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From YouTube: Salt Lake City Formal Meeting - Date 04/04/2023
Description
To view the agenda for this meeting go to https://slc.primegov.com/public/portal
A
A
A
A
A
A
B
Welcome
to
today's
meeting,
I
am
Victoria
Petro
district,
one
and
I
have
the
pleasure
of
chairing
tonight.
We
continue
to
host
hybrid
meetings
to
keep
everyone
healthy
and
safe.
Our
meetings
are
public
and
you're
welcome
to
join
us
in
person
or
by
watching
from
the
council's
agenda
page
Zoom,
Facebook,
YouTube
or
SLC
TV.
We
hope
you'll
continue
to
join
us
in
whatever
manner
you
feel
most
comfortable
and
thank
you
for
participating.
Today
we
will
start
with
the
Pledge
of
Allegiance.
Please
join
us.
B
Thank
you
and
thank
you
again
to
everyone
who's
joining
us
tonight,
both
in
person
and
online
before
we
move
the
agenda,
I
want
to
mention
and
remind
everyone
about
our
rules
of
decorum,
which
are
in
place
to
ensure
our
meetings
move
along
well
and
help
everyone
feel
comfortable,
sharing
their
comments.
A
copy
of
the
full
rules
of
decorum
are
available
at
the
door
and
our
staff
will
post
them
in
the
zoom,
which
brings
us
to
item
A4.
B
D
B
B
B
This
brings
us
to
the
public
hearings
portion
of
the
evening.
As
some
of
you
have
may
noticed,
we
switched
our
platform
from
WebEx
to
zoom
and
with
this
comes
a
few
changes,
if
you'd
like
to
comment
on
a
public
hearing
today,
we're
accepting
comments
in
person
and
online
on
Zoom
Issac
canero
from
our
staff
will
moderate
our
zoom
and
will
message
you
with
any
questions
about
your
registration
staff
is
handling
many
tasks.
So
please
limit
messages
to
technical
issues
and
minimal
information
updates.
B
If
you
need
to
speak
with
our
staff,
please
select
esec
spelled
I-s-aac
canado
from
the
list
of
participants.
Please
only
use
the
chat
to
chat
for
troubleshooting
and
registration
inquiries
and
be
sure
to
direct
your
message
to
isak.
Only
if
you
need
to
please
use
the
raise
hand
control
to
indicate
that
you
need
something
from
The,
Host
Taylor
Hill
on
our
staff
will
be
calling
the
names
of
those
that
wish
to
comment.
B
We
will
call
the
names
of
people
on
zoom
and
in
person
based
on
the
order
of
registration
or
received
comment
cards
if
you're
on
Zoom,
please
unmute
your
mic
when
Taylor
calls
your
name
and
with
that
we'll
start.
Our
public
hearings
item
B1
is
an
ordinance
on
the
homeless,
Resource
Center
text
Amendment
before
we
start
taking
comments.
I'll
turn
the
time
over
to
Nick
tarbet
Council
staff
policy
analyst
to
give
a
short
introduction.
F
Thank
you,
madam
chair.
The
council
will
be
briefed
on
a
proposal
that
would
do
the
following
for
the
homeless
resource
text
Amendment.
We
would
establish
a
process
for
approving
future
homeowners
homeless.
Resource
Centers
create
a
homeless,
Resource,
Center
overlay,
zoning
District,
adult
Provisions
for
temporary
and
seasonal
homeless,
Resource
Centers
and
modify
existing
standards
for
homeless,
Resource,
Centers
and
homeless
shelters.
F
G
H
Thank
you
good
evening,
council
members,
my
name
is
Paul
Webster
I'm,
the
executive
director
of
solutions,
Utah
Solutions
Utah
is
a
public
policy
advocacy
organization,
oops,
sorry
boy
that
changed
my
whole
look
here:
we're
a
public
policy
advocacy
organization
that
focuses
on
homelessness
and
solving
homelessness
and
its
impacts
on
the
community,
we'd
like
to
focus
on
just
a
couple
of
items
that
are
contained
in
the
provisions
of
the
proposed
homeless,
Resource,
Center,
Amendment
and
we're
we're
concerned
because
oftentimes
they
don't
encourage
better
outcomes
and
keep
the
public
informed
of
the
impacts
of
homeless,
Resource
Centers.
H
In
fact,
with
respect
to
the
provision
on
Firearms,
we
believe
they
make
the
communities
and
homeless
Resource
Centers
more
dangerous.
We
provided
a
document
with
a
number
of
concerns,
but
I
wish
to
emphasize
just
three
first
I
want
to
thank
you
for
removing
from
consideration
the
administerial
approval
of
so-called
small
shelters.
Solutions
Utah
appreciates
the
removal
of
this
provision
because
it
was
based
on
no
evidence
and
no
facts
suggesting
that
smaller
shelters
produce
smaller
impacts
in
the
community.
H
Second,
we
recommend
that
police
reports
attributed
to
calls
related
to
hrcs
be
included
in
the
hrc's
annual
report.
Police
reports
are
more
substantive
and
provide
a
higher
degree
of
objectivity
than
complaints
from
the
public,
and
they
also
indicate
whether
public
and
Community
safety
goals
are
being
met
with
respect
to
homeless,
Resource
Centers.
H
Lastly,
the
language
regarding
the
collection
and
securing
of
firearms
is
a
significant
safety
concern
for
the
community
homeless.
Resource
Centers
should
have
no
authority
to
collect
and
secure
Firearms
staff
are
not
trained.
There
are
no
information,
there's
no
information
if
Firearms
collected
will
have
Trigger
or
chamber
locks
be
kept
in
a
gun
safe
and
a
secure,
separate
room.
Hrc
hrcs
should
not
be
in
the
business
of
handling
firearms
and
keeping
them
on
the
premises
noticing
that
Firearms
are
prohibited
inside
homeless,
shelters.
I
G
J
I
believe
I
am.
Can
you
hear
me?
Yes,
yes,
okay,
I
am
Reverend
Brigette,
weird
and
I'm.
An
ordained,
Lutheran,
pastor
and
I
have
been
serving
as
chaplain
for
the
second
and
second
Coalition
down
at
First
United
Methodist
for
several
months
and
I
would
like
to
speak
to
this
amendment
and
that
it
is
very
important
that
we
have
enough
beds
and
shelter
space
for
our
unhoused,
siblings.
The
Proposal
does
not
even
make
a
dent
and
continues
to
exacerbate
the
issue.
J
In
my
time
at
second
and
second,
we
house
85
Souls
every
night
for
our
movie
nights
and
I
can
tell
you.
There
has
been
no
impact,
no
complaints,
no
issues,
only
people
being
fed,
housed
and
and
creating
Community
genuine
community
that
every
person
deserves.
J
Here
we
are
in
the
most
holy
of
weeks
for
my
faith,
tradition,
the
one
where
we
recount
the
passion
of
Jesus,
who
taught
us
to
love
and
care
for
our
neighbor
and
I.
Think
it's
ironic
we're
having
this
conversation
in
Holy
Week.
Can
we
as
people
come
together
with
compassion
to
understand
that,
when
we
love
and
care
for
each
other,
we
love
and
care
for
ourselves,
and
that
the
this
this
relationship
that
we
are
in
together
matters
when
we
don't
house
our
unhoused
siblings,
that
is
more
trauma?
There
is
more
hunger
there.
J
It
exacerbates
all
the
problems
that
this
kind
of
housing
can
solve.
I
implore,
the
city,
the
the
County
Council.
Excuse
me
I
implore
you
to
ensure
that
there
is
a
safe,
loving
place
for
every
unsheltered
utahn
to
to
go
to
each
and
every
night.
This
solution
is
simply
not
enough
and
we
need
to
care
for
our
neighbor.
Thank
you
very
much.
G
K
Thank
you
good
evening,
council
members,
my
name
is
Michelle
Flynn
and
I
serve
as
executive
director
of
the
road
home.
I
would
like
to
express
our
support
of
the
homeless
Resource
Center
text
Amendment
before
you
with
some
feedback
for
you
to
consider
as
well.
We've
been
providing
feedback
throughout
around
two
years
of
this
process
and
really
appreciate
the
evolution
of
The
Proposal.
That's
happened
over
that
time
and
the
Outreach
that
the
planning
staff
has
completed
I
want
to
be
clear.
We
have
no
plans
to
develop
a
new
homeless,
Resource
Center
in
Salt
Lake
City.
K
100
years
of
experience,
providing
support
and
developing
shelter
and
housing
facilities
for
people
in
Salt,
Lake
count
throughout
Salt
Lake
County
we're
a
strong
partner
with
the
Salt
Lake
Valley
coalition
to
end
homelessness
and
can
we'll
continue
that
work
to
help
prioritize
the
types
of
new
services
and
projects
that
are
needed
and
ensure
that
our
goal
is
to
reduce
the
number
of
Shelter
beds
and
Resource
Centers
that
are
needed
and
support,
Salt,
Lake,
City
and
other
leaders
in
the
development
of
the
deeply
affordable
housing.
That's
needed.
K
You
know
that
we
operate
the
gal
Miller
Resource
Center
in
Salt,
Lake
City,
as
well
as
a
number
of
Supportive
Housing
Programs,
but
in
addition
to
operating
in
Salt,
Lake
City
we've
developed
and
continue
to
operate
the
Family
Resource
Center
in
Midvale,
which
opened
in
1998,
and
we
want
to
reiterate
our
support
of
a
collab
and
multi-city
solution
to
meet
the
needs,
and
then
I
also
want
to
recognize
the
really
significant
change
that
this
proposal
outlines
and
what
that
means
for
you
in
your
role
as
council
members.
This.
K
This
change
moves
us
away
from
the
designated
zones
with
conditional
use
approvals
to
this
new
model,
where
we
take
equity
and
proximity
into
other
Resource
Centers
into
consideration.
While
when
evaluating
these
sites
and
really
has
the
city
council
in
the
driver's
seat-
and
we
appreciate
you
taking
that
role
and
look
forward
to
working
with
you
in
the
days
ahead,.
G
L
Hi
I'd
like
to
urge
you
to
pass
the
original
version
of
this
from
the
planning
committee
that
put
a
lot
of
thought.
A
lot
of
knowledge
into
its
decisions.
These
hrcs,
while
inadequate
to
the
scale
of
the
problem,
could
indeed
at
least
it
opens
up
a
possibility
of
a
lifeline
if
more
of
these
hrcs
are
available
and
we
have
people
dying
on
the
streets
right
now.
We
have
people
dying
of
sepsis
in
the
hospital.
L
We
have
people
losing
parts
of
their
body.
We
have
people
losing
their
loved
ones
because
they
can't
afford
housing
right
now,
so
I
really
urge
you
to
pass
the
original
version
and
certainly
not
to
reduce
the
number
of
the
maximum
number
of
occupants
in
the
hrc's.
L
If
it
goes
from
40
to
10,
10
is
simply
not
enough
to
operate
in
HRC.
It's
it's
not
viable
at
all
and
as
a
volunteer
at
the
second
and
second
Coalition
I
can
assure
you.
40
people
who
are
experiencing
homelessness
are
not
a
threat
to
anyone's
Community
we're
every
night.
We
offer
it
we're
out
there
in
a
room,
basically
one
room,
two
rooms
with
85
people,
and
you
know
what
they're
doing
they're
talking
to
their
friends
they're
getting
some
rest
they're
eating
food
they're
charging
their
phones.
L
These
are
people
like
anyone
else
and
I'd
urge
you,
if
you're,
not
sure
whether
they're,
threatening
or
not
to
to
just
go
down
there.
It's
open
tonight,
you
can
see
what
people
are
learn
their
stories.
L
But
yes,
please
toss
this
without
watering
it
down
without
making
it
no
longer
even
part
of
the
solution.
We're
about
to
see
600
people
kicked
out
on
the
streets
as
the
Overflow
beds
closed
over
the
next
couple
weeks.
This
is
a
huge
problem.
It's
already
not
enough
beds.
Thank
you.
E
All
right,
so
my
name
is
Carl
Moore
and
I'm.
Exhausted
I
am
tired,
I
don't
get
paid
for
what
I
do
I
started
a
number
of
non-profits
pandos
we've
been
doing
advocacy
for
indigenous
people,
also
marginalized
communities,
slcr
protectors.
We
advocate
for
marginalized
communities
and
advocate
for
responsibility
of
our
people.
E
I
started
help
started
hours,
our
unsheltered
relatives,
we
feed
people
every
Saturday
on
the
Block
I
am
the
new
chairperson
of
unsheltered,
Utah
and
I
just
want
to
say
that
all
of
these
organizations,
including
mmiw
plus
Utah,
are
object
to
this
amendment
that
reduces
the
the
capacity
from
40
to
10
people,
10
people
in
every
District
times,
seven,
that's
70
people
and
as
a
person
who
is
one
of
the
key,
a
key
organizations
in
the
second
and
second
coalitions.
E
Our
logo
here
is
a
symbol
of
us
as
a
relationship
with
each
other,
we're
all
related
we're
all
related
and
we
take
care
of
each
other
and
I
want
to
remind
y'all
also
that
you're
all
on
Stolen
land
and
whatever
Authority
or
whatever
that
crap.
You
think
you
have
just
check
yourselves
check
yourselves.
So
all
these
people
who
oppose
these
things
or
whatever
they
need
to
check
themselves
too,
because
they're
living
on
Stolen,
land,
okay
and
I
know
that
that
seems
trivial
to
a
lot
of
people.
But
that
is
serious.
This
is
serious.
E
M
Good
evening,
our
city
is
at
its
lowest
moral
point
in
terms
of
its
treatment
of
people
who
are
most
in
need.
If
I
left,
my
dog
Outdoors
to
freeze
to
death
I
would
rightly
be
prosecuted.
Yet
our
elected
City
officials
have
left
human
beings
Outdoors
this
brutal
winter
to
freeze
to
death
and
suffer
Untold
tragedies
demonstrating
an
uncivilized
cruelty.
M
The
city
has
paid
employees
and
contractors
to
confiscate
and
destroy
the
property
of
homeless
people,
including
tents,
clothing
and
medications.
During
a
recent
raid,
I
met
a
man
who
is
only
wearing
socks
on
his
feet
in
bitterly
freezing
weather,
because
he
couldn't
put
on
shoes.
I
took
him
to
an
emergency
room
and
he
had
massive
frostbite
and
trench
foot.
That's
the
result
of
how
homeless
people
are
being
treated.
M
Yet
at
our
mayor's
behest,
you
voted
to
prohibit
shelters
of
any
size
for
homeless
people,
for
the
sake
of
fundamental
decency,
stop
prohibiting
an
unreasonably
limiting
shelters
in
our
community
instead
reverse
course
and
provide
shelter.
That
is
a
solution
that
promotes
the
interests
of
residents,
businesses
and
homeless
people
alike.
Thank
you.
Rocky.
G
N
Good
evening,
council
members,
my
name
is
Nigel
swaby
I'm,
the
chair
of
the
Fair
Park
Community
Council.
We
sent
a
letter
or
an
email
earlier
on
this
subject
being
in
a
community
that
served
as
a
temper
as
Salt
Lake's
last
two
temporary
homeless
resource
overflows.
I
wanted
to
make
a
couple
comments
tonight
about
this
and
I.
Want
you
to
think
about
a
few
things.
First
off.
N
Will
this
proposal
provide
equitable
distribution
throughout
the
city?
It
shouldn't
be
concentrated
in
any
one
area,
and
it
should
also
when
I
talk
about
equity
on
this
subject,
I
also
talk
about.
We
shouldn't
be
putting
homeless
people
unsheltered
people
in
Warehouse
districts
or
in
commercial
districts,
they're
people
just
like
us,
they
need
to
be
in
housing
districts.
N
N
The
third
thing
I
want
you
to
think
about
is
case
management
if
you
supply
housing,
but
you
don't
Supply
the
help
that
these
folks
need
to
go
along
with
it
they're
going
to
end
up
back
on
the
street.
Again,
that's
one
of
the
powerful
things
that
Carl's
organization
does
and
finally,
I
want
you
to
think
about
creating
truly
safe
spaces
for
all
residents
of
Salt
Lake.
We
all
have
different
needs,
somebody
who
who
is
housed?
Who,
who
has
a
home?
N
O
Well,
thank
you
I'm
Sean,
McMillan
and
today
I'm
here
in
my
capacity
as
the
co-chair
of
the
Salt
Lake
Valley
coalition
to
end
homelessness.
I
want
to
thank
the
council
for
all
of
their
hard
work,
as
well
as
the
mayor
for
for
her
hard
work
on
this
very
complex
issue.
I've
appreciated
the
opportunity
to
work
with
this
group
with
this
group
of
leaders
and
and
much
has
been
done.
The
solely
Valley,
Coalition
and
homelessness
has
appreciated
the
opportunity
to
offer
us
expertise
and
provide
feedback
throughout
the
homeless,
Resource
Center
text
amendment
process.
O
Once
again,
we
would
like
to
take
this
opportunity
to
comment,
as
he
thoughtfully
consider.
The
proposed
amendments.
The
Salt
Lake
Valley
Coalition
is
support,
is
supportive
of
this
text
Amendment,
but
we
would
like
to
offer
a
few
additional
comments.
Considerations
timeline.
The
Salt
Lake
Valley
Coalition
proposes
specific
time
frame
for
the
process
with
a
total
period
limitation
of
six
to
nine
months.
In
order
to
mitigate
mitigate
the
challenges
the
applicant
has
and
navigate
creating
the
purchase
of
real
estate
and
securing
Financial
Resources
size.
The
Salt
Lake
Valley
Coalition
recommends
the
zoning
map.
O
Amendment
application
be
be
the
process
for
for
facilities
of
all
sizes,
thereby
expanding
the
relevant
locations
for
the
proposed
facility,
citing
Clarity
is
needed
regarding
where
hrcs
can
be
cited.
Potential
applicants
need
information,
such
as
a
map
or
specific
guidance
from
the
planning
department
as
to
where
hrcs
can
be
located,
I'm
very
short
on
time,
I'm
not
going
to
be
able
to
get
through
the
letter.
There's
more
detail
know
that
it
is
our
great
desire
that
it's
our
great
hope
that
we
don't
come
before
you
about
hrc's
or
more
shelter.
O
What
we
need
in
our
community
in
our
city
is
housing
that
is
Affordable
to
all
of
the
citizens
of
this
community.
The
other
thing
that
we
need-
and
many
of
you
know
this,
because
you've
provided
support
for
it,
that
that
there
are
individuals
who
need
Supportive
Services
and
they
will
need
it
for
an.
B
P
Good
evening,
one
of
the
biggest
concerns
about
the
new
HRC
standards
is
they
are
nearly
identical
to
the
existing
ones
and
those
who've
not
only
been
problematical
but
have
done
very
little
to
build
public
trust.
We
all
know
there
are
complexities
associated
with
hrc's
funding,
operational
challenges,
staff
shortages
and
the
broad
and
diverse
needs
of
the
homeless,
but
those
must
also
be
weighed
against
another
set
of
important
facts.
Our
shelters
are
responsible
for
the
highest
calls
to
police.
They
have
burdened
our
fire
department
and
civil
enforcement
officials.
P
Nearby
businesses
and
homeowners
have
also
experienced
elevated
rates
of
crime,
and,
while
there
have
been
certainly
some
great
human
successes
and
improved
lives,
questions
remain
about
the
efficacy
of
the
current
model.
As
elected
officials,
one
of
your
primary
duties
is
to
ensure
Public
Safety.
Let
me
restate
for
the
record
that
the
Hillcrest
neighborhood
Council
supported
the
intent
to
open
all
homeless
shelters
to
other
parts
of
the
city,
but
in
doing
so
we
assume
that
crime
and
safety
issues
associated
with
its
existing
shelters
wouldn't
be
duplicated.
P
Since
their
existence,
hrcs
were
required
to
annually
submit
written
reports
to
city
officials
pertaining
to
community
complaints
and
their
resolution,
actions
to
prevent
unlawful
Behavior,
the
security
of
surrounding
neighborhoods,
internal
on-site
security,
noise
reduction
and
much
more
to
our
knowledge.
None
of
those
reports
have
been
filed.
We
know
the
task
before
you
is
complicated,
but
we
implore
you
to
set
a
higher
standard
for
the
operation
of
hrcs.
We
want
to
be
supportive,
but
will
find
it
difficult
to
do
so
if
things
remain
the
same.
Thank
you.
Q
Hi,
my
name
is
Barbara
Elber
and
I
am
here
as
a
homeless,
individual
in
the
city
of
Salt,
Lake
I
have
been
homeless
for
the
better
part
of
18
years.
In
your
wonderful
City,
this
year
alone,
I
have
been
in
the
last
year.
I
have
been
abated
49
times
because
of
the
great
laws
of
the
city,
one
of
those
times
the
city
took
my
RV
and
my
child
into
DCFS
custody,
because
I
was
a
homeless
individual.
Q
Instead
of
giving
services
to
the
homeless.
That
need
help
who
choose
not
to
go
to
shelters
because
of
safety
issues
because
of
theft
and
because
of
pure
PTSD
we're
forced
to
go
camping
and
you
come
and
steal
our
stuff.
You
Force
us
to
freeze
to
death.
I,
have
lost
75
friends
this
year
due
to
hypothermia
drug
overdose,
because
they
can't
get
warm
enough
to
stay
alive.
Q
It
is
crap
and
I
believe
that
we
need
something
simple.
It's
a
12-step
program
and
the
first
step
is
a
sanctioned.
Pro
is
a
sanctioned
Campground,
where
we
can
go
where
it's
low
barrier,
where
we're
safe.
Where
we
know
our
stuff
is
safe,
so
that
we
can
become
the
proper
citizens
of
Utah
and
be
self-sustained,
so
that
we
can
be
just
as
independent
as
everybody
else.
I
I
Yes,
more
shelters,
people
are
freezing,
we
need
to
do
whatever
we
can
to
get
people
inside,
but
also
the
people
we
serve
will
never
step
foot
inside
a
shelter
again.
A
lot
of
them
won't
and
for
very
valid
reasons.
Barbie
over
here
stayed
in
a
shelter,
the
Midvale
family,
shelter.
Her
little
girl
got
bit
by
so
many
bed,
bugs
Mama
decided
that
being
outside
camping
is
safer
for
the
child
and
having
the
baby
urinate
blood
and
be
on
antibiotics
for
six
weeks.
I
There
are
problems
in
shelters
and
I
know
that
we
understand
that
I
know
we're
trying
to
do
better,
but
the
shelter
system
is
not
the
all
the
be-all
end-all
system.
There
are
people
that
deserve
privacy,
people
that
have
PTSD.
That
cannot
be
in
a
congregate
setting.
That's
why
we're
pushing
for
a
sanctioned
Campground?
We
can
create
amenities
and
utilities
bathrooms
hookups
so
that
they
have
space
heaters
in
their
tents.
We've
housed
people
in
tents
and
backyards
with
great
success.
They're
warm
they're,
safe,
there's
bathrooms.
I
The
current
system
is
only
promoting
instability
and
we
need
to
have
other
options,
and
we
can
do
that
cheaply
much
cheaper
than
building
a
new
HRC.
We
can
do
that
for
with
with
purely
Nomad
labor
right
now.
The
people
on
this
here
today
are
living
in
a
bus,
24
7.
We
bought
the
blue
bus.
It
was
a
Deseret
News
article
and
they're
happy
and
they're
thriving
that.
G
G
R
My
name
is
Robert
Danielson
and
I'm,
a
property
owner
in
District
Five
I
have
a
business
that
happens
to
be
right
next
door
to
the
Gail
Miller
resource
center,
and
it's
I've
been
a
incredibly
obvious.
How
mismanaged
and
how
ineffective
the
lack
of
resources
are
at
the
resource
center.
The
only
people
benefiting
from
this
are
the
directors
of
shelter,
the
homeless
and
the
road
home
which
are
both
making
over
two
hundred
thousand
dollars
a
year.
The
crime
inside
of
these
facilities
is
abysmal.
It
is
unforgivable.
R
We
have
a
city
council
that
won't
do
anything
to
hold
these
organizations
and
these
sites
to
their
conditional
use
permits.
So
the
question
comes
to
mind:
why
would
a
failing
system
be
rewarded
with
more
property
and
more
money
when
their
existing
facilities
are?
Are
nothing
more
than
a
complete
failure
in
a
profit
Center
for
these
quote
unquote,
non-for-profits
I
strongly
oppose
offering
any
any
resources
whatsoever
to
the
current
organizations
running
these
Resource
Centers
right
now,
as
their
complete
and
utter
failures.
G
S
Hello,
my
name
is
Luke
Menders
I've
been
a
homeless
person
off
and
on
for
the
last
five
years,
and
it's
it's
been
due
to
being
attacked
and
whether
it's
mental
disorder
or
something
actually
attacking
me,
I,
haven't
been
able
to
be
too
close
to
people
or
I
need
my
own
space
and
being
in
apartment
buildings.
Stuff
like
that.
It
has
a
lot
of
factors
for
safety
concerns,
and
things
like
that
for
me
or
for
everybody,
I
feel
like
and
so
I'm
out
there
and
I'm
I'm,
really
good.
S
With
my
eyes,
I
see
the
I,
see
the
patterns
and
everything
and
there's
an
issue.
You
can
look
at
all
the
patterns
and
see
what
the
what
the,
what
the
issues
are
from
and
there's
there's
a
lot
of
things
that
need
work.
But
these
this
is
connected
to
everything.
S
To
not
have
a
place
to
go,
that's
safe
is,
is
a
big
deal
for
people
that
maybe
are
out
there
for
the
night,
couldn't
get
a
a
taxi
or
anything
home.
You
know
the
downtown
stores,
like
one
place,
that
I
think
should
be
a
safe
place
as
well
is
like
a
gas
station
with
lit
up
parking.
S
Lots
like
why
can't
you
know
they
don't
like
you
hanging
out
there
either
if
you
don't
have
any
place
to
go,
but
that's
just
going
to
be
a
consistent
for
the
future
for
every
city,
there's
gonna,
there's
need
for
that,
and
there's
need
for
the
the
number
one
thing
which
is
safety
and
that
I've
I
have
a
lot
of
things
to
say,
but
I
think
this
is
just
a
good
start
for
that.
So.
T
Hi
I
just
wanted
to
talk
about
a
few
things
like
they're
kind
of
what
casino
touched
on
there
is
like
spaces,
there's
been
other
cities,
and
you
know
places
that
have
allowed,
or
you
know
like
a
piece
of
land
to
use
and
I
just
believe
that,
like
if
we
handle
things
kind
of
out
of
compassion
and
like
realize
that
these
are
all
real
people,
these
could
be
your
brothers
sisters,
moms
dads,
you
know
what
I
mean
we
had
to
help
a
74
year
old
man
that
laid
on
a
sidewalk
for
three
days
in
just
sheets
right
outside
of
a
resource
center
and
like
he
would
have
died
and
I
just
believe
that,
like
we
all
work
together,
a
little
bit
better
that
we
can
accomplish
a
law
because
it
was
The,
Nomad
Alliance,
we
actually
do
like
a
lot
of
big
things
and
we're
just
Grassroots
all
volunteer
and
all
donation
and
wow
I
have
a
whole
minute.
T
T
We
have
a
lot
of
good
ideas
on
how
to
like
help
people
in
a
real
way
like
show
them
love
basically
and
show
them
like
better
ways
of
living
and
how
to
lift
themselves
up
out
of
of
where
they're
at
and
like
Barbara
was
saying
like
on
the
street,
like
people
can't
do
that,
you
know
like
if
you
go,
spend
some
time
down
there,
because
I
volunteer
a
lot.
T
A
C
I'm
Audrey,
Evans
and
I
am
a
small
business
owner
here
in
Salt,
Lake
City
I
grew
up
out
in
the
West
Valley
area,
and
ever
since
I
became
a
very
successful
entrepreneur
in
real
estate.
I've
done
development
for
economics
in
the
United
States
and
outside
I
have
seen
poverty
with
my
own
eyes
and
I
know
that
this
is
a
great
country.
This
is
a
country
with
extreme
wealth.
C
We
have
a
four
percent
economic
growth
coming
to
our
country
every
single
day
and
the
amount
of
billionaires
that
live
on
this
soil
is
a
privilege
to
every
single
one
of
us.
I
challenge
each
and
every
one
of
you
council,
members
to
disguise
yourselves
contact
a
women's
shelter,
a
men's
shelter
make
an
appointment
to
be
seen,
ask
for
a
bed
and
time
yourself
how
long
it
would
take
for
you
to
receive
a
place
to
sleep.
C
I
leave
you
with
these
few
words
that
the
people
that
you
saw
today
are
what
they
call
the
boots
on
the
ground
and
they've
done
more
in
the
shortest
amount
of
time.
I've
seen
and
witnessed,
with
my
own
eyes,
has
been
accomplished
throughout
this
winter.
This
has
been
the
longest
winter
we've
ever
seen,
and
these
projections
happen
through
agricultural
calendars,
that
we
see
these
snowstorms.
C
We
don't
watch
dead
bodies
outside
and
think
that
that's
how
it's
supposed
to
be
I
also
want
to
suggest
that
there's
a
distortion
between
the
city
council
and
their
obligation
versus
a
mayoral
position
and
their
obligation.
These
are
things
that
should
be
done
simultaneously.
We
shouldn't
have
two
different
bodies
of
government
working
in
two
different
directions:
it's
one
whole
concept.
C
We
can
look
at
lots
of
people
that
are
on
the
streets
and
any
one
of
you
could
lose
your
home
at
any
time.
Due
to
existing
pre-existing,
your
children
have
lost
a
job.
Your
parents
could
lose
a
job.
Your
home
can
come
down.
There's
lots
of
factors
why
these
people
don't
have
a
home
today
and
I
think
it
takes
just
a
little
bit
of
humanity
to
see
what's
really
happening
on
these
streets.
Thank
you.
U
I,
thank
you
for
listening
to
us,
I've
moved
to
downtown
Salt
Lake
in
September.
It
was
December
when
I
was
walking
my
dog
one
morning
in
the
bitterly
cold
temperatures
and
I
Came
Upon
A
man
around
the
corner
and
I
just
thought.
I
hope,
I,
don't
see
anyone
sleeping
on
the
streets
tonight
because
it's
far
too
cold,
it
was
16
degrees.
As
I
looked
at
my
phone
and
he
was
waking
up
and
telling
me
how
cold
he
was
and
he
couldn't
fill
his
fingers.
U
I
said
why
didn't
you
go
to
a
shelter?
He
said
they
were
all
full.
Last
night
I
got
turned
away,
it
was
then
I
decided
I'm
going
to
do
something
and
I've
written
letters,
and
luckily
I
listened
to
a
podcast
where
Rocky
Anderson
was
talking
about
how
this
is
not.
Okay
on
our
watch
and
he's
mentioned
a
church
on.
Second
and
second,
that
said,
we
are
not
going
to
allow
this
we're
opening
our
doors
and
I
started.
U
Instead,
we're
sending
money
to
programs,
the
Gale
Miller
Center
that
does
isn't
done
right
and
you
guys
aren't
holding
these
people
accountable
and
I'm.
Sorry,
if
you're
gonna
blame
it
on
the
county,
then
your
messaging
isn't
getting
through
because
you're
getting
blamed
and
it
doesn't
look
like
you're
doing
anything.
So
if
this
is
all
the
counties
doing
about
not
funding,
shelters
about
encouraging
all
these
abatements
in
the
middle
of
winter
and
taking
things
that
I
have
donated
I,
don't
make
a
lot
of
money
but
I'm
not
going
to
watch.
U
B
G
We
it
looks
like
we
had
one
more
person
wanting
to
speak
and
that
is
Amy
Hawkins.
If
that's
okay,
all.
W
W
Many
of
us
in
the
virtual
or
literal
room
tonight
are
involved
in
the
conversation
with
our
state
legislature
about
the
need
for
more
resources,
more
mitigation
funding,
but
we
need
metrics
and
reports
to
make
those
arguments
effectively.
Having
publicly
available
data
that
community
members
and
policy
makers
can
access
without
a
grammar
request
would
boost
transparency
and
trust
with
community
members.
Who'd
like
to
see
that
their
comments
are
in
fact
represented
in
these
annual
reports
at
present
from
the
neighborhood
advisory
council
meeting
minutes
that
have
been
shared
with
us.
W
It's
seems
that
their
issues
aren't
making
it
into
the
reports.
Since
the
Gail
Miller
homeless,
Resource
Center
opened
in
Fall
2019,
businesses
surrounding
the
resource
center
have
experienced,
heightened
rates
of
repeated
damages
to
their
property
by
some
people
experiencing
homelessness,
but
also
those
who
prey
on
them.
Owners
of
these
businesses
can
no
longer
afford
to
pay
for
their
insurance
premiums
for
the
accrued
damages
or
they're
afraid
to
make
claims,
because
they'll
be
dropped
from
yet
another
insurance
carrier.
W
X
B
B
Those
opposed
that
motion
carries
seven
to
none.
We
will
move
on
to
public
hearing
item
B2,
it's
an
ordinance
regarding
a
rezone
and
master
plan
Amendment
at
865
South
500
East.
Before
we
begin
taking
comments.
I'll
first
turn
the
time
over
to
Brian
Fulmer
Council
staff
policy
analyst
to
give
a
short
introduction.
Z
Thank
you,
madam
chair.
This
is
a
proposal
to
amend
the
zoning
map
for
the
parcel
at
865
South
500
East
from
its
current
RMF
30
zoning
designation
to
CN
or
neighborhood
commercial
The
Proposal
would
also
amend
the
Central
Community
master
plan.
Future
land
use
map
from
low
density,
residential
to
Neighborhood
commercial.
The
petitioner
stated
objective
is
to
con
is
to
convert
the
single-family
residential
structure
to
an
unspecified
commercial
use.
Thank.
G
AA
It
snowed
this
much
in
Salt
Lake
before
I,
just
wasn't
as
old,
then
as
I
am
now
tonight
is
yet
another
insult
to
the
public
process.
Regarding
this
rezoning
and
master
plan
Amendment
two
weeks
ago,
the
note
is
posted
on
the
property.
Was
wrong.
I
didn't
see
a
sign
at
all
on
Sunday
when
I
was
there,
it's
not
surprising,
given
our
employment
weather.
AA
AA
The
mentality
is
that
one
more
house
won't
matter,
but
it
does
especially
in
a
neighborhood
losing
its
family
oriented
housing,
and
that
is
the
highest
and
best
use
of
this
property
located
across
from
Liberty
Park
near
a
fabulous
infant
daycare
and
one
of
Salt
Lake's
after
school
programs.
In
addition
to
Abundant
coffee
shops,
restaurants,
Gift,
Stores
and
I
would
be
remiss
if
I
didn't
mention
hand,
dipped
chocolates.
AA
There
have
been
multiple
failures
of
public
process,
but
the
Fatal
flaw
is
that
no
one
could
reasonably
know
about
the
proposal
to
put
an
Adu
behind
this
house
right
where
the
neighbor
has
documented
parking
for
the
commercial
uses
under
the
same
ownership.
My
understanding
of
State
Statute,
adopted
in
2018,
is
that
a
development
agreement
would
have
to
go
through
the
entire
public
process.
I
do
not
see
how
the
city
can
ensure
that
an
Adu
will
be
constructed
without
a
development
agreement.
AA
The
dysfunctional
housing
loss
mitigation
ordinance
does
not
require
replacement
of
the
housing
on
the
same
site.
Short
version
I
believe
that
the
proposed
Adu
would
violate
State
Statute,
compounding
all
of
the
other
issues
with
public
process.
If
you
say
no,
Salt
Lake
retains
a
unit
of
family-oriented
housing.
That
should
be
a
simple
call
to
make.
Thank
you.
G
AB
B
AC
X
Yeah
I
was
actually
debating
that
so
let's
I
listen
yeah,
let's
go
for
because
you
know
Cindy,
you
know
knows.
B
B
AD
Thank
you,
madam
chair.
The
city
applies
for
and
receives
grants
which
helps,
support
and
pay
for
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's
one
Grant,
the
marathon
petroleum
Community
investment
Grant,
which
will
provide
improvements
to
the
fire
department,
training
Tower,
which
will
help
with
training
for
responses
to
gas
related
and
hazardous
incidents.
V
Y
B
Even
if
we
move
into
the
next
section
all
right,
then,
let's
move
on
to
the
section
c,
which
are
potential
item
action
items.
The
first
one
is
the
ordinance
on
electric
vehicle
Readiness
for
off-street
parking
stalls,
Amendment.
B
B
AB
I
moved
that
the
council
adopt
the
ordinance
and
include
the
following
conditions:
remove
conditional
use
requirements
for
adus
establish
the
maximum
size
of
a
detached
Adu
is
a
thousand
square
feet
adversely
affected
parties
have
rights
of
enforcement
for
violating
terms
of
an
Adu
restrictive
covenant.
I
thought
the
ordinance
has
proposed
retaining
the
owner
occupancy
requirement
for
properties
with
adus
the
minimum
Corner
side
yard
setback
is
20
of
the
lot
width
or
10
feet.
AB
Whichever
is
less
provide
a
minimum
of
one
off
street
parking
space
for
an
Adu
for
Adu
residents,
with
the
following
exceptions,
if
the
properties
within
half
a
mile
of
designated
bicycle
lane
or
path
if
the
property
is
within
a
quarter
mile
Transit,
if
sufficient
space
for
on-street
parking
is
available
in
front
of
the
primary
resonance
I
further
move
that
the
council
adopt
the
following
legislative
intents.
AB
It
is
the
intent
of
the
council
to
revisit
this
requirement
in
three
years
in
the
interim,
data
will
be
collected
and
reviewed
regarding
numbers
of
adus
constructed
during
this
three-year
period,
barriers
to
their
construction
and
impacts
to
the
neighborhoods.
It
is
the
intent
of
the
council
to
provide
one
million
dollars
in
one-time
funding
to
provide
financial
support
for.
AF
AB
X
B
X
No,
because
is
my
favorite
motion.
I
think
this
is
not
the
right
approach.
I
think
it
is
not
quite
what
we
need
to
do
in
this
city,
but
I
appreciate
that
some
of
the
concerns
and
some
of
the
things
we
haven't
found
some
consensus.
Well,
not
the
consensus
that
I
wish
we
we
do.
We
need
more
housing
in
this
city,
and
this
is
part
of
the
solution
on
housing,
and
you
know
the
concern
of
the
owner.
X
Occupancy
requirement
is
talking
and-
and
you
have
read
it
many
times
and
listened
to
to
this-
in
these
meetings-
talking
about
renters
as
a
problem
who
wants
some
renters
and
I
quote:
I'll
paraphrase
I-
guess
who
wants
some
renters
next
to
your
house
right
and
we
need
all
the
housing
that
we
can
get
I
still
support,
removing
the
requirements.
I
think
that's!
It
is
the
right
thing
to
do.
X
I
wish
we
didn't,
we
didn't
stop
there
by
keeping
that
requirement
in
there,
but
I
also
want
to
Second
this
motion
because
to
highlight
that
this
Council
has
met
some
places.
Well,
we
didn't
agree
all
the
way.
X
I
also
appreciate
that
we
are
working
with
enforcement,
something
that
actually
well
suggested
and
we
we
put
it
in
there.
I
I
also
support
that
removing
some
of
the
barriers,
but
I
think
that
we
could
do
more,
especially
because
we
are
hearing
and
including
in
this
meeting
so
much
about
housing
and
the
need
for
housing
and
the
need
for
density.
Even
earlier
today,
one
of
the
council
members
here,
one
of
you,
said
when
talking
about
a
completely
different
issue.
AB
I
would
like
to
make
a
comment
in
response
to
council
member
Pui,
because
that's
the
I
mentioned
today
that
we
need
to
densify
our
city
and
downtown,
because
that's
we're
in
a
geographical
area
that
it's
constrained
right
now
and
we
will
have
to
do
that.
But
the
reason
why
I
made
this
motion
and
the
requirements
here
about
starting.
We
we're
dealing
with
a
couple
of
issues:
enforcement,
the
short-term
rentals
enforcement.
AB
That
hasn't
happened
in
years
and
that's
on
us
to
figure
out
understanding
that
they're
really
good,
that
we
do
need
the
housing
understanding
that
there
are
good
landlords
out
there,
understanding
that
there
are
good
developers
out
there.
That
could
be
that
could
provide
adus
faster
than
than
what
could
happen.
But
I
feel
like
with
this
million
dollars
that
we
proposed
here.
We
can
help
with
adu's
with
for
the
people
that
own
properties
right
now
in
The
District
in
some
of
our
districts,
to
help
those
first
I
have
shallower
Pockets.
AB
If
you
will
and
and
see
where
it
goes,
and
then
we'll
have
three
years
of
a
timeline
to
figure
out.
If
we
did
something
right
and
help
with
a
home
ownership
with
the
anti-displacement
anti
sorry
I'm
getting
nervous
here,
but
with
all
the
things,
housing
and
destruction
of
neighborhood
characters
that
we
see
so
often
because
we
do
have
a
group
of
developers
that
do
buy
houses
and
baths
and
just
limits
the
the
opportunity
for
people
to
keep
the
owner
occupancy.
AB
My
also
remind
like
mind
mind
us
that
we
had
a
property
tax
increase
last
year,
so
this
million
dollars
potentially
helping
families
build
an
Adu
for
a
family
member
or
or
so
or
or
somebody
else
can
help
offset
those
things
that
we
had
to
do.
Unfortunately,
last
year,
so
I
appreciate
you
seconding
this
and
and
and
coming
to
a
conclusion
that
this
this
way
it's
been
very
contentious
at
times.
AB
I
do
feel
strongly
that
we
have
a
good
path
forward
with
the
three-year
requirement
that
we're
going
to
come
back
to
it,
with
the
enforcement,
with
a
million
dollar
one-time
approach
to
see
if
we
can
make
a
dent,
but
slowly
and
and
orderly
and
in
three
years
for
sure.
If
you
know
we'll
decide
on
this
again,
and
maybe
we
can
open
the
flat
gate,
so
we
can
get
more
density.
Thank.
Y
You
and
I
just
appreciate
all
the
comments
and
the
engagement
we've
had
across
the
city
and
across
across
the
Council
on
this
ordinance
and
I
appreciate
the
discussions.
We've
had
I,
don't
think,
there's
any
council
member
here
who
would
say
this
is
exactly
what
they
wanted
and
that's
part
of
the
compromise
and
that's
part
of
the
political
process.
Here.
Yes,
there's
some
great
things
in
here
that
I
love
and
there's
other
things,
boy
I
wish
I
could
change,
but
that's
part
of
the
compromise
and
I
think
we
have
some
great
information
here.
Y
I,
like
the
million
dollars
I'd
like
to
review
in
a
couple
years,
I,
like
some
other
things
and
there's
other
things
I,
you
know
I
could
change,
but
that's
the
process
and
I
appreciate
the
process.
We
went
through
and
I
appreciate
the
discussion
across
the
city
and
across
this
Council,
and
it
was
that
it
was
done
in
a
very
civil
manner.
So
I
appreciate
that
very
much.
AG
Thank
you,
yeah
I
mean
this
has
definitely
been
a
lightning
rod
issue
on
the
council
for
sure,
but
I
really
appreciate
what
councilmember
boy
said
and
I
want
to
make
it
clear,
as
well
as
somebody
who's
really
outspoken
on
this
issue
and
has
tried
to
address
it
from
the
homeowner
perspective
and
the
renter
perspective
that
I
think
everybody
on
this
Council
understands
and
welcomes
renters
in
Salt
Lake
City.
AG
Not
everybody
is
going
to
and
be
able
to
achieve,
single-family
home
ownership
or
or
home
ownership,
or
maybe
they
don't
want
to-
maybe
they
maybe
they
choose
to
rent
and
all
of
those
people.
All
of
the
above
and
more
all
need
to
have
a
welcome
place
in
Salt,
Lake,
City
and
a
well
and
our
welcome
part
of
our
community.
So
I
hope
that
that
that
came
clear
through
our
discussions
from
this
side
and.
AG
I
know
also
that
this
doesn't
doesn't
go
as
far
as
as
some
on
the
council
would
like.
But
I
want
to
thank
everybody
for
the
work
that
we
put
in.
We
have
removed
some
major
administrative
barriers
that
that
we've
identified
over
a
long
period
of
time
that
have
been
major
major
hurdles
to
having
more
adus
we
and
because
of
our
discussions
on
owner
occupancy.
AG
We
have
achieved
things
in
other
areas,
like
enforcement
and
providing
funding
for
people
that,
because
of
like
Financial
constraints,
would
not
be
able
to
build
adus
and
we're
we're
advancing
on
those
two
areas.
Because
of
the
discussions
that
we've
had
on
this
Council
over
the
last
couple
weeks.
I,
don't
think
that
we
would
have
made
progress
on
those
areas
if
we
hadn't
had
these
intense
discussions,
so
so
I
hope
that
as
councilmember
Dugan
said,
you
know
there.
AG
There
may
be
a
piece
of
this
that
all
of
us
don't
like,
but
I
hope
that
all
of
us
see
that
the
work
that
each
and
every
one
of
us
put
into
this
resulted
in
something
better.
That
wasn't
going
to
happen.
If
we
had
just
passed
this
on
a
straight
up
or
down
vote
without
the
discussions
that
we
had
so
thanks
to
my
council
members
on
this
thanks,
councilmember
Pui
for
your
comments
and
I'm
I'm
glad
to
vote
on
this
and
move
on
to
the
next
issue.
AE
I
just
wanted
to
say
thank
you
to
everyone
for
engaging
in
this
conversation.
I
know
it's
been
difficult,
I
agree
that
we
probably
all
didn't
get
everything
we
wanted,
but
I,
but
this
is
a
huge
step
forward
overall,
for
this
ordinance
and
for
housing
and
just
the
reason
I'm
joining
remotely
today
is
because
I'm
at
the
planning
conference
and
and
I've
attended
everything
I
could
about
housing
and
adus,
and
our
discussions
really
match
the
national
conversation
that
is
happening
on
a
national
level.
AE
B
Additionally,
as
renters
are
one
of
the
constituencies
that
is
continuously
growing,
I
want
them,
and
thank
you
Amy
for
representing
them
here.
I
want
I
want
renters
to
know
that.
Not
only
do
we
hope
you
are
engaged,
we
are
cordially
inviting
you.
We
are
begging
you
to
be
engaged,
whether
it's
at
the
community
council
level,
it's
on
a
border
commission,
whether
it's
just
you
going
to
the
second
and
second
Coalition
and
engaging
down
there.
B
Whatever
your
connection
to
the
community
is,
you
are
not
a
detail,
you
are
someone
who
is
valuable
whose
contribution
is
wanted
and
your
status
is
equivalent
to
every
other
American.
We
have
long
ago
in
this
country
decided
that
property
ownership
was
not
rights
for
having
your
voice
heard
above
others,
we
removed
it
as
a
poll
test
and
we're
not
going
to
inadvertently
or
passively
Institute
it
going
forward
and
I'm
thankful
to
my
co-counselor's
commitment
to
that
with
me
and
our
mutual
commitment
as
we
move
forward.
B
I
am
thankful
also
to
council,
chair
mono,
who
possibly
is
the
single
largest
engine
for
challenging
all
of
our
complacency
on
this
issue
and
got
all
of
us
to
explore
Concepts
that
we
would
not
have
and
got
us
to
Envision.
What
moving
forward
in
a
progressive
way
would
look
like
and
convinced
us
to
really
engage
with
this
issue
on
a
deep
and
significant
level.
V
B
I
would
like
to
very
quickly
revisit
hearing
B2
we've
received
notice
that,
while
the
original
sign
was
improperly
posted,
we
have
now
it
was
corrected
on
March
22nd.
So
we
have
now
met
the
10-day
posting
requirement
with
two
days
to
spare.
So
we
are
safe
to
vote
on
this
action
item.
So
I
will
look
for
emotion
on
hearing
B2,
the
rezone
and
master
plan
Amendment
at
6,
865
South,
500,
East,
Madam.
Y
B
B
All
those
in
favor
all
those
opposed
the
that
carries
unanimously.
Let's
move
on,
oh
we're
done
with
we're
done
with
all
of
our
we're
done
with
all
of
our
C
stuff.
We
are
now
going
to
move
on
to
section
d.
The
first
portion
is
questions
to
the
mayor
from
the
city
council
mayor.
Thank
you
for
being
here
Rachel.
Thank
you
for
being
here
as
well.
Cancel
any
questions.
B
B
B
All
of
those
attachments
are
also
available
on
a
council
social
media.
Thank
you
all.
All
right
now
we
are
at
General
comment
portion
of
our
agenda.
As
a
reminder,
isak
Canada
from
our
staff
will
moderate
our
zoom
and
will
message
you
with
any
questions
about
your
registration
staff
is
handling
many
tasks.
So
please
limit
messages
to
technical
issues
and
minimal
information
updates.
If
you
do
need
to
speak
with
our
staff,
please
select.
Esak
spelled
is
AAC
Canada
from
the
list
of
participants.
S
B
Please
only
use
the
chat
hang
on
one.
Second,
please
only
use
the
chat
to
chat
for
troubleshooting
and
registration
inquiries
and
be
sure
to
direct
your
message
to
esoc.
Only
if
you
need
to
please
use
the
raise
hand
control
to
indicate
that
you
need
something
from
The,
Host,
Taylor,
Hill
and
our
staff
will
be
calling
the
names
of
those
who
wish
to
comment.
We
will
call
the
names
of
people
on
zoom
and
in
person
based
on
the
order
of
registration
or
received
comment
cards.
B
If
you
are
on
Zoom,
please
unmute
your
mic
when
Taylor
calls
your
name
I
want
to
remind
everyone
about
our
rules
of
decorum
which
apply
to
this
comments
section
at
the
two-minute
Mark.
The
host
will
announce
time
and
your
microphone
will
be
muted.
If
you're
unable
to
finish
your
comment,
please
send
the
rest
via
email,
mail
or
call
our
office.
B
AE
G
AH
Hello,
my
name
is
Oakley
Hill
and
I'm.
Speaking
on
behalf
of
the
aguay
garden
I'm,
a
senior
at
the
University
of
Utah
graduating
in
May,
with
my
undergrad
degree
in
gender
studies
and
social
justice
advocacy.
The
aguay
gardens
is
a
testament
to
the
sacred
human
land
relationship
that
indigenous
cultures
proudly
hold
to
take
away.
The
garden
would
be
a
detriment
not
only
spiritually,
but
agriculturally
the
aguay
gardens,
as
stated
on
their
website,
was
created
and
has
managed
100
by
volunteer
community
members
and
is
a
prime
example
of
how
food
can
be
free
and
accessible.
AH
Its
name,
derived
from
the
Shoshone
word
river,
is
referencing
its
prime
placement
on
the
Jordan
River.
This
Garden
is
a
staple
piece
that
represents
reciprocity
between
us
humans
and
the
Earth,
as
balance
has
already
been
misaligned
due
to
over
consumption
by
humans,
specifically
through
impacts
of
settler
colonialism
and
Corruption
by
means
of
privatization
of
Natural
Resources.
AH
The
aguayos
work
with
mmiw
plus
Utah,
advocating
for
and
raising
awareness
about,
the
humanitarian
issue
of
missing
a
murdered
indigenous
women
and
girls
in
Utah
specifically
needs
to
be
acknowledged
and
commended.
The
aguay
honors
strong
leaders,
strong
women
and
specifically
highlights
the
strength
of
community
bonds,
the
aguay
specifically
honors
halai
Hali
and
Vandenberg,
and
Margarita
Santini,
my
apologies,
if
I
mispronounced,
this
Margarita
Santini,
a
social
justice
Advocate,
obviously
in
the
aguay
and
her
effort
and
strength,
is
honored
through
the
memorial
in
their
Garden,
Hallie
and
vanderberg,
a
dirt
to
table
volunteer
and
fellow
justice.
AH
AI
Aguay
fights
for
Houston
and
community
building,
which
are
located
along
the
river
indigenous
community
members
have
expressed
taliban's
life,
aguay,
provide
connection
to
their
ancestral
ties
culturally
relevant
food
and
medicine
to
their
communities,
build
connections
and
hold
events.
In
a
report
on
the
aguay
gardens
by
University
of
Utah
researchers,
it
was
found
that
the
garden
a
lines
of
City
development
Plans
by
providing
the
community
with
opportunities
to
support
Urban
agriculture,
collaborate
with
others
in
the
neighborhood
and
experience
the
now
unique
lens.
In
the
University
of
Utah
research
report,
it
was
found
Urban.
AI
Agriculture
is
viewed
by
Salt
Lake
City
residents
for
its
capacity
to
increase
Community
resilience,
health
and
food
access.
Community-Led
organizations
like
aguay
also
provide
a
little
space
for
advocacy.
Aguay
has
worked
extensively
with
mmiw
Utah,
a
group
which
advocates
for
raising
awareness
about
missing
and
murdered
indigenous
women
and
girls
in
our
State.
Community
leaders
have
expressed
how
the
gardens
have
opened
a
door
to
conversations
about
indigenous
issues
and
how
they
impacts.
The
community
aguay
has
worked
hard
in
the
past
to
meet
City.
G
A
AJ
Lava,
my
name
is
JK
ciolo
I'm,
a
queer
victim,
Advocate
and
work
for
Pacific
island
knowledge
to
Action
Resources,
though
my
comments
here
are
my
own.
I
am
also
commenting
on
the
ogway
gardens.
AJ
I
just
want
to
urge
you
to
invest
in
community,
invest
in
our
spaces
that
we
cultivate
and
create.
This
was
a
space
that
was
overlooked
until
it
became
something
blooming.
We
see
the
same
thing
with
the
murals
on
300
West
area
of
town
that
had
nothing
until
it
became
a
community
space.
AJ
As
someone
who
works
with
indigenous
survivors
of
domestic
violence
and
sexual
assault,
it's
so
crucial
to
have
these
spaces
for
community
members
to
come
together
and
have
connection
to
the
land
and
also
to
the
land
that
is
stolen
and
so
I
just
urge
you
to
support
the
Garden
in
all
forms
of
what
that
looks
like
whether
it
be
you
know,
restrictions
and
policy,
and
things
like
that.
I
know
that
community
members
want
to
work
together
for
that
I.
AJ
Also
speaking
as
a
queer
Samoan,
you
know
to
see
Margarita
satini's
mural
at
that
Garden
is
a
space
for
all
native
Hawaiian
and
Pacific
Islanders
in
this
Valley.
You
know,
there's
more
Pacific
Islanders,
where
we
have
the
largest
diaspora,
Pacific
Islanders
in
Utah,
one
in
Fort,
Collins
lives
in
Utah,
and
so
this
Garden
has
been
a
space,
especially
through
the
pandemic,
when
Pacific
Islanders
were
always
at
the
top
of
that's
from
covid-19,
so
I
just
urge
you
to
invest
in
our
communities
and
really
understand
what
that
means
to
invest
in
our
communities.
Thank
you.
AK
Thank
you
good
evening.
My
name
is
D
platero
and
I'm,
a
member
of
pandos,
which
is
stands
for
peaceful
advocates
for
Native
dialogue
and
organizing
support.
I
would
also
like
to
comment
and
support
the
ogai
people's
Orchard
and
Garden
project
in
response
to
the
letter
received
by
the
collective
on
March
21st
to
remove
the
garden
by
May
1st
of
this
year.
So
volunteering
at
the
Garden
has
been
a
way
to
connect
with
my
indigenous
community
living
in
an
urban
area.
AK
AK
This
is
a
powerful
model
for
promoting
sustainability,
reciprocity
and
Community
well-being,
instead
of
commodifying
goods
and
services
for
profit,
the
gift
of
company
values,
relationships
and
the
circulation
of
resources
as
a
means
of
creating
social
connection
and
fostering
trust
such
as
the
artist
murals
that
have
been
given
to
beautify
the
garden
and
memorialize
Community
activists.
Important
traditional
medicine
plans
from
the
ogai
garden
have
been
shared
with
indigenous
families
to
provide
Comfort
after
the
passing
of
a
loved
one
due
to
tragic
violence.
AK
Salt
Lake
City
is
ranked
as
the
ninth
highest
number
of
cases
of
missing
and
murdered
indigenous
women
in
the
uni
in
the
United
States.
The
act
of
growing
medicine
is
an
exact,
an
act
of
resistance
against
the
systemic
violence
that
has
been
perpetrated
against
indigenous
peoples
for
Generations.
It's
a
way
to
reclaim
traditional
practices
and
knowledge
to
honor.
G
AL
Aloha
Mai
kako,
my
name
is
Miley
Arvin
and
I'm.
The
director
of
Pacific
island
studies
at
the
University
of
Utah
I'm,
also
here
to
ask
that
you
support
the
Agway
Garden.
As
many
have
already
said,
the
aguay
is
a
community-based
project
modeling
how
food
can
be
free
and
accessible
along
the
Jordan,
River
Parkway
Trail,
and
that
it
was
created
lovingly
by
and
for
the
people.
AL
The
public
land,
Salt
Lake
City
public
lands
recently
and
suddenly
notified
the
garden
that
everything
has
to
be
removed
from
the
site
by
May.
1St
they've
also
said
that
they're
supportive
of
the
garden
and
want
to
Shepherd
it
through
various
kinds
of
official
approval
processes,
but
those
processes
can't
start
until
the
fall.
So
what
we're
asking
is
that
that
you
all
support
you
know
taking
away
that
deadline,
because
removing
all
of
the
existing
infrastructure,
the
trees
and
plants
would
be
a
huge
setback
both
practically
and
morale
wise
for
the
community,
who
runs
the
garden?
AL
Who
had
thought
that
a
process
was
underway
with
the
city
to
receive
official
approvals
and
I
I
want
to
add
why
this
is
important
to
me.
Specifically
in
November
of
last
year,
our
Pacific
island
studies
program
hosted
an
event
featuring
three
indigenous
community
garden
projects.
We
have
leaders
from
the
carry
the
Water
Garden,
the
healthy
Roots
program
of
the
Utah
Pacific
Islander
Health,
Coalition
and
pandos,
including
Dee,
who
just
spoke.
AL
The
event
was
so
wonderful
as
folks
from
the
garden
of
shared,
so
much
wisdom
and
love
and
Michelle
Brown
and
Dee
plotero
from
Pando
spoke
eloquently
about
food
and
Medicine
grown
at
the
Agway.
After
that
event,
our
program's
faculty
and
students
have
continued
to
grow
relationships
with
these
Gardens
and
we
also
worked
quite
a
lot
with
Margaritas
satsini
who's
memorized
in
unreal
at
the
Agway.
Our
students
really
see
themselves
reflected
In,
Her,
Image
and
Legacy,
and
it
would
be
a
blow
time
to
see
that
mural
removed.
G
AM
Hello,
my
name
is
Mark
Roya
a
resident
here
in
Salt
Lake
City
I'm,
asking
for
the
city
to
please
lift
the
May
1st
deadline
to
remove
the
OG
white
people's
Orchard
and
garden.
While
we
work
through
the
formal
CIP
process
with
the
city,
the
trees
in
this
Garden
were
first
planted
in
2020
as
an
amazing,
active
Community,
stewardship
I
was
personally
fortunate
enough
to
stumble
across
the
land
in
2021,
while
walking
along
the
Jordan
River
Parkway.
AM
Since
that
time,
I've
had
the
opportunity
to
meet
and
work
with
a
diverse
and
caring
group
of
people
that
are
volunteering,
their
personal
time
resources
and
physical
efforts
to
provide
a
much
needed
service
to
the
immediate
community
and
the
entire
surrounding
City
Salt
Lake
City,
communicated
through
the
2022
Parks
master
plan
that
their
first
goal
is
environmental,
health
and
sustainability.
The
two
related
transformative
projects
that
were
communicated
through
the
master
plan
related
to
that
are
to
put
environment
first
and
to
grow.
AM
Our
Urban
Forest
The
Orchard
and
the
30
plus
trees
contained
within
clearly
contribute
to
Growing
our
Urban
forest
and,
more
importantly,
a
food
Forest
that
provides
a
perennially
fresh,
nutritionally,
dense
food
to
our
community,
with
absolutely
no
cost
or
prerequisites
to
or
from
the
recipients.
The
garden
as
a
whole
puts
our
environment
first.
In
numerous
ways,
the
space
began
as
a
completely
neglected
lot
full
of
nothing
but
trash
debris
and
unmitigated
weed
cover.
The
collective
efforts
of
the
garden
volunteers
have
been
adding
to
the
biological
diversity
that
the
space
desperately
needed.
AM
The
organic
approach
to
the
space
is
in
Far
contrast
to
the
complete
lack
of
effort
put
into
the
space
prior
to
our
involvement
again
I'm
asking
the
city
to
please
lift
the
May
1st
deadline
to
remove
the
aguay
people's
Orchard
and
garden.
While
we
work
through
the
CIP
process
with
the
city,
please
allow
us
to
continue
providing
this
much
needed
resource
to
the
community
and
to
continue
caring
for
the
small
plot
of
land
in
a
caring
and
thoughtful
manner.
Thank
you.
AF
The
ogai
Project's
mission
to
provide
free
and
accessible
food
aligns
well
with
the
aspects
of
the
city's
food
Equity
recommendations
for
future
success,
such
as
the
inclusion
of
cultivating
food
and
Medicine
plants
that
are
culturally
relevant
to
Black,
indigenous
and
people
of
color
communities.
Community
agency,
by
way
of
a
diverse
planning,
Collective
of
Partners
from
various
neighborhoods
and
other
organizations,
and
connecting
with
schools
to
enhance
and
strengthen
education
regarding
food
growing
and
healthy
eating.
AF
Diy
also
aligns
with
the
city's
transformative
project
reimagined
neighborhood
parks,
in
that
it
sits
on
a
once
neglected
lot
transformed
into
a
welcoming
inclusive
space
for
all,
to
enjoy,
learn
and
about
healthy
food
and
biodiversity,
create
and
enjoy
community
art
and
become
a
steward
of
the
land
through
Community
engagement.
The
current
plan
and
long-term
vision
for
the
ogway
contains
Community
assets
such
as
raised
vegetable
garden
beds,
including
wheelchair
accessible
beds,
pollinator
Gardens
and
Outdoor
Classroom
for
experiential
learning,
self-guided
Educational
Tours
of
the
Orchard
and
local
artwork,
the
OG.
AF
Why
project
is
sponsored
by
a
state
and
federally
recognized
22
year
old
501c3
and
has
various
volunteers
with
Decades
of
expertise
who
have
guided
and
created
his
infrastructure.
I
am
asking
that
the
city,
please
lift
the
May
1st
deadline
to
remove
the
ogai
people's
Orchard
and
Gardens,
and
continue
working
with
the
ogai
volunteers
to
finalize
the
draft
land
use
agreement.
Thank
you.
AN
AN
AN
We
turn
this
underutilized
weed
patch
into
a
Vibrant
Community
space
alive
with
activities
that
involve
and
empower
the
residents.
When
okoy
started
our
community
needed
vibrant
outdoor
spaces.
We
still
need
this
vibrant
outdoor
space,
especially
here
and
Elsewhere.
On
the
west
side,
the
city
has
been
supportive
of
this
Garden
in
fits
and
starts,
and
I'm
asking
that
the
city
again
rejoined
the
ogway
supporters.
AN
AN
L
I
didn't
know
how
much
this
Garden
meant
to
everyone,
but
I
have
put
in
so
much
time
working
under
the
hot
sun
to
bring
love
and
to
bring
sharing
into
this
community,
and
so
my
my
task
today
was
to
mention
that
the
city's
public
lands
master
plan
also
prioritizing
connecting
people
with
our
public
lands,
getting
people
to
engage
in
enjoying
the
space
and
actually
using
it
not
just
running
past
it
get
people
to
learn
how
to
Steward
the
land,
we're
doing
all
that
in
the
garden
we
have
educational
workshops,
we
get
volunteers
involved,
we're
all
learning
and
teaching
each
other.
L
We
provide
public
art
and
flowers
that
people
can
walk
through
and
enjoy.
I
just
saw
puppies
playing
in
the
garden
that
was
just
so
much
more
interesting
than
the
flat
mode
beds
of
weeds
surrounding
it.
The
last
time
I
was
there
and,
of
course,
we
see
families
walk
through.
We
see
people
actually
enjoying
the
produce
of
the
garden
and
so
on.
L
We
took
this
neglected
lot
and
we've
made
it
something
that
enriches
lives,
provides
food
and
will
even
produce
more
fruit
trees
that
people
can
bring
home
over
the
years.
The
public
life
support
departments,
points
against
the
garden,
seem
wheat
compared
to
the
value
that
the
garden
provides
for
our
community
and
they're.
Also
something
we're
committed
to
address.
If
the
city
will
just
let
us
work
with
them,
we
have
a
plan,
we
have
expert
advisors,
we
have
people
who've
been
through
this
before
that,
want
to
help
us
get
through
the
process.
D
Good
evening,
good
evening,
everybody,
my
name
is
Jack
I'm,
originally
from
Atlanta,
but
I've
been
living
in
the
greater
Salt
Lake
area.
For
the
past
two
years,
I'm
an
English
student
at
the
U
I
am
an
educator
with
the
Salt
Lake
City
School
District
I'm,
a
community
organizer
and
I
am
an
avid
supporter
of
the
ogawai
people's
Orchard
and
garden.
You
see,
gardening
has
helped
me
heal
and
grow
as
a
person.
In
a
way,
literally,
nothing
else
does
throughout
most
of
my
life.
D
I've
battled
and
I've
survived
severe
mental
illness
and
gardening
is
a
huge
part
of
that.
For
me,
it's
it's
meditative.
It's
act.
It's
active.
It
literally
feeds
your
soul
and
I'm
such
I'm,
such
a
believer
in
gardening.
That
I
was
the
subject
of
a
short
documentary
about
Horticultural
therapy
and
I,
find
this
council's
intent
to
ins.
I
find
even
the
entertainment
of
the
idea
to
destroy
the
Uruguay
Garden.
Shameful
I
think
you
all
should
be
ashamed
of
yourselves.
D
I've
had
a
very
difficult
time
finding
Community
Gardens
in
Salt
Lake-
and
this
is
coming
from
someone
with
immense
privilege,
people
of
color,
especially
indigenous
folks,
whose
land
we're
on
are
disproportionately
affected
by
food,
deserts,
income
inequality
and
the
effects
of
climate
change
homeless.
People
whom
this
Council
and
mayor
have
systematically
waged
war
against
are
even
more
sensitive
to
these
injustices.
Gardens
are
a
part
of
the
solution
to
food
insecurity,
the
Mental
Health
crisis
and
the
looming
climate
crisis.
D
Unfortunately,
this
Council
has
proven
y'all
are
completely
apathetic
and
hostile
towards
these
causes,
as
is
shown
by
the
fact
that
you
would
want
to
destroy
this
space
on
an
unused
lot.
That
lot
was
empty
before
the
Uruguay
Garden.
Was
there
I,
don't
see
why
the
community
shouldn't
make
use
of
it
for
good
I
I
it
it's
a
waste.
Otherwise,
you
all
abandoned
your
neighbors
out
the
doors
of
this
building
and
are
now
actively
punishing
them
for
taking
things
into
their
own
hands.
AO
Great,
thank
you.
I
just
want
to
Echo
all
the
the
concerns
and
comments
that
have
been
made.
I'm
I've
lived
here
in
Salt
Lake
City
for
over
35
years
and
this
project
you
can
tell
by
by
the
comments
that
you've
heard
today.
AO
This
project
is
important
to
the
well-being
of
this
community:
the
agua
Community,
the
West
Side
Community,
our
Salt
Lake
Community,
the
well-being
of
the
community
that
Gardens
here
and
the
well-being
of
those
who
have
gardened
here
in
the
past
and
those
who
will
Garden
here
in
the
future
it
nourishes
bodies
and
souls.
AO
That
is
what
gardening
does
Community
Gardens
build
soil
and
community
and
food
all
of
those
things,
and
it
we.
We
can't
lose
this
Garden.
It
is
part
of
our
community.
It
is
part
of
our
Lives,
please
give
aguay
garden
and
Wasatch
community
garden
and
all
those
who
are
assisting
in
this
effort
the
opportunity
to
move
forward
together
for
the
sake
of
the
soil,
for
the
sake
of
the
food,
for
the
sake
of
the
people,
for
the
sake
of
our
community
I.
Thank
you
for
opening
your
hearts
and
Minds
to
letting
them
continue.
Thank
you.
AO
B
Thank
you
so
much
Taylor.
Thank
you
to
everyone
who
commented
I'll,
look
for
a
motion.
B
Oh
sorry,
yeah.
Thank
you,
okay,
so
we're
going
to
move
on
to
new
business,
which
there
is
none
at
this
time.
So
then
we're
going
to
move
on
to
unfinished
business
E1
is
an
ordinance.
The
zoning
map
Amendment
at
approximately
1
30
North
2100
West
I'll,
look
for
a
motion.
Y
Madam,
chair
I,
move
that
the
council
adopt
an
order.
Excuse
me
adopt
and
update
orders
that
includes
a
condition
that
the
property
owner
enter
a
development
agreement
with
a
city
requiring
sound
attenuation
in
new
structures
constructed
on
the
property
or
if
there
is
a
substantial
remodel
of
an
existing
structure.
B
B
B
This
brings
us
to
section
g,
our
last
item
of
business.
Under
the
consent
portion
of
our
agenda
before
I
call
for
a
motion.
We
want
to
remove
items.
Eight,
nine
and
ten,
the
reappointments
for
the
sister
cities
board.
Our
staff
needs
time
to
confirm
the
term
information
before
they're
listed
again
for
a
council
vote.
So
I
will
look
for
a
motion
that.