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From YouTube: Salt Lake City Council Formal Meeting - 6/1/2021
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A
B
All
right
welcome
to
today's
salt
lake
city
council
meeting.
We
are
happy
to
have
you
here.
While
we
continue
to
hold
our
meeting
remotely
due
to
safety
precautions
related
to
the
pandemic
and
the
earthquake.
Thank
you
for
joining
us.
We
will
begin
with
a
moment
of
silence,
as
we
recite
the
pledge
of
allegiance.
When
we
are
done,
we
will
turn
our
audio
back.
B
B
Thank
you.
So
we
as
city
council
members,
wear
three
different
hats
and
last
formal
meeting.
It
was
a
little
confusing
on
when
public
comment
for
certain
things
was
happening.
So
I
just
before
I
get
into
the
decorum
and
the
rules
of
decorum
for
our
meetings.
B
I
just
want
to
try
to
explain
how
this
is
going
to
go.
So,
as
council
members,
we
also
sit
as
the
board
of
the
local
building
authority
and
we
do
have
a
public
hearing
on
the
local
building
authority's
budget
today.
So
we're
going
to
start
with
that.
After
the
local
building
authority
meeting,
we
sort
of
switch
hats
and
we
will
then
reconvene
as
the
rda
board
the
redevelopment
agency
board.
Again
there
will
be
a
public
hearing
on
the
redevelopment
agency's
budget
and
we'd.
Ask
that
people
only
comment
on
the
redevelopment
agency's
budget.
B
After
that
we
will
switch
our
hats
one
more
time
and
convene
as
the
city
council.
The
city
council
also
has
a
public
hearing
on
its
budget,
so
we
will
try
to
if
we
kind
of
have
callers
or
have
people
commenting
on
one
of
the
other
budgets.
B
As
always,
we
are
accepting
public
comment
through
webex
and
for
those
whose
only
option
is
to
call
in
staff
will
be
monitoring
a
separate
phone
line.
Before
we
begin,
I
do
want
to
mention
and
review
our
rules
of
decorum.
B
B
In
order
to
achieve
this,
our
rules
of
decorum
begin
from
the
moment
you
arrive
into
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
again.
We
try
to
make
sure
that
everybody's
voices
that
everybody
feels
comfortable
to
have
their
voice
be
heard
if
you
do
use
profanity
during
your
comment,
your
line
will
be
muted
and
if
any
comments
reach
a
level.
B
Muted-
and
you
will
forfeit
opportunity
to
address
the
council
tonight
if
you
feel
you
need
to
use
profanity
or
have
some
other
comments
that
are
not
appropriate,
please
feel
free
to
email,
council
members
or
call
our
comment
line.
In
addition,
our
staff
will
request
for
your
name
during
the
registration
process
to
limit
disruption.
B
Your
name
cannot
include
a
message
or
violate
our
rules
of
decorum.
If
your
registered
name
does
not
meet
this
requirement
and
our
staff
will
use
the
chat
feature
to
gather
that
information
from
you,
taylor,
hill,
our
from
our
staff,
is
helping
to
moderate
this
meeting
and
will
be
messaging
with
the
attendees
to
coordinate.
Please
monitor
the
chat
screen
for
information
and
or
feel
free
to
message,
taylor
with
any
questions.
B
B
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.
If
you
are
unable
to
finish
your
comment,
we
realize
two
minutes
is
not
a
lot
of
time.
Please
refer
to
your
chat
screen
and
our
staff
will
post
your
content.
Our
contact
information
remember
any
comments
that
we
get
via
email.
B
Any
of
our
social
medias
mailed
in
do
become
are
distributed
to
us
council
members
and
do
become
part
of
the
record.
If
you
do
not
wish
to
speak,
please
message
our
staff
to
let
them
know
or
when
the
host
states,
your
name.
Please
let
us
know
that
you're
just
here
to
listen,
our
local
building
authority
hearing
is
regarding
a
resolution.
Adoption
adoptee
the
final
budget
for
the
local
building
authority
of
salt
lake
city
for
fiscal
year,
2021
2022
included,
including
the
capital
projects
fund.
B
Last
time
we
had
jen
give
a
little
overview
of
this
budget
of
this
item.
Jen.
Do
you
want
to
just
give
us
a
quick
little
overview
before
we
get
started
with
comments?
Yeah.
C
Just
real
quickly
for
the
public's
information
for
the
council's
information,
because
sometimes
the
title
can
be
a
little
confusing.
The
local
building
authority
is
essentially
a
financing
tool
that
the
city
used
to
facilitate
the
financing
and
building
of
the
glendale
and
marmalade
library
branches.
So
in
the
budget,
it's
essentially
just
debt
service,
it's
paying
paying
on
those
bonds.
So
that's
the
information
on
the
local
building
authority.
F
Council,
council
members,
I
do
appreciate
this
opportunity
to
give
my
my
comments
on
this
meeting
here.
First
of
all,
I
am
a
volunteer
with
citizens,
climate
lobby,
even
though
I
am
not
here
representing
them.
I
would
like
to
personally
thank
all
of
the
council
members
for
for
supporting
the
carbon,
the
energy
innovation
and
carbon
dividend
act,
and
I'm
here
just
to
express
my
concern
about
the
I.
What
I
believe
is
the
necessity
to
take
into
account
the
sustainability
projects
to
effectively
grow
our
city
in
a
healthy
and
sustainable
manner.
F
Public
lands
commission,
as
well,
both
of
those
work
hand
in
hand
in
order
to
increase
the
renewable
energy
sector
of
the
city,
as
well
as
protecting
public
lands
and
trails.
Both
services
are
very
very
valuable
to
the
continuing
services
of
the
city
and,
as
we
are
continuing
to
see
a
increase
in
population
in
and
around
the
salt
lake
valley,
it
is
crucial
that
we
make
sure
that
we
develop
for
future
generations
a
healthy
and
sustainable
method
of
of
development.
That
leaves
nobody
behind,
and
that
allows
us
to
really
grasp
the
grasp.
B
Thank
you,
robert.
Before
we
continue.
I
do
appreciate
that
comment.
I
would
just
like
to
reiterate
that
I
think
that
comment
may
be
more
appropriate
for
when
we
convene
as
the
city
council
body
and
we're
talking
about
the
mayor's
proposed
budget
for
the
city
council,
so
to
the
next
callers
again.
If
you
can
keep
your
comments
to
the
local
building
authorities
budget,
that
would
be
very
helpful.
We
will
get
to
the
main
budget
a
little
bit
later
in
our
formal
meeting.
D
G
Awesome,
I
think
what
amy
just
said,
if
you
guys
didn't
hear
me,
I'd
like
to
speak
on
the
rda
and
then
also
during
the
city
council
general
session.
So
if
I
could
just
wait
until
then,
that's
all
all
right.
B
B
I
J
B
H
E
K
J
B
C
J
J
C
Chair
so
the
redevelopment
agency
collects
property
tax
increment
from
specific
areas
of
the
city
to
invest
in
those
areas
and
into
affordable
housing
in
general
to
further
the
city's
policy
goals.
So
this
presents
the
annual
budget
for
how
those
property
tax
dollars
will
be
collected
and
spent
in
the
coming
year.
D
If
you
council
chair,
we
have
approximately
five
users
to
speak
to
this,
the
first
being
george
chapman,
followed
by
casey
mcdonnell
and
then
ian
harris
george
you're
unmuted.
K
Okay,
the
rda
budget
doesn't
have
anything
about
the
thousands
of
affordable
housing
that
rda
staff
predicted
on
the
state
street
cra.
This
city
has
dragged
their
feet
for
seven
years,
with
just
two
projects
approved.
K
Despite
again
the
rda
staff
saying
we
should
have
thousands
of
units,
so
a
good
form-based
zoning
would
open
the
floodgates
to
affordable
housing
construction,
but
the
local
community
councils
haven't
been
told
about
potential
plans,
so
it
looks
like
salt
lake
city
is
going
to
wait
another
seven
years
to
build
thousands
of
promised
affordable
units.
K
This
city
seems
to
be
discouraging
bus
service
and
one
dollar
fares
when
they
encourage
uta
to
build
buildings
at
station
center.
Again,
salt
lake
city
does
not
allow
housing
on
80
percent
of
the
city's
area.
Despite
just
approving
low
income
housing
in
an
area
that
the
city
said
can
have
housing.
Remember
the
airport
in
well.
If
the
airport
in
can
have
housing,
then
the
international
center
can
use
housing
it's
in
zone
c,
which
means
they
can
have
housing.
K
D
Console
chair
next
we
have
casey
mcdonald,
followed
by
ian
harris
and
then
pachuco
lattaro
stacy.
You
are
unmuted.
I
All
right
hi,
this
is
casey
mcdonough,
I'm
sure
all
of
the
city
council
members
in
the
mayor
are
familiar
with
my
name
in
regards
to
the
coalition
of
residents
trying
to
save
the
utah
pantages
theater.
I
You've,
surely
all
have
seen
the
email
that
we
sent
you
with
links
to
what
we've
concluded
from
the
grammar
request
we
made
regarding
the
this
deal
and
the
operations
of
the
rda.
I
So
I
think
this
is
a
great
time
to
talk
about
it
in
the
context
of
you
guys
adopting
the
next
budget,
I'm
going
to
address
the
the
thing
that
I
find
the
most
alarming
from
that
grammar
request:
the
thing
that
when
I
tell
journalists
and
other
residents
about
they
find,
I
think,
almost
entirely
the
most
alarming
thing,
which
is
that
heinz
made
a
request
of
the
city
to
in
fact
hide
all
of
the
deal
from
any
grammar
request,
tammy's
credit
with
the
rda.
She
let
them
know
that
wasn't
possible.
I
That's
not
how
grandma
and
open
records
work,
but
the
mere
fact
that
they
asked
for
that
raises
the
specter
of
I
think
grave
suspicion
that
there's
something
in
that
deal,
and
I
think
we
found
many
things
in
that
deal
that
we've
emailed
you
about
that
are
at
best
questionable
and
at
worst
hint
at
collusion
and
and
lies.
I
So
I'd
ask
that
you
don't
approve
the
budget
or
if
you
do
approve
the
budget,
that
you
stop
all
the
current
deals
of
the
rda
and
and
have
an
emergency
investigation
from
a
third
independent
party.
I
know
we'll
be
talking
to
the
ag's
office
about
it.
I
I
Thanks
yeah
I'll,
I
honestly
am
not
very
familiar
with
the
rda's
budget
and
every
line
in
it.
I
I
would
just
also
like
to
make
a
comment
toward
the
availability
and
number
of
low-income
units
that
are
available
and
point
out
their
importance
and
the
shortcomings
in
current
low-income
housing
stock
with
the
expiration
of
those
units.
In
many
cases
where
there
is
no
requirement
passed
a
few
years
of
them
being
built
to
honor
any
responsibility
to
match
the
rent
scale
of
their
units
to
the
areas
that
they're
in
and
the
jobs
that
are
available
in
their
neighborhoods.
I
A
L
Yes
hi,
my
name
is
pachuco
lautado,
I'm
here
with
the
rose
park,
brown
berets
and
I'm
just
here
to
show
solidarity
with
the
save
the
utah
appendages.
Theater,
danny
walls
and
the
rda
have
been
lying
about
the
theater
for
years,
inflated,
restoration,
cost,
discredited
historical
experts
due
six
years
of
exclusive
agreements
to
hold
the
theater
hostage
and
orchestrated
its
destruction
to
every
turn.
Danny
walls
and
david
artiega
have
known
that
the
theater
was
eligible
for
the
historic
registry
and
20
tax
credits
since
september
27
2018
at
a
preservation,
utah
board
meeting.
L
So
I'm
just
here
for
y'all
to
save
the
theater
in
solidarity
with
them.
You
know
you
guys
shouldn't
be
destroying
the
historical
theater
that
that
is
very
useful
to
the
community.
So
I'm
just
here
for
y'all
to
to
reopen
it
and
to
put
a
stop
to
it,
because
I
know
you
guys
are
planning
to
build
luxury
apartments.
Thank
you.
J
Thank
you
lava.
I
am
grateful
to
be
here
on
the
essential
lands
of
of
the
you
pay,
shoshone,
danae
and
and
many
others,
relatives
I'm
calling
in
to
in
support
of
in
support
of
the
theater
and
as
well
as
like,
if
the.
J
If
this
language
can
be
changed,
and
if
you
can
please
support
the
communities
that
are
living
and
make
theater
on
on
theater
on
on
the
stage
and
that
build
and
our
our
city
each
and
every
day,
please
don't
be
bought
out
as
city
council
members
and
please
you
are
here
to
serve
each
of
the
community.
Please
don't
be
bought
out
by
the
profits
that
that
can
that
do
seem
right
at
the
time.
Please
do
the
right
thing
and
support
the
community.
Thank.
G
I
just
like
to
shout
out
to
you
know
pride
day
right
here:
real,
quick
and
I'd
like
to
welcome
dennis
to
the
council
very
excited
to
be
here
with
all
you
guys
and
finally,
talk
to
you,
you,
you
know
us
well,
we've
been
trying
to
talk
to
you
about
the
theater
for
a
long
time,
and
I
find
it
very
unsettling
that
last
friday
we
reveal
a
sprawling
investigation
into
years-long,
lies
and
abuse
and
fraud
of
the
rda,
and
then
today
it's
just
business
as
usual,
with
this
rda
meeting
and
about
the
budget
at
2pm.
G
You
know,
and
we
wouldn't
make
these
claims
if
we
couldn't
back
them
up.
You
know
the
lies
are
so
obscene
that
we
use
the
rda's
own
documents
against
them.
We
use
the
minutes
from
the
meetings
we
use
the
memos.
We
use
the
videos
on
youtube.
You
know
that
as
our
homies,
the
brown
berets
mentioned,
danny
and
david
artiego
have
known
about
the
historic
registry.
Since
2018.,
that's
20
percent
tax
credits
goes
directly
to
the
theater
being
restored.
Chris
in
in
the
october
meeting
of
2019,
you
asked
for
follow-up
about
the
registry.
G
How
do
we
know
it's
not
on
there?
They
lied
directly
to
your
face.
You
know,
not
only
have
they
lied
to
the
city
and
the
people.
They've
lied
to
you
as
members
of
the
city
council.
They've
lied
to
two
mayors.
Now
this
is
information
that
you
guys
need
to
have
factual
from
experts
to
be
able
to
make
decisions.
You
know,
and
that's
just
the
tip
of
the
iceberg:
they've
inflated
restoration
costs.
We
have
evergreen
architectural
arts
they've
restored
three
of
our
sister
pantages
theaters
and
and
over
400
theaters.
G
That
agree
with
us
that
the
restoration
costs
are
actually
35
to
40
million,
not
60
to
80
million.
They
abandoned
the
2018
preservation,
utah
survey
that
would
have
asked
for
public
input
about
the
theater.
They
abandoned
the
2019
structural
survey
and
and
restoration
costs
that
would
have
updated
those
those
structural
costs.
You
know
and
then,
as
casey
mentioned,
these
emails
from
heinz
and
the
grammar
documents
are
just
very
unsettling.
G
Blanket
grandma
requests
collusion
with
with
the
rda
about
the
historical
registry
and
the
tax
credits
asking
for
the
purchase
and
sales
agreement
before
this.
B
B
B
Appreciate
you
board
member
working.
H
J
M
B
H
B
J
B
J
A
N
J
J
B
C
I'm
really
excited
to
read
this
resolution.
I
I
don't
know
how
long
salt
lake
city
has
recognized
june
as
pride
month
in
salt
lake
city,
but
this
is
a
historic
year
because
this
morning
that
the
governor
issued
a
resolution
recognizing
pride
month
for
the
entire
state
of
utah
for
june
2021
for
all
lgbtq
plus
utahns,
and
so
it's
really
exciting,
exciting
to
have
the
state
join
us
for
the
first
time
in
history
this
year.
C
But
of
course
it's
also
exciting
to
have
salt
lake
city
outline
this
resolution,
as
we
have
done,
for,
I
think
many
several
decades
now
as
far
as
I'm
aware.
So
whereas
our
nation
was
founded
on
the
principle
of
equal
rights
for
all
people,
and
the
fulfillment
of
this
promise
has
been
long
coming
in
many
ways
for
many
americans
and
whereas
some
of
the
most
inspiring
moments
in
our
history
have
arisen
from
various
civil
rights
movements
that
have
brought
one
group
after
another,
from
the
margins
into
the
mainstream
of
american
society.
C
C
That
sparked
change
and
is
widely
considered
to
be
among
the
most
important
events
leading
to
the
gay
liberation
movement
and
the
modern
fight
for
lesbian,
gay,
bisexual,
transgender
and
queer,
plus
or
lgbtq
plus
rights
in
the
united
states
and
whereas
pride
month
celebrates
and
recognizes
a
community
that
includes
people
who
are
lesbian,
gay,
bisexual,
transgender,
queer,
two-spirit,
pansexual,
asexual,
gender,
fluid
non-binary
intersex,
as
well
as
heterosexual
allies.
And
whereas
salt
lake
city
acknowledges
that
the
lgbtq
plus
community
and,
in
particular
indigenous
black
and
other
queer
people
of
color,
have
faced
and
continue
to
face.
C
B
Thank
you,
councilmember
wharton,
before
I
recognize
rob
mullman,
who
is
the
executive
director
and
ceo
of
the
utah
pride
center,
who
I
believe
is
here
to
join
us.
I
would
look
for
a
motion
adopting
the
resolution.
B
K
C
H
B
J
J
I
think
it
has
even
more
meaning
this
year
for
us
to
have
pride,
come
together
in
our
capital
city,
where
they're
having
more
volunteers
than
they've
ever
had
before
and
corporations
stepping
up
wanting
to
support
the
unity
and
celebration.
So
it's
it's
a
wonderful
thing
and
I
hope
that
as
people
decide
to
go
to
the
pride
fest
this
year,
they'll
know
that
that
entry
fee
is
paying
for
services
that
are
so
critically
needed
that
the
utah
pride
center
performs
365
days
a
year.
So
it's
it's
just
wonderful
to
be
back
together.
B
Thank
you,
madam
mayor,
and
I
see
that
one
of
my
favorite
people
ever
has
joined
us
rob,
who
is
the
executive
director
and
ceo
of
the
utah
pride
center?
Thank
you
so
much
for
joining
us.
This
is
always
difficult
for
me
when
we
do
these
awesome
resolutions
and
we
don't
get
to
be
in
person
to
give
big
hugs
and
take
lots
of
pictures.
So
I'm
just
going
to
take
a
picture
like
on
my
phone,
this
screens,
but
I'd
love
to
turn
it
over
to
you.
O
Thank
you
so
much.
I
am
just
going
to
take
a
few
moments,
it's
a
little
impromptu,
but
I
want
to
thank
the
mayor
and
the
city
council
for
that
incredible
incredible
resolution.
I
thought
that
I
would
bring
a
little
pride
flare
with
the
boa
but,
as
I
was
sitting
listening
to
it
being
read
out
loud,
I
was
just
reminded
about
what
a
powerful
statement
it
is,
and
I
I
thank
the
governor
for
his
resolution
and
declaration,
and
it
is
fabulous
fabulous
to
have
the
governor
make
that
statement.
O
But
I
want
this
council
to
recognize
just
how
powerful
this
resolution
is
and
how
much
meaning
it
has
to
our
communities.
It
mentions
out
loud,
not
just
gay,
bi,
trans
queer
individuals,
but
it
mentions
individuals
who
are
non-binary
who
are
intersex.
It
talks
about
the
black
indigenous
and
the
other
people
of
color
within
our
communities
in
the
queer
communities
and
says
out
loud
things
that
have
not
been
said
in
many
many
spaces,
and
I
want
to
thank
the
council
and
the
mayor
for
adopting
this
resolution.
It
is
incredibly
important.
O
It
is
incredibly
meaningful
and
thank
you.
Thank
you.
Thank
you.
I
hope
to
see
you
all
at
pride
month
or
pride
week.
We
are
building
what
looks
to
be
a
small
maze-like
craziness
outside
your
home
offices
there,
and
it
is
going
to
be
so
important
to
bring
our
stories
our
history,
our
community,
to
your
space
and
for
you
all
to
to
not
only
be
there
and
see
the
history
and
recognize
it,
but
also
for
you
all
to
be
at
the
march
and
rally
and
hear
those
voices
that
don't
often
get
heard.
O
B
Rob
thank
you
so
much
for
those
words
you
I
I
got
a
little
teary
while
you
were
talking
and
it's
it's
so
true
that
this
is
a
bold
and
beautiful
statement
and
I'm
grateful
to
be
a
part
of
it
not
only
with
the
queer
community
community,
but
obviously
with
city
council
and
rob.
I
just
want
to
thank
you
for
all
of
the
work
that
you
do
for
the
queer
community
and
for
the
utah
pride
center.
B
The
the
services
as
mayor
mendenhall
mentioned
the
services
that
you
provide,
particularly
for
many
of
our
youth
who
struggle
throughout
the
state
of
utah.
You've
provided
and
do
continue
to
provide
a
safe
haven,
a
place
where
people
can
get
to
know
who
them
they
are
themselves
and
be
just
as
out
loud
as
our
statement
was,
but
they
get
to
be
out
loud
and
their
voices
get
to
be
heard.
And
so
thank
you
so
much
for
your
service
to
our
community
and
look
forward
to
seeing
you
soon.
B
B
It's
just
a
friendly
reminder
that
all
of
those
rules
still
apply
at
this
public
hearing.
So
if
there
is
any
profanity
or
disrespect,
we
will
mute
you
and
you
will
forfeit
your
time
to
address
the
council
tonight.
I
have
been
in
these
council
meetings
a
lot
and
I
trust
that
many
of
you
and
all
of
you
will
give
your
comments
in
a
respectful
and
open
way
so
that
everybody
can
be
heard
and
feel
safe
in
this
space.
B
I
want
to
just
also
mention
that
the
public
hearings
there
will
be
several
items
and
would
ask
that
you
speak
to
just
that
particular
item
during
the
public
hearing.
If
there
are
items
outside
of
the
public
hearings
that
we
have
right
now,
you
can
make
those
comments
during
the
general
comments
section
which
is
later
on
in
tonight's
agenda.
So
I'd
ask
that
people
stick
to
this
sort
of
public
hearing
agenda
item
and
we
will
give
a
short
introduction
for
each
of
those
agenda
items.
B
So
you
know
what
we're
speaking
on,
and
I
appreciate
everyone
who
is
here
to
speak
to
these
items.
As
for
always,
we
have
robert
who
will
announce
three
names
so
that
people
can
be
prepared.
He'll
unmute,
your
mic,
your
time,
we
ask
your
time
will
begin
and
then
at
the
two
minute
timer
we
will
say
time
and
your
mic
will
be
muted.
B
As
always
again,
if
you
want
to
say
more,
please
reach
out
to
staff.
They
will
direct
you
in
the
right
direction
to
leave
more
comments.
If
you
do
not
get
to
finish
what
you
were
intending
to
say
and
if
you
do
not
wish
to
speak,
that's
also,
okay,
we
appreciate
people
being
here
and
listening,
and
so
you
can
message
our
staff
and
say
that
you're
just
here
to
listen
or
if
your
name
gets
called.
You
can
simply
just
tell
us
that
you're
here
to
listen
with
that.
B
Our
very
first
public
hearing
is
on
budget
amendment
number
nine
for
fiscal
year,
2020
2021,
and
before
we
begin,
I
will
turn
it
over
to
ben
ledke,
our
staff
policy
analyst
to
give
a
short
introduction.
Thank
you.
Ben.
F
F
Some
of
the
items
are
two
hundred
and
ninety
three
thousand
dollars
to
build
office
space
for
an
expansion
of
the
emergency
management
division,
forty
one
thousand
dollars
for
a
security
upgrade
to
the
911
department
and
moving
eight
and
a
half
million
dollars
of
transportation
funding
into
the
capital
improvement
program
fund.
So
those
projects
are
part
of
the
annual
open
and
competitive
process.
F
C
F
D
K
Okay
on
budget
amendment,
nine
salt
lake
city
is
bleeding
cops.
I
think
you're
losing
about
30
this
last
month.
These
are
the
best
trained
de-escalation
cops
in
utah.
It
doesn't
matter
where
they're
going,
they
are
going
and
salt
lake
will
be
left
with
just
new
cops.
They
get
21
dollars
an
hour
less
than
a
starting
bus
driver.
K
We
are
losing
those
10-year
experienced
cops
with
hundreds
of
thousands
of
dollars
of
training,
some
of
you
correctly
estimated
500
000
worth
of
training,
but
that
de-escalation
simulation
training
can't
be
found
anyplace
else
in
utah,
chief
brown
you're
going
to
have
a
skeleton
staff
of
new,
poorly
trained,
low-income
inexperienced,
cops
counsel.
Remember
what
former
chief
burbank
told
you
when
you
bought
the
five
hundred
thousand
dollar
de-escalation
simulation
system.
He
said
he
could
have
shot
thirteen
justifiably
in
his
career,
but
his
training
and
experience
resulted
in
no
one
shot
again.
K
K
This
budget
amendment
is
the
last
chance
to
stop
the
bleeding
of
cops
at
a
ten
thousand
dollar
retention
bonus.
The
regular
budget
can
work
on
a
respectful
salary,
remembering
that
other
departments
in
utah
value,
our
best
trained
de-escalation
cops
eight
to
ten
dollars
an
hour
more
otherwise.
Police
critical
incidents
will
increase
with
situations
that
inexperienced
and
under
trained
officers
are
going
to
face.
You
don't
even
have
enough
for
trained
for
hiring
social
workers.
D
Council
chair
looks
like
the
other
two
speakers
that
we
have
have
either
indicated.
They
are
not
actually
give
me
one
moment.
I
just
got
a
message
about
someone
wishing
to.
D
P
D
P
Great,
I
just
wanted
to
speak
to
address
george
chapman,
saying
that
the
uta
bus
drivers
get
more
than
than
incoming
policemen.
That's
untrue.
The
starting
wage
is
16
an
hour,
and
then
it
goes
up
progressively
to
1844
and
then
2369
through
a
five-year
period,
and
I
would
like
to
mention
that
they
also
provide
a
real
service
to
the
city.
I
yield
my
time.
B
Item,
thank
you
bobby
and
thank
you
to
everyone
who
commented.
I
will
look
for
a
motion
on
this.
B
C
B
C
B
I
have
a
motion
by
council
member
wharton
and
a
and
a
second
by
council
member
dugan
I'll
go
ahead
and
roll
call.
This
council
member
dugan,
yes
councilmember,
wharton.
J
E
J
B
Sorry,
the
ordinances
listed
as
items
g2
to
g13
are
all
ordinances.
B
All
of
the
ordinance
revisions
that
are
associated
with
the
implementation
of
the
mayor's
recommended
budget
for
salt
lake
city,
including
the
library
fund
for
fiscal
year,
2021
2022.
All
ordinances
will
be
heard
as
one
public
hearing
item
today,
and
this
is
the
public's
second
opportunity
to
provide
input.
I
will
turn
the
time
over
to
jen
bruno
to
give
a
short
introduction
and
jen.
If
you
don't
mind
during
your
introduction,
if
you
can
just
read
kind
of
an
abbreviated
version
of
all
of
the
ordinances,
so
people
understand
what
what
we're
all
talking
about.
Please.
C
C
The
council
will
continue
discussing
specific
departments
in
more
detail
at
each
of
their
work
sessions
which
have
concluded
in
may.
Although
you
can
go
back
and
review
the
videos
and
some
in
june
some
tuesdays
and
thursdays.
The
mayor's
proposed
budget
and
staff
reports.
Analysis
for
all
departments
are
available
on
the
city's
budget
hub
on
our
website,
as
well
as
a
hub
relating
to
the
topic
of
racial
equity
and
policing.
C
The
council
is
scheduled,
hopefully,
to
adopt
the
budget
on
june
15th,
although
by
law
they
have
until
june
30th
and
then
just
really
quickly
running
through
the
ordinances
ordinances
relating
to
employee
compensation
for
represented
employees
are
are
considered,
and
that's
the
with
the
three
unions
that
are
for
the
city
ordinances
to
adopt
the
rate
of
tax
levy
for
the
city
and
library
fund
and
then
an
ordinance
adopting
the
library
fund
also
an
ordinance
adopting
specific
fees
that
the
city
charges,
as
well
as
an
ordinance
adopting
proposed,
departmental
reorganizations,
and
I
believe
that's
it.
B
Thank
you,
jen
bobby
I'll
turn
it
over
to
you.
D
Thank
you,
council
chair.
We
have
approximately
30
people
here
to
speak
to
this
item,
beginning
with
eliza
mckinney,
followed
by
beverly
cooper
and
then
josh,
kelvins
eliza.
You
are
unmuted.
Q
Q
A
year
ago,
you
said
that
you
needed
more
time
that
this
was
just
the
beginning
of
fundamental
changes
you
wanted
to
make
for
our
city.
Instead,
you've
championed
and
cheered
for
the
police
voted
yes
to
every
budget
amendment.
They
have
asked
for
making
this
the
largest
police
budget
in
city
history
and
added
new
police
officers
to
the
force
after
promising.
Not
to
do
so.
Q
Q
Q
Q
M
I
wanted
to
address
the
budget
for
the
department
of
public
lands.
Is
this
the
right
place
to
do
it?
Yes,
yes,
it
is.
I
want
to
address
the
ongoing
funding
for
the
trails
master
plan
in
the
department
of
public
lands.
Stopping
the
trail
building
has
given
the
department
time
to
repair
and
mitigate
some
of
the
problems
with
the
new
trails.
M
I
want
to
look
at
the
first
goal
in
the
trails
goal
statement
in
the
master
plan
to
see
how
we're
doing
it's
called
environmental
sustainability,
which
says
trails
avoid
sensitive
habitat,
minimize
erosion,
sedimentation
and
vegetation
disturbance
and
make
efficient
use
of
available
natural
lands.
The
wild
and
scenic
nature
of
the
foothills
landscape
is
protected,
fragile,
natural
or
cultural
field
features
are
avoided.
In
reality,
the
trails
have
destroyed
fragile
habitat
and
natural
lands,
native
vegetation
and
animal
habitat.
M
There's
enough
erosion
that
trails
have
had
to
be
closed
for
repairs
in
their
short
existence.
After
the
last
rain,
there
were
some
significant
slides
that
preclude
the
loose
use
of
some
trails.
There's
significant
visual
pollution
and
scarring
geologic
destruction
has
occurred
like
unstable
trails
and
hillsides.
There's
no
piece
of
this
goal.
That's
been
met.
We
are
sadly
off
track
on
what
was
a
good
vision.
I'm
not
blaming
you
together.
We
could
go
through
each
of
these
trails
goals,
statements
and
see
how
they
have
not
been
met.
M
I
will
deliver
a
document
to
you
that
does
just
this.
I
invite
you
to
visit
the
trails
and
see
if
it
looks
like
what
you
thought
it
would.
I'm
asking
you
to
segregate
any
funds
intended
for
future
trail
building
into
a
restricted
account,
because
the
work
does
not
match
the
master
plan.
Funds
should
not
be
released
until
specific
conditions
are
met
relative
to
the
master
plan.
By
doing
this,
you
will
ensure
environmentally
sound,
sustainable,
enjoyable,
low
maintenance
trails
as
we
move
forward.
This
is
your
duty
and
your
legacy.
C
R
R
It
is
truly
mind-blowing
to
me
that
you
all
have
the
audacity
to
sit
here
with
this
proposed
budget.
After
everything
you
said
during
the
last
budget
cycle.
Talking
about
your
commitment
to
meaningful
change
over
time,
you're,
not
even
making
small
steps
this
year,
you're
actively
walking
backwards
by
continuing
to
raise
their
budget.
Slcpd
already
has
129
more
officers
than
comparably
signed
cities.
R
We
do
not
need
more
funding
for
trainings
and
body
cameras.
Cops
with
these
trainings
and
body
cameras
are
still
murdering
and
harassing
our
community
members.
Without
any
accountability,
it
is
not
dramatic
or
impulsive
to
reinvest.
The
city
budget
into
things
that
we
know
actually
reduce
crime,
housing,
access
to
food,
health
care,
mental
health
and
substance
use
treatment.
R
R
Your
declaration
of
pride
for
the
lgbtq
plus
community
is
hollow
when
you
turn
around
and
consider
throwing
more
money
at
the
police
who
continue
to
harass
the
most
vulnerable
of
our
lgbtq
community,
and
I
say
this
especially
for
my
fellow
queers
here
sitting
on
the
council.
I
urge
you
all
to
dream
just
a
little
bit:
bigger
fines,
violence
and
incarceration
just
lead
to
more
suffering
and
more
crime.
Public
safety
is
rooted
outside
of
the
police
system,
it's
rooted
in
a
robust
community.
So
please
start
investing
that
way.
Thank
you.
N
Hi,
my
name
is
brinley
frolic
and
I'm
a
resident
of
salt
lake
city
going
on
about
a
decade
now,
and
I
just
wanted
to
say
that,
while
I
commend
the
city
council
and
mayor
for
recognizing
that
we
need
to
make
changes
to
our
city,
your
actions
aren't
backing
up
your
words.
The
community
has
consistently
been
calling
on
you
to
defund
the
police.
This
is
a
really
straightforward
and
necessary
demand
of
our
city
leaders.
N
N
Despite
the
cry
that
we
need
the
police
to
protect
us,
which
is
often
used
as
an
excuse
to
keep
funding
them,
the
police
don't
keep
us
safe,
they
don't
heal
us
and
they
don't
prevent
any
harm
from
happening.
It's
time
for
you
to
take
seriously
this
demand
to
defund
the
police
and
I'll
eat
the
rest
of
my
time.
S
Hi,
I'm
lisa
freeze
I'm
calling
to
urge
the
city
council
to
stop
supporting
gentrification
and
increase
police
spending
in
salt
lake
city.
Specifically,
I'm
asking
that
you
oppose
the
learned,
dolly
vacation
ordinance,
which
will
allow
for
another
gentrification
project
in
rose
park,
with
no
consideration
of
those
who
are
being
displaced.
I'm
also
asking
you
to
abide
by
the
promises
you
made
last
year
to
defund
the
police.
S
Please
read
the
entire
defund
slcpd
post,
made
by
decar
strait
utah,
which
you
can
find
on
the
du
website
or
facebook
page
as
outlined
in
the
post
community
members
are
demanding.
You
reduce
the
police
department,
budget
and
the
number
of
police
by
50
and
then
importantly,
reinvest
these
funds
into
supportive
community
programs.
When
you
read
the
u's
demand
post,
you
can
find
more
information
about
where
these
cuts
can
come
from
and
what
types
of
services
to
reinvest
in
which
are
supported
by
research
to
actually
create
safer
communities.
S
And
no,
we
don't
mean
that
we
want
you
to
support
exploitative
panopticon
work
camps
with
no
access
to
needed
resources
for
people
most
in
need
of
shelter
like
projects
run
by
the
other
site
academy,
and
no,
we
don't
mean
profit-driven
healthcare
models
which
neglect
patient
care,
because
service
providers
are
overworked
and
underpaid,
and
no,
we
don't
mean
social
workers
acting
as
cops
last.
I
want
to
respond
to
this
idea
that
we
need
more
police
funding
in
areas
with
large
unsheltered
populations
and
the
concern
that
reducing
the
police
budget
will
make
these
areas
more
dangerous.
S
First
of
all,
we
need
to
recognize
the
underlying
need
when
folks
call
in
saying
the
homeless
are
breaking
into
their
bathrooms
or
defecating
in
public.
It
is
infuriating
to
me
that
the
solution
suggested
here
is
more
police,
when
you
shouldn't
have
to
be
a
genius
to
recognize
the
problem
as
a
lack
of
access
to
maintained
public
bathrooms.
If
you
don't
like
seeing
people
just
trying
to
live
on
your
street,
then
let's
invest
funds
away
from
the
police
and
into
accessible
permanent
housing
options.
S
The
police
do
not
solve
any
symptoms
of
poverty;
they
only
exacerbate
them
to
be
clear,
I'm
not
saying
that
harm
does
not
happen
when
people
are
living
in
severe
poverty.
I'm
saying
that
the
solution
is
not
the
police,
while
police
want
us
to
believe
they
keep
us
safe.
In
reality,
only
11
of
all
serious
crimes
even
result
in
an
arrest
and
about
two
percent
ended
in
a
conviction.
Police
come
after
him
has
already
happened,
and
they
do
nothing
to
address
the
actual
causes
of
crime.
S
D
M
Thank
you
hi.
My
name
is
crystal
kuh
and
since
we
just
heard
about
your
support
of
the
lgbtqia
community,
I'm
calling
ask
the
mayor
and
the
city
council
to
actually
support
us
by
defunding
the
police,
the
policing
incarceration
does
not
lower
crime
rates,
just
as
brinley
and
liz
said,
and
to
add
to
that.
The
root
cause
of
crime
is
poverty
and
social
environment,
so
that
is
lack
of
financial
resources,
housing
stability,
healthcare
stability,
meaningful
employment
opportunities.
M
Also,
you
add
to
that
the
rising
economic
inequality
in
accessibility
to
resources
and
social
stigma
due
to
racism
and
ableism.
I
would
also
like
to
remind
you
that
by
trans
youth
are
the
most
vulnerable
to
homelessness
and
police
violence,
so
please
support
us,
threatening
the
community
with
policing
in
prisons
does
not
fix
anything.
Punishing
people
who
have
little
options
does
not
solve
any
problems
and
continuing
to
funnel
money
away
from
actual
proven
methods
of
building
safer
cities
into
policing.
M
Just
reinforces
this
cycle,
so
we
need
to
divest
from
the
place,
invest
into
healing
the
issues
within
our
community.
We
need
expanded
and
accessible
rental
assistance.
Community
land
trusts,
allotments
counselors
for
our
kids
in
schools,
expanded
health
programs,
etc.
Our
city
budget
could
be
going
towards
programs
that
offer
communities,
financial
and
emotional
security.
Instead
of
allowing
violence
to
rise,
then
pay
cops
to
abuse
us
even
further,
so
please
refund
the
police
and
happy
party
month.
Thank
you.
D
F
Hello,
council
members,
as
I
already
said,
said
my
comments
at
the
beginning
of
this
meeting,
even
though
it
was
not
the
most
appropriate
time
for
that.
I
have
already
said
my
comments,
so
I
will
yield
the
rest
of
my
time.
Thank
you.
D
L
J
R
Hello
council,
my
name,
is
obey
goyal.
Thank
you
for
the
introduction
and
for
the
time
to
speak,
I'm
calling
to
express
my
concern
regarding
the
mayor's
recommended
budget
for
fiscal
year
2021
and
22
with
respect
to
the
allocation
of
police
funds.
R
Prior
discussions
over
the
last
year
indicated
a
severe
need
for
a
decrease
in
said
budget
instead
of
the
proposed
4
million
increase,
specifically
in
light
of
the
current
reality
of
police
brutality.
I'd
like
to
highlight
a
re-evaluation
of
the
657
thousand
dollar
increase
in
the
budget
for
salary
proposals.
The
650
thousand
dollar
increase
for
encampment
cleanup
proposed
as
an
extension
of
budget
amendment
number
seven
of
fiscal
year,
2021,
whose
language
includes
some
troublesome
discussion
of
protests
and
the
2.8
million
dollar
increase
for
hiring.
R
Despite
the
claims
over
the
last
year,
I'd
also
like
to
highlight
the
hundred
thousand
dollars
allocated
to
a
mental
health
professional
for
the
police,
which,
while
valiant
in
some
respects,
is
undermined
by
the
fact
that
the
city
does
not
provide
similar
services
to
those
individuals
who
are
brutalized
by
the
police
at
this
time.
R
These
funds
would
provide
more
value
in
housing
projects.
Food
equity
work,
education
and
the
like.
Given
the
mayor
and
this
council's
acknowledgment
of
the
1969
stonewall
riots,
I
ask
that
we
remember
their
cause
and
our
own
history.
The
riots
were
fundamentally
an
anti-police
right
for
lgbtq
rights,
divest
defund
happy
pride
month.
I
yield
my
time.
S
Can
you
hear
me
yeah,
okay,
awesome
hi,
I'm
maeve!
I
want
to
emphasize
first
that
again,
since
2013
salt
lake
city
has
continuously
increased
the
police
department
budget
by
55,
so
I'm
calling
again
with
my
community
members,
just
as
we
did
last
year
to
ask
that
you
defund
the
slcpd
and
cut
the
current
budget
in
half.
S
I
want
to
focus
specifically
on
the
part
of
the
budget.
Our
demand
is
to
cut
the
funding
of
the
administrative
and
operations
support
to
13.85
million
and
in
particular,
to
prioritize
cuts
to
school
resource
officers.
Among
several
other
positions,
I
am
a
phd
student
studying
the
school
to
prison
pipeline
and
at
the
university
of
utah
and
have
studied
extensively
the
dangerous
impact
of
police
officers
in
schools
and
communities.
I've
read
story
after
story
of
five-year-old
children,
handcuffed
taken
from
their
classrooms
of
students
arrested
even
here
in
salt
lake,
for
minor
behavioral
infractions.
S
This
criminalization
of
students
typically
target
students
who
are
already
marginalized
and
can
impact
the
course
of
their
lives.
Keeping
police
out
of
schools
is
one
way
to
reduce
the
harmful
impacts
of
youth
involvement.
Research
shows
it
just
shows
that
police
officers
do
not
make
schools
safer
as
a
whole
and
they
usually
just
work
to
arrest
students.
This
is
exacerbated
by
racial
disparities.
Black
students
in
particular
are
arrested
in
schools
at
disproportionately
high
rates
and
in
utah
compared
to
white
peers.
American
indian
students
are
8.8
times
more
likely
to
be
arrested
in
schools.
Q
Hi
thanks:
can
you
hear
me
yeah?
Okay,
I'm
annie
charles
I'm
a
therapist
here
in
salt
lake,
I'm
calling
on
you
to
cut
the
police
budget
by
50.
This
might
seem
extreme,
but
in
2020,
40
percent
of
people
shot
by
police
in
utah
were
having
mental
health
crisis.
It's
seen
a
record
number
of
police
shootings.
Why
are
we
still
having
them
respond
to
these
calls?
The
police
chief
mike
brown,
has
stated
before
the
police
are
the
most
expensive
and
least
effective
tool
for
mental
health,
substance
use
and
issues
of
homelessness.
Q
This
money
should
be
reallocated
to
a
civilian
response
team,
as
recommended
by
your
audit,
and
other
community
supports.
This
is
a
proven,
effective
strategy
in
cities
like
eugene
and
denver.
It
should
not
be
withheld
within
the
police
budget,
however,
because,
as
your
audit
stated,
they
do
not
accurately
and
transparently
budget
their
funds
outside
of
their
deadly
response
to
mental
health.
They
do
not
prioritize
the
safety
of
our
community
on
a
zoom
call.
Q
Last
year,
a
spokesman,
detective,
greg
wilkins
told
a
group
of
community
members
to
report
all
property
crime
that
it's
caused
by
decriminalization
of
drugs
and
that
people
using
meth
and
heroin
were
a
quote
unquote
danger
to
the
morals
of
our
society.
When
pressed
on.
Why?
Who
is
only
focusing
on
these
drugs
he's,
for
example,
when
alcohol
increases
the
risk
of
domestic
violence,
he
stated
we're
looking
at
the
property
crime,
not
the
domestic
violence
stuff.
How
are
we
supposed
to
feel
safe
in
a
community
when
they
reduce
domestic
violence
to
stuff?
Q
It's
an
indicative
of
issue
of
an
issue
within
the
culture
priority.
The
priority
is
not
healing
and
safety,
as
you
all
said.
Last
year,
when
you
cut
the
police
budget
that
it
was
only
the
beginning
to
deconstruct
the
problems
in
our
systems
and
fix
them
over
the
course
of
the
year,
you've
increased
the
budget
by
eight
million
dollars
and
will
be
adding
another
five
percent
you've
made
reforms
that
led
to
a
fifteen
percent
decrease
in
use
of
force,
but
how
many
people
are
still
victim
to
the
police?
Q
K
Okay,
I
keep
asking,
can
you
hear
me
now.
K
You,
okay,
hundreds
of
protesters
are
demanding
defunding
the
police,
but
every
month
10
000
are
demanding.
More
police
protesters
are
demanding
better
focus
on
de-escalation
training
for
police,
but
the
best
trained
in
utah
are
leaving
salt
lake
city
police
for
other
departments
and
de-escalation-trained
cops
are
being
lost,
hundreds
of
thousands
of
dollars
in
de-escalation
training
lost
and
the
only
way
to
stop
the
loss
is
to
give
retention
bonuses
and
higher
pay
or
tell
the
protesters.
Sorry,
we
lost
the
best
trained.
De-Escalation,
train
cops.
K
Sorry,
we
don't
even
have
enough
cops
to
hire
social
workers
if
other
cities
believe
our
cops
are
worth
eight
to
ten
dollars
an
hour
more.
This
city
needs
to
quickly
increase
salaries
or
wait
five
years
to
restore
a
well-trained
de-escalation
department.
Chief
brown,
you
make
the
mayor
look
good,
but
it's
time
to
stop
putting
a
smiley
face
on
this.
This
is
important.
You
chief
need
to
push
to
retain
these
officers
and
salt
lake
city
transportation
continues
its
war
on
cars
by
removing
parking
on
island
drive.
K
Police
brutality
is
nothing
compared
to
the
pedestrians
that
will
be
forced
to
cross
a
busy
street
and
risk
death
by
forcing
people
to
cross
the
street.
There
used
to
be
four
lanes
forcing
residents
to
drive
around
the
block
on
formerly
quiet
residential
streets
increases
pollution.
Duh
this
city
should
not
increase
pollution.
What
really
bothers
me
is
that
this
city
puts
in
bull
belts
and
crosswalks
to
protect
pedestrians,
but
it
forces
them
to
cross
the
street
despite
the
jaywalking
laws,
so
let's
defund
the
transportation
department.
M
Hi,
thank
you
for
giving
me
time,
I'm
honestly
jaded
speaking
at
this
meeting,
because
last
year
we
were
told
that
the
small
budget
cut
was
only
the
beginning,
but
here
we
are
with
a
five
percent
increase.
There
is
real
evidence
in
tax
savings,
crime
and
crime
reduction
and
poverty
reduction
when
we
invest
in
the
community,
so
it
feels
so
archaic
to
throw
money
at
the
police.
There
isn't
very
much
evidence
of
the
good
they
are
doing
or
change.
Behavior
sends
our
calls
to
action.
M
Yet
we
see
real
tax
savings
when
we
have
things
like
rental
assistance,
mental
health
services,
public
spaces
and
a
lot
of
these
seem
like
very
basic
necessities,
proceed
for
a
city,
yet
they
are
not
being
met
because
they're
being
prioritized
to
meet
things
like
counselors
for
the
police
or
pope
overtime
to
to
for
abatements
and
body
cams,
just
to
name
a
few
things.
Yet
many
of
us
are
paying
so
much
in
taxes
without
having
our
basic
needs
met
or
even
being
like
having
a
sense
of
safety.
M
We
do
not
need
to
hire
more
officers
or
pay
them
more.
The
backbones
of
our
society
are
being
paid
much
less
and
the
police
are
not
crime,
prevention
or
harm
reduction,
they
are
reactionary
and
dangerous
and
they
do
not
protect
people
that
look
like
me
or
my
family.
I
I
just
first
wanted
to
say
how
grateful
I
am
and
and
privileged,
I
feel
to
be
speaking
here
today
and
and
how
torn
I
am
in
speaking,
I
don't
think
I'm
the
best
informed.
I
always
have
more
questions
than
I
do
answers
and
I'm
so
glad
that
there
are
other
people
on
this
call
who
brought
their
receipts
and
their
stats
and
everything
and
just
want
to
echo
all
of
those
points.
I
Needs
list
is
so
much
longer
than
mine
and
far
more
important
than
convincing
them
that
coming
and
talking
it
somewhere
like
this,
would
fulfill
those
needs.
I
I
there
are
a
lot
of
stories
that
I
wish
could
be
highlighted
more
than
mine
and
but
mine's
the
one
that
I
have
so.
I
And
I'm
I'm
not
even
sure
where
to
start
on
it.
In
this
amount
of
time
I,
in
the
first
week
of
working
there
felt
that
wow,
our
education
system
has
really
failed
a
lot
of
people
just
with
so
many
things
that
they
couldn't
understand
or
were
having
difficulties.
With
that,
I
didn't
understand
it
all
felt
like
something
our
education
system
failed
on.
D
L
It
takes
to
take
for
y'all
to
take
steps
to
eliminate
the
funding
from
the
non-departmental
budget
and
other
departments
reserved
for
policing
operations,
invest
the
funds
diverted
from
the
police
department
into
support
of
community
programs
to
also
reduce
the
police
department
budget
by
50
percent,
from
79
million
to
39.5
million.
The
reason
why
we're
saying
defund
the
police
is
because
the
polices
are
brutalizing
us
in
our
communities.
L
For
example,
the
yanagi
family
rose
park
was
brutalized
three
weeks
ago,
and
none
of
you
guys,
none
of
the
council
members
went
up
to
their
homes
and
to
see
if
they
were
okay.
So
this
is
you
know,
and
they
and
they
are
a
latino
family.
You
know
this
is
the
reality
that
we
got
to
face
on
our
side
of
town
of
being
brutalized
by
the
by
the
cops.
So
we're
asking
you
guys
to
please
reduce
the
police
department
budget
by
50.
Thank
you.
S
Hi,
I'm
just
calling
in
today
to
like
others
on
the
call
express
a
desire
I
expressed
a
year
ago
as
well.
I
want
to
and
and
have
one
at
the
slcpd
to
receive
no
further
funding
and
instead
have
its
budget
cut
and
those
funds
redirected
to
programs
and
community
resources
that
were
needed
last
year
and
are
still
needed
now
in
salt
lake
city.
If
we
want
less
camps
and
less
camp
abatements,
the
answer
is
not
police
endlessly
and
violently.
S
Shifting
those
camps
around
town,
it's
giving
people
the
resources
to
stay
off
the
streets
in
the
first
place,
or
once
they
do
get
to
the
streets
to
camp
in
places
that
are
safe
with
bathrooms,
running
water,
access
to
shelter
and
needle
exchanges
for
those
living
with
substance
addiction,
a
huge
problem
in
utah.
If
we
want
less
homeless
people,
the
solution
is
not
police.
Helping
landlords
kick
tenants
out
of
apartments
during
a
housing
crisis,
it's
rent
assistance
and
affordable
housing.
S
If
it's
data
you
need
to
entangle
the
supposedly
complicated
ask
it's
there,
and
I
know
you
know
community
organizations
like
decarcer
utah,
who
have
listed
and
done
the
research
on
those
demands
and
you
I
know
you
know
how
to
contact
them
and
I'm
just
asking
that
you
give
the
concept
of
defunding
a
real,
fiscally,
backed
chance
and
work
towards
new
solutions
towards
helping
residents
of
salt
lake
thrive
outside
punitive
so-called
solutions
like
policing
that
only
reinforce
cycles
of
violence,
crime
and
poverty
and
quickly
respond
to
former
commenter
george
protesters
are
not
asking
for
de-escalation
training
because
we
know
that
doesn't
work.
S
T
Yes,
sorry,
this
is
d
afa
actually
had
to
step
out
so
I'll,
just
for
a
business
call
I'll
take
I'll
take
over
for
her
yeah.
No.
I
just
wanted
to
say
that
I'm
also,
you
know,
echoing
everyone
on
the
this
this
meeting,
and
I
I
am
a
pacific
islander,
so
being
a
person
of
color,
you
know
it
you
can.
T
You
can
really
feel
and
see
how
how
heavy
the
racism
is
towards
the
police
on
our
end,
because
so
many
times
I've
been
pulled
over
for
no
reason
and
I'm
just
one
pacific
islander,
so
you
can
just
imagine
all
the
other
pacific
islanders
who
are
at
elementary
and
all
the
way
up
to
the?
U
of?
T
U-
and
you
know
all
the
other
universities
that
y'all
see
us
playing
sports
or
whatever
going
to
school
and
reaching
our
dreams,
but
I
I
feel
like
there
should
be
other
ways
to
to
to
kind
of
communicate
or
or
like
not
having
the
police
to
get
involved,
maybe
having
some
of
our
mothers
or
some
of
our
uncles
or
some
other
people
in
the
community
who
can
actually
be
there
to
help
out
our
own
community.
T
Instead
of
having
new
people
being
hired
on
and
just
like,
then
then
we
started
all
over
and
let's
give
us
that
training
for
them
to
help
them
train
to
to
communicate
with
our
kids,
our
youth
and
and
our
adults,
and
folks
that
who
are
in
who
are
incarcerated
and
also
folks,
folks
who
are
black.
You
know
native,
not
just
just
me
a
pacific
islander
but
other
folks
who
are
of
color.
So
if
y'all
can
just
like,
please
just
look:
look
into
that
and
not
fun.
T
D
G
Thank
you
so
much,
I'm
going
to
make
another
statement
about
the
theater
in
the
general
comments
section,
but
I
just
wanted
to
shout
out
my
support
for
the
brown
berets
and
what
they're
fighting
for
and
rose
park
area
and
then
also
the
wasatch
tennis,
united
fighting
for
affordable
housing
before
I
got
really
involved
with
the
theater,
my
background's
in
black
lives
matter
and
I've
been
part
of
the
slc
cag
meetings,
and
I
know
mike
brown
and
all
this
stuff.
G
G
More
policing
won't
solve
issues
of
homelessness,
it
won't
solve
issues
of
housing
or
or
drug
use,
or
anything
like
that.
We
need
to
think
smarter
about
this
and
be
more
effective
where
our
dollars
are
going
not
to
violence
but
to
you
know,
actual
real,
long-term
solutions.
You
know,
instead
of
spending
overtime
to
just
chase
the
the
homeless
camps
around
town.
G
I
think
it's
a
lot
more
important
to
figure
out
long-term
care
for
them,
with
housing
and
and
social
workers,
and
things
like
this,
so
I
really
appreciate
everyone
getting
on
here
and
speaking
out
against
this,
and
I
think
we
should
be
smart
about
this
and
I'd
like
to
add
that
the
history
of
policing
in
america
comes
from
colonialism
and
genocide,
and
this
would
be
a
conversation
that
should
be
led
by
communities
of
color
because
they
are
disproportionately
affected
by
policing,
and
this
is
the
issue
where
they
need
to
be
centered,
and
especially,
you
know,
as
people
mentioned
with
stonewall
and
pride
today.
H
H
J
D
N
Thank
you.
My
name
is
caroline
and
I'm
a
small
business
owner,
a
therapist
in
the
salt
lake
city
area
and
the
daughter
of
a
criminal
judge.
I
work
with
mostly
marginalized
communities
and
I'm
here
to
ask
that
the
city
council
follow
through
with
their
promise
they
made
last
year
to
continue
to
defund
the
police.
N
This
person
was
one
of
just
30
people
who
were
killed
by
the
slcpd
this
last
year.
I'm
concerned
about
the
increase
of
the
police
budget
when
it
seems
these
funds
would
be
better
spent
on
community
mental
health
interventions
and
harm
reduction
resources
for
people
who
suffer
most
at
the
hands
of
the
slcpd
non-violent
drug
users.
Thank
you
and
I
yield
my
time.
P
P
Such
a
basic,
purely
human
need
is
then
criminalized,
despite
the
fiscal
negligence
of
this
council
and
really
like
the
rather
blatant
disregard
for
the
most
vulnerable
groups
in
the
city
and
like
this
is
only
a
really
small
tributary
at
the
confluence
of
all
of
these
issues
of
bills
and
resolutions
to
support
more
luxury
condos,
the
tearing
down
of
historical
buildings
that
could
be
allocated
for
use
by
the
community
for
anything
other
than
funding
to
the
police
budget,
especially
after
multiple
promises
were
made
to
reduce
the
police
budget.
P
This
just
seems
dishonest
and
also
like
a
really
poor
investment
in
the
people
that
are
actually
here
living
in
your
city
and
experiencing
police
violence
and
brutality.
Every
day
I
yield
my
time.
D
Q
What's
up
so
being
black.
P
In
america
already
means,
I
have
to
question
the
intentions
of
law
enforcement.
I
don't
feel
safe.
When
I
see
a
cop,
I
immediately
become
fearful
and
I
feel
at
risk.
Allocating
these
funds
to
the
police
department
would
only
increase
that
fear
since
moving
from
michigan
to
utah,
it's
very
clear
that
there's
discrimination
against
people
of
color
everywhere,
and
it's
blatant
here
in
salt
lake
city
last
year,
ten
percent
of
people
killed
by
the
slc
police
were
black,
yet
black
people
only
make
up
two
percent
of
the
state
population.
P
I
fear
that
putting
funding
towards
more
police
officers
will
only
cause
those
statistics
to
rise
and
more
inequity
to
take
place,
that
money
could
go
towards
educating
our
police
force
and
cultural
awareness
or
whatever
other
types
of
resources.
We
could
think
of
that
could
help
them
understand
the
people
of
color
in
their
community.
We
don't
need
more
cops.
We
need
more
compassion
and
empathy.
N
These
communities
often
don't
have
access
to
affordable
and
accessible
mental
health
resources
experiencing
the
hardships
in
life
without
the
necessary
mental
support,
is
isolating
and
leads
to
deeper
problems
that
can
be
easily
avoided
by
having
professionals
who
often
offer
mental
support.
I
demand
defunding
the
police
and
reducing
the
number
of
police
on
patrol
units.
We
must
invest
mental
health
in
mental
health
resources
for
therapists
and
social
workers
to
offer
free
therapy
programs
for
all
individuals.
N
Hi,
thank
you.
I'll
keep
my
comments
brief.
I
would
like
to
just
echo
the
sentiments
of
the
need
to
reduce
the
police
budget
and
invest
in
costs,
invest
the
cost
savings
into
supportive
community
programs
like
mental
health
resources
and
other
things
that
can
support
people
who
are
in
situations
where
they
need
basic
life
services.
N
J
Hi,
I'm
a
12-year.
J
P
B
Thank
you
so
much
bobby
and
thank
you
to
all
of
our
commenters
today,
council
members,
we
have
been
at
it
besides
the
whole
day
at
the
formal
meeting
for
about
an
hour
and
a
half,
so
I
thought
we
would
take
just
a
little
five
to
ten
minute
break
so
just
meet
you
back
here
sometime,
madam
chair.
E
Got
it
so
I'd
like
to
do
that,
if
you
don't
mind
I'll
move
the
camera,
let's
see,
council
continue,
let's
see,
move
the
council
close
the
public
hearing
and
refer
the
item
to
a
future
date
for
action.
E
B
Okay,
I
have
a
motion
by
council
member
rogers
and
a
second
by
council
member
fairest.
I
think
I'm
still
getting
to
love
your
voice
and
couldn't
see
you.
So
I
will
roll
call
this
councilmember
dugan,
yes,
councilmember
rogers,.
J
B
A
A
B
B
Thank
you,
council
members.
Thank
you
to
the
public
for
allowing
us
to
have
a
little
break.
We
are
at
agenda
h
each
part
of
our
agenda
potential
action
items.
The
first
item
is
an
ordinance
that
would
vacate
a
city-owned
alley
adjacent
to
properties
at
1025,
west,
north
temple,
1022,
1028,
1030
and
1032
west
learned
avenue.
B
J
B
B
I'm
a
yes
and
anna
is
not
here
at
this
moment
for
this
boat
that
passes
next
item
is
h2
and
it
is
regarding
an
ordinance
that
would
vacate
a
city-owned
alley,
known
as
the
fern
subdivision
alley,
located
between
1000,
east
and
1100
east
and
between
wood
avenue
and
logan
avenue.
I
will
look
for
a
motion.
J
B
J
J
B
B
Let's
see
at
this
time,
we
are
moving
on
to
our
comments
section.
Are
there
any
questions
for
the
mayor
and
also,
madam
mayor?
Thank
you
so
much
for
being
here.
As
always,
council
members,
do
you
have
any
questions
for
madam
mayor,
I
don't
see
any
so.
Thank
you
again
for
being
here.
We
appreciate
it.
B
B
If
your
only
option
is
to
call
in-
and
it
is
only
two
minutes-
we
recognize-
that
is
not
a
lot
of
time,
but
if
you
want
to
continue
making
comments,
please
contact
our
staff
and
they
will
direct
you
in
the
right
place
to
continue
making
your
comments.
You
can
email,
mail,
call
text,
facebook,
lots
of
ways
to
get
in
touch
with
us
to
give
us
your
comments.
B
D
Thank
you,
council,
chair
first,
we
have
josh
kibblewood,
kilovitz,
paula,
bray,
brinley,
frolich
and
then
daniel
shelling,
josh,
you're,
unneeded
it
looks
like
josh,
is
not
interested
in
speaking
for
general
comment,
so
we
will
go
ahead
and
move
on
to
brinley
brinley
you're
unmuted.
N
N
N
I
honestly
think
the
city
should
consider
placing
a
moratorium
on
any
new
development
until
it
can
figure
out
how
to
house
the
people
who
are
not
already
housed
to
restore
old
houses
and
buildings,
full
of
rich
history
and
cultural
interests
such
as
the
utah
pantage
theater,
and
to
get
rental
assistance
to
people
in
businesses
who
are
struggling
to
pay
there.
So
they
don't
have
to
worry
about
moving
somewhere
new
and
uprooting
their
lives.
That's
all
I
have
to
say.
J
My
name
is
daniel
shelling
and
I'm
a
27-year
resident
of
salt
lake
city
in
the
avenues,
as
well
as
an
avid
runner
and
hiker
in
the
foothills
above
salt
lake
city.
I
would
like
to
begin
by
thanking
the
city
council
and
mayor
mendenhall
for
pausing
further
implementation
of
the
foothills
trail
master
plan
last
week.
As
a
number
of
concerned
residents
have
requested.
J
This
is
indeed
a
welcome
step.
However,
many
of
us
are
still
concerned
about
the
potential
for
continued
implementation
of
phase
one
of
the
master
plan
at
the
end
of
the
four-month
pause
and
the
implementation
of
phase
two,
without
carefully
reviewing
the
many
problems
identified
with
the
plan
over
the
last
nine
months
as
a
professional
geologist,
I'm
particularly
concerned
with
the
way
trails
have
been
plowed
out
of
geologically,
unstable
hillsides,
along
city
creek
and
on
the
hills
above
18th
avenue
meadows,
resulting
in
what
are
clearly
unsustainable
and
potentially
dangerous
trails.
J
Unfortunately,
problems
with
both
the
master
plan
and
its
implementation
are
not
restricted
to
geological
stability
and
sustainability
issues.
I
therefore
think
it
is
imperative
that
the
city,
council
and
mayor
mendenhall
insist
that
all
aspects
of
the
foothills
trail
master
plan
be
carefully
reviewed
by
not
only
city
employees,
but
also
by
outside
experts,
trail
users
and
city
residents
prior
to
continuing
further
work
on
any
trail
construction.
J
P
Okay,
can
you
hear
me?
Yes,
I
am
hilary
jacobs,
a
27-year
resident
of
salt
lake
city.
Thank
you
for
pausing
the
active
construction
of
the
foothills
trails
master
plan.
Yet
there
is
work
that
can
and
must
be
done
during
this
time.
Among
your
five
stated
trail
systems
goals.
The
suction
headed
enjoyable
specifies
that
the
new
trails
should
quote
cater
to
a
variety
of
recreation
types
and
also
to
a
variety
of
desired
experiences.
P
Yet
the
master
plan
seems
to
prioritize
only
certain
user
groups,
rather
than
the
variety
that
the
plan
explicitly
states.
Interestingly,
while
the
beautiful
foothill
setting
supports
this
goal,
your
plan
restricts
the
vision
and
experience.
I
see
no
evidence
of
equitable
outreach
to
or
input
from,
diverse
user
groups,
many
of
whom
actively
enjoy
our
foothills.
You've.
Distinguished
only
two
groups,
pedestrians
and
mountain
bikers,
with
no
recognition
of
the
many
types
of
users
that
fall
into
each
of
these
categories.
P
Cyclists
include
road,
mountain
downhill
and
bmx
riders.
Pedestrians
include
walkers,
hikers
runners,
dog
walkers
families
with
children,
skiers,
snowshoers,
picnickers,
bird
watchers,
wildlife,
photographers
botanists,
school
groups,
boys
and
girls,
clubs
and
those
enjoying
family
reunions,
weddings
birthday
parties
and
business
gatherings,
etc.
P
Further
by
virtue
of
the
way
trails
have
been
designated,
the
two
groups
classified
as
pedestrians
and
mountain
bikers
have
been
pitted
against
each
other.
What
benefit
can
arise
from
this?
These
areas
are
also
used
by
citizens
who
speak
a
rich
diversity
of
languages,
notably
most
notably
spanish.
For
many
immigrants,
the
foothills
are
a
vital
getaway
from
cramped
apartments.
Did
the
city
reach
out
to
any
of
these
stakeholders
in
their
own
languages
to
find
out
how
the
master
plan
could
accommodate
them?
Perhaps
most
egregiously?
P
I
hope
that
in
the
next
four
months,
parks
and
trails
begins
the
bedrock
work
of
any
master
plan,
genuine
outreach
and
engagement
with
all
communities
for
whom
it
is
ostensibly
intended,
not
just
the
loudest
most
money
most
privileged
and
those
given
highest
priority
in
your
mountain
bike.
Master
plan,
it's
time
to
create
a
genuine
plan
that
is
inclusive
and
works
for
all.
H
Thank
you.
First
of
all,
I
want
to
thank
the
salt
lake
city,
mayor
and
city
council
for
pausing
construction
of
the
phase.
One
foothills
trail
plan
this
moment
of
community
reflection
is
critical
because
our
future
is
at
stake.
My
name
is
gavin
noyes.
I
live
in
district
3
and
I
serve
on
the
board
of
save
our
canyons.
I
run
hike
and
bike
in
the
foothills
almost
every
day.
The
wasatch
mountains
and
foothills
are
the
gem
of
our
city.
They
are
our
coastline
our
central
park
and
serve
as
an
escape
to
everyday
people.
Every
day.
H
Today,
I'm
here
to
ask
the
city
council
to
redo
and
expand
the
foot,
the
vision
for
the
foothills
trail
plan
by
allowing
us
to
develop
a
citizen's
alternative
and
incorporate
the
many
values
that
were
overlooked
by
the
original
plan.
The
reason
for
this
are
one
to
protect
the
environment,
two
to
correct
the
failure
process
and
insufficient
public
engagement
and
three
to
create
a
legacy
of
land,
stewardship
and
recreational
opportunity
that
we,
as
citizens,
can
all
be
proud
of
for
generations
to
come.
H
H
We
want
to
see
a
city
bustling
with
diversity
and
full
of
culture
and
to
have
that
stand
in
stark
contrast
to
natural
lands
that
are
immediately
adjacent
to
downtown
and
our
neighborhoods
lands
that
are
ecologically
intact,
diverse
and
abundant
with
clean
water,
fresh
air,
healthy
soils
and
wildlife.
We
have
this
balance
today,
thanks
to
generations
of
foresight
and
caretaking
of
these
same
foothills,
saber
canyons
is
in
favor
of
increasing
trails.
We
are
active
proponents
of
mountain
biking
in
these
mountains.
H
H
H
All
right,
hi
everybody,
my
name-
is
austin
wood.
I've
lived
in
salt
lake
for
about
three
years
now
transplanted
from
los
angeles.
I
really
just
wanted
to
voice
my
support
for
pretty
much
everything
that
was
said
today
by
the
community
and
just
urge
everyone,
every
elected
official
here
to
just
listen
to
the
community.
It
sounds
like
sounds
like
they've
done.
The
research
on
every
specific
topic
that
they're
here
for
and
they're
very
happy
to
give
you
that
research
and
probably
have
tried
to
and
probably
you've
taken
it.
H
Maybe
not,
but
that's
what
we're
here
for
is
to
talk
to
you
and
to
tell
you
what
we
think
is
best
for
our
city,
because
we're
here
we're
in
it
and
a
lot
of
us
are
underrepresented,
and
so
I
just
want
to
voice
my
support
for
most
for
pretty
much
everything
that
was
said
today
and
just
urge
you
to
you
know,
listen
to
us
and
take
into
account
what
what
we're
talking
about.
So
thank
you
for
letting
me
talk
and
happy
pride
month.
J
Hello,
thank
you
for
having
me,
I
am
the
yale
crest
community
council
chair
and
I
am
speaking
as
a
individual
citizen.
I've
been
hearing
a
lot
of
traffic
issues,
specifically
speed
and
residential
areas,
as
well
as
commercial
traffic
violating
regulations.
J
I
would
like
us
to
investigate
as
a
city
a
way
to
assess
the
vehicle
and
not
the
driver
and
create
fees
for
vehicles
that
are
operating
outside
the
rules
and
eliminate
traffic
stops,
take
it
completely
out
of
the
criminal
end
and
instead
make
it
basically
an
excessive
use
fee
that
can
be
assessed
by
license
plate
via
cameras
or
other
type
of
technologies.
G
Awesome
thanks
so
much
guys
I'll
try
to
talk
fast.
I
have
so
much
to
talk
about
one
real,
quick,
fun
fact,
since
it
is
pride
month
and
the
start
of
pride,
I'd
like
to
talk
mention
that
in
the
1910s
there
was
an
array
of
drag
dancers
at
the
pantages.
G
You
know
so
by
destroying
that
theater
you're
destroying
one
of
the
oldest
parts
of
queer
history
in
the
city.
It's
pretty
fascinating
and
amazing.
We
have
a
series
about
it
anyway,
so
I
I
talked
earlier
about
some
of
this
stuff
with
the
rda
and
the
lies
and
corruption
going
back.
You
know
several
years
now
what
what
what's
needs
to
happen
here
is
you
know
it's
time
for,
for
you
guys
on
the
council
and
the
mayor
to
to
make
this
right.
You
know
this
deal
needs
to
be
stopped
immediately
from
heinz
and
lasalle.
G
It
was
built
off,
lies
and
corruption
and
fraud,
and
how
are
we
supposed
to
have
planning
commission
meeting
next
week
when
the
whole
deal
was
was
set
up
on
from
lies
from
the
beginning
about
the
historic
registry,
from
the
the
restoration
costs
from
all
the
stuff?
I'm
only
mentioning
a
few
things.
My
investigation
is
30
pages
long.
You
know,
there's
lots
to
add
from
there
you
know,
and
then
there
needs
to
be
a
full
audit
investigation
into
the
rda.
G
The
theater
needs
to
be
open
to
the
public,
so
people
can
go
in
and
see
it.
We
need
to
have
real
experts,
go
in
and
actually
finally
put
accurate
restoration
costs
together,
and
you
know
this
is
a
very
serious
matter
that
goes
way
beyond
the
theater.
G
This
goes
into
the
heart
of
our
democracy,
of
what
this
powerful
agency
that
controls
tens
of
millions
of
dollars
and
dozens
of
acres
in
this
in
the
city
is
unilaterally
doing
going
against
the
will
of
the
people,
the
the
the
the
ability
for
you
guys
to
do
your
jobs
as
the
city
council
and
there
to
be
educated
with
facts,
and
it
needs
to
never
happen
again.
G
You
know
this
needs
to
something
needs
to
seriously
change
here
and
the
theater
needs
to
finally
be
restored,
and
and
freed
from
the
six
year
long
grasp
of
exclusive
agreements
from
heinz
and
lasalle.
I
thank
you
for
your
time
really
excited
to
talk
to
you
more.
We
have
so
much
information
and
we
would
love
to
have
a
public
meeting
about
the
rda,
this
corruption
and
the
future
of
the
theater
and
bring
bring
all
the
experts
with
those
preservation.
Utah
evergreen
architectural
arts
and
you
know,
really
have
a
serious,
deep
conversation
about
this.
P
P
First,
the
city's
position
regarding
notification
was
not
upheld
by
the
state
on
spaceman
for
property
rights
that
didn't
cost
the
city
anything
initially,
but
the
city
had
to
rewrite
the
ordinance
based
on
the
omsputsmen
opinion
and
that
process
took
years
of
staff
time.
The
city
also
had
to
write
the
ordinance
for
the
fbu
in
two
zone,
which
was
never
intended
to
be
used
next
to
any
zone
except
fbun1,
and
there
was
no
fbun1
anywhere
in
the
historic
district,
much
less
adjacent
to
the
proposed
reza.
P
The
hearing
at
the
planning
commission
had
to
be
redone
because
of
the
issue
of
notification
and
parts
of
my
house
became
impassable
from
the
accumulated
clutter
of
this
cat
and
mouse
game
in
land
use.
I
don't
know
how
to
assign
a
cost
to
the
time
that
the
city
attorneys
and
planners
spent
on
this
one
project.
The
developer
had
an
architect
an
attorney,
an
historian
and
a
lobbyist
on
his
payroll.
The
disruptions
in
my
own
life
and
the
lives
of
my
neighbors
were
considerable,
and
no
one
was
opposed
to
the
redevelopment
of
the
parking
lot.
P
No
one
everyone
was
in
favor
of
the
redevelopment
of
the
surface
parking
lot.
Most
of
us
had
anticipated
it
for
years
in
the
rear
view
mirror.
It
is
clear
to
me
that
we
should
have
started
with
a
small
area
planning
process
for
the
block.
A
small
area
plan
would
have
addressed
the
complexity
of
the
historic
overlay,
the
mix
of
existing
zones
and
the
interface
of
commercial
and
residential
uses.
Previously,
the
city
had
used
this
tool
frequently,
especially
in
the
central
community.
P
D
To
chair
next,
we
have
mave
wall,
followed
by
ian
harris
and
then
adam
wit
made
your
unmuted.
S
Hi
thanks
for
hearing
me
again
and
thank
you
for
what
I
know
has
been
a
long
day
of
meetings.
I
hope
that
you're
able
to
let
our
comments
sink
in
as
in
the
next.
You
know
few
days
I
just
wanted
to
mention
my
support
of
the
rose
park,
brown
berets
and
the
my
disappointment
in
your
recent.
In
the
past
few
minutes
approval
of
the
learned
alley
vacation.
S
This
ordinance
allows
the
lasso
apartments
to
undertake
another
gentrification
project
that
the
poor
and
working
class
families
in
the
community
will
not
be
able
to
afford
the
families
that
have
lived
in
the
home
in
these
homes
have
been
displaced
and
are
not
properly
being
compensated
to
obtain
a
new
home
in
rose
park
and
further.
I
think
that
it's
right
that
we
halt
all
new
housing
developments
in
salt
lake
city
until
we
can
provide
sustainable,
long-term
housing,
not
tiny
homes
and
for
all
the
residents
who
are
currently
forced
to
live
on
the
streets.
Thank
you.
E
Thank
you
hi,
I'm
adam
witt,
I'm
a
salt
lake
city
resident,
whose
comments
today
hope
to
bring
awareness
to
the
council
about
the
amazing
things
going
on
at
the
tennis
centers,
and
that
the
city
should
consider
a
budget
amendment
to
support
requests
that
would
improve
the
tennis
centers
for
decades
to
come.
A
little
background
on
me,
I'm
originally
from
carson
city
nevada.
E
What
is
going
on
at
these
two
tennis
centers
is
miraculous
and
should
be
celebrated.
The
dedicated
volunteer
foundation
that
supports
liberty,
hills
tennis,
has
spearheaded
over
2.5
million
dollars
of
savings
to
salt
lake
city
for
necessary
improvements
and
upgrades
at
both
facilities.
All
funds
have
been
exhausted.
Now
is
the
time
for
the
city
who
ultimately
owns
the
property
to
add
some
skin
in
the
game.
E
As
someone
with
my
own
foundation,
which
specializes
in
underserved
youth
sports
scholarships,
I
understand
the
need
to
give
back
and
every
dollar
that
the
coach,
mike's
friends
of
public
tennis
foundation
has
put
into
capital
improvements
at
the
tennis.
Centers
is
now
every
dollar
they
will
not
be
able
to
put
towards
underserved
youth
in
our
city
and
community.
E
L
Yes,
the
brown
berets
again,
I
am
very
disappointed
on
you
guys's
decision
about
the
ordinance
you
guys
are
allowing
to
for
gentrification
to
occur
in
rose
park
and
on
the
west
side.
You
know
you
now
you
guys
are
allowing
jared
hall
who's
the
applicant
for
the
lusa
apartments
to
obtain
a
construction
permit,
the
lusso
apartments,
another
gentrification
project
in
our
community
that
we
or
working
class
would
not
be
able
to
afford
the
families
that
have
lived
there
and
the
homes
have
been
displaced
and
not
properly
compensated
to
obtain.
The
newcomer
rose
park.
L
Shame
on
jared
hall
and
riley
rogers
for
pushing
long
time,
residents
out
of
our
community
and
for
destroying
the
culture
and
character
of
our
neighborhood,
just
for
them
to
make
a
profit
off
of
us-
and
you
know-
and
you
guys,
council
members
you
guys
are-
are
all
bystanders
and
contributors
to
gentrification,
and
this
is
something
that
you
guys
need
to
be
held
accountable.
Please
stop
the
ordinance,
stop
delusion
apartments.
Thank
you.
T
Oh
sorry,
phi
also
she's
still
in
the
business
meeting
so
I'll.
This
is
d
to
vi.
Yes,
no,
I
I.
I
I'm
also
disappointed
on
the
the
development
of
the
luso
apartments
in
in
the
rose
park
area.
T
For
me,
I
feel
like
nothing's,
really
changing
like
the
only
thing
changing
is
that
y'all
are
building
and
building
more
and
more
and
like
it's
just
it's
just
not
looking
good
for
us
as
folks
who
live
in
the
community
and
been
living
here
for
quite
a
while,
you
know
and
different
other
places,
but
here
in
salt
lake
city,
where
we
all
connected
as
as
a
community
members,
you
know
grandpa
elders,
moms
whatever
you
want
to
call
it,
but
I
mean
it
feels
like
y'all,
just
pushing
us
out
and
bringing
new
things
in
and
what
kind
of
community
are
you
trying
to
build
like
do
you
is
it?
T
Do
you
want
us
to
stay
here
or
do
you
want
to
develop
more
and
more
money?
Because
I
feel
like
it's
just
power
money
at
this
point
and
it's
like
I
don't
know
you
all
bought
or
something
or
or
what
is
it
going
to
take
for
us
to
fight
more
and
more
to
to
push
us
to
work
together,
because
that's
the
main
thing
about
being
in
a
community
is
that
we
all
work
together
in
the
council
member,
the
the
governor,
the
state.
T
D
J
Hi,
my
name
is
tamara
white
and
I
am
part
of
the
powerful
moms
who
care
that
is
represented
through
the
crossroads
and
I'm
a
single
mother
who
resides
at
palmer
court,
which
is
run
through
the
road
home
and
our
community
is
lacking
consistency
and
safety.
There's.
Our
main
thing
that
we
would
like
to
see
is
a
family-only
unit
for
affordable
housing.
J
There
is
a
concern
of
safety
which
is
not
consistent.
You
once
had
a
officer
on
property,
but
no
longer
have
that
and
it's
just
security
which
is
random
of
when
it
is
there,
there's
also
a
concern
of
health,
there's
lacking
needle
disposal
and
garbage
cans.
So
just
we'd
like
to
see
a
little
bit
more
focus
of
this
government-run
program
of
housing
to
be
safe
for
our
families,
because
we're
mixed
with
mental
health
singles
and
it's
not
a
safe
place
for
our
children
to
play
in
the
community.
H
Hi
thanks
for
taking
my
comments,
I
just
want
to
kind
of
echo
what
michael
valentine
and
so
many
of
the
others
said.
It's
really
destroying
the
progression
of
the
council
and
mayor,
and
especially
what
seems
to
be
a
rogue
agency.
The
rda
now
colluding
with
billionaires
against
the
citizenry
and
the
interests
of
salt
lake
city
citizens.
H
We
need
to
put
a
stop
to
that
when
we
see
that
they
are
actively
working
even
against
and
lying
straight
to
the
faces
of
council
members
and
the
mayor,
trying
to
get
a
sweetheart
back
room
deal
to
destroy
the
last
movie
palace
in
utah,
so
that
a
wealthy
developer
based
in
dallas
can
get
free
land.
It's
really
disturbing.
H
It's
really
disturbing
and
there
needs
to
be
and
90
180
degree
change
immediately,
as
well
as
in
city
council
electoral
reform,
where
you
can't
take
thousands
of
dollars
and
then
two
days
later
vote
to
give
away
for
free
land
and
owned
by
salt
lake
city
citizens
to
billionaire
developers
based
out
of
state.
We
need
to
change
that
immediately.
H
D
Unmuted
em
is
your
microphone
connected
all
right,
we're
gonna
keep
working
with
our
council
chair.
Next
we
have
george
chapman,
followed
by
roger
borgenisch
and
then
eric
nelson
one
moment.
While
I
unmute
george.
D
K
Okay,
I'm
against
using
transportation
impact
fees
for
anything
other
than
basic
maintenance
of
streets
and
on
another
subject.
Consultants
are
killing
this
city,
they
screwed
up
miller
park,
they
screwed
up
foothill
trails
and
they're
screwing
up
one
of
the
great
artworks
in
salt
lake
city
by
suggesting
that
it
be
ground
down
and
even
suggesting
lifeguards.
K
K
Please
implement
a
retention,
bonus
and
respectful
salary
that
recognizes
that
they
regularly
face
criminals
with
guns
and
risk
their
lives.
Chief
brown
said
that
the
city
may
be
able
to
hire
30
in
the
next
six
months,
but
before
they're,
effectively
trained
this
city
will
be
down.
200
cops.
What
will
it
take
for
this
city
to
start
listening
to
the
10
000
a
month
who
want
more
police?
K
D
F
Great,
thank
you
everybody
for
taking
my
comments
here.
I
was
going
to
speak
up
earlier.
However,
I
felt
like
from
a
high
level
this
fit
more
within
the
general
comments
section,
I
would
like
to
express
my
complete
solidarity
with
the
movement
to
defund
the
salt
lake
city
police
department.
They
are
sucking
up
valuable
resources
in
our
community.
That
is
apparent.
That
is
obvious,
given
the
58
increase
that
was
quoted
earlier.
F
There
are
other
ways
that
a
city
could
develop.
Tax
revenue
such
as
taxing
corporations,
taxing
the
big
money.
That's
coming
to
this
city,
that's
flooding,
our
that's
flooding
the
city.
There
are
ways
that
could
be
done,
but
the
question
is:
is
whether
or
not
the
city
and
the
council
will
actually
push
for
those
demands,
or
are
they
instead
acting
out
of
the
interests
of
these
large
corporations?
F
It
doesn't
seem
to
matter
so
much
as
in
the
council,
and
the
mayor
do
not
have
to
respond
in
this
meeting
to
any
of
the
people
that
have
voiced
their
concerns.
F
We
have
seen
on
the
streets
the
dire
circumstances
that
people
are
forced
into
and
that
are
being
pushed
over
and
over
again
by
the
cops
further
traumatizing
these
people.
They
are
us.
These
people
could
be
any
one
of
us.
We
don't
have
medicare
for
all.
We
don't
have
universal
health
care.
We
don't
have
so
many
of
the
safety
nets
that
are
otherwise
necessary
for
a
society
to
function,
and
so,
as
you
continue
to
fund
the
police
over
these
other,
these
dire
needs.
F
The
situation
on
the
ground
is
only
going
to
get
worse
and
the
city
and
the
mayor
are
only
going
to
face
increased
pressure.
I
highly
recommend
that
the
city
and
the
council
and
mayor
change
course
immediately
to
actually
benefit
the
people
that
live
here.
The
people
that
genuinely
need
your
help.
If
teachers
can
do
so
much
with
so
little
cops,
they
don't
have
to.
We
don't
need
to
listen
to
the
whining
from
the
police
department
about
lack
of
funding.
Teachers
have
been
grossly
underfunded.
F
J
O
Okay,
thank
you
yeah,
so
I
just
wanted
to
say
a
couple
things:
I'm
not
very
happy
about
the
fact
that
you
guys
kind
of
decided
to
just
have
the
motion
on
the
learned
alley:
vacation
ordinance.
O
I
know
that
this
was
a
I
think
we
talked,
I
think
we
talked
about
last
week
and
we
postponed
it.
Also,
it's
very
difficult
to
see
like
or
at
least
for
like
the
public,
to
see
what
the
actions
item
items
will
be
and
having
to
constantly
like
go,
go
and
look
and
see
if
it'll
be
this
week
next
week
whatever.
But
I
was
kind
of
expecting
that
we
would
have
a
discussion,
or
at
least
the
city
council
would
have
a
discussion
or
listen
to
the
public
comments
before
hosting
the
ordinance.
O
So
I
was
very
disappointed
in
that.
I
I
hope
that
we
can
visit
that
in
the
future,
because
we
know
that
there's
a
lot
of
identification
going
on
in
rose
park
already
and
at
these
lusso
apartments,
the
people
who
are
planning
on
developing
them
have
already
displaced
a
couple
families
or
a
few
families.
O
I
was
looking
and
I
saw
that
they
they
bought
the
houses
off
of
them
for
cheaper
than
what
they're
actually
worth,
which
I
think
is
really
sad
and
kind
of
is
just
shows
how
this
process
is
affecting
people.
I
don't
know
where
they're
living,
but
I
doubt
that
if
they
wanted
to
keep
living
in
rose
park,
they
won't
be
able
to,
especially
with
that
money
that
they
were
given.
I
kind
of
feel
like
this
like
allowing
them
to
to
pass
or
passing.
O
These
ordinance
is
basically
allowing,
if
not
incentivizing,
more
developers
to
come
because
they
can
see
how
easy
it
is.
I
hope
the
city
knows
that
they
have
the
power
to
stop
it
and
can
choose
to
especially
after
I
guess
you
know,
hearing
so
many
public
comments,
but
yeah
anyways.
Thanks
for
listening
and
everything.
B
C
Make
it
super
quick
point,
point
of
personal
privilege
that
the
administration,
everyone
that
called
in
with
concerns
about
gentrification,
that
the
administration
is
proposing
it
a
gentrification
or
mitigation
plan
or
anti-gentrification
plan
and
that'll,
be
going
out
to
bid
for
a
contractor
to
help
us
do
that
plan,
and
I
just
hope
that
everybody
that
called
in
will
keep
that
on
your
radar
as
we
move
into
forming
that
plan
and
and
we'll
give
all
of
the
comments
and
comments
and
feedback
that
you've
given
tonight
about
gentrification
as
part
of
that
plan,
so
that
we
can
try
to
better
address
that
issue
going
forward.
B
Thank
you,
councilmember
wharton,
council
members.
We
are
now
on
to
unfinished
business.
B
C
Madam
chair
move
that
we
adopt
the
amendment
to
the
plan.
Is
that
sufficient
or
do
I
need
to
state
more.
B
J
J
B
E
Madam
chair,
I
move
we
adopt
the
resolution.
B
M
B
B
J
B
I
C
E
J
J
B
J
B
I
am
so
sorry,
I
must
have
skipped
over
that
j1
or
j2.
I
skipped
over
j.
Sorry,
council
members,
you
thought
you
were
going
to
be
done
and
you're
not
quite
yet.
Thank
you.
Cindy
lou
we're
going
to
go
back
up
to
new
business
and
it
is
item
number
one
is
a
resolution
that
would
authorize
the
sale
of
airport
revenue
bond
issue
to
continue
to
finance
construction
at
the
new
salt
lake
city
international
airport.
I
will
look
for
a
motion.
E
C
C
Madam
chair,
I
moved
that
the
council
approved
issuance
of
the
bonds
for
the
new
slc
airport
reconstruction.
B
C
J
J
B
And
I
am
a
yes
and
that
passes
one
more
item:
everyone.
We
have
new
business
item,
j2
with
a
motion
to
meet
remotely
without
an
anchor
location.
I
will
look
for
a
motion.
C
Sharing
move
that
we
continue
to
meet
remotely
without
an
anchor
location
and
ratified
the
chairs
decision
under
the
applicable
state
law.
J
B
J
C
J
C
Think
it
only
goes,
we
keep
doing
it
only
on
a
monthly
basis,
so
I
think
we
can
only
do
it
for
up
to
a
month
and
then
the
chair
has
to
make
the
decision
and
then
we
can
choose
to
ratify
it
again,
but
we
we've
never
specified
a
date
in
the
past.
Okay.
R
B
Slc
fire
working-
I
don't
know
if
you
all
heard
that
go
by
my
house
great,
so
that
passes
unanimously
as
well
and
council
members.
That
concludes,
I
might
have
been
a
little
rough
end,
but
because
I
was
so
confused.
But
that
concludes
our
council
meeting.
For
today
we
will
see
you
at
our
work
session
on
thursday
thanks.