port.
G
K
J
Yes,
we
can
hear
you,
okay,
I'm
gonna
go
ahead
and
just
quote
from
the
website
for
the
utah
physicians
for
a
healthy
environment.
I
think
that
you
should
all
read
it.
J
This
website
has
a
lot
of
really
great
information
on
it
and
it
is
the
largest
group
of
physicians
in
utah
coming
together
to
talk
about
issues.
They
have
some
serious
concerns
about
what
might
be
done
to
control
the
mosquito
population
in
an
area
of
the
inland
port.
Ever
since
the
port
first
emerged
from
the
legislature
in
2018,
they
are
alarmed
after
learning
that
slc
mad
was
posing
to
invoke
u.s
aerial
force
and
launching
aerial
spraying
over
the
northwest
quadrant.
J
In
recent
years,
numerous
medical
experts
and
the
entire
medical
societies
have
made
these
strong
position.
Statements
regarding
the
danger
to
humans
of
even
small
doses
of
chemicals
and
their
least,
links
to
obesity,
cancer,
heart
disease,
birth
defects,
reproduction
pathology,
neurologic
and
brain
disorders
such
as
parkinson's
and
huntington's
impaired,
intellect
autism
and
attention
deficit
disorder.
J
For
every
chemical
that
we've
looked
at
and
found
a
low
dose
cut
off.
It
has
been
studied
at
low
doses
that
has
an
effect.
There
are
many
toxicologists
and
environmentalists
and
thank
you.
C
Before
council,
thank
you
everyone
for
commenting
today
and
before
I
ask
for
a
motion.
I
do
just
want
to
reiterate
that
under
utah
code,
17b
one
one
zero,
zero
one,
subsection
three,
the
salt
lake
city
council-
has
nothing
no,
no
power
to
levy
tax.
This
tax,
we
have
nothing
to
vote
for
or
against.
This
is
simply
under
utah
code,
the
a
way
to
give
more
public
hearings
towards
this,
but
this
will
go
back
to
the
mosquito
abatement
district
for
their
budget
process.
C
H
H
With
my
following
comment,
nice,
I
agree
with
most
of
these
comments
that
were
made
tonight
and
I
say
that
because
I've
done
a
lot
of
thought
about
it
and
I've
looked
at
things
and
I've
read
things,
and
I
really
would
request
that
the
mad
conduct
a
true
and
thorough,
deep
dive
into
the
health
impact
of
aerial
sprain
of
pesticides,
and
I
say
that
I'm
going
to
repeat
a
thorough,
deep
dive
on
the
impact
of
it
and
look
at
it
across
the
board.
C
J
Other
than
supporting
what
councilmember
dugan
said,
because.
C
Seems
that
these
are
very
informed
people
and.
B
E
E
Is
you
know,
being
a
forum
for
people
to
come
and
share
these
concerns
and
not
being
able
to
do
anything
about
them
like
legally
or
practically
or
anything,
and
so
I
really
hope
that
that
the
mosquito
abatement
board
will
take
the
opportunity
to
to
review
all
of
these
comments
and
give
them
their
really
strong
consideration
and
I'll.
I
have
several
more
that
I'll
be
sending
over
so.
E
C
That
passes
unanimously.
Thank
you,
council
members.
We
are
on
to
potential
action
items.
We
are
at
c1,
which
is.
C
An
ordinance
that
would
amend
the
zoning
map
for
property
at
860
and
868
east
third
avenue.
I
will
look
for
a
motion
on
this.
E
I
moved
okay,
that's
right.
We
already
did
have
the
one
hearing
and
we're
not
doing
the
two
hearings
anymore,
so
sorry,
old
habits,
madame
cherry
move
that
we
adopt
the
zoning
change
and
I'll
just
note
that
I
have
had
some
constituents
write
in
about
this,
but
I
do
think
that
this
plan
addresses
all
of
the
concerns
that
I've
heard.
So
I
will
encourage
people
to
go
and
look
at
the
substance
of
the
plan
and
I'm
happy
to
answer
any
follow-up
questions.
But
I
think
this
is
the
right
thing
for
this
spot.
H
C
M
C
Any
opposed
that
passes
unanimously
item
c2
is
an
ordinance
that
would
amend
the
zoning.
L
C
B
C
C
C
C
I
have
a
motion
by
council
member
dugan
and
a
second
by
council
member
rogers
any
discussion
on
this.
All
those
in
favor
aye.
C
Any
opposed
that
passes
unanimously
at
this
point
we
are
on
to
our
comment,
section
mayor
as
always
thank
you
for
being
here
with
us.
We
certainly
appreciate
it.
Are
there
any
questions
or
comments
for
madame
mayor.
C
C
This
section
is
meant
for
people
to
make
comments
on
anything
they
want
outside
of
what
was
already
heard
here
on
the
agenda.
We
did
have
several
public
hearings
tonight
and
those
had
their
opportunity
to
be
spoken
about,
and
so
the
general
comments
are
about
anything
else
that
was
not
on
the
agenda
for
a
public
hearing.
C
I'm
sure
everyone
who's
commented
or
is
going
to
comment
knows
mostly
the
drill.
Taylor
will
say
three
names
at
a
time
and
unmute
or
if
you
are
in
person,
we
will
have
taylor
call
your
name
and
you
can
come
up
to
our
podium
and
speak
your
two
minutes
at
the
podium
at
the
time
that
the
two
minutes
is
up.
We
will
say
time
and
mute
your
microphone
or
ask
you
to
step
down
from
the
podium.
C
C
So
with
that,
I
will
turn
the
time
over
to
taylor
to
start
us
out
with
our
public.
Our
general
comment
section.
K
Thank
you,
council
chair.
It
looks
like
we
have
about
29
people
here
to
speak
for
general
comment,
first
of
which
will
be
david
shearer,
followed
by
dorothy
owen.
Oh
sorry,
followed
by
roger
harry
and
then
jackson,
bradshaw
david.
You
are
now
unmuted.
I
Great
good
evening,
my
name
is
david
shear,
I'm
the
chair
of
the
capitol
hill
neighborhood
council
tonight,
I'd
like
to
urge
you
to
approve
the
cip
request
before
you
for
the
capitol
hill
traffic
calling
plan
that
was
discussed
during
your
work
session
earlier
this
evening.
I
especially
want
to
thank
council
member
wharton
for
his
advocacy,
an
excellent
summary
of
the
traffic
calming
plan,
which
you
heard
earlier,
and
I'd
also
like
to
thank
council
member
rogers
for
his
support
of
the
plan.
I
Traffic
problems
have
plagued
capitol
hill
for
many
years.
The
current
capitol
hill
master
plan
adopted
in
2000
with
amendments
in
2001
documents.
The
very
problems
we
continue
to
deal
with.
These
include
the
heavy
volume
of
commuter
traffic
that
cuts
through
parts
of
our
neighborhood
on
the
way
to
the
state,
capitol
the
university
and
other
destinations.
I
Speeding
of
this
cut
through
traffic,
the
narrow,
steep
streets
of
marmalade
and
west
capital,
which
compound
cut
through
traffic
problems,
the
noise
debris
and
traffic
conflicts
created
by
industrial
traffic
generated
by
the
quarries
and
refineries
north
of
us.
The
high
volume
of
traffic
on
east
capital
boulevard
due
to
visitors
to
ensign
peak
the
most
popular
tourist
destination
in
salt
lake
city
and
speeding
on
east
capital
boulevard.
I
These
problems
have
become
much
worse
over
the
21
years.
Since
the
master
plan
was
adopted,
they
undermine
the
quality
of
life
for
our
residents.
They
create
hazards
for
pedestrians
and
cyclists
in
a
neighborhood
that
would
otherwise
be
a
model
of
walkability
and
alternative
means
of
transportation.
I
I
In
november
2019,
our
neighborhood
council
initiated
a
resident-based
process
to
identify
specific
areas
where
problems
exist
and
collaborate
with
council,
member
wharton
salt
lake
city's
transportation
division,
udot
and
the
uta
to
come
up
with
practical,
effective
solutions.
Over
the
following
eighteen
months,
we
held
many
meetings
bringing
together
residents
and
public
agencies
to
develop
the
plan.
That
is
the
basis
for
our
cip
request.
E
O
Yes,
I'd
just
like
to
attend
those
comments
and
stress
the
traffic
issues
on
east
capital
boulevard.
It's
become
a
speedway.
I've
clocked
cars
as
fast
as
80
miles
an
hour,
so.
M
H
Great
so
my
name
is
jackson
bradshaw,
and
I
would
also
like
to
urge
you
to
support
the
cip
request
of
the
capitol
hill
neighborhood
calming
plan.
I
wanted
to
speak
a
little
bit
about
how
this
issue
has
affected
me
personally,
as
david
shearer
has
done
a
great
job
representing
the
extensive
research
site,
visits
and
planning
the
capitol
hill
neighborhood
council
has
done
with
city
engineering
officials.
H
I
live
at
the
bottom
of
zane
avenue,
I'm
sure
many
of
you
know
it
it's
one
of
the
steepest
hills
in
salt
lake
city
at
the
bottom
of
that
hill,
zane,
teased
with
wall
street,
making
my
house
essentially
a
runaway
truck
ramp.
According
to
a
grandma
report.
Since
2016
there
have
been
over
15
incidents
reported
at
the
intersection
of
zayn
and
wall
street.
In
the
short
two
years
I
have
lived
here,
I
have
currently
personally
witnessed
seven
accidents
and
had
three
accidents
involving
my
property.
H
The
most
recent
incident
involved
an
out
of
control
car
that
traveled
over
60
feet
into
my
property
crashing
through
fences,
retaining
walls
and
into
building
structures.
Luckily,
no
one
was
around
when
this
accident
occurred,
but
had
there
been
a
pedestrian
or
my
family
around
the
accident
could
have
been
fatal.
H
This
accident
is
not
alone,
it's
been
repeated
many
times
over
the
years.
This
is
just
one
of
the
many
traffic
issues
that
the
capitol
hill
neighborhood
faces.
It
cannot
be
ignored
that
the
capitol
hill
neighborhood
faces
many
unique
issues
that
are
unprecedented
across
the
valley.
The
capitol
hill
traffic
calming
map
takes
into
account
all
these
issues
to
create
a
more
livable
and
walkable
neighborhood
from
our
narrow
and
winding
roads,
with
dangerous
intersections
the
steepest
hills
in
the
valley,
industrial
traffic
and
cut
through
traffic
between
the
capital
and
600
north
freeway
exit.
H
We
cannot
wait
for
a
death
or
serious
injury
to
take
action.
The
capitol
hill
traffic
calming
plan
must
be
addressed.
We
have
done
our
research,
we've
garnered
feedback
and
support
from
the
community
with
over
200
signatures
on
a
petition,
and
we
have
worked
with
city
engineering
officials
to
build
a
comprehensive
plan.
All
that's
left
is
funding
and
we
need
your
support.
B
Thank
you.
This
concerns
the
inland
port.
Obviously,
you
know
that
we
are
in
the
midst
of
a
20-year
drought
which
may
go
to
30
years.
If
climatologists
are
correct
and
salt
lake
city
is
responsible
for
the
water
for
the
port,
an
estimated
5
000
warehouses,
each
with
1500
employees
and
salt
lake
is
responsible
for
the
water.
P
Talk
about
the
budget
amendment
to
support
the
capital
improvement
projects
at
this
tennis
center
on
behalf
of
all
the
players
and
staff
at
libby
park
and
wasakio
tennis
center.
I
would
like
to
thank
mayor
and
council
members
for
your
guidance
to
lead
us
through
the
tough
time
last
year
safely,
with
a
consistent
mass
policy.
P
During
the
coveted
time
winter,
2
and
20
and
21,
we
were
full
from
7
a.m
until
10
p.m,
with
so
many
group
over
25,
zip
code,
everyone
is
so
grateful
that
we
were
open
and
provided
a
safe
environment
for
them
to
play
and
keep
them.
Sane.
Tennis
is
the
only
sport
I
could
play
during
that
time.
However,
the
current
bubble
is
too
old.
Water
is
leaking
in
hazard
with
electricity.
P
P
At
15
years.
Staying
at
the
tennis
center,
I
can
see
rowan
hall
and
guadalupe
student
who
are
playing
tennis
under
the
same
bubble.
Every
play,
tennis
divorce
people
play
tennis,
stay
home,
parents
play
tennis,
never
late
to
play.
We
have
a
60
years
old,
lady
retired
and
still
playing
30
years
more
of
tennis.
P
A
Hi,
thank
you
for
the
opportunity
to
speak
this
navy,
as
you
mentioned
in
the
joint
resolution
on
racism
as
a
public
health
hazard,
which
I
believe
you
all
unanimously
supported
this
evening.
Structural
racism
creates
inequities
that
include
environmental
and
economic
injustice,
driving
health
disparities
in
communities
surrounding
both
england
and
seaport.
A
Furthermore,
can
we
also
rely
on
you
to
support
economically
just
economies,
as
listed
in
president
biden's
american
rescue
plan
such
as
sustainable
and
even
regenerative
building
materials
that
not
only
begin
sequestering
pollutants
as
soon
as
they
are
implemented?
That
can
also,
furthermore,
be
produced
by
utah
farmers
and
businesses
and
be
implemented
into
the
very
structure
of
the
utah
inland
port.
I
would
be
more
than
happy
to
speak
with
anyone
to
discuss
these
issues
that
is
in
attendance
this
evening.
A
B
Are
now
unmuted
good
evening,
council,
members
and
mayor,
I
have
recently
reached
out
mayor
to
you
personally
and
to
your
council
members
to
speak
regarding
the
pantages
theater
we've
reached
out
as
preservationists
I've
reached
out
as
an
expert
in
the
field
of
preservation
and
restoration
of
over
25
years.
But
tonight,
mayor
on
public
record,
I'm
reaching
out
to
mother
to
mother.
I
was
recently
handed
a
photo
of
you
walking
into
the
pantages
theater
and
doing
a
tour
with
it
looks
like
a
small
child.
B
So
my
question
is:
you
have
voted
continuously
and
support
it
that
this
building
be
demoed,
because
it's
too
hazardous
and
too
far
gone.
So
my
question
tonight
is:
if
this
building
is
so
far
gone,
why
on
earth?
Would
you
be
taking
your
child
in
on
a
tour?
You
became
a
city
council
member
because
you
wanted
to
have
cleaner
air
in
salt
lake
city.
In
fact,
you
have
a
non-profit
called
greed
utah,
yet
you
are
not
taking
into
effect
the
health
impact
that
the
demolition
over
a
hundred
thousand
square
feet
of
historic
building.
B
That's
103
years
old
will
have
on
your
city
and
mayor.
You
have
failed
to
answer
your
constituents
request
to
have
a
public
viewing
to
assess
this
building
for
themselves.
Yet
you
have
been
had
the
privilege
of
touring
this
building
and
again
taking
small
children
in
so.
My
question
tonight
is:
is
the
building
really
that
hazardous
and
if
it
is,
are
you
a
negligent
parent
or
is
it
just
that?
B
No
one
wants
to
comment
that
the
building
can't
indeed
be
saved
and
you're,
just
ignoring
all
these
facts,
about
it
being
up
for
national
registration
for
historic
preservation
and
the
fact
that
it
could
be
saved
mayor.
We
would
like
an
answer,
I'm
speaking
on
behalf
of
many
of
your
citizens
of
salt
lake
city,
and
I'm
also
questioning
this
as
someone
who
has
been
in
this
field
for
over
25
years,
I
do
believe
you
ignored
the
facts.
C
K
P
Okay,
thank
you.
My
name
is
daniel
shelling
and
I
I
would
like
to
begin
by
thanking
the
city
council
for
the
hard
work
they're
doing
as
our
representatives
in
the
city.
P
P
First,
a
foothill
trails
oversight
committee
should
not
include
members
of
the
parks
department
as
it
is
the
work
of
the
parks
department
that
the
oversight
committee
must
assess.
Second,
an
oversight
committee
should
not
include
any
groups
or
individuals
that
were
involved
in
the
development
of
the
master
plan,
as
the
plan
itself
must
be
reassessed.
P
I
and
many
other
salt
lake
city
residents
believe
that
a
foothills
trail
oversight
committee
is
necessary
to
ensure
that
the
full
hills
trail
master
plan,
meets
the
stated
goals
and
objectives
of
the
city
and
that
the
above
stated
conditions
are
necessary
to
ensure
that
a
committee
is
able
to
do
its
job
effectively
while
at
the
same
time
avoiding
potential
conflicts
of
interest.
Thank
you.
Q
Is
it
on
it's
on
all
right,
cool
cool,
all
right,
so
back
again,
yeah
at
this
point.
You
know
it's
been
two
years
here,
so
I'm
like
90
here,
just
to
say
things
into
the
record
10
here
to
talk
to
you
guys,
I'm
hoping
you
listen.
You
know
we
have
people
all
around
the
world
on
this
right
now.
I
was
here
earlier
talking
about
some
very
serious
things
that
go
way
beyond
the
theater.
You
know
chris
was
talking
on
his
instagram
yesterday
about
transparency
and
getting
rid
of
the
exclusive
agreements,
which
is
great.
Q
I
applaud
you
guys
for
that.
Those
exclusive
agreements
are
what
led
us
into
this
mess.
Having
heinz
and
lasalle
hold
this
theater
hostage
for
six
years
and
poison
any
real
chance
to
see
us
saved,
but
changing
the
exclusive
agreements
after
the
fact
does
not
bring
us
justice
to
the
theater
or
does
not
bring
justice
to
democracy
and
what
happened
these
last
several
years
under
danny
walsa
and
the
rda
I'm
here
to
read
a
letter
specifically
into
the
record
from
daniel
stevens
of
heinz
saying.
Q
Let
us
know
when
you
hear
back
on
the
purchase
and
sales
agreement,
as
mentioned,
it's
hind's,
strong
preference
to
execute
the
purchase
sales
agreement
before
this
goes
public
and
that's
to
tammy
hunsaker
danny
waltz
is
on
there
same
with
dusty
harris
of
heinz.
Q
I
think
that
really
shows
that
this
has
never
been
a
transparent
process,
let
alone
like
this
entire
investigation.
We
have
inflating
restoration
numbers.
The
building
is
historic,
we're
putting
it
on
the
historical
register.
Right
now,
there's
tons
of
tax
credits.
We
need
real
justice
here,
guys
we're
asking
you
for
help.
This
is
a
very
serious
issue.
It
goes
way
beyond
the
theater.
We
need
an
investigation
into
the
rda.
We
need
danny
watson,
tammy
hunsaker
held
accountable
and
we
need
answers
right
now.
This
is
election
year.
Q
You
know
we'll
find
five
people
that
will
find
justice
and
democracy.
If
you
guys
aren't
up
for
it.
I'm
hoping
you
join
us.
I
I'm
here
willingly
to
talk
to
you.
We
would
love
to
talk
more,
but
we
need
your
help.
Stand
for
democracy
stand
for
this
right
now
and,
let's
make
you
know
justice
and
truth
shed
shine
in
in
salt
lake
and
not
corruption.
So
thanks.
B
Thank
you
very
much.
This
is
hilary
jacobs
and
first
I
want
to
thank
you
for
addressing
the
shortfalls
and
challenges
presented
by
the
salt
lake
city
trails
master
plan.
Your
attention
is
most
appreciated
and
you're
doing
a
remarkable
job
getting
handled
on
this
complicated
situation,
trails
utah,
the
mountain
bike
lobby
that
has
played
a
dominant
role
in
developing
the
salt
lake
city,
trail's
master
plan
is
also
behind
the
planned
development
of
the
bonneville
shoreline,
trail
extension
and
parley's
point
trails.
B
This
extension
will
cut
across
steep
foothill
terrain
above
the
east
bench,
resulting
in
more
damage
to
foothill
habitats,
like
that
already
seen
from
phase
one
cuts
above
the
avenues.
The
mayor
ordered
the
trail's
master
plan
pause
and
the
city
council
placed
the
conditional
appropriation
clause
to
prevent
further
damage
in
the
foothills.
B
B
Please
ensure
all
trail
building
activity,
even
that
which
may
not
be
written
into
the
master
plan,
but
is
wholly
integral
to
it
to
follow
the
same
stipulations
set
forth
by
the
mayor
and
you,
our
city,
council.
Anything
less
is
a
slap
in
your
faces.
Don't
let
lobbyists
get
away
with
this
insolence?
Thank
you.
So
much.
K
B
Hi
everybody
I
have
my
usual
jam,
packed
two
minutes
prepared
and
I
sent
you
a
copy
of
the
text
right
after
five
o'clock
this
afternoon.
In
light
of
the
number
of
people
lined
up
to
speak,
I'm
just
going
to
draw
your
attention
to
your
email
under
my
address
and
ask
you
to
please
look
at
how
we
are
losing
housing
and
how
it
is
being
stolen
from
our
community.
B
Thank
you
very
much
be
back
in
touch
the
next
time.
You
have
general
comments.
M
I
Some
things
I'm
kind
of
concerned
about
that
I
would
like
to
bring
up,
is
why
were
no
historical
experts
contacted
about
the
restoration
calls
why
work
we
have
over,
like
400
experts
all
across
the
united
states
that
have
done
multiple
theaters?
Why
haven't
any
of
them
been
contacted?
I
I
Why
is
this
deal
being
railroaded
and
why
can't
be
the
people
go
see
this
theater
in
person,
and
why
is
it
like
that?
Others
can
go
like
people
that
have
been
voted
in
can
go
see
it,
but
why
can't
we?
Why
is
it
that
there
was
a
chance
for
people
to
go
in?
Why
was
it
canceled?
Why
was
the
public
initiative
survey
cancelled
in
2018?
I
F
Thank
you.
Thank
you,
council
and
mayor
for
allowing
us
to
speak.
I
have
specifically
been
speaking
in
regards
to
the
salt
lake
city,
foothills
project.
I've
been
along
this
process
for
last
year
and
a
half
followed
it.
I
have
to
voice
that
I'm
rather
disturbed
and
sad
that
phase
one
has
gone
so
poorly.
F
As
a
civil
engineer
that
studies,
soils
and
rock
mechanics-
and
I
spend
days
a
week
on
the
trail
system,
the
phase
one
trails
could
not
have
been
located
in
worse
terrain
than
they
were
placed
in
alta
and
the
planning
commission
has
exhibited
poor
judgment
in
phase
one.
We
should
not
move
forward
with
them
in
phase
two
and
phase
three.
We
have
not
been
given
the
opportunity
to
proactively
engage
the
community
to
implement
changes.
I've
listened
to
louis
cogan
speak
and
he
has
not
given
any
updates
on
actual
changes
or
adjustments
that
are
being
implemented.
F
I
am
begging
you
to
allow
the
citizens
to
voice
their
concerns
for
phase
two
or
any
any
trails
that
might
be
built
additionally,
while
attending
the
peanut
board
meetings
trying
to
voice
and
be
engaged
with
the
representatives
that
are
to
engage
and
educate
the
council.
I've
also
noticed
that
kristen
reicher,
the
head
of
the
parks
department,
has
done
her
best
to
inhibit
the
council.
The
peanut
board
from
informing
you
of
what
the
citizens
are
voicing
to
them.
The
peanut
board,
samantha
finch
I've
watched
her
basically
kill
any
conversation.
F
F
I
ask
that
you
please
revoke
the
funding
for
the
next
phase,
that
the
second
step,
we
open
up
the
planning
to
allow
the
community
to
to
to
actually
provide
recommendations
for
improvements
moving
forward,
and,
thirdly,
that
a
third
party
be
brought
in
that
that
it
prohibits
engagement
from
from
the
parks
department,
because,
right
now
they
have
too
much
power.
They
are
giving
you
the
dialogue
that
they
have
proposed
for
the
last
two
years.
They
have
not
done
any
changes
or
improvements
or
taken
feedback
from
the
community.
A
A
Basically,
some
parking
lot
we're
giving
away
our
history
an
amazing
architecture
for
strip
of
sidewalk
with
some
plants,
a
garden
on
top
of
the
parking
lot,
possibly
and
that's
not
even
guaranteed
and
some
affordable
apartments
that
will
expire
in
a
few
years
and
we're
paying
the
developer
in
tax
credits
of
three
million
dollars.
I
believe
close
to
that
and
we're
giving
them
away
the
building
for
free,
if
you're
going
to
give
it
away
to
be
destroyed,
give
it
or
sell
it
to
someone
that
will
preserve
it.
A
There
are
people
willing
to
buy
it,
to
restore
it
and
preservationists
that
will
work
on
the
same
that
have
worked
on
the
same
types
of
buildings
say
that
it
can
be
done
for
a
lot
cheaper
than
the
city
and
developer
claim
or
give
it
to
someone
that
can
use
it.
The
money
to
support
charities
or
help
the
issues
with
like
homelessness.
We
have
issues
here
in
this
in
the
city
already
that
can
use
the
money.
A
People
are
barely
catching
wind
of
this
deal
and
you
are
hearing
the
outcry,
if
you're
afraid
of
lawsuits
by
the
developer,
that
only
makes
them
look
bad
or
work
with
them
to
somehow
save
it.
It
belongs
to
us,
it's
still
not
too
late.
To
say
that
you
may
say
the
deal
is
too
far
along,
but
the
building
is
still
standing.
A
D
My
name
is
kevin
hartley
supporting
the
utah
pantages
theater
restoration
in
september
of
2018,
danny
waltz
and
the
rda
were
informed
that
the
utah
pantages
theater
was
eligible
for
the
national
registry
and
yet
still
in
2019,
on
multiple
occasions
cited
to
this
council
knowingly
outdated,
2013
information
to
say
that
the
the
theater
was
not
eligible
for
their
national
registry.
Knowing
that
there
was
a
reversal
on
the
stance,
as
stated
by
amber
anderson
of
the
state
historical
preservation
office
in
september
of
2018
the
year
before.
D
After
knowing
it
was
eligible
for
registry
that
if
the
theater
was
eligible,
it
would
only
be
eligible
for
10
maximum
tax
credits
and
that
it
would
not
be
eligible
for
those
tax
credits
until
the
restoration
of
the
theater
was
complete.
The
actual
percentage
of
eligible
tax
credits
is
double
that
as
high
as
twenty
percent
tax
credit
eligibility,
and
you
can
further
claim
up
to
ninety
percent
of
the
tax
credits
up
front
to
fund
the
initial
cost
of
the
waltz
restoration.
D
The
rda
have
also
not
contacted
many
of
the
experts
in
the
historical
theater
preservation
area,
nor
contacted
any
of
the
restored
sister
pantages
theaters
to
get
insight
or
guidance
on
restoration,
rollout
and
cost
phasing.
This
negligence
is
not
unique
to
salt
lake.
However,
it
is
a
known
pattern:
nationwide
california,
in
2011
dis,
dissolved
all
400
plus
rdas,
stating
that
they
act
as
an
unelected
local
government
of
their
own
and
more
that
more
often
than
not
go
against
public
interest
in
favor
of
billionaire
developer
interests.
D
This
sounds
familiar
if
the
council
is
unaware
of
or
unwilling
to
see
the
rda's
inherent
corruption,
danny
waltz's,
repeated
blatant
lies
to
this
council
in
favor
of
the
billionaire
developer
heinz.
I
urge
you
to
investigate,
bring
justice
and
secure
the
theater.
This
is
a
lesson
we
can
learn
from
now
and
apply
now
bring
justice
for
the
rda's
wrong
doings
in
the
form
of
a
formal
investigation
and
save
the
utah
pantages
theater.
I
reserve
my
time.
Thank
you.
M
Thank
you,
I'm
not
sure
if
we're
going
to
have
a
public
hearing
on
allen
park,
but
at
least
dogs
should
be
allowed
on
allen
park,
since
it
is
a
paved
park
on
another
issue,
I
urge
the
city
to
provide
an
attorney
for
every
renter
that
is
being
served
with
an
eviction
in
third
district
court,
since
if
they
are
evicted
and
become
homeless,
they'll,
probably
end
up
homeless
in
salt
lake
city,
the
city
spends
millions
on
rental
assistance,
but
it
is
all
wasted
when
the
renters,
who
get
that
assistance
are
served
with
eviction
papers
on
another
issue,
you
discussed
the
city's
affordable
housing
plan
today
at
rda,
and
it
calls
into
question
why
this
city
is
considering
higher
density
housing
in
single-family
home
neighborhoods.
M
M
I
think
you
recognized
it
because
you
put
it
as
the
highest
top
priority
in
your
affordable
housing
plan.
So
I
urge
a
city
to
allow
housing
on
the
80
percent
of
the
city
that
does
not
allow
housing
and
stop
worrying
about
the
12
percent
of
the
city
property.
The
single-family
home
neighborhoods
80
of
the
house
of
the
property
in
this
city
does
not
allow
housing,
so
I
think
you
should
be
encouraging
housing
at
the
international
center
and
it's
50
000
employees.
M
The
city
has
said
you
can't
have
housing
there,
but
you
gave
a
million
per
housing
at
the
airport
in
which
is
in
the
same
zone
as
the
international
center.
So
I'm
encouraging
you
to
allow
housing
on
the
rest
of
it,
the
property
in
the
city
that
you
don't
allow
housing
and
please
put
in
more
steel
plates
for
traffic
calming
especially
on
east
capital
boulevard
thanks
for
listening.
E
I'm
concerned
that
that
park
on
top
of
a
parking
garage
could
become
a
huge
liability
and
they
will
end
up
closing
it
about
20
years
ago
there
was
an
unfortunate
accident
on
the
roof
of
the
church,
the
lds
church
conference
center
gardens
and
ever
since
they
closed
and
restricted
access
to
that
area.
So
a
concern
that
something
similar
could
happen
there.
I'm
surprised
that
this
developer
would
want
to
take
on
this
liability,
and
I
would
really
hope
that
they
would
reconfigure
their
plans
to
work
around
the
theater.
E
It
didn't
make
economic
economic
sense
to
do
so,
but
they
could
come
back
after
demolishing
the
theater
and
use
that
same
excuse
to
scale
back
their
plans
to
something
that
would
have
possibly
worked
with
the
theater.
So
just
some
concerns
and
thoughts
there.
Thank
you.
K
It
looks
like
jared
west
has
left
the
meeting,
so
we
will
move
on
to
brian
hutchinson,
followed
by
donna,
lymon
and
then
emily,
allworth
and
brian.
Is
there
in
person.
L
Hello,
can
you
hear
me
very
well
hi,
as
the
chnc
transportation
committee
chair
I'm
here,
to
advocate
for
street
safety,
including
pedestrian
safety,
that
is
prerequisite
to
livability
and.
L
Should
I
start
over
okay?
Okay
thanks!
So
I'm
the
chair
of
the
capitol
hill,
neighborhood
council
transportation
committee
and
I'm
here
to
advocate
for
the
street
safety,
including
pedestrian
safety.
L
We've
worked
with
a
transportation
division
in
the
development
of
a
model
for
the
region,
bonded
by
I-15,
1800,
north
north
temple
and
east
capital,
boulevard
that
includes
the
suppression,
speed
suppression,
devices,
speed,
limit
reduction
street
topology
revision,
signaling,
preferred
route,
information
and
other
elements
to
keep
regional
commuters
on
on
major
corridors
and
off
narrow
secondary
streets.
I
just
say
that
there
were
a
half
dozen
three-hour
site
visits,
including
three
bike
tours
on
several
very
steep
streets
for
the
transportation
engineers
to
test
their
their
stamina
and
also
we've.
L
We
rode
out
to
the
gravel
pits
and
cross
rail
tracks
and
did
a
lot
of
rigorous
work,
a
lot
of
note
taking
over
and
I
I
commend
the
transportation
division
on
the
on
their
effort.
We've
worked
for
the
salt
lake
transportation
division
in
utah
udot
and
the
station
sticker,
partisan
and
council
member
wharton
and
the
gen
daily
provost
and
center
world
on
re-route
industrial
traffic
to
safety
and
more
efficient
roadways,
expansive
I-15
corridor
anyway.
I'd
like
to
thank
you
very
much
for
your
support
of
the
traffic
calming
plan.
B
I'd
like
to
thank
you
for
providing
the
opportunity
for
me
to
give
my
comments
to
the
salt
lake
city
camp
council.
My
topic
is
regarding
the
preservation
of
the
historical
pantages
theater.
You
have
downtown
and
I'm
speaking
to
you
as
a
visitor,
not
a
constituent,
not
a
resident
there.
J
Thank
you.
I
would
like
to
talk
about
watering.
As
you
know,
we
are
in
a
huge
drought
and
we're
using
more
and
more
water
every
single
year.
J
One
of
the
biggest
signs
recently
was
the
sugar
house
park
having
to
drain
its
pond
due
to
the
lack
of
water
from
its
source
and
potential
issues
for
disease
with
birds.
I
do
support
this
decision.
However,
I
think
that
we
need
to
look
at
larger
ways
of
mitigating
water
use
within
salt
lake
city.
J
I
believe
that
a
looking
at
laws
that
have
been
passed
in
other
states,
such
as
the
colorado
house
bill,
1912-31
that
new
applicant
energy
and
water
efficiency
standards
would
be
a
great
use
of
potential
power
within
salt
lake
city
to
mitigate
some
of
the
over
watering.
I
think
creating
smart
water
senses
and
putting
more
money
into
encouraging
these
and
also
creating
laws
that
actually
make
it
mandatory
for
businesses
and
residential
areas
to
use
these
systems
would
be
a
huge
boon
to
the
state.
J
It
would
be
able
to
cut
water
usage
in
half
for
people
who
are
heavy
water
users,
and
it
would
actually
cut
down
what,
according
to
a
2010
study
of
american
water
consumption,
is
an
average
use
of
167
gallons
of
water
per
person
for
utah
residents.
That
is
a
ton
of
water
that
could
be
mitigated
when
it
comes
to
residential
watering
and
commercial
watering.
K
N
I'm
also
calling
in
about
the
utah
camtasia
theater.
I
just
have
a
few
comments.
N
N
N
The
pantages
theaters
nationwide
be
restored
and
for
substantially
less,
but
your
guys
can't
it's
not
in
that
bad
of
a
shape.
It's
beautiful
and
it's
historic.
You
should
save
it.
Instead
of
knocking
it
down
for
a
glass
skyscraper
to
put
parking
in
and
then
put
a
park
on
top
of
your
guys
parking
garage,
it
looks
ridiculous.
B
I'm
with
the
nicole
curtis
team
in
detroit,
and
I
stand
behind
everything
that
nicole
said
tonight,
and
I
also
stand
behind
michael
and
the
other
citizens
who
are
speaking
against
this
theater
being
demolition.
I
also
want
to
know
why
the
theater
that
no
historical
experts
were
ever
contacted
about
the
restoration
costs.
B
D
C
Great
thank
you
to
everyone
who
commented,
particularly
those
that
did
so
and
following
our
rules
of
decorum,
I
appreciate
that
council
members,
we
are
on
our
first
new
business
item
e1,
which
is
a
resolution
of
intention
to
designate
central
business
improvement
area
2022.
O
C
Council
member
dugan
any
discussion
on
this.
P
C
H
C
Any
opposed
that
passes
unanimously
item
e2
is
a
resolution
ratifying
execution
of
a
second
amendment
to
an
interlocal
agreement
between
salt
lake
city,
the
redevelopment
agency
and
the
utah
performing
arts
center
agency
yupaka
for
operation
of
the
george
s
and
dolores
d'or
echols
theater.
Is
there.
C
That,
because
this
has
never
appeared
on
an
agenda
before
tonight,
technically
you
would
need
to
suspend
the
rules
and
adopt
on.
D
C
C
E
C
D
H
C
Any
opposed
that
passes
unanimously
f2
is
regarding
an
ordinance
approving
a
memorandum
of
understanding
between
salt
lake
city
corporation
and
the
international
association
of
firefighters,
local
81,
representing
eligible
employees.
Pursuant
to
the
collective
bargaining
and
employee
representation
joint
resolution
dated
march
22,
2011.
C
C
Any
opposed
that
passes
unanimously
item
f3
is
regarding
an
ordinance
approving
a
memorandum
of
understanding
between
salt
lake
city
corporation
and
the
salt
lake
city
police
association
representing
eligible
employees.
Pursuant
to
the
collective
bargaining
and
employee
representation
joint
resolution
dated
march
22nd,
2011.
H
C
H
C
H
C
E
C
C
Oh
thanks
that
passes
unanimously.
Thank
you
to
everyone
who
participated
in
tonight.
Today's
rda
work
session
and
formal
meeting.
Thank
you,
council
members.
Thank
you
to
the
staff.
We
are.