►
From YouTube: Salt Lake City Formal Meeting - 07/19/2022
Description
To view the agenda for this meeting please use this link https://slc.primegov.com/public/portal
A
Although
we
are
unable
to
host
a
hybrid
meeting
via
webex
today,
we're
going
to
be
broadcasting
live
and
recording
of
this
meeting
will
be
available
online
within
24
hours.
Thank
you
for
your
patience
as
we
continue
navigating
the
covid
situation
and
trying
to
make
the
best
decisions
to
keep
people
safe.
A
The
council
continues
to
take
precautions
to
reduce
the
transmis
transmission
of
covid19
and
maintain
healthy
work
environments.
For
now,
although
masks
are
no
longer
required
in
city
facilities,
we
encourage
everyone
here
to
wear
masks.
Since
cova
cases
are
rising,
disposable
masks
are
available
outside
our
meeting
door
or
raise
your
hand,
and
one
of
our
staff
members
can
bring
one
to
you
if
you're
here,
to
give
public
comment,
feel
free
to
remove
your
mask
after
your
name
has
been
called
when
you're
at
the
microphone
to
address
the
council.
A
A
A
A
If
you
all
don't
know
about
rose
park,
baseball
you
need
to
investigate.
It
is
one
of
the
coolest
things
that
we
do
on
the
west
side,
and
these
young
men
are
an
example
of
how
our
community
comes
together,
led
by
some
of
our
ogs,
who
know
how
to
handle
it
and
shape
that
next
generation
into
amazing
talent.
A
A
If
you're
joining
us
for
the
public
comment
opportunities
later
on
the
agenda,
we
are
set
up
to
accept
your
comments
in
person
only
tonight
before
we
begin
moving
through
our
agenda,
I
want
to
mention
and
review
our
rules
of
decorum.
These
are
guidelines
that
the
city
council
has
always
had
in
place
to
help
meetings,
progress
in
an
orderly
civil
efficient
way,
so
that
everyone
has
the
opportunity
to
voice
their
opinions
without
feeling
intimidated.
A
A
A
I
have
a
second
from
councilmember
dugan,
any
discussion,
I'll
roll
call,
councilmember
dugan;
yes,
mano
wharton;
yes,
yes,
fowler;
yes,
I'm
a
yes,
that's
six
yeses
with
council
member
voldemoros
absent
before
we
move
on
to
our
next
business
item.
A5
for
the
record.
I
want
to
make
a
correction
to
our
agenda.
Language
to
say:
council
will
consider
a
joint
ceremonial
resolution
with
mayor
mendenhall
recognizing
the
week
of
september
12
2022
as
one
kind
act
a
day
week,
I'd
like
to
turn
the
time
over
to
council
member
dan
dugan
to
read
the
resolution.
C
Thank
you,
madam
chair.
This
is
a
resolution
recognizing
one
kind
act
a
day
week.
Instead,
whereas
in
partnership
with
the
tsunami,
family
foundation,
salt
lake
city
to
celebrate
and
promote
kindness
campaign
known
as
one
kind
act
today
and
now
more
than
ever,
the
world
needs
more
kindness
and
whereas
kindness
can
be
as
simple
as
a
single
smile,
a
thoughtful
message
to
a
friend
or
just
a
small,
unexpected
gesture.
C
A
C
A
I'm
a
yes,
that's,
six
yeses
with
baltimore's
absent
the
motion
passes.
One
act
of
kindness
week
resolution
represents
the
kindness
shown
by
salt
lake
city
residents.
I
welcome
local
businessman
and
founder
of
the
simnani
family
foundation,
mr
khasrowski,
who
is
joining
us
today.
If
you
wish
I'd
like
for
you
to
give
you
an
opportunity
to
speak
on
the
joint
resolution.
D
Thank
you
very
much
pleasure
to
be
with
you.
It's
a
pleasure
to
be
on
the
west
side
with
our
friends
here.
This
is
a
a
campaign
that
it
is
for
all
people
from
all
races
backgrounds.
Just
somebody
mentioned
about
the
rich
and
poor,
rich
and
poor
everybody.
D
I
am
the
product
of
the
kindness
that
I
received
in
utah
53
years
ago,
when
I
came
here
penniless
and
I
want
to
promote
this
campaign,
and
I
want
to
thank
the
governor
of
utah.
I
want
to
thank
the
mayor
of
salt
lake
city.
I
want
to
thank
the
city
council.
Many
of
you
are
my
friends,
and
I
hope
that
you
continue
to
be
my
friends
and
promote
this
campaign
in
any
way
that
you
can.
D
I
encourage
you
to
go
there.
There
is
no.
In
fact
we
had
the
email
somebody
was
saying
today.
Do
we?
How
do
we
donate?
I
said
there
is
no
donation,
except
that
you
only
donate
if
you
want
to
donate
donate
to
your
own
charity
that
you,
like
the
best
just
donate
to
them.
That's
about
one
way
of
doing
the
kindness
and
we
are
excited
to
do
this
program
and
we
are
receiving
all
kind
of
support
from
our
businesses
in
utah.
D
D
He'll
change
your
life
and,
as
I
said,
I'm
a
product
of
it
and
if
it
wasn't
for
a
kind
act
of
a
professor
at
westminster
college
50
years
ago,
I
wouldn't
be
here
today.
So
I
want
to
thank
you
for
the
opportunity
and
I
encourage
you
to
go
to
the
site
and
make
a
difference
for
the
better.
That's
all
I
have
to
say
thank
you
very
much,
mr
sherman.
A
Thank
you
so
much.
Thank
you
all
right.
That
brings
us
to
no
all
right.
That
brings
us
to
a6.
I
am
so
excited
about
this.
I've
been
talking
about
it.
For
months
we
are
going
to
recognize
and
celebrate
the
halverson
family,
who
now
have
four
generations
of
rose
park,
firefighters
who
have
served
in
the
salt
lake
city
fire
department.
A
Okay,
I'm
going
to
read
the
I'm
going
to
read
the
words
I
told
me
to
read
and
then
I'll,
probably
vamp
a
little
bit
so
first,
it's
such
an
honor
to
say
thank
you
from
the
city
council
to
your
families,
for
your
family's
dedication
and
commitment
to
firefighting
to
our
city
and
especially
to
rose
park
and
being
everything
that
is
wonderful
about
being
a
west
sider
for
a
family
with
four
generations
of
people
who
have
dedicated
your
lives
to
keep
our
community
members
safe.
It's
an
amazing
historical
feat.
A
I
knew
when
I
came
here
as
a
28
year
old.
Just
visiting
utah
that
rose
park
was
the
coolest
spot
in
utah.
When
I
moved
here
and
began
serving
families
like
yours
have
laid
a
groundwork
so
that
families
like
mine
can
now
find
a
home
here
and
carry
on
the
tradition
of
just
being
really
amazing
humans
who
contribute
amazing
things,
and
I'm
so
thankful
for
the
example
you
all
have
set
and
the
service
you
continue
to
provide
chief
leeb,
I'm
going
to
turn
the
time
over
to
you
now.
E
Thank
you,
madam
chair,
and
thank
you
for
supporting
this
recognition
as
well
good
evening
salt,
lake
city,
west
siders,
we're
so
happy
to
be
here,
as
a
council
member
said,
we're
pretty
proud
of
this
legacy.
This
is
what
we
call
firefighters.
You
know
who
repeat
service
to
salt
lake
city
in
the
capacity
of
firefighter
generations.
E
Over
and
over
again,
we
have
a
few
three
generation
legacy,
families
in
the
fire
department,
but
this
is
our
first
fourth
generation
of
families
that
have
served
in
the
fire
department
and
captain
david
halverson
on
my
far
right
here
has
been
a
firefighter
for
22
years,
and
his
son
devon
on
my
near
right,
has
actually
been
a
firefighter
for
approximately
eight
weeks.
E
D
A
A
Continuing
with
the
business
of
recognizing
the
awesomeness,
that
is
our
west
side
strength.
Our
next
business
item
is
a7
council.
Member
pui
will
recognize
archie,
archuleta
and
his
family
for
the
legacy
he
has
left
on
the
west
side,
community
and
the
city
as
a
whole.
I
welcome
archie's
wife
lois,
who
is
with
us
today
to
come
forward,
and
I
turn
the
time
over
to
council
member
pui.
G
So,
madam
chair,
thank
you
for
the
privilege.
I
I
just
want
to
mention
that,
while
seeing
these
many
people
here.
G
I
hate
this
make
me
emotional,
because
this
is
what
government
should
be
close
to
all
of
us,
and
I
wanted
to
highlight
louis
and
archie
with
something
special
that
wasn't
a
plaque
or
something
to
put
on
their
wall.
G
I
wasn't
her
house
a
few
months
ago
and
her
house
has
a
lot
of
things
in
her
wall
well
deserved,
though,
but
I
been
talking
about
this
from
the
beginning
of
the
year.
I'm
sure
many
people
are
very
thankful
that
this
is
happening
now,
so
you
don't
have
to
hear
me
again
about
bringing
the
council
to
the
west
side,
and
I
hope
that
this
is
the
beginning
of
many
more.
G
I
wanted
to
recognize
and
highlight
these
amazing
humans
with
nothing,
no
more,
no
something
bigger
than
just
a
symbol,
something
to
put
on
your
wall,
but
bringing
the
government
close
to
the
people,
and
while
I
cannot
give
them
anything
more
important
than
that,
I
think
highlighting
other
individuals
that
I
think
inspire
me
and
I
see
archie
and
louise
every
time
I
think
of
them.
Jennifer
carver
hunter,
a
teacher
from
mountain
view
elementary
who,
who,
a
few
months
ago,
received
the
presidential
award
for
excellence
in
stem
education
right
here
at
mountain
view.
G
I
also
want
to
highlight
deegan
stocks,
who
is
a
rail
engineer,
who
is
a
conductor
of
a
train
that
crosses
through
crosses
through
our
neighborhoods,
who
unfortunately
ran
over
a
person
very
recently
and
got
out
of
his
fire
engine
and
aid,
this
person
to
save
his
life
and
this
person
is
okay.
I
also
want
to
highlight
grant
who
I
don't
know
his
last
name,
though,
who
lives
in
here
in
poplar
grove
and
spends
most
of
his
weekends
cleaning,
the
jordan
river.
G
I
I
these
are
people
that,
regardless,
if
they
knew
the
archuletas,
I
know
that
they
their
archer
lives
in
in
those
actions,
and
I
want
us
all
of
us
to
do
something
more
for
each
other.
I
also
want
to
thank
this
this
family
for
the
the
the
most
amazing
things
they
did
to
me,
which
is
archie
every
time
I
met
him
and
I
didn't
even
live
in
the
county.
Then
this
is
over
10
years
ago.
G
He
will
remember
my
name
and
remember
my
story,
and
it
was
shocking
to
me
because
I
will
see
him
once
in
a
while
and
remember
who
I
was
and
what
I
told
him
last,
and
this
is
the
sort
of
people
that
the
west
side
is
full
of
all
of
you,
and
I
wanted
to
also
recognize
the
council
staff
that
put
literally
hundreds
of
hours
to
make
this
happen
and
while
all
the
kings
and
all
the
issues
and
all
the
frustrations
that
we
have
with
technology,
I
it's
just
beautiful
and
I
think
it
was
worth
it.
G
G
I
I
hope
that
we
can
do.
We
can
honor
his
legacy
by
being
better
stewards
of
our
our
neighbor
neighbors
and
our
community,
and
please
tell
us
what
is
working
and
what
is
not
and
tell
us
to
come
back.
Maybe
we
do
it
soon
again.
So
thank
you
so
much.
Thank
you,
madam
chair,
for
your
time
and
I'm
going
to
pass
this
small
gift.
It's
not
a
plaque,
it's
nothing
that
is
going
to
clutter
those
beautiful
walls
to
louis
and
her
families.
Thank
you.
H
My
other
three
girls
could
not
be
here
this
evening,
so
but
they're
here
in
spirit.
I
thank
you
so
much
because
arch
loved
this
community.
He
worked
hard
for
it
and
also
what
a
blessing
the
bridges
for
the
west
side
for
the
connection
that
it
gave
on
the
trail
and
all
that.
So
hopefully,
if
you
haven't
seen
it
and
haven't
used
it
walk
and
get
your
exercise
for
the
day.
A
A
All
right
so
now
here
comes
here.
Comes
the
real
work,
we're
going
to
begin
our
public
hearing
items
b1
and
b2
are
grant
applications
combined
into
one
public
hearing.
If
you
wish
to
speak
to
this
public
hearing,
please
complete
a
comment
card
and
provide
it
to
our
staff
member
taylor
hill
taylor.
Will
you
raise
your
hand?
There's
taylor.
A
Any
of
our
city
council
staff
members
can
also
help
you
with
comment
cards.
Taylor
will
call
two
names
at
a
time.
The
first
person
please
come
forward
to
the
microphone
second
person,
please
be
ready
to
follow,
you'll,
be
called
forward
in
the
order
your
cards
are
handed
in.
If
you
need
a
card,
please
raise
your
hand
now
moving
into
our
public
hearing
items
b1
and
b2,
which
will
be
heard
as
one
public
hearing
number
one
is
a
grant
application,
2022,
community
oriented
policing
services
or
cops,
grant
and
number
two.
A
A
Support
and
some
city
programs
each
grant
application
is
reviewed
and
then
receives
a
public
hearing
which
gives
the
public
an
opportunity
to
comment
on
them
tonight.
There
are
two
grants,
as
we
mentioned,
the
2022
community-oriented
policing
services
grant,
which
will
fund
a
program
for
the
promising
youth.
G
Close
the
public
hearing
and
refer
items
b1
and
b2
through
v2
to
a
future
consent
agenda
for
action.
G
A
Yes,
fowler
and
I'm
a
yes
that's,
six
yeses
with
voldemort's
absent
the
motion
passes.
We
are
moving
on
to
see
potential
action
items
and
we
have
no
potential
action
items
tonight.
So
we
will
now
be
moving
on
to
d
comments
are
to
the
mayor
from
the
city
council.
Are
there
any
questions
for
the
mayor's
representatives
and
mayor
staff?
Thank
you
for
always
being
willing
to
roll
with
the
punches
and
be
here
when
we
need
you
to
answer
questions
councilmember.
B
Fowler,
thank
you.
I
don't
have
a
question,
but
if
I
may
take
a
quick
point
of
privilege
to
just
if
I
may
point
out
what
happened
today
at
our
work
session,
I'm
gonna
brag
a
little
bit.
If
that's
okay,
lisa!
No,
it's
not
really
me
bragging.
It's
me
giving
you
props.
B
Do
you
is
that
still
okay,
great
so
earlier
today,
as
we
were
discussing
cip
there,
and
if
I
can
back
up
a
little
bit
a
few
years
ago
when
the
council,
when
mayor
mendenhall,
was
a
council
member,
we,
the
council,
funded
free,
menstrual
hygiene
products
in
all
city
facilities
in
the
women's
bathroom,
and
it
was
awesome
and
I
think,
we're
probably
one
of
the
first
cities
in
the
country.
B
In
fact,
I
am
90
percent
certain
we're
the
only
airport
in
the
country
that
offers
this
service
in
our
bathrooms,
and
it's
amazing
and
and
it
it
really
to
me,
shows
the
importance
and
the
commitment
we
have
to
accessibility,
and
today
we
yet
again
showed
the
importance
and
commitment
we
have
to
equity.
B
And
while
I
was
sort
of
rambling
about-
and
this
was
inspired
by
council
member
bui
and
a
discussion
with
council
member
wharton
to
ask
if
we
could
fund
free
menstrual
hygiene
products
within
all
of
our
men's
bathrooms
as
well
and
without
skipping
a
beat
lisa
shaffer,
who
is
our
chief
administrative
officer,
went
to
public
service
as
our
director
of
public
services,
and
he
said
we
got
this,
and
I
mean
I
I
got
a
little
choked
up.
I
I
was
at
loss
for
words,
which
is
if
anyone
knows
me
that's
unusual.
B
So
I
want
to
really
say
that
that
action
alone
shows
truly
the
dedication,
the
commitment
and
the
desire
to
have
a
more
equitable
city
here
in
salt
lake
city,
to
take
steps
to
make
sure
that
people
have
access
to
health
care,
have
access
to
the
things
that
are
important
to
all
of
us
as
residents,
but
as
of
salt
lake
city,
but
as
humans
in
general.
And
so
I
really
was
a
huge
step
and-
and
it
literally
was
just
like
no
big
deal.
We
got
this
and
this
bragging
about
salt
lake
city.
B
This
is
the
city
we
live
in.
That
isn't
just
going
to
talk
about
the
the
priorities
we
have,
but
that
will
take
actions
to
show
that
we
want
to
have
that.
We
will
truly
believe
in
diversity,
equity
and
inclusion,
and
it's
not
just
buzzwords
for
us.
So
thank
you
to
the
administration
to
council
and
to
our
staff.
A
As
council
woman
fowler
was
talking,
I
have
text
messages
here
from
mayor
mendenhall.
She
she
asked
me
to
intentionally
tell
you
all
that
she
is
really
sad
to
be
missing.
Tonight.
A
G
What
I
wanted
to
highlight
as
the
mayor
not
being
here
not
because
she
didn't
want
to
but-
and
I
know
she's
here
in
spain,
she's,
listening
and
and
you
know,
participating
texting
us.
I
know
she
wanted
to
be
here,
and
I
know
this
community
probably
wanted
to
to
see
her,
but
I
know
that
she,
you
know
her.
Her
staff
is
here
her
administration
is
here,
helped
helped
in
this
effort.
So
I
hope
that
the
mayor
recuperates,
very
quick,
so
thank.
A
You
thank
you.
Okay.
So
now
we
are
at
the
comment
portion
of
our
agenda
for
comments
about
general
topics
and
items
that
were
not
scheduled
for
our
one
public
hearing
tonight.
I
went
over
the
city
council's
rules
of
decorum
earlier
and
I
trust
that
you
all
still
have
them
in
your
head.
I
can
go
over
them
again
if
you
need
them,
though,
just
like
any
public
hearing.
Those
wishing
to
make
a
comment
will
be
called
forward
in
the
order
comment
cards
have
been
turned
in.
A
Taylor
will
again
call
two
names
at
a
time.
The
first
person
please
come
forward
to
the
mic.
The
second
person
please
be
ready
to
follow.
Comment.
Time
is
limited
to
two
minutes
per
person.
You
cannot
combine
time
with
another
speaker
and,
as
a
reminder,
please
help
create
a
civil
and
respectful
meeting.
A
I
A
I
Hello,
this
is
my
first
city
council
meeting,
so
I
thought
you
had
five
minutes,
so
I'm
going
to
try
my
best
to
do
two
minutes.
My
name
is
kara
muncie,
I'm
a
registered
nurse
at
huntsman
cancer
institute
and
I
am
a
voting
constituent
of
district
one
and
I
live
in
the
fair
park
neighborhood
here
on
the
west
side.
I
I
I
I
myself
have
beard
witness
to
a
number
of
individuals
using
ivs
drugs
in
broad
daylight.
The
ground
is
littered
with
iv
needles
and
it's
a
public
health
hazard
and
I'm
not
here
to
encourage
policing
or
rounding
up
and
carting
people
away,
because
that
will
not
solve
this
problem.
I'm
here
to
advocate
for
harm
reduction.
J
K
H
Hi,
how
are
you
guys
doing?
My
name
is
goud,
it's
maragani,
but
I
think
that
my
handwriting
is
terrible,
so
I'll
take
the
blame
for
that
I'm
running
for
to
be
the
next
county
clerk.
I
just
wanted
to
come
and
introduce
myself
to
all
of
you.
Just
a
little
bit
of
background
about
me.
I'm
a
lawyer.
I've
been
practicing
now
for
almost
20
years.
I'm
a
veteran.
I
served
in
the
army
reserves
in
the
utah
national
guard
for
over
10
years,
and
I
deployed
twice
and
I'm
a
first
generation
american.
H
I
invite
all
of
you
to
check
out
my
website.
It's
goud
g-o-u-d,
the
number
four
clerk.com.
I
think
you'll
see
on
there
that
my
proposals
are
common
sense.
They
can
be
implemented
under
current
law
and
they're
measurable,
so
that
you
can
tell
whether
I'm
keeping
my
promises
to
you.
My
goal
is
to
run
a
unifying
campaign
around
good
ideas
that
we,
so
we
can
take
our
clerk's
office
to
the
next
level
of
transparency
of
security
and
getting
voters
and
candidates
more
involved
in
the
process.
H
I
invite
all
of
you
again
to
go
to
the
website.
If
you
have
any
feedback
feel
free
to
reach
out
through
that,
my
events
are
on
the
website.
I
would
love
to
see
you
on
the
campaign
trail
and
I
hope
to
earn
your
vote
between
now
and
november
and
if
I
win,
I
look
forward
to
working
with
all
of
you,
so
thank
you
very
much.
Thank
you.
L
L
I'm
here
to
talk
today
about
a
company
called
parking
solutions,
and
I
doubt
I'm
the
first
person
to
mention
this
to
the
city
council,
but
I
hope
I'm
one
of
the
last.
If
you
take
action,
parking
solutions
is
a
private
company
that
manages
the
parking
at
the
fourth
south
market
in
central
city.
This
company
is
using
a
legal
loophole
to
extort
customers
that
park
in
a
specific
lot
behind
jimmy
john's.
L
I
was
one
of
those
extorted
customers
when
I
parked
in
the
lot
and
walked
to
jimmy
john's
for
a
total
of
20
seconds,
and
my
partner
went
to
cafe
dupas
to
frequent
the
market
and
thereby
confirming
us
patrons
of
the
fourth
south
market,
which
is
what
I
thought.
That
was
not
the
case,
because
I
had
a
boot
on
my
car
about
20
seconds
later,
with
a
sticker
indicating
I
had
to
pay
75
to
get
it
taken
off.
L
There
was
no
negotiating
with
agent
that
was
sitting
in
the
parking
lot
waiting
for
this
to
happen
over
and
over
and
over
on
a
daily
basis,
so
I
was
forced
to
pay
it,
and
I
see
this
company
seeing
itself
as
the
judge,
jury
and
executioner.
Essentially
when
it
comes
to
parking
and
towing
citizens
in
this
lot,
they
get
to
do
whatever
they
want
on
the
premises,
essentially
creating.
What
I
mentioned
is
a
legal
loophole,
dozens
of
times
a
day.
L
I
was
fortunate
enough
to
be
able
to
pay
this
off
very
quickly
right
then,
and
there,
but
I
know
that's
not
the
case
for
a
lot
of
citizens
that
go
through
this
inconvenience
daily,
especially
because
there
are
a
lot
of
university
students
that
live
in
the
area
and
that's
what
I
have
a
problem
with,
while
they
might
be
legally
allowed
to
do
this.
L
Ethically
speaking,
I
feel
like
we
should
be
doing
something
about
this,
and
I
know
I'm
not
the
only
one
when
I
googled
this
company
and
I
found
dozens
of
google
reviews,
complaints
to
the
better
business
bureau
and
even
a
change.org
petition
with
over
2000
signatures.
As
of
today,
npr
even
covered
this
issue
on
a
podcast
episode
in
2019,
so
I
hope
that
by
coming
here
to
ask
you
to
do
something
that
you
can
end
this
unethical
business
practice
that
happens
to
citizens
on
a
daily
basis.
F
Hi
I'm
dwane
smith.
I
live
in
glendale
in
district
2..
I
just
wanted
to
inform
you
of
some
of
the
things
that
have
been
happening
in
my
neighborhood.
My
mailbox
has
been
vandalized
twice
and
a
guy
will
go
up
and
down
our
street
destroying
mailboxes,
throwing
mail
out
of
the
street.
Now
I
have
to
have
a
post
office
box
and
drive.
You
know
round
trip
four
miles
every
day
to
get
my
mail.
F
N
M
Miller
a
long
time,
poplar
grove
resident,
my
issue
is
homelessness.
Most
of
us
would
offer
a
helping
hand
to
our
brother
man
in
need.
The
homeless
crisis
needs
to
be
successfully
addressed.
The
fantasy
of
a
tiny
house
village
for
hundreds
of
homes
on
indiana
avenue,
west
of
redwood
road
and
poplar
grove,
does
not
offer
a
successful
solution.
M
There
is
a
history
of
housing
projects
in
america,
a
tragically
failed
one
crime,
poverty,
insecurity,
lack
of
safety
run
rampant
in
the
projects.
The
sociopathic,
predatory
criminal
element
within
the
homeless
population
needs
to
be
screened
out
in
order
to
provide
the
safety
and
security.
The
other
homeless
need
to
begin
the
steps
to
integrate
back
into
the
larger
world.
M
Mental
health
issues
also
need
to
be
addressed.
Address
these
aspects
of
homelessness,
as
the
first
priority
do
not
jeopardize
the
safety
of
our
popular
growth
neighborhood.
With
a
flawed
short-sighted,
addressing
of
the
nuances
of
our
homeless
problem.
No
to
the
tiny
house
village.
We
need
national
state,
local
governments
and
officials
to
think
creatively
and
support
financially
depressing
homeless
need
of
the
homeless
within
our
society.
M
A
So
we're
gonna
do
a
point
of
decorum
here,
I'm
with
you
west
side,
I'm
feeling
the
vibe
and
I'm
loving
our
energy,
but
if
we
could
withhold
our
applause
or
responses
after
comments
that
it
helps
to
keep
the
neutral
for
everyone
in
the
room.
But
thank
you
I'm
with
you.
I
love
your
energy.
Do
not
stop
that
part
of
it
all
right.
Taylor,
who's!
Next.
O
Okay,
hello,
everybody
thanks
for
being
here
thanks
for
presenting
congratulations
to
the
firefighters,
I
I
think
homelessness
is
tragic
and
I
definitely
think
we
there's
certain
ways
we
can
help.
My
dad
is
currently
homeless
and
he's
got
a
jail
for
trespassing
in
his
prior
apartment,
kind
of
harsh,
but
that's
life,
but
anyways.
O
Though
I
think
there's
going
to
be
a
lot
more
homelessness,
if
we
don't
deal
with
the
climate
crisis
at
hand,
I
know
we're
kind
of
in
a
bubble
here
in
salt
lake,
and
I
don't
want
to
bring
everybody
down
so
like.
We
can
stay
optimistic
about
this,
but
there
is
kind
of
a
major
issue
going
on
in
the
world
with
warming
because
of
output
of
carbon
dioxide
primarily
and
methane.
O
Methane,
I
think,
is
about
40
of
the
greenhouse
gas
emissions,
so
both
of
which
we
definitely
output
and
we're
not
going
to
feel
the
worst
of
it.
Though.
The
great
salt
lake
is
already
drying
up.
We
know
about
that
and
along
those
lines,
something
we
can
do
concretely
instead
of
me
trying
to
tell
you
all
that
you
need
to
acknowledge.
Climate
change
is
control
our
water
use
and
one
of
the
ways
I
know
that
we
can
all
do
that
is.
O
I
would
like
to
like
not
maybe
illegalize
as
a
strong
word,
but
get
rid
of
lawn
grass
lawn
kentucky
bluegrass
going
back
to
climate
change.
It
actually
takes
more
carbon
and
puts
out
more
carbon
to
grow
kentucky
bluegrass
traditional
grass
lawns
than
it
does
output
oxygen.
So
it's
just
a
lose-lose-lose.
I
know
it's
tradition
and
we've
been
doing
it
for
a
long
time.
O
But
if
you
look
at
the
history
of
why
grasses
grasslands
are
thing,
it's
kind
of
silly,
I
understand
we
want
places
to
play
and
that's
what
parks
are
for
and
such.
So
if
we
could
do
something
about
the
water
issue,
that
would
be
cool.
K
Thank
you,
I'm
a
resident
of
poplar
grove
and
I
have
about
four
issues
just
very
quickly
to
go
through.
First,
one
is
drug
trafficking
and
enforcement
and
accountability,
one
of
the
root
causes
of
homelessness.
Whether
people
want
to
accept
that
or
not
is
drugs
and
we've
had
a
shooting
across
the
street
from
my
house
a
stabbing
across
the
street.
This
is
a
drug
house.
We
have
four
drug
places,
hot
distributors,
on
our
street,
no
accountability,
no
accountability.
We
have
a
math
lab
in
back
of
our
house,
no
accountability.
K
There's
been
additional
two
shootings
on
our
street
in
the
time
I've
been
there
continual
drug
trafficking,
four
cars
about
an
hour,
oftentimes
picking
up
their
drugs,
dropping
off
using
their
kids
to
distribute
home
invasion.
We
had
two
homeless
people
invade
our
home.
K
I
was
in
the
kitchen
they
just
barged
in
they
saw
that
my
daughter
had
just
come
home
from
the
store
watching
and
and
with
their
intent,
I'm
sure
to
steal
something
or
just
grab
a
person
run
reported
this
no
accountability.
We
even
had
a
video
of
them,
no
accountability,
fire
explosion
at
the
house.
In
back
of
mind
at
this
drug
lab,
we
have
to
breathe
the
fumes
that
come
in
the
vents
in
my
home.
My
daughter
has
now
an
autoimmune
problem.
I
cannot
move,
I
do
not
have
anywhere
to
go.
K
Please
help
us
reduce
the
number
that
are
planned
for
the
homeless
center.
It
is
not
wise
to
have
thousands
located
in
one
place
where
they
have
access
to
the
drugs.
There
are
other
solutions
to
consider.
Please
do
so.
We
have
neighbors
and
family
with
children,
these
homeless
situations.
We
all
our
hearts,
want
to
help
these
people.
They
are
enslaved.
H
Hi
everyone,
my
name
is
alison
lewis,
I'm
a
landscape
architect
at
the
university
of
utah,
I'm
also
a
resident.
I
live.
I
don't
know
a
10-minute
bike
ride
from
here
and
biking
is
why
I'm
here
I
love
to
bike
commute
but
frankly,
biking
across
the
tracks
is
either
a
harrowing
experience
at
13,
south
or
4th
south,
because
you
actually
have
to
cross
where
people
are
getting
on
and
off
the
freeway
off
and
on
ramp,
or
you
wait
for
a
really
long
time.
H
There
are
freight
trains
that
will
stop
on
the
tracks
and
I
have
waited
before
for
over
45
minutes.
So
I'm
here
asking
that
there
could
be
funds
allocated
for
a
pedestrian
and
cyclist
bridge
to
take
us
over
the
tracks
that
are
completely
separate
from
the
vehicles.
Thanks.
E
Greetings.
Council
members,
I'm
here
as
a
lifetime
resident
of
salt
lake
city,
a
former
council
member
and
a
board
member
of
the
seven
canyons
trust.
I
want
to
talk
a
little
bit
about
the
bond.
That's
coming
up
as
a
board
member
of
the
seven
canyons
trust
we
see
the
city
as
connected,
not
by
roads
but
by
water
and
in
the
upcoming
bond.
E
Our
vision
is
100
years
in
the
future,
but
you're
part
of
it
is
now,
and
what
I'm
talking
about
in
particular
are
the
fisher
mansion
which
is
here
on
second
south
warm
springs
park
up
there
on
third
west
and
in
particular
allen
park,
which
is
the
keystone
of
essentially
two
miles
of
river.
That's
already
daylighted,
but
it
just
needs
to
be
connected
together
from
starting
at
the
at
the
library
up
there
on
foothill.
E
You
can
walk
along
this,
the
river
corridor
that
goes
through
neighborhoods
and
through
allen
park
and
through
westminster
college,
and
you
can
traverse
literally
two
miles
of
river.
That
is
a
signature
project
that
the
allen
park.
Buildings,
restoration
will
will
serve
to
to
create
a
a
space
for
people
to
be
and
be
at
the
center
of
it
all.
E
But
that
section
of
the
river
is
really
just
in
the
long
run,
a
way
to
connect
east
and
west
a
way
to
connect
the
the
three
creeks
confluence,
all
the
way
up
to
liberty
park
and
on.
I
E
The
east
side,
so
in
my
in
closing,
I
will
just
encourage
you
to
to
support
these
buildings
because
it's
not
just
buildings,
it's
water,
it's
connectedness
with
our
communities.
Thank
you.
J
Hi,
I'm
lisa
mohan,
I'm
here
today,
because
I
met
ali
while
he
was
running
for
his
seat
and
I
got
a
chance
to
vote
for
him
and
he
came
and
he
sat
in
my
living
room
and
he
talked
to
me,
and
one
of
the
things
we
talked
about
is
for
south
for
south
has
become
the
indianapolis
freeway
of
east
side.
J
I
hear
cars
racing
down
that
road
all
the
time
I
hear
them
with
their
revving
engines.
I
watched
them
not
even
stop
at
the
stop
sign.
I've
actually
almost
been
hit
by
them.
While
I'm
walking
my
dog,
there
needs
to
be
something
done
with
that
street.
There
are
children
that
live
on
that
street
that
play
in
this
in
the
on
the
sidewalks,
and
there
are
animals
that
have
a
tendency
to
run
across
the
street.
J
H
Hi
guys
amber
rasband,
I
live
in
poplar
grove,
neighborhood
love
living
on
the
west
side,
hi
ali.
H
I
really
appreciate
you
guys.
You
guys
have
done
awesome
like
I've,
come
to
tons
of
meetings
and
just
really
appreciate
the
action
that
you've
come
through.
H
Whenever
I've
addressed
a
concern,
it
seems
like
it's
been
taken,
care
of
or
you've
addressed
it
for
me.
So
and
my
husband
also
appreciates
it,
and
so
I'm
very
grateful
to
live
here.
I
know
we're
very
lucky:
we
live
so
close
to
a
beautiful
city
and
we
have
a
lot
of
activities
and
restaurants
and
beautiful
things
to
do.
I
wanted
to
specifically
specifically
address
them
that
we
live
on
700,
south
and
jeremy
street.
H
We
want
to
see
if
we
can
get
a
stop
sign,
yield
sign
as
we've
seen
that
that
street
has
a
lot
of
racing
on
it,
and
I
will
address
that
jan
that
had
mentioned
the
fumes
of
the
meth
and
everything
I
I
have
smelled
those
fumes.
Okay,
I
know
what
the
drug
bill
she's
talking
about.
H
L
Hi,
my
name
is
sheryl
christie
and
I
grew
up
in
rose
park.
Graduated
west
high,
granddaughter
graduated
west
high,
so
I've
lived
here
in
salt
lake
off
and
on
I've
lived
in
atlanta
for
a
lot
of
years,
but
I'm
back
home.
We
live
in
my
mother's
house
and
it's
we
stay
there
because
of
the
memories
that
have
been
created.
But
the
one
thing
I
would
love
to
say
is
or
like
to
see
is
you
know
I
go
to
5600
west
to
go
to
the
restaurants
or
fast
food
places
and
little
stores.
L
Why
don't
we
have
that
over
here
in
our
areas
where
I
can
shop
where
I
can
eat
in
this
area?
Why
can't
we
work
on
caring
more
in
our
community?
You
know
I
look
at
some
the
properties
and
things
that
are
around
here.
It's
like
nobody
cares.
I
would
like
to
suggest
a
campaign
for
caring
for
our
neighborhood.
N
I'd
like
to
say-
and
this
is
not
complaining
or
anything
but
I'd
like
to
first
of
all,
say
that
we're
all
looking
for
what
happiness
and
happiness
comes
in
different
forms
and
means
different
things
to
different
people.
We
have
a
very
diverse
situation
over
here
in
the
neighborhood
and
there's
different
things
that
make
people
unhappy.
N
The
people
exactly
and
here
we
are
together
and
we
have
to
find
a
way
to
smooth
these
things
out,
and
I
think
this
is
the
first
step,
and
I
wanted
to
make
that
comment
and
that's
really
how
I
feel
and
what
you're
doing
here
is
having
a
rippling
effect,
take
a
smooth
small
pond
and
you
throw
a
little
tiny
pebble
in
there.
What
happens
it
ripples
out,
and
this
is
rippling
out
to
the
community
and
bringing
about,
I
think,
a
greater
deal
of
trust,
because
I,
for
one
don't
mind
seeing
it.
I
P
P
What
I
want
to
talk
about
tonight
is
the
lack
of
traffic
control
signage
in
district,
one
in
fair
park
and
rose
park
throughout
the
world,
where
I
also
had
an
opportunity
to
drive
and
get
around
salt
lake
city
in
every
other
district,
except
for
the
fair
park
and
rose
park
communities.
There
is
plenty
of
yield
signs
and
stop
signs
at
intersections.
P
I
do
not
know
well,
I
do
know
a
little
bit.
Why?
Because,
when
I
address
this
with
the
member
of
the
transportation
division,
I
was
told
by
that
person
that
they
didn't
want
to
put
signs
there
to
encourage
people
to
slow
down
which
definitely
goes
against
any
of
my
training
or
experience,
or
probably
most
people
in
the
room,
except
for
those
who
have
to
drive
in
fair
park
and
rose
park.
Neighborhoods,
please
drive
pun,
intended
the
transportation
division
to
put
up
the
signage
in
those
intersections,
that's
one.
It
means
I
have
still
more
time.
P
Last
gentleman
talked
about
trust
as
a
student
of
public
administration
suu
just
went
overseas
and
had
a
the
education
study
abroad
was
about
public
trust.
P
One
of
the
things
this
council
did
two
years
ago
is
reduced
the
europe
everyone's
police
department
to
build
trust
with
the
community
by
constricting
the
ability
for
the
police
department
to
release
body
cam
video
by
city
ordinance
to
the
community
that
reduces
the
department's
ability
to
recruit
and
retain
personnel
that
this
community
desperately
needs
to
keep
the
city
safe.
I
last
ask
that
you
repeal
that
portion
of
the
ordinance.
Q
Q
Wherever
we
go,
the
problem
is
there
and
it
is
in
our
face
and
it
is
our
neighborhood
and
it
never
changes,
no
matter
what
you've
done
in
the
past
and
what
the
city
council
and
the
mayors
of
the
past
have
done.
Nothing
has
ever
changed
ever.
There
are
more
homeless
today
on
the
street
than
ever
before.
Q
Q
We
see
50
to
60
homeless
people
a
day
activity
program
where
they
come
together
and
work
as
a
community
to
do
something
good,
no
fights,
we
have
addicts,
we
have
people
title
tendencies,
we
have
people
that
are
schizophrenics
and
they
all
come
together
in
one
space
to
be
together
to
do
something
positive.
I
have
a
problem.
Q
We
know
we
are
doing
good.
We
know
we
are
helping
people,
but
we
can't
get
anybody
to
believe
us,
because
the
councils
in
the
past
and
the
council
presence
up
to
this
date
haven't
done
a
good
enough
job
of
collecting
information
about
what
is
working
and
it.
What
isn't
so,
when
I
make
a
claim
of
our
program
working,
we
have
nothing
to
compare
it
to.
Q
There
is
no
data
out
there
at
all.
That
says
this
works
or
that
doesn't
work
or
it
works
at
this
rate,
or
it
helps
so
many
people
come
off
of
drugs
or
not.
There
is
no
data.
It's
a
measure
success
against,
so
I
have
a
question.
We
are
successful.
We
are
helping
people,
but
I
have
to
be
able
to
measure
our
our
success
against
something
and
I'm
going
to
depend
on
you
to
enforce
when
you
fund
something
I
want
you
to
prove
it
works.
Thank.
R
R
R
R
R
I
need
we
need
to
see,
have
something
done
on
5th
north
and
8th
west,
that
street
floods,
when
it
rains
in
2019,
we
lost
two
cars
parked
in
front
of
the
house
by
the
street,
flooded
doing
getting
ready
to
do
something
they
have
our
drain
marked
off.
I
don't
know
what
they're
getting
ready
to
do,
but
yeah
that
needs
to
be
taken
care
of,
but
I
just
want
to
say
you
know.
I
love
this
area
and
I'm
tired
of
people
trying
to
buy
our
homes
because
we
are
a
prime
location.
A
A
J
Okay,
I
just
come
to
talk
about
a
so
problem.
I
think
it's
been
forced
upon
the
people
of
salt
lake
and
all
it's
about
the
inland
port.
I
think
it's
been
forced
upon
us
and
I
worried
about
it
because,
with
all
the
pollution,
people
are
going
to
die
from
it
and
there's
all
these
things.
This
is
not
going
to
do
good
for
our
error,
and
so
also
as
I'm
asking
you
do
away
with
the
inland
port,
so
everybody
can
live
and
nobody
can
die.
S
Hello,
thank
you
all
for
coming
to
the
west
side.
We
really
appreciate
it.
We
do
it's
really
good
to
see
your
faces
over
here,
I'm
billy
palmer
and
we
all
know
each
other.
One
thing
I
wanted
to
talk
about,
and
it's
going
to
echo
what
a
lot
of
people
have
said.
I
think
there's
at
least
four
people
in
this
room
over
the
last
year
have
canvassed
this
neighborhood
and
asked
neighbors
what
was
important
in
this
neighborhood
and
two
things
that
came.
S
I
know
I've
talked
to
some
of
you
about
it,
three
things
that
came
up
the
most
where
people
want
more
businesses.
They
want
to
be
able
to
walk
to
a
business.
They
want
to
walk
to
a
pub
or
a
tavern.
They
want
to
walk
to
restaurants,
they
want
their
old
neighborhood
back
and
the
other
thing
was
all
surrounding
safety.
People
wanted
to
feel
more
safe.
S
So
I
just
wanted
to
bring
that
to
your
attention
that
so
many
people,
the
first
thing
they
say
was
safety-
was
about
the
dr
you've
heard
some
of
the
stories
here
about
we're
a
compassionate
neighborhood.
S
We
care
deeply
about
people.
We
are
concerned
about
those
folks
that
are
living
without
homes
and
those
folks
that
are
battling
drug
addiction,
but
at
the
same
time
we
feel
that
they're
we're
not
seeing
in
as
much
concern
from
our
city
about
mitigating
those
things
that
make
us
feel
unsafe.
A
lot
of
people
don't
go
down
the
river
trails
anymore,
where
they
used
to
all
the
time
with
their
kids,
and
I
invite
for
any
one
of
you.
S
T
I
live
in
the
poplar
grove
neighborhood
and
I
wanted
to
say
that
I'm
in
agreement,
we
we're
losing
a
lot
of
space
to
poor
development
options
and
the
limited
some
of
the
space
that
the
city
owns
around
us
is
has
been
asked
for
by
the
the
homeless
village
folks
and
that
I
had
hoped
and
a
lot
of
people
hope
that
might
turn
into
a
place
where
we
can
go
for
for
those
amenities
that
we
need
that
is
and
and
a
group
a
group
of
people
who
are
here
have
been
working
towards
that
over
the
years
it's
been
like
10,
10
years
of
focusing
on
that
and
the
rda
has
circled
that
area,
and
we
would
like
to
continue
with
that
effort
as
the
as
as
for
homeless.
T
I
think
I
would
like
to
propose
a
great
spot
for
the
homeless
community.
I
think
setting
up
a
very,
very
administered
camp
on
capitol
hill
is
the
best
place
for
the
city
to
put
the
homeless.
I'm
very
serious
about
this.
T
This
is
a
great
way
for
the
city
to
show
what
we're
dealing
with
and
why
the
city
has
to
deal
with
the
homeless
population.
The
drug
use
for
the
state
and
the
state
will
see
that
when
they
come
to
work,
I
think
that's
a
great
place.
It's
grass
there's
trees,
water,
there's
lots
of
places
to
gather,
there's
nice
big
flat,
open
spaces
for
fires.
T
I
think
it's
a
great
spot
and
I
think
it
should
be
considered
as
part
as
a
as
a
piece
of
the
city
that,
even
though
I
think
the
state
has
some,
I
think
the
state
police
control
that
land,
but
I
think
you
know
they
took
the
west
desert.
We
can
take
capitol
hill.
I
think
it's
a
great
spot
and
I
think
there
should
be
some
real
effort
towards
the
towards
it.
Thank
you.
J
As
homeless
normally
aren't
allowed
to
go
in
so
we're
forced
to
urinate
outside
and
defecate
outside
the
nice
ones,
we'll
put
bags
over
it
and
we'll
put
it
somewhere
to
where
you
know.
But
the
truth
is:
is
the
hospitals.
J
If
they
would
just
stop,
I
think
everybody
who
does
not,
I
think
I
would
say
a
very
large
percentage
of
us.
Well,
I
don't
know
how
many
people
are
just
getting
put
in
the
hospital,
but
I
I
guarantee
you.
I
would
not
be
homeless.
J
If
I
could
put
an
address
on
something
and
nobody
would
bother
me
there,
I
would
not
be
homeless.
I
have,
I
have
probably
about
five
thousand
seven
hundred
and
eighty
dollars
in
my
bank.
I
do
stocks,
I
do
a
lot
of
things
and
I'm
the
one
pulling
your
guyses
they're
like
gardens,
but
the
cracks
anyways.
J
Your
guys
is,
I
don't
know
what
they're
called
but
they're
weeds
and
I
in
anyways
I
I
take
them
out
so
that
the
concrete
doesn't
bust
and
you
guys
don't
have
to
do
more
things.
I
also
served
for
seven
weeks
at
the
crossroad
thrift
store
volunteer
work
is
my
life
and
I
homeless
are
not
just
bad
people.
Hospitals,
where
running
from
plea
time.
F
Like
to
welcome
everybody
here
to
my
neighborhood,
my
name
is
nui.
I
live
here
in
glendale
for
30
years
I
own
a
small
business
electrical
contracting,
as
you
can
see
the
development
and
homeless
in
my
community,
I'm
reaching
out
to
city
council
to
help
a
small
business
here
who
lives
in
this
community.
F
F
We
decided
to
move
back
to
hawaii,
but
my
kids
want
to
live
here
in
glendale,
so
we
stay
here
in
glendale,
we've
been
here
for
so
long,
so
this
is
home.
But
as
I
have
this
business,
I
like
to
ask
the
senior
besides
other
companies,
doing
all
these
developments.
As
you
talk
to
your
agenda,
why
not
us
empower
us,
so
I'm
reaching
out
to
committee
not
just
a
talk,
because
if
it's
just
a
talk,
you'll
see
me
again
on
the
next
talk
so
reach
out
committee
for
yoga
city
council
to
make
this
happen.
Thank
you.
A
A
I
have
a
motion
from
council
member
dugan,
a
second
by
council
member
wharton.
Is
there
any
discussion
all
right,
I'll
roll
call?
Councilmember
fowler,
wharton
mono?
Yes,
dugan?
Yes,
I'm
a
yes
that
passes
six
with
valdemaros
absent.
Thank
you
we'll
be
moving
on
to
section
f,
unfinished
business
item
f1
regarding
the
ordinance
convention
on
the
elimination
of
all
forms
of
discrimination
against
women,
cedaw
and
gender
equity.
K
A
F
A
A
A
A
A
A
Y'all
like
I
was
so
nervous
that
our
staff
was
gonna
come
here
and
be
like.
Why
did
we
literally
spend
half
of
our
brain
power
this
week?
Preparing
for
it?
You
showed,
I
know
I
know
who
you
are.
This
is
why
I
ran.
I
know
who
you
are.
Thank
you
for
showing
up
and
doing
what
we
do
as
west
side.
Thank
you
so
much.