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From YouTube: Salt Lake City Formal Meeting - 03/21/2023
Description
To view the agenda for this meeting go to https://slc.primegov.com/public/portal
A
A
A
A
A
A
Everyone
thank
you,
council
members
for
joining
us
at
tonight's,
formal
council,
meeting
yeah
it's.
We
will
get
it
for
you
right
now.
One
moment
please,
he
needs
a
resolution.
Chris
is
reading
it.
Okay,
perfect,
never
mind
got
it
hi.
Everyone.
Thank
you
for
joining
us
at
today's
formal
council
meeting.
A
We
want
to
welcome
you
and
we
do
continue
to
hold
hybrid
meetings,
to
keep
everyone
healthy
and
safe
and
create
other
forms
of
accessibility
to
our
council
members
for
our
for
the
public.
Our
meetings
are
public
and
you
are
welcome
to
join
in
person
or
by
watching
from
the
council's
agenda
page
our
Facebook
page
YouTube
or
SLC
TV.
We
hope
that
you'll
continue
to
join
us
in
whichever
way
you
feel
most
comfortable.
This
is
a
work
session.
Nope.
That's
not
it's
not
a
work
session.
B
A
So
we
will
begin
our
formal
meeting
by
the
Pledge
of
Allegiance.
So
if
you'll
all,
please
join
me
for
the
Pledge
of
Allegiance.
A
Thank
you.
That's
a
nice
of
you.
A
You
know
it's
good
to
have
good
friends
that
always
have
your
back.
Thank
you
so
before
we
before
we
begin
I
just
want
to
mention
and
remind
everyone
about
our
rules
of
decorum,
which
are
in
place
to
ensure
that
our
meetings
move
along
well
and
to
help
everyone
feel
comfortable.
Sharing
their
comments.
C
Thank
you,
madam
chair
resolution.
A
joint
resolution
recognizing
March
31st
2023
as
International
transgender
day
of
visibility
in
Salt,
Lake
City,
whereas
International
transgender
day
of
visibility
is
observed
and
celebrated
on
March,
31st
and
whereas
International
transgender
day
of
visibility
is
a
time
to
celebrate
and
recognize
a
large
community
of
people,
including
people
who
identify
as
transgender
non-binary
and
gender
non-conforming
and
whereas
the
Salt
Lake,
City,
Council
and
mayor
of
Salt,
Lake.
C
City
are
committed
to
advocating
for
the
rights,
dignity
and
equality
for
transgender
and
gender,
diverse
people
everywhere,
and
whereas
transgender
non-binary
and
gender
non-conforming
people
have
long
added
to
the
rich
tapestry
of
Salt,
Lake,
City
and
Utah
as
a
whole.
By
telling
their
stories
through
activism
and
advocacy
and
living
openly
and
authentically,
and
whereas
more
transgender,
non-binary
and
gender
non-conforming
people
are
gracing.
C
The
covers
of
magazines,
film
and
television,
raising
awareness
of
their
gender
identities
and
highlighting
their
contributions
to
our
culture
and
history
as
artists
musicians,
healers
workers
and
organizers,
and
whereas,
in
light
of
recent
legis
legislation
around
the
country,
and
here
in
Utah,
aim
to
Target
and
exclude
transgender
youth.
It
is
especially
crucial
that
we
as
a
city
come
together
and
uplift
and
celebrate
our
transgender
community
and
whereas
International
transgender
day
of
visibility
is
a
time
to
join
the
transgender
Community
around
the
world
and
acknowledge
their
communities.
Many
contributions,
accomplishments
and
Leadership.
C
Now,
therefore,
be
it
resolved
that
Salt
Lake
City
recognizes
March
31st
2023
as
International
transgender
day
of
visibility
in
Salt
Lake
City.
Be
it
further
resolved
that
the
Salt
Lake
City
Council
and
mayor
of
Salt
Lake
City
recognize
The
Bravery
of
the
transgender
Community
as
it
fights
for
equal
dignity
and
respect.
A
A
I
have
a
second
second
I,
have
a
motion
by
council
member
Wharton
as
sec
I
mean
mono.
There's
a
second
council
member
Petro
any
further
discussion
to
this.
All
those
in
favor
aye
aye
any
opposed
that
resolution
is
adopted.
Congratulations,
everyone
and
I
believe
that
we
have
will
Terry
here
from
equality
Utah
to
accept
the
resolution.
I,
don't
know
if
you'd
like
to
come
and
say
a
few
words.
E
On
behalf
of
equality,
Utah
I
just
want
to
say
thank
you
so
much
for
adopting
this
resolution
and
there's
a
couple
names.
I
want
to
call
out
here
that
are
friends
of
equality,
Utah
and
residents
of
the
city
that
I
know.
This
means
a
lot
to
Alexander,
Erica,
red
Margo,
Plum
and
I
also
want
to
give
a
special
thanks
to
Senator
Plum
who's
joining
us
today
for
being
such
a
strong
voice
of
the
legislature,
this
past
legislative
session
for
transgender
rights.
So
thank
you.
Thank.
F
F
A
Thank
you,
everyone.
We
are
moving
on
to
our
public
hearings.
Our
first
public
hearing
B1
is
a
funding
allocation
for
one
year.
Action
plan
for
Community,
Development
block
grants,
otherwise
known
as
cdbg
and
other
federal
grants
for
fiscal
year
2023-2024.
Before
we
begin
taking
comments,
I
will
turn
the
time
over
to
our
very
own
policy
analyst
Ben
ludke,
who
is
a
guru
at
all
things
cdbg
to
give
us
a
short
introduction,
Ben.
H
Thanks
Madam
chair,
the
annual
grants
from
the
U.S
Housing
and
Urban
Development,
Department
or
HUD,
are
one
of
the
largest
non-pandemic
funding
sources.
The
city
receives
from
the
federal
government,
as
happens
most
years,
requests
for
funding
are
greater
than
available
funding
across
the
four
grants
nearly
11
million
dollars
was
applied
for,
but
the
available
funding
is
nearly
9
million
or
2
million
dollars.
Less
than
requested
funding
recommendations
from
The
Advisory
board
and
the
mayor
are
identical
this
year.
H
A
Thank
you,
Taylor
I
believe
we
can
begin
with
our
first
commenters
I
mean
come
enter.
I
J
Good
evening
City
Council
Members,
as
mentioned
my
name,
is
John
haymond
I'm
a
volunteer
with
neighborworks
Salt
Lake
and
have
been
volunteering
with
them
for
over
30
years.
I
currently
work
for
a
bank
here
in
Salt
Lake
City
Medallion
Bank
45
years
ago,
neighborworks
Salt
Lake
has
for
45
years
neighborhood
Salt
Lake
has
been
a
dedicated
and
vision,
comprehensive,
neighborhood,
revitalization
agency
throughout
the
Salt
Lake
City
for
over
four
decades.
Our
mission
has
remained
the
same
building
on
the
strength
of
neighborhoods
to
create
opportunities
for
affordable
housing,
Economic,
Development,
Youth
and
Resident
leadership.
J
The
city
receives
from
the
housing
of
housing
of
Department
of
Housing
and
Urban
Development
in
the
form
of
loans,
grants,
property
purchases
and
Rehabilitation
the
broader
efforts
to
increase
and
maintain
affordable
housing
within
the
city,
where
one
of
the
city's
most
tenured
and
effective
Partners
in
neighborhood,
revitalization,
and
consistently
leverage
government
funds
with
other
partners.
Throughout
our
efforts,
we
have
facilitated
the
investment
of
millions
and
millions
of
dollars
in
this
community
and
through
development
of
projects
that
often
support
the
city's
housing
goals.
J
Given
our
10-year
track
record
and
having
navigated
the
challenges
of
the
current
housing
market,
we
recognize
that
many
factors
can
affect
performance
and
that
there's
always
room
for
improvement.
However,
what
makes
this
funding
different
from
the
past
is
the
funds
will
be
awarded
as
Home
Improvement
or
down
payment
assistance
grants
for
homeowners.
We
already
have
10
families
in
the
pipeline.
We
are
working
with.
This
will
make
it
easier
to
deploy
the
funds
within
the
year
allotment,
which
has
been
a
challenge
when
we
have
been
making
funds
available
at
low
interest
rates.
K
Thank
you
city,
council
members
and
mayor
and
abcentra
Stuart
Ross
with
Legal
Aid
Society
of
Salt
Lake.
We
celebrated
our
Centennial
anniversary
last
year,
100
years
of
service
in
Salt,
Lake,
City
and
Salt
Lake
County
I
come
to
express
my
appreciation
to
the
committee
and
to
the
mayor
for
the
recommending
legal
aid
study
of
Salt
Lake
for
thirty
thousand
dollars
for
our
domestic
violence,
Victim
Assistance
Program
and
our
bridge
the
gap
program.
K
K
Getting
protective
orders
for
victims
of
domestic
violence
is
one
of
the
best
ways
to
go
upstream
and
address
the
housing
need,
because
when
we
can
keep
families,
especially
parents
with
children
in
housing
and
keep
them
safe
in
that
their
existing
housing,
then
we
don't
have
to
spend
that
much
more
Downstream
to
find
them
new
housing
and
and
those
extra
costs.
So
it's
one
of
the
most
cost
effective
ways
to
address
one
of
the
most
urgent
housing
needs
in
our
community,
that
goes
to
say,
keeping
people
safe
in
their
homes.
K
I've
been
doing
this
for
over
30
years
and
I
cannot
imagine
not
feeling
safe
going
home
at
night
and
feeling
safe
in
my
home
or
protect
having
to
protect
my
children
from
an
abusive
partner
or
House
member.
So
we
truly
appreciate
this
funding
and
we'll
put
it
to
good
work
for
the
citizens
of
Salt
Lake
City.
L
Great
thanks
so
much
for
having
me
Zach
Bale,
with
housing,
connect,
I'm
speaking
to
our
funding
requests
for
hopwa
funding.
Many
thanks
to
the
council
to
the
mayor
and
and
City
staff
for
your
support.
We've
had
a
long-standing
partnership,
I'm
just
shy
of
20
years
receiving
hopwa
funds,
so
these
are
funds
supporting
rental
assistance
for
individuals
who
are
HIV,
AIDS
positive
and
need
financial
support.
L
Over
the
course
of
the
last
year,
we've
served
just
shy
of
60
households.
The
majority
of
these
households
are
very
low
to
extremely
low
income,
the
majority
about
80
percent
or
30
percent
below
area
median
income,
so
certainly
individuals
that,
when
making
decisions
navigating
both
important
Health
needs
meeting
the
needs
of
family
and
paying
rent,
often
these
households,
without
this
support,
often
are
unable
to
make
and
support
all
the
needs.
So
this
is
a
really
critical
funding
program
in
context
of
the
kind
of
the
greater
housing
need.
This
one's
unique.
L
It
is
a
partnership
both
with
the
University
of
Utah,
Utah,
AIDS
Foundation,
and
really
provides
kind
of
a
a
full
service
program
for
individuals
to
meet
their
medical
need
and
housing
need.
So
we
thank
you
for
your
ongoing
support.
Our
request
is
slightly
higher
this
year.
Our
Hope
as
an
agency,
is
to
continue
to
support
more
of
our
residents,
and
our
community
have
safe,
affordable
housing.
Thank
you.
M
Hello
good
afternoon,
good
evening,
City
Council
Members
mayor
Mendenhall,
it's
great
to
see
you.
My
name
is
Christy
nellermo
I'm
with
the
International
Rescue
committee
here
in
Salt,
Lake
City,
the
IRC
is
what
we
call
it
and
Salt
Lake
City
has
been
around
since
1994
supporting
upwards
of
12
000
refugees
create
a
home
here
in
Salt,
Lake
City
and
call
this
place
the
place
that
they
raise
their
children
and
do
their
lives
and
and
rebuild
their
lives
from
conflict
and
disaster.
M
And
so
this
this
funding
is
supporting
refugees
and
new
Americans
in
their
digital
inclusion.
Pathways.
It
is
a
21st
century.
If
you
don't
have
digital
tools,
there
is
no
way
you
can
navigate
almost
any
service,
Health
Care
job
Readiness,
employment
searches,
financial
literacy,
even
looking
for
Better
Homes
and
better
apartments
and
more
affordable
rent
all
includes
a
digital
literacy
lens.
M
Apps
for
navigation
interpretation
and
funding
would
also
help
us
deepen
this
program
to
help
with
weekly
language
specific
classes
for
clients
where
they
can
kind
of
navigate
and
bring
their
own
relevant
digital
needs
to
IRC
staff
and
support
with
learning
how
to
use
those
tools
in
reality
to
search
for
jobs
to
help
their
kids
enroll
into
school.
This
program,
this
funding,
will
also
help
us
bolster
our
volunteers.
We
have
a
tech
Squad
program
where
volunteers
are
matched
with
refugees
in
their
homes
and
help
them
with
their
individual
digital
literacy
goals.
M
Through
six
to
eight
week,
Journeys,
we
have
an
assessment
tool
from
the
beginning,
all
the
way,
through
our
18
months
of
case
management,
supporting
clients
along
that
pathway
to
see
where
their
skill
development
is
increasing
and
really
look
at
outcome
driven
programming
time
so
great
to
be
here.
Thank
you
again
for
this
time.
N
Hi,
thank
you
so
much
for
allowing
us
the
opportunity
to
comment.
I
am
Bailey
white
with
the
road
home
just
a
fun
fact,
for
you
guys
we
are
celebrating
our
100
year
anniversary,
so
we
have
been
in
existence
serving
low-income
and
vulnerable
residents
of
Salt
Lake
City
for
100
years,
so
stay
in
tune
for
some
updates
on
our
100th
year
anniversary.
N
We're
excited
to
celebrate
that
I'll,
be
speaking
about
our
emergency
shelter
programs
that
we've
requested
funding
for
first
I
just
want
to
say
thank
you
so
much
to
you
all
and
to
the
community
Advisory
Board
to
housing
stability
staff
and
to
the
mayor's
team
for
reviewing
all
of
our
requests.
We
know
it's
a
ton
of
requests.
We
know
we're
always
asking
for
more
money
than
you
have
and
it's
tough
decisions
to
make.
So
thank
you
for
taking
the
time
to
look
them
over
at
our
Gale
Miller
Resource
Center
to
date.
N
Through
the
end
of
December,
we
were
able
to
serve
487
Unique
Individuals.
This
year,
we've
been
able
to
start
a
lot
of
really
Innovative
programs.
Some
of
those
have
involved
bringing
Medicaid
providers
on
site
to
help
connect
people
with
better
Medical
Services,
as
we
saw
through
the
pandemic.
Medical
services
are
key
to
making
sure
that
people
avoid
returns
to
homelessness.
N
We
are
also
really
excited
that
we
are
about
to
start
a
pilot
program
with
Salt
Lake,
City
Police
Department,
to
help
improve
the
safety
and
support
our
participants
and
the
community
with
some
of
the
security
that
is
happening
kind
of
in
that
community.
So
we
want
to
make
sure
that
everybody
is
supported
and
that
we're
responding
to
everything,
but
we
just
wanted
to
say.
Thank
you
so
much.
N
O
Cdgb
grants
to
mostly
the
large
organizations
and
the
and
those
whose
reviews
whose
those
who
receiving
it
in
the
past
and
the
organizations
like
mine
mine,
are
not
included.
That
makes
sure
that
refugees
struggling
to
survive,
survive
refugees
who
do
not
know
English
and
do
not
know
their
way
around
our
system
and
then
I
myself,
I
came
as
Refugee
1998
I'm
still
doing
what
I'm
doing
right
now,
I
really
work
like
70
20,
seven
days
a
week,
24
hours
a
day,
even
middle
of
the
night.
I
P
You
good
evening
and
thank
you
for
this
opportunity
to
make
a
comment
on
behalf
of
my
organization,
so
my
name
is
Brandon
vile
and
I'm
the
grants
manager
with
South
Valley
Services.
We
are
a
domestic
violence,
emergency
shelter
as
well
as
domestic
violence,
service
provider
that
helps
clients
throughout
Utah
last
year.
With
help
from
Planters
such
as
yourself,
we
were
able
to
make
a
lot
of
significant
strides
in
several
of
our
service
areas,
such
as
2500
total
survivors
helped
across
all
of
our
programs.
P
510
individuals
served
in
shelter
about
15,
000,
total
shelter,
nights
and
hotel
stays
provided
for
and
2500
hours
of
Case
Management
Services,
as
well
as
children,
advocacy
Services
about
96
of
our
clients
report
having
zero
income.
This,
coupled
with
the
fact
that
takes
victims
about
seven,
tries
to
leak
their
abuser.
P
It's
the
fact
that
most
of
the
services
that
we
provide
Often
by
life-saving
and
the
difference
between
an
individual
choosing
to
become
homeless
or
return
back
to
their
abusive
relationship
since
the
covet
pandemic,
domestic
violence
in
Utah
has
seen
a
continual
uptick
that
we
do
not
see
reversing
anytime
soon.
We
just
wanted
to
take
this
opportunity
to
thank
you
for
the
opportunity
to
comment
and
with
that
that's
all.
Q
You,
my
name
is
Andres
Calderon
I'm,
the
emergency
home
repair
program
director
at
assist
Community
Design
Center.
We
serve
low-income
homeowners,
with
accessible
modifications
and
emergency
home
repairs
and
on
behalf
of
assist
and
the
crew
at
assist,
I'd
like
to
thank
the
mayor
and
the
cdcip
board
and
the
city
council
for
their
funding
recommendations
for
this
coming
fiscal
year.
Q
R
Our
housing
case
management
provides
housing,
stability,
case
planning,
access
to
substance,
use
treatment,
referrals
to
behavioral
health
and
medical
providers,
as
well
as
supports
with
transportation
and
really
so
much
more
I
could
go
on
and
share
with
you
a
larger
picture
of
what
these
funding
sources
do,
but
I
thought
I
would
actually
share
with
you
a
story
of
a
family
that
has
benefited
from
the
services
you've
provided
to
their
own
home.
The
this
particular
family
consists
of
a
single
father
with
two
Elementary
School
age:
children
unable
to
consistently
attend
school.
R
They
were
living
in
their
vehicle
and
really
struggling
to
meet
their
needs.
Our
housing
stability,
homeless,
Outreach
team,
found
them
and
brought
them
to
our
Family
Resource
Center,
where
our
housing,
navigation,
team,
assisted
them
in
moving
into
an
apartment
once
fully
transitioned
into
their
apartment
case
manager
assistant,
getting
the
children
re-enrolled
in
school,
connected
their
father
to
mental
health,
supports
as
well
as
employment
resources,
the
family
really
struggled
to
adjust,
but
they
made
they
made
big
efforts
and
were
able
to
take
over
their
rent
because
their
father
was
able
to
get
some
good
income.
R
I
S
Thank
you
so
much
to
the
council,
my
name
is
Laurel
Ingham
I'm,
the
chief
development
director
at
4th
Street
Clinic,
my
pronouns.
Are
she
her?
Thank
you
so
much
I
am
so
excited
about
this
program.
I
cannot
even
tell
you
it's
in
conjunction
with
our
partners
at
the
road
home.
It
is
called
the
health
and
housing
transition
pilot
program,
and
what
it's
going
to
do
is
going
to
put
our
providers
together
to
create
a
team
in
the
Magnolia
to
really
address
some
behavioral
health
issues
that
are
happening.
S
We're
going
to
do
a
priority
focus
at
Magnolia
we're
going
to
look
at
Palmer
court
and
Wendell
Apartments.
The
program
is
really
going
to
look
at
the
social
determinants
of
Health
specific
to
the
housing
programs,
to
increase
that
access
to
health
services,
with
a
focus
again
on
that
behavioral
health
need
it's
going
to
Target
individuals
and
families
housed
within
the
last
12
months
or
really
those
that
are
considered
at
risk
of
eviction
due
to
their
untreated
mental
health
needs
and
or
medical
health
needs.
S
The
best
practice
models
for
this
all
population
always
indicate
that
providing
assertive,
co-located
and
or
Outreach
Services,
contributing
to
a
higher
rate
of
Engagement
and
services
for
a
longer
period
of
tenancy
in
housing.
Again,
we
really
want
to
keep
people
in
housing
once
they're
in
we
have
to
have
this
program,
so
it
go
to
real-time
coordination
between
forestry
clinic
and
the
road
home
and
eliminate
any
service
duplication.
S
A
needs
assessment
will
be
done
and
complete
it
and
they'll
do
a
shared
treatment
plan
and
they'll
be
able
to
access
that
team
in
the
moment.
So,
if
somebody's
having
a
behavioral
health
issue
in
the
moment,
they'll
be
able
to
assess
with
that
so
I
want
to
thank
you
again
for
the
39
813
I'm,
not
sure
what
that
number
comes
to,
but
nothing
comes
up
right.
That
will
help
pay
for
our
funding
Gap.
S
T
Good
evening,
city
council,
thanks
for
having
me,
my
name-
is
Ryan
Gibbs
I'm
here
on
behalf
of
Utah
AIDS
Foundation.
So
we
want
to
thank
you
so
much
for
all
of
the
assistance
that
we
received
through
the
hoppo
program
as
a
case
manager,
I
work
boots
on
the
ground
directly
with
clients.
This
funding
is
incredibly
important
for
filling
in
many
of
the
funding
gaps
that
we
have
related
to
housing,
especially
during
the
pandemic
and
with
the
cost
of
living
continuing
to
increase.
T
This
has
been
a
real
life
saver
for
many
of
our
clients
who
are
on
fixed
incomes
or
who
are
experiencing
some
sort
of
Crisis.
Housing
is
the
number
one
thing
we
can
do
to
keep
our
clients
and
patients
on
their
HIV
medications.
If
they
lose
housing,
everything
tends
to
implode
and
one
of
the
first
things
that
goes
is
the
focus
on
their
medical
care
if
they
can't
go
home
to
a
safe
place
at
night
oftentimes.
T
The
last
time
the
last
they're
thinking
about
is
going
to
that
doctor's
appointment
that
they
have
set
tomorrow
going
to
the
pharmacy
Etc,
and
so
this
is
really
really
helpful
for
us
being
able
to
stabilize
our
clients
and
then
also
just
funds,
the
infrastructure
that
we
need
at
the
foundation
to
to
help
our
HIV
positive
individuals.
So
thank
you.
U
Good
evening
my
name
is
Mary
T
Calhoun
from
First
Step
house
I
greatly
appreciate
the
opportunity
to
speak
with
the
council,
and
we
want
to
express
our
gratitude
and
appreciation
to
the
Citizens
Council
and
the
mayor
for
reviewing
our
applications
and
making
funding
recommendations
at
this
point,
so
we
actually
have
five
applications
in
so
I'm
going
to
talk
very
briefly
about
each
one.
But
first
I'll
tell
you
a
little
bit
about
first
step
house.
We
have
been
serving
Salt
Lake
County
since
Salt
Lake,
County
and
Salt
Lake
City,
since
1958.
U
So
for
65
years
we've
been
providing
behavioral
health
treatment
and
transitional
housing,
and
in
recent
years
we've
branched
out
tremendously
to
expand
that
to
permanent
Supportive
Housing.
We
really
see
it
as
taking
the
the
best
of
what
we've
we
do
and
what
we've
done
for
so
long
and
combining
those
Services
treatment
and
housing
together
to
meet
the
needs
of
the
most
vulnerable
people
in
our
community.
The
people
we
serve
at
First
Step
house.
Most
of
of
them
fall
beneath
30
percent
of
the
Ami.
U
They
come
to
us
with
high
severity
substance,
use
disorders,
mental
health
conditions,
and
they
come
to
us
typically
from
incarceration
and
with
histories
of
homelessness.
So
the
five
applications
that
we
have
approved
that
we
have
recommendations
for
the
first
is
about
access
to
treatment.
We
partner
with
the
road
home
on
our
Resource
Center
program.
We
embed
a
behavioral
health
Team
in
two
of
the
Resource
Centers
to
help
homeless
guests
receive
access
to
behavioral
health
and
substance
use
disorder
treatment.
U
The
next
two
programs
are
Supportive
Services
serving
all
of
our
clients
in
treatment
and
housing.
One
is
peer
support
services.
This
is
an
evidence-based
practice
using
individuals
who
have
lived
experience
with
substance
use,
disorder,
recovery
and
mental
health
recovery
working
directly
with
clients
as
they're
in
treatment.
The
other
is
our
employment,
preparation
and
placement
program.
This
program,
oh
I,
talked
way
too
long.
Thank
you.
The
other
ones
are
really
good
too.
V
Good
evening,
everyone,
my
name-
is
Miles
Ellis
and
I'm-
a
proud
Homeland
homeowner
in
the
Guadalupe
neighborhood
I'm
here
to
tonight
to
provide
my
support
to
neighborworks
Salt
Lake,
a
local
non-profit
organization
that
without
I,
would
not
be
able
to
buy
a
home
for
the
last
year.
For
the
last
past
year,
I
was
struggling
to
find
a
house
with
my
partner,
and
it
was
getting
to
a
point
where
we
were
thinking.
We
weren't
going
to
be
able
to
find
a
house
I'm
sure
everybody
knows
with
how
the
housing
market
is
right.
V
Now
it's
really
tough,
so
neighborworks
was
there
to
help
me
get
into
a
home
that
fit
my
needs
and
my
wants
for
a
house.
Also,
it
made
it
so
I
could
financially
afford
a
community
that
I
really
really
appreciate
their
down
payment
assistance
program
really
helped
me
in
the
home
buying
process.
They
have
a
80
20
mortgage
with
one
of
their
approved
lenders
and
I
can
stand
before
you
and
say
that
if
I
wouldn't
have
had
the
help
from
them,
I
probably
wouldn't
have
a
house.
V
W
W
A
Just
so
everyone
knows
we
will
have
another
briefing
on
cdbg
funds
in
on
April
4th.
Is
that
right
and
then
take
action
on
April
14
18th
18th?
X
Z
A
Z
A
Aye
any
opposed
that
passes
7-0
our
next
item.
A
public
hearing
item
is
B2
and
that's
not
true,
because
I
think
I
will
be
looking
for
a
motion
on
this
one.
Isn't
that
right,
I
think
we
are
pulling
this
rezone?
Oh,
not
this
one
got
it.
Public
hearing
is
on
the
rezone
and
master
plan
Amendment
at
865,
South
500
East.
Before
we
begin
taking
comments,
I
will
turn
it
over
to
Brian
Fulmer,
who
knows
way
more
than
I
do
to
give
a
short
introduction.
Brian.
AA
Thank
you,
madam
chair.
This
is
a
proposal
to
amend
the
zoning
map
for
a
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.
AA
I
AB
Hi
there
my
name
is
Adam
Vogel.
Hopefully
you
guys
can
hear
me
thanks
for
taking
the
time
to
hear
my
comments
today.
I
think
that
this
is
a
generally
positive
change.
AB
That
being
said,
the
proposal
did
mention
the
possibility
of
some
other
zoning
categorizations
for
it
and
I
think
it
could
be
worth
giving
some
consideration
to
zoning
this
as
mixed
use
or
maybe
form-based
Urban
neighborhood
one
or
two
no
I'm,
not
an
expert
on
Salt
Lake
zoning
I
think
leaving
it
available
to
housing
options
as
well
might
be
worth
considering.
AB
AC
Murphy's
Law,
if
something
can
go
wrong,
we
get
an
outstanding
nuanced
analysis
of
all
of
the
relevant
planning
documents
from
the
planning
staff
and
they
are
numerous
recommending
denial
of
the
requested
rezoning.
What
happens?
The
Planning
Commission
goes
off
the
rails
and
concludes
that
this
neighborhood
is
not
sufficiently
walkable
and
needs
another
commercial
use.
It
does
not.
It
has
three
of
the
state's
nine
James
beards
semi-finalists.
It
has
a
chocolate
shop
which
has
been
in
business
for
99
years.
In
fact,
it
has
plenty
of
everything
except
long-term
residents.
AC
84
percent
of
the
occupants
of
Central
City
are
now
renters
and
with
the
escalating
cost
of
housing,
they
have
to
move
around
like
cats
on
a
Hot
Tin
Roof.
What
we
need
are
long-term
residents
either
renters
or
homeowners,
preferably
the
latter,
to
balance
out
the
tsunami
of
rentlers
along
the
transit
corridor.
The
neighborhood
can't
afford
to
lose
this
housing
unit.
The
city
can't
afford
to
lose
this
unit
of
housing.
It
will
never
be
replaced
as
a
housing
type
in
this
neighborhood
Additionally.
AC
The
posting
of
the
property
was
inaccurate,
suggesting
that
the
proposal
was
from
Rocky
Mountain
Power.
How
did
that
happen?
And
the
date
was
incorrect.
As
a
result,
I'm
asking
you
to
hold
the
public
hearing
open
I
think
that's
only
fair
and
more
significantly
for
public
process.
No
one
would
know
about
a
potential
Adu
in
the
rear
yard
discussed
at
your
work
session
unless
they
had
attended
the
work
session
or
listened
the
concept
of
adding
an
Adu
in
the
rear
yard
and
further
aggravating
the
existing
parking
problems.
AC
Never
came
up
previously
in
the
public
process,
because
the
staff
report
was
for
denial
as
it
should
have
been.
Any
development
agreement
would
have
to
go
through
the
entire
public
process,
beginning
with
the
Planning
Commission.
The
only
good
news
here
is
that
the
city
has
hired
a
skilled
and
talented
young
planner.
Unfortunately,
his
professional
recommendation
and
my
own
views
based
on
Decades
of
experience
with
Central
cities,
housing
are
being
ignored.
Thank
you.
AD
Hello,
my
name
is
Christina
Robb
and
I'm.
The
chair
of
East
Liberty,
Park
elpco
I,
am
here
tonight
to
talk
about
this
because
you
know
for
two
reasons.
We
were
one
told
to
trust
our
planning.
AD
Folks,
two.
We
were
also
asked
to
look
at
some
rezoning
along
the
900
South
Corridor
in
elpco,
which
we
are
really
excited
to
support
and
three.
We
wanted
to
speak
to
affordable
housing
being
the
number
one
priority
in
the
area
and
we
feel
like
here
is
a
great
opportunity
for
some
affordable
housing
that
would
be
turned
into
business.
However,
you
know
we
do
support
the
business
along
the
corridor.
We
do
not
want
to
start
a
precedence
for
the
businesses
taking
over
potential
housing
heading
towards
the
mid
block.
Thank
you
so
much.
Y
Y
A
AE
A
A
Perfect,
thank
you
in
case
I
didn't
say
that
past
7-0
we
are
moving
on
to
item
B3,
which
is
an
ordinance
looking
at
electric
vehicle,
Readiness
off
street
parking
stalls
Amendment
and
before
we
begin
taking
comments.
I
will
turn
the
time
over
to
Sam
Owen,
who
is
on
the
big
screen
today
and
one
of
our
Council
staff
policy
analysts
to
give
us
a
short
introduction.
AF
I
AG
F
AG
Are
a
non-profit
organization
working
in
the
clean
energy
transformation
space,
including
utilities,
building
and
residential
electrification,
electrified
transportation
and
climate
leadership?
Utah
clean
energy
is
pleased
to
support
Salt
Lake
City's
proposed
easy,
read
units
ordinance.
We
believe
this
is
an
important
step
to
support
clean
air
in
Utah
and
move
the
city
into
the
future
of
Transportation.
AG
It's
important
that
everyone
who
wants
to
be
able
to
own
an
EV
is
able
to
own
an
EV
and
access
to
charging
at
home
is
an
important
part
of
that
decision
for
most
people
printers
and
those
who
don't
live
in
single-family
homes
have
often
been
left
out
of
this
opportunity
due
to
lack
of
access
to
at
home
charging.
It's
important
that
you
be
charging
infrastructure
keeps
Pace
with
EV
adoption,
especially
in
multi-family
housing,
where
retrofitting
to
support
EV
infrastructure
is
substantially
more
expensive
than
installing
it
up
front.
AG
AG
Utah
clean
energy
has
been
following
the
development
of
this
ordinance
over
the
last
couple
of
years,
and
we
want
to
acknowledge
and
appreciate
the
thoughtful
and
thorough
stakeholder
input
that
Salt
Lake
City
sustainability
department
has
conducted
by
adopting
this
ordinance.
Salt
Lake
City
will
join
at
least
47
other
cities
with
similar
ordinances
in
preparing
their
multi-family
housing
infrastructure
for
the
future.
In
closing,
Utah
clean
energy
strongly
supports
this
proposed
ordinance
and
we
encourage
the
council
to
adopt
the
ordinance
at
the
earliest
possible
opportunity.
Thank
you.
AH
Good
evening,
council
members,
my
name
is
Nigel
swaby.
Over
the
past
couple
of
years,
I've
served
on
the
legislative
committee
for
the
Utah
Association
of
Realtors
and
over
the
last
couple
of
sessions
there
have
been
several
bills
that
address
this
very
thing
in
different
capacities
that
have
failed.
AH
As
on
the
board,
I
heard
different
comments
from
developers
and
landlords,
and
they
are
completely
in
support
of
of
an
ordinance
like
this
or
a
law
like
this
for
new
construction,
where
they
would
oppose
it
would
be
for
existing
construction.
So
you
guys
are
leading
on
this
subject
and
I.
It's
something
that
I
support
and
you
would
have
support
from
a
lot
of
people
because
they
recognize
the
the
high
adoption
of
electro
electric
electric
vehicles
and
need
this
sort
of
thing.
Thank
you.
AI
Hello,
my
name
is
Eliza
Howie
I'm,
a
resident
of
Salt
Lake
and
also
the
policy
director
at
O2
Utah,
where
we
are
concerned
with
air
quality
along
the
Wasatch
Front.
As
you
probably
know,
Transportation
currently
stands
as
the
largest
contributor
to
our
air
quality
issues
along
the
Wasatch
Front.
Well,
its
impact
is
projected
to
decrease
due
to
technology
advances
in
adoption.
This
will
only
happen
if
individuals
are
able
to
adopt
electric
and
other
zero
emission
options
for
vehicles
moving
forward,
providing
Equitable
access
to
charging
stations
is
pivotal
in
this
momentum.
AI
According
to
axios,
charging
access
is
among
the
top
four
barriers
to
EV
adoption,
the
other
cost
availability
and
the
fact
that
people
typically
buy
cars
every
16
years.
This
remains
especially
true
for
those
living
in
multi-family,
housing
and
renters.
Under
current
permitting
regulations.
The
construction
of
new
multi-family
units
does
not
require
the
concurrent
construction
of
home
charging
infrastructure,
which
is
an
essential
component
of
improving
the
overall
cost
and
effectiveness
of
EB
adoption.
AI
The
multi-family
Housing
Industry
is
quickly
outpacing
single-family
housing
Nationwide.
According
to
the
National
Association
of
home
builders,
in
2022
multi-family
new
building
projects
increased
by
nine
and
a
half
percent,
while
single-family
housing
starts
increased
by
five
and
a
half
percent
looking
around
Salt
Lake
City.
This
reality
is
clear,
especially
in
our
downtown.
AI
We
need
to
get
in
front
of
this
and
provide
multi-family
residents
access
to
EV
charging
stations
as
a
Salt,
Lake
City
renter,
not
having
access
to
a
charging
station
at
home
is
the
number
one
reason
why
I
haven't
traded
out
my
gas
powered
vehicle
for
an
electric
option,
ensuring
that
renters
have
access
to
an
on-site
charging
station
needs
to
be
part
of
our
our
equation
to
combat
our
air
quality
issues.
Please
vote
and
support
of
this
critical
Amendment.
AJ
Today,
I'm
speaking
in
strong
support
of
the
proposed
EV
Readiness
Ordinance,
one
of
the
best
tools
available
to
increase
access
to
EV
charging
for
multi-family
dwellers
building,
EV
ready
parking
spots
at
the
time
of
construction
is
cost
effective,
being
three
to
five
times
less
expensive
than
a
retrofit
and
avoiding
obstacles
such
as
Demolition
and
surface
repair
of
Parking
Services,
as
well
as
upgrading
electric
vehicles.
Speaking
in
EV
Readiness
is
especially
important
in
the
multi-family
housing
market
segment,
where
residents
have
little
agency
to
install
charging
infrastructure.
AJ
This
ordinance
would
allow
these
residents
to
choose
an
EV
knowing
they
had
access
to
charging
at
their
residence.
Other
cities
have
adopted
easy
ready,
ordinances
already
to
future-proof
their
housing
stock
and
smartly
prepare
for
the
EV
adoption
we
know
is
coming
among
these
cities.
Chicago
requires
20
EV,
ready
parking
spaces,
as
do
Atlanta
and
Washington
DC.
AJ
This
proposed
ordinance
incurs
small
additional
upfront
costs
during
construction,
but
saves
time
and
money
down
the
road
and
helps
equalize
access
to
charging
for
All
City
residents
to
conclude,
Western
resource
Advocate
strongly
supports
this
coordinates
and
sees
it
as
an
important
tool
to
allowing
all
residents
of
Salt
Lake
City
to
be
able
to
choose
a
vehicle
that
best
suits
their
needs
and
helps
reduce
air
pollution.
Thank
you.
AK
Thank
you.
My
name
is
Katie
Pappas
and
I
live
in
Salt
Lake
City
I
support
this
ordinance
to
provide
for
future
electric
vehicle
charging.
This
will
further
the
city's
carbon
emission
reduction
goals
and
will
enable
families
that
cannot
or
choose
not
to
buy
their
own
home
to
enjoy
the
benefits
of
driving
an
electric
vehicle.
AK
AK
AL
Everyone
Alex-
may
you
I'm
a
resident
of
District
3
and
a
policy
associate
with
heal,
Utah,
otherwise
known
as
the
healthy
environment
Alliance
of
Utah.
We
focus
on
air
quality,
climate
initiatives,
all
types
of
good
stuff
that
the
city
is
already
accomplishing
and
I'm
happy
to
be
here
today.
Supporting
this
really
fantastic
EV,
Readiness
ordinance,
I
really
just
want
to
commend
the
council
and
the
mayor
and
sustainability
staff
for
considering
this
ordinance.
It's
the
exact
type
of
ordinance
that
heel
is
looking
to
push
forward
when
we're
thinking
about
electric
vehicles.
AL
We
really
need
to
be
thinking
about
the
broader
scope
of
how
we
can
get
everyone
to
adopt
electric
vehicles
to
clean
up
our
air
shed
and
reduce
greenhouse
gas
emissions.
So
I
really
want
to
commend
you
all.
Considering
this
ordinance
I
really
urge
you
to
vote
Yes
for
the
ordinance
offering
the
support
of
you
know
Utah
on
that,
and
also
offering
the
sport
of
Hill
Utah
for
any
type
of
additional
ordinances
or
Municipal
level
work
that
can
be
done
to
encourage
any
type
of
work
that
takes
an
environmental
justice
lens.
AL
Really
thinking
about
moderate
to
low-income
communities
renters
how
they
can
adopt
electric
vehicles,
building
electrification,
any
type
of
decarbonization
projects,
I'm
looking
forward
to
having
more
conversations
with
the
city,
something
off
the
top
of
my
head
right
now
in
the
ira,
there's
tons
of
money
in
the
climate
reduction.
Excuse
me
the
climate
emissions
reduction
grant
program,
there's
4.6
billion
dollars
available
right
now,
cities
have
until
April
28th
to
apply
for
this
program
and
I'm,
hoping
that
we
can
start
some
conversations
to
hopefully
get
Salt
Lake
City
on
board
with
that,
thanks
for
them.
C
A
C
A
H
Some
of
the
largest
items
include
five
and
a
half
million
dollars
for
police
officer,
one-time
retention
and
hiring
bonuses,
four
million
dollars
in
additional
emergency
rental
assistance
from
the
U.S
treasury,
2.6
million
dollars
for
City
Hall,
earthquake
repairs
and
2.4
million
dollars
for
Public
Safety
radio
replacements,
the
staff
report,
the
administration's
transmittal,
are
available
in
today's
meeting
packet.
The
council
has
a
budget
webpage
which
is
updated
throughout
the
year.
It
can
be
found
at
tinyurl.com
forward,
slash,
SLC
fy23.
I
AM
Hi
this
is
Jeff
sandstrom
I'd,
just
like
to
take
a
minute
in
support
of
the
budget.
Amendment
number
five:
it
includes
several
important
items
that
are
a
positive
to
the
entire
city,
including
the
additional
earthquake,
repairs
to
City
Hall,
the
upgrades
to
Public
Safety,
Radio,
Systems
and
recruitment
in
the
retention
of
police
officers.
I
think
those
are
all
broad-based
positives
for
the
city.
AM
I'd
also
like
to
support
one
of
the
smaller
items
that
it
helps
our
ballpark
neighborhood
greatly
in
regards
to
the
funding
for
repaving
and
repairing
the
Lockhart
alley,
which
runs
South
off
of
13th
South
by
Wayne's
corner
funding.
AM
This
would
really
help
the
residents
business
owners
and
others
along
the
alley,
especially
on
the
west
side,
where
they
face
a
lot
of
flooding
in
the
alley
and
I'd
encourage
you
to
support
budget
amendment
five
and
I'd
like
to
also
thank
council
member
mono
for
alerting
us
to
this
opportunity
and
his
support
of
this
project.
I.
Thank
you
for
your
time.
AN
Hello
city,
council
members,
my
name
is
Amy
J
Hawkins
I
serve
as
chair
of
the
ballpark
community
council
tonight,
I'm
speaking
in
support
of
budget
amendment
number
five
like
Jeff
sandstrom
because
of
the
inclusions
of
funds
to
support
the
Lockhart
alley.
Reconstruction,
the
improvements
to
the
alley
between
Major
Street
and
State
Street,
just
south
of
1300
South
to
Kensington
Avenue.
AN
This
neglected
alley
is
immediately
adjacent
to
one
of
the
most
notorious
businesses
in
the
neighborhood,
possibly
even
the
city.
The
gas
station
and
convenience
store
at
1300
South
and
State
Street
The
Business,
formerly
known
as
Wayne's
Corner.
When
our
previous
Community
liaison
officer,
then
Detective
Nathan,
meinzer,
now
Sergeant
surveyed
community
members
about
their
number
one
safety
issue
in
our
neighborhood
without
fail
folks
described
the
drug
trade
that
happened
in
and
around
Wayne's
Corner
detective
minds
are
initiated
a
nuisance
case
against
the
business
that
was
aggressively
supported
by
a
letter
writing
campaign
by
the
community.
AN
AN
We've
seen
violence
spill
over
from
the
drug
trade
there
in
the
form
of
homicides
and
stabbings
around
1300
South,
but
this
past
Saturday
afternoon,
like
many
others,
I
picked
up
trash
and
needles
in
this
very
same
alley.
With
some
of
my
dedicated
ballpark
Neighbors,
please
support
us.
Let's
get
this
alley
fixed!
Thank
you.
A
Excellent,
thank
you
for
everyone
who
commented
I
will
look
for
emotion,
Madam,.
A
A
A
A
I
have
one
thing:
I
would
like
to
quickly
say,
and
it's
just
a
little
something
to
our
wonderful
Lisa,
Schaefer
chief
administrative
officer.
When
we
are
fixing
the
building,
can
we
leave
some
of
the
exposed,
brick
fabulous
I'm,
just
throwing
that
out
there.
AO
I
just
wanted
to
remember
the
comment,
a
comment
on
some
of
the
requests
that
I
wasn't
clear
and
about
you
know
who
asked
for
what
or
or
how
they
made
it
to
the
agenda
and
stuff
and
I
think
I
love
the
idea
that
we
can
be
council
member
boy's
idea
of
the
building
security
like
the
million
dollars
I.
Think
it's
a
good
idea.
I
just
wasn't
prepared
for
like
that,
like
because
I
just
read.
Y
AO
Of
it,
but
it's
something
that
and
I
think
you
were
shocked,
maybe
with
with
the
other
the
alleyway
that
council
member
Manu
had
requested,
so
maybe
in
the
future,
just
for
our
for
our
information
amongst
ourselves.
AO
If
we,
if
you
feel
strongly
about
one
of
these
things
that
you
want
to
add,
please
let
us
know
so
that
we're
not
surprised
and
I
think
that
was
one
of
the
recommendations
from
staff
that
we
don't
surprise
each
other
and
I
think
I
may
have
done
it
before
so
I'm
also
to
blame
for
it,
but
just
for
future
reference.
Please
let
us
know,
because
it's
a
big
chunk,
like
a
million
dollars,
no.
Y
Madam
chair
and
you
know,
council,
member
valdemoris
I.
That
is
this
is
my
fault
on
this
specific
item,
because
I've
been
sort
of
working
on
this
for
a
little
while,
but
because
of
my
travel
and
all
that
it
was
last
week
and
I
thought
I
had
I
lost
my
chance
because
I
had
to
disconnect
from
the
meeting
I
thought
that
that
item
I
didn't
have
the
chance
to
really
raise
it
up.
But
that's
a
really
good
point
and
I
appreciate
that
too.
That
you're
saying
that.
AP
AI
A
A
Z
A
Y
A
There
is
a
motion
by
council
member
Bui
in
the
second
by
council
member
Mano.
Any
discussion
on
this
theme,
no
discussion,
all
those
in
favor
any
opposed
and
that
passes
7-0
I
think
we
are
finally
done
with
that
particular
item
on
the
budget.
Thank
you.
Everyone
with
that.
We
will
be
moving
on
to
item
number
B5,
which
is
an
ordinance
regarding.
A
Accessory
dwelling
units
text-
Amendment,
no,
you
guys
are
fine.
A
Oh,
this
is
before
we
get
started
on.
This
I
would
like
to
invite
our
lovely
Brian,
Fulmer
who's.
All
things
land
use
to
talk
to
us
about
to
give
us
a
brief
introduction
on
adus.
G
AA
You
at
the
last
Council
discussion
last
week,
council
members
narrowed
down
the
potential
motions
and
ways
they'd
like
to
approach
this
to
two
basic
options:
I'll
just
briefly
go
through
them.
The
first
one
would
remove
the
conditional
use
requirements
for
adus,
who
would
establish
the
maximum
size
of
a
detached
Adu
at
one
thousand
square
feet
would
retain
the
owner
occupancy
requirement
for
properties
with
single-family
homes
and
adus
in
the
FR
R1
sr1
and
sr1a
Zoning
districts,
the
minimum
Corner
side
yard
setback
is
20
percent
of
the
lot
width
or
10
feet.
AA
Whichever
is
less,
it
would
provide
a
minimum
of
one
off
street
parking
space
for
Adu
residents,
with
the
following
exceptions.
If
the
property
is
within
one
half
mile
of
a
designated
bicycle
lane
or
path
if
the
property
is
within
one
quarter,
mile
of
transit
or
if
this,
if
sufficient
space
for
on-street
parking
is
available
in
front
of
the
primary
residence.
AA
I
AQ
Thank
you,
I
am
hopeful
that
you
all
will
keep
the
owner
occupancy
in
the
main
house,
or
even
vice
versa,
owner
in
the
Adu
and
rent
the
main
home
for
the
foreseeable
future.
At
least
five
plus
years
I'd
like
to
see
programs
to
help
homeowners
be
able
to
build
an
Adu
and
help
provide
a
missing
piece
of
the
pie
when
it
comes
to
affordable
housing.
Eugs
are
not
the
whole
pile
Oh,
My
Gosh.
AQ
Excuse
me
the
whole
pie
when
it
comes
to
solving
our
housing
issues
and
for
everything
else
that
you
all
have
worked
for
and
want
to
implement.
Thank
you
for
your
work.
I
do
believe
in
empowering
our
communities
to
build
generational
wealth.
At
the
same
time,
we
need
to
preserve
some
of
our
deep
lots
and
what
makes
the
west
side
of
Salt
Lake
City
so
unique.
We
are
the
stewards
of
what
will
be
passed
down
to
Future
Generations.
We
don't
need
to
hack
up
every
piece
of
land.
AQ
We
have
homeowners
who
would
utilize
their
land
for
gardening
chickens,
animal
rescue
or
just
raising
kiddos.
We
shouldn't
take
away
future
Planning
by
getting
rid
of
every
single
parcel.
The
fact
that
a
handful
of
salt
Lakers
and
larger
Banks
want
to
have
two
rentals
on
one
parcel
does
not
justify
removing
owner
occupancy.
It
is
offensive
to
me
to
hear
that
part
of
your
proposed
solution
would
have
been
to
provide
more
enforcement
and
landlords
if
the
owner
occupied
rule
was
removed.
AQ
Where's
our
current
enforcement
on
the
West
Side
per
the
master
plan,
my
neighborhood
neighborhood
has
been
promised
more
Landscaping
lighting
and
enforcement.
Etc
we
haven't
received
any
of
this
I
understand.
Development
is
a
tricky,
tricky
great
area
and
to
say
that
the
west
side
has
been
underdeveloped
is
an
understatement.
We
have
a
Feeding
Frenzy
for
our
land
and
we
deserve
more
than
just
Podium
Apartments
a
fee
here
or
a
fee
there
to
keep
investors
developers
or
landlords
in
line
is
a
drop
in
the
bucket
they'll
pass
the
fee
along
to
the
renter
increasing
rent
prices.
AB
Hi
I'm
Adam
Vogel
I
would
like
to
speak
briefly
in
favor
of
this
proposal.
From
what
I
can
see,
it's
generally
a
very
positive
change
and
will
help
improve
housing.
Accessibility
I
would
particularly
like
to
mention
that
specifically
disallowing
the
use
of
adus
as
short-term
rentals
is,
in
my
view,
a
very
important
part
of
The
Proposal
to
ensure
that
they
are
actually
beneficial
to
neighborhoods
and
don't
have,
for
example,
on
ruling
Airbnb
tenants,
additionally,
as
a
Salt
Lake
resident,
who
does
frequently
use
public
transit,
a
bike
or
other
forms
of
transportation.
AB
I
think
adding
the
exceptions
to
the
parking
minimum
requirements
is
a
great
change
in
that
proposal.
Thank
you.
AR
Hi,
as
many
of
you
know,
I
live
in
the
Guadalupe
neighborhood
and
I
serve
on
the
Fair
Park
Community
Council,
although
I
am
just
speaking
for
myself.
AR
A
three-year
period
of
time
before
assessing
I
think
is
not
long
enough.
Frankly,
I
don't
even
think
five
years
is
long
enough
and
other
cities,
where
similar
approaches
have
been
made.
Results
are
still
inconclusive.
AR
Additionally
the
state
of
our
economy
throughout
the
pandemic
in
the
years
that
have
followed,
really
have
not
made
building
an
Adu
easy
at
all,
resulting
in
lower
numbers
of
Adu
construction
than
hoped
at
this
time.
There's
a
majority
of
those
who
can
afford
adus
are
those
with
Deep
Pockets
or
those
who
have
access
to
Deep
Pockets
like
Developers.
AR
Secondly,
owner
occupancy
the
owner,
occupancy
requirement
should
remain
in
place.
City-Wide
consideration
of
allowing
multi-family
zones
as
an
exemption
to
the
requirement
will
have
negative
effects
on
many
vulnerable
and
fragile
neighborhoods.
There
are
communities
and
neighborhoods
that
have
already
suffered
at
the
creation
of
TSA
Zone
zones
that
would
also
be
affected
by
this
decision.
AR
AS
AS
Even
if
you
live
in
R1,
your
neighbors
property
may
turn
into
RMF
at
any
time
and
two
after
I'm
about
revising
this
in
three
years.
Personally,
considering
today's
economy,
it's
not
long
enough
for
homeowners
to
build
a
lot
of
adus
and
in
last
week's
work
session.
I
heard
council
member
Petro
mentioned
five
years
and
thank
you,
Victoria
and
I
hope
to
see
you
guys
give
more
time
to
evaluate
this
and
three.
AS
AS
AT
AT
So
the
major
thing
that
gives
me
concern
is
this
owner
occupancy
requirement.
There
are
just
so
many
situations
where
this
requirement
makes
an
Adu
feel
like
a
ball
and
chain
instead
of
an
asset.
If
I
want
to
go
to
grad
school
in
a
couple
of
years,
then
or
or
maybe
in
my
midlife
I
want
to
go
out
of
town
out
of
state
to
get
a
job
for
a
couple
of
years
or
even
when
I
want
to
retire.
AT
There
is
the
possibility
of
traveling
the
world
for
a
couple
of
years
and
renting
out
my
house
while
I'm
gone,
but
an
owner
occupancy
requirement
makes
it
so
I
I
wouldn't
be
able
to
do
that.
I
would
need
to
sell
my
home
in
order
to
be
able
to
leave
for
a
couple
of
years,
but
this
is
my
forever
home.
I
want
to
be
in
this
home
forever,
so
to
make
it
so
that
I
am
tied
to
a
spot,
even
if
I
just
want
to
be
able
to
leave
for
a
moment.
It's
just.
AT
It
feels
like
a
ball
and
chain
that
I'm
always
stuck
to
so
you're.
Forcing
a
question
you
say:
do
I
want
to
provide
housing
for
my
friends
right
now
in
the
present
moment,
or
do
I
want
to
postpone
building
an
Adu
tell
maybe
one
of
these
other
dreams
is
completed
or
another
dream,
or
another
dream
and
I
just
keep
pushing
it
off
further
and
further
and
further
to
the
point:
I
never
build
an
Adu
so
on
owner
occupancy
requirement
and
if
I'm
an
agent.
Thank
you
appreciate
it.
AU
Hello
you're,
the
first
person
I've
heard
that
said
that
he
wants
to
build
one
and
why
I
listened
to
the
work
session
last
week
and
it
was
very
informative
and
you
guys
Mr
Wharton.
Thank
you.
You
sticking
to
it.
You
tried
to
convince
him.
Mr,
pooey,
convincing
Victoria,
convincing
others.
The
owner
occupancy
sounds
always
good
to
remove
it.
AU
You
always
want
someone
else
to
do
it,
but
look
on
either
side
of
you
and
picture
that
be
now.
You
have
two
rentals,
two
rentals.
You
can't
control
them.
You
have
no
one
to
call
to
deal
with
the
situation.
Airbnbs
at
least
were
only
there
for
a
short
period
of
time,
but
this
is
a
rental
situation.
Do
you
want
that
next
door
to
you?
None
of
them
answered
not
a
single
one
of
them
ever
answered
back.
I
understand
your
position
on
that.
AU
I
understand
that,
but
have
you
thought
about
maybe
giving
a
permit
a
certain
amount?
Okay,
we
have
no
idea
how
many
people
actually
want
to
do
this.
We
have
no
idea
at
least
I've
been
asking
and
no
one's
been
able
to
answer
me
how
many
people
are
on
a
list
that
want
to
do
this?
How
many
are
applying
to
do
this?
The
liquor
license
is
okay.
They
have
to
apply
there's
only
so
many
that
can
be
done
and
they
watch
watch.
AU
Can
they
not
do
that
with
this
and
if
it,
if
it
gets,
if
it's
okay
and
it's
okay,
Glendale
is
going
to
be
up
for
investment
because
of
the
park,
and
it's
going
to
go
crazy
because
they
saw
what
happened
in
Liberty
Park
Liberty
Park
is
now
surrounded
by
airbnbs.
That
is
the
time
they're
going
to
buy
and
think
about
putting
something
in
the
backyard.
So
they
can
I
know
they're
not
legally
supposed
to
do
it,
but
you
guys
don't
crack.
AU
G
Good
evening
my
name
is
Dave
Alderman
and
I
live
in
the
lower
Avenues
and
I'm.
Here
speaking
in
support
of
the
revised
Adu
ordinances,
with
the
caveat
that
the
owner
occupancy
requirements
be
retained,
removing
the
owner
occupancy
requirement
would
make
home
ownership
even
more
difficult
for
individuals
by
putting
them
in
competition
with
investor
groups
and
Realty
corporations.
By
addressing
one
problem,
you'd
be
making
a
bigger
problem.
G
One
of
the
keys
to
stabilizing
housing
is
home
ownership.
This
is
important
enough
to
be
a
stated
goal
of
the
draft
housing
SLC
plan.
It's
also
a
key
to
minimizing
displacement.
Policies
such
as
those
outlined
in
housing.
Slc
should
support
home
ownership,
not
disadvantage
it
as
eliminating
the
owner.
Occupancy
requirement
would
I'm
speaking
of
someone
that
already
owns
a
house
and
when
it
comes
time
that
my
wife
and
I
have
to
move
out,
because
we
can
no
longer
live
in
our
house,
no
longer
maintain
it.
G
Eliminating
the
owner,
occupancy
requirement
would
actually
increase
our
property
value
and
we'd
be
able
to
sell
it
for
more
but
I'm,
aware
of
people
that
are
trying
to
move
into
a
house
now
and
I'm.
Also
speaking
as
someone
with
adult
children
who
would
love
to
buy
their
own
home
but
can't
afford
it
in
these
environment,
making
them
compete
with
corporations
will
only
make
it
more
difficult
for
them
to
own
their
own
home.
G
AH
AH
Good
evening
again,
council
members,
my
name
is
Nigel
swaby
I'm,
the
chair
of
the
Fair
Park
Community
Council,
and
you
should
have
gotten
a
letter
earlier
today
with
a
statement
from
the
council.
But
I
want
to
speak
personally
tonight
about
this
issue.
We
as
a
as
a
council
and
as
an
individual
I,
am
very
opposed
to
removing
the
owner
occupancy
or
yeah.
Removing
the
owner
occupancy
requirement
to
give
you
an
idea
of
what
the
reality
of
the
marketplace
is
right
now,
wages
in
Salt,
Lake
County
have
gone
up.
AH
That
gives
the
median
wage
earner
about
a
little
over
two
thousand
dollars
a
month
for
housing
to
be
at
30
percent
to
be
affordable
to
buy
a
home
at
that
price.
At
today's
interest
rates
it
would
be
265
000,
it's
the
most.
They
can
afford.
As
I
looked
on
the
MLS
today
to
find
homes
in
Salt,
Lake
City
that
were
single
family
that
met
that
requirement.
There
are
none.
There
are
none
in
the
county
either
for
condos
and
Townhomes
in
Salt
Lake
City.
There
are
eight
in
Salt
Lake
County.
There
are
22.
AH
the
median
wage
owner
in
Salt.
Lake
County
cannot
afford
the
median
home.
The
new
number
came
out
earlier
today.
It's
524
500
for
Salt
Lake
County,
that's
the
median
home
price.
Maybe
maybe
we
need
to
rethink
the
definition
of
affordable.
Most
homeowners
spend
more
than
30
percent
of
their
gross
income
on
their
first
home
owner
occupancy
should
apply
to
all
adus.
They
should
only
be
built
in
residential
areas,
including
R2.
AH
That's
one
that
you've
left
out
adus
can
help
people
attain
homeownership,
while
increasing
housing
stock,
allowing
investors
to
buy,
will
increase
housing
stock,
but
will
not
increase
ownership
opportunities.
So
I
urge
you
I
I
love
the
other
things
that
you're
doing
with
adus,
but
you
need
to
keep
the
owner
occupancy
requirement.
Thank
you.
AD
AD
We
have
talked
about
renters
in
Elko
and
across
Salt
Lake
City
speaking
to
comments
today
in
the
work
session
and
according
to
our
meeting
with
the
mayor's
office
and
a
representative
can
the
thriving
in
place
data
shows.
We
Eastside
renters
outnumber
West
Side
renters
in
order
to
support
East
Liberty
Park
renters.
We
support
leaving
owner
occupancy
in
place
Citywide
for,
however
long
it
takes
to
collect
local
affordability
data.
AD
We
have
poured
through
the
non-proprietary
data
from
Turner
the
tip
data,
which
is
limited,
as
well
as
an
analysis
of
Seattle's
Adu
data
and
find
that
the
affordability
data
was
not
separated
out
for
adus
rented
for
free
and
those
rented
at
four
and
an
above
Market
rates
thus
provides
very
little
data
about
affordability
of
Adu
housing
available
to
ordinary
citizens.
Like
myself.
AD
In
addition,
20
of
Adu
housing
in
this
study
was
lost
to
sdrs.
We
have
received
dozens
of
comments
from
our
constituents.
Most
supporting
adus
all
supporting
owner
occupancy,
while
we
recognize
oo
may
not
be
the
best
tool
for
supporting
families
in
providing
affordable
housing
to
renters
or
the
best
tool
for
preventing,
affordable
housing
being
lost
to
strs.
AD
AV
Distinguished
council
members,
I
am
chair
of
the
Hillcrest
neighborhood
Council
and
also
I'm
speaking
as
a
resident.
I
want
to
Echo
the
wise
words
of
councilman
Chris
Wharton
at
last
week's
work
session.
He
said
if
owner
occupancy
is
removed
from
single-family
zoning
in
the
edu
codes.
Homeowners
would
be
quote
outnumbered
and
outgunned
by
corporations
and
developers.
He
is
right,
I
believe
he
was
also
saying,
there's
a
very
human
side
to
the
decisions
this
Council
makes
well
trying
to
fix
the
city's
needs
for
more
housing.
What
real
and
unintended
consequences
might
be
triggered?
AV
Well,
the
very
things
that
attract
record
numbers
of
people
to
Salt
Lake
be
lost
if
the
city
pursues
what
outside
States
and
towns
are
experimenting
with.
Chris
also
asked
a
perceptive
question
of
a
City
attorney
two
weeks
ago,
which
yielded
the
startling
knowledge
that
removing
owner
occupancy
in
single-family
zones
would
effectively
end
single-family
zoning
in
Salt
Lake,
a
hundred
years
of
History,
conceivably
Swept
Away
and
a
written
email
to
this
Council
I
shared
the
story
of
my
friends,
Jen
and
Jeff,
who
lived
for
years
in
a
rental
home
owned
by
a
local
man.
AV
To
add
insult
the
injury,
the
corporation
announced
just
weeks
ago,
a
drastic
rent
increase
that
exceeded
their
budget
during
March,
Jen
and
Jeff
had
been
frantically
searching
for
another
place
and
fortunately
they
found
one
that
is
an
owner
operated
rental,
while
Jen
and
Jeff's
story
isn't
about
edu's.
It
is
about
what
life
is
like
in
the
thank
you.
AW
The
last
time
I
was
at
this
Podium
I
was
feeling
very,
very
discouraged
and
I'm
feeling,
not
that
my
feelings
matter
that
much
but
I'm
feeling
more
hopeful
just
based
on
efforts
that
chairman,
Dugan
and
others
have
been
making
Chris
as
well.
When
I
read
about
your
most
recent
discussions,
I
thought
it
was
thoughtful.
It
felt
like
it
was.
AX
Thank
you
for
the
opportunity
to
speak
to
all
you
tonight,
I'm,
a
strong
supporter
of
owner
occupation
requirement
for
Residential
Properties
containing
adus
I'm,
also,
a
very
strong
supporter
of
internal
adus
external
adus.
However,
present
a
multitude
of
complexities,
I
believe
in
equal
voices
in
a
democracy
and
I
believe
in
equity
rights
amongst
all
property
owners.
AX
Given
that
external
adus
are
permanent
and
not
readily
removed,
it
is
critical
that
we
all
use
common
respect
and
neighborly
Behavior
regarding
the
installation
of
external
adus.
The
golden
rule
applies
here
due
on
to
others,
as
you
would
have
them
do.
Unto
you,
installation
of
an
external
Adu
should
not
come
as
a
surprise
to
a
budding
property.
AX
Neighbors
I
suggest,
as
a
common
courtesy,
to
be
included
in
this
code,
Advanced
notification
of
a
pending
external
Adu
to
all
abutting
property
owners,
and
that
notification
should
provide
a
contextual
elevation
of
height
size
and
location
of
the
pending
Adu.
In
reference
to
the
primary
dwelling
that
abutting
property
owners
be
allowed
14
days
to
identify
potential
impacts
to
their
property
with
three
well-known
and
accepted
land
use
mitigation
issues,
including
air
circulation,
sunlight
and
view
corridors.
Thank
you.
I
AC
Don't
forget
the
issue
that
launched
this
proposal,
which
is
the
removal
of
the
conditional
use
requirement,
there's
another
staff
report
and
another
hearing
tomorrow
night
at
the
Planning
Commission,
because
we're
still
talking
about
this,
this
is
of
course
a
window
squeegee.
It's
useful
for
cleaning
large
pieces
of
glass
not
divided
light
windows.
It's
not
a
good
tool
to
use
to
pry
open
the
doors
of
an
elevator
stuck
between
floors
of
the
World
Trade
Center
on
September
11th.
AC
But
that's
what
this
was
used
for.
One
of
the
people
trapped
in
the
elevator
was
the
window
washer.
Thank
goodness.
He
was
still
carrying
his
squeegee
I'm
speculating
here,
but
I
bet
you
that
no
one
said
that's
not
the
right
tool
to
use
I,
don't
think
anyone
suggested
waiting
for
someone
to
show
up
with
a
better
one.
AC
AC
It
is
the
only
efficient
and
possibly
effective
tool
that
we
have
at
the
moment.
Should
we
use
it?
Yes,
should
we
work
to
make
other
tools
available
in
the
future?
Absolutely
do
we
need
to
be
concerned
about
every
unit
of
housing
removed
from
our
supply?
Yes,
we
certainly
do
because
the
failure
to
do
so
in
the
past
has
gotten
us
where
we
are
now
thanks.
I
AY
I
AZ
Great
hello,
my
name
is
Eric
valtius
I'm,
a
homeowner
in
District,
Six
and
I've
spoken
before
about
my
support
of
the
revised
Adu
ordinance,
which
I
would
like
to
reiterate
here
today.
Given
the
two
remaining
options
on
owner
occupancy,
I
support
the
collection
of
data
and
revisiting
in
three
years.
Two
questions
that
I'd
recommend
studying
would
be
one
the
instances
of
renters
being
evicted
due
to
homeowners,
moving
out
of
the
primary
home
and
two,
a
survey
of
homeowners
who
have
not
built
adus
and
their
reasons
for
doing
so.
AZ
AZ
I
won't
take
up
my
time
here
to
outline
why
the
economics
of
adus
don't
generally
work
for
developers,
but
I
do
want
to
say
something
to
hopefully
shape
conversations
around
future
land
use
reforms.
Salt,
Lake's
housing
crisis
is
at
its
core,
driven
by
lack
of
housing,
Supply,
For,
Better
or
Worse.
Almost
all
the
new
units
that
are
built
in
the
US
are
completed
by
individuals
in
business,
who
expect
to
return
on
their
investment.
AZ
I
believe
that
fighting
against
this
fact
will
simply
mean
that
we'll
continue
with
the
status
quo
of
not
building
enough
housing
in
our
city
to
the
detriment
of
renters
and
those
who
want
to
attain
homeownership
I'd
encourage
this
Council
to
take
what
I
believe
is
a
more
constructive
approach
of
redirecting
housing
developers
to
accomplish
City
goals,
instead
of
using
the
threat
of
developers
to
prevent
the
reform
needed
to
solve
the
pressing
issue
of
housing.
Affordability.
Thank
you.
BA
I'm
Jim
Burdette
I've
watched
over
the
years.
The
many
concerns
and
the
slow
progress
of
this
evolving
ordinance
in
your
debates
in
the
last
couple
of
work
sessions
have
continued
to
be
difficult
and
time
consuming
in
the
proposed
motions
you
have
tonight.
I
think
you've
come
up
with
reasonable
alternatives
to
ease
the
difficulty
of
a
homeowner,
adding
an
Adu
to
an
existing
home
I'm,
referring
to
motion
two
and
motion
3.
BA
BA
BA
I'd
much
prefer
this
design
to
what
is
now
allowed,
which
is
to
tear
off
my
entire
roof,
build
a
box
on
top
and
get
a
second
floor
apartment
ordinance.
Motion
2
will
allow
my
living
with
no
stairs
so
I
hope
you
can
settle
this
ordinance.
Amendment
I
mistakenly
thought
that
you
could.
That
could
be
tonight
that
you
could
solve
this,
but
not
quite
thank
you.
I
BB
Good
evening,
I'm
Kimball
young,
chairman
of
the
foothill
Sunnyside
Community
Council
I'm,
a
Utah
native,
a
long
time,
50
half
century
plus
resident
of
District
Six
two-year
renter
and
52-year
homeowner
and
I'm.
Here
as
chairman
to
implore,
my
neighbors
have
instructed
me
and
I
enthusiastically
implore
you
to
support
adus
with
owner
occupancy,
as
most
recently
proposed.
BB
Just
as
a
note
one
of
my
neighbors
who
just
moved
out
of
our
neighborhood
to
over
to
District
Seven
said
they
in
selling
their
house.
They
were
approached
by
an
investor
who
proposed
that
their
house
would
be
a
perfect
BRBO
and
made
an
offer,
a
generous
offer
that
was
very
much
competitive.
They
ended
up
selling
to
another
person
to
a
family
so
to
preserve
owner
occupancy
and
family
occupancy
owner
occupancy
in
our
neighborhood,
which
is
really
appreciated.
BB
As
you
know,
we
have
a
renter
majority
City,
which
is
growing
because
of
this
33
percent
of
all
new
homes
that
are
purchased
are
purchased
by
investors,
who
intent
who
intend
to
rent
which
really
works
against
owner
occupancy,
which
we
really
need
more
of
in
the
city.
District
6
and
district
7
are
the
only
two
districts
that
have
a
majority
of
occupancy
in
owner
occupancy.
We
should
work
as
a
city
to
preserve
the
owner
occupancy
that
we
have
plus
grow
it
in
the
other
five
districts.
Thanks.
BC
Turner
bitten
I'm
here
representing
SLC
neighbors
for
more
neighbors
I'm
here
tonight
to
speak
in
support
of
the
proposed
policy
changes
and
specifically
for
the
compromise
that
was
proposed
by
council
member
Mano
earlier
today.
There
was
a
lot
of
discussion
today
in
your
work
session
about
data,
and
many
of
the
comments
tonight
have
focused
on
concerns
that
are
not
based
in
data
they're,
based
on
conjecture
and
assumptions.
BC
If
data
is
what
you
need,
it
is
readily
available.
Institutions
like
the
Brookings,
Institute
sightline,
Institute,
Turner
Center
at
UC,
Berkeley
and
countless
others
have
data
on
what's
Happening
Nationwide
data
from
across
the
country
supports
our
position.
That
is
time
for
the
council
to
make
a
serious
commitment
to
removing
owner
occupancy
requirements
and
not
wait
another
half
decade
to
take
action
on
this.
We
implore
you
to
follow
the
state
of
California
cities
of
Portland
Seattle
and
out
as
of
last
week,
Anchorage
Minneapolis
and
many
others
that
have
ended
owner
occupancy
requirements.
BC
The
experiences
of
these
cities
are
remarkably
consistent.
Few
adus
are
used
for
short-term
rentals.
Corporate
investors
have
not
taken
over
housing
markets
and
a
majority
of
adus
are
rented
far
below
Market
rates
in
Seattle
it's
over
75
percent,
rented
at
affordable
rates.
We
recognize
that
the
politics
of
this
issue
may
not
be
easy,
but
Salt
Lake's
position
in
the
world
is
not
unique
and
we
should.
We
should
not
ignore
the
experiences
of
our
peer
cities
across
the
country.
BC
I'll
end
with
a
quote
from
one
of
the
Brookings
institute's
reports
on
owner
occupancy,
because
renters
typically
have
lower
incomes
than
homeowners
and
are
racially
more
diverse
owner
occupancy
requirements
affect
the
economic
and
demographic
makeup
of
neighborhoods
I'll.
Leave
you
to
draw
a
conclusion
about
how
owner
occupancy
impacts,
neighborhoods,
Citywide.
BD
Okay
yeah,
my
name
is
Jim
Webster
I
live
in
in
the
eelcrest
area.
I'm
a
former
chair,
I
kind
of
feel
like
removing
removing
the
requirement
for
owner
occupancy
is
a
good
thing.
I
mean
excuse
me,
I'm.
The
other
way
around
I
think
we
should
have
under
occupancy,
but
I
want
to
stress
that
even
having
ordinary
occupancy
doesn't
really
protect.
The
neighbor
I
live
in
a
situation
where
my
neighbor
wanted
to
build
a
just
rebuild
his
garage
and
he
was,
he
was
talked
into,
calling
it
an
Adu
it.
BD
It
was
submitted
in
this
as
an
Adu.
There
was
no
demolition.
Permit,
no
notice
to
me.
No
plans,
no
elevation
and,
as
a
result,
I
have
lead
paint
all
over
my
backyard.
It's
a
hazardous
Hazmat
site
right
now
and
I.
Don't
know
if
Chris
you
agree
with
me
or
not,
but
maybe
the
City
attorney
would
would
take
issue
with
this,
but
I
think
it's
a
taking
issue.
I
can
no
longer
use
my
backyard
for
my
garden.
BD
It's
the
only
place
where
I
had
available
Sun,
so
I
kind
of
feel
like
requiring
owner
occupancy
is
maybe
throwing
a
bone
at
us.
A
little
bit
and
it's
a
good
thing
and
I
support
it,
but
it
doesn't
solve
the
problem
of
no
notification
to
Neighbors
when
when
an
Adu
is
being
approved.
Thank
you.
I
BE
Good
evening
my
name
is
Chris
magrill.
The
wording
tonight
said
that
the
pro
pose
changes
seek
to
strike
a
better
balance
between
encouraging
construction
and
mitigating
impacts
to
neighboring
properties.
The
planning
division
has
never
said
no
I'm,
not
sure
SLC
needs
to
do
much
more
than
never
saying
no
to
encourage
construction,
so
had
been
suggested
by
some
that
we
should
give
it
three
years.
Let
it
let
the
owner
occupancy,
go
away
for
three
years
to
see
what
happens
in
the
Liberty
Park
neighborhood
where
I
live.
We
already
know
what
happens.
BE
BE
It
is
now
going
to
be
turned
into
another
seven-figure
home
by
the
very
same
developer.
Who
has
already
done
this
in
our
neighborhood?
We
know
what's
happening,
it's
happening
already,
so
the
in
the
past
month,
the
building
department
has
told
me
it's
not
their
job
to
enforce
Force
owner
occupancy
in
the
past
month.
A
senior
planner
in
the
planning
division
has
told
me
it's
not
their
job
to
enforce
owner
occupancy.
BE
In
the
case
of
the
Princeton
house
that
was
flattened
last
week
by
the
Speculator,
he
covered
all
the
bases.
The
building
permit
says
it
is
owner
occupied.
He
has
never
lived
in
this
house,
the
planning
permit
says
he
has
no
intention
of
living
here
and
will
sell.
As
soon
as
the
project
is
completed,
we
could
get
into
numbers.
Several
people
got
into
numbers.
BE
We
could
talk
about
this
house,
certainly
being
at
least
3.5
times
the
cost
of
a
house
that
is
Within
Reach
of
the
average
household
income
in
this
ZIP
code,
where
we
could
talk
about
how
the
secondary
building
on
this
property
will
be
larger
than
13
of
the
14
single-family
homes
in
my
block,
but
it's
not,
let's
not
get
lost
in
the
numbers.
BE
I
BF
Hello,
thank
you
first
I'd
like
to
say
thank
you
to
the
council,
as
well
as
the
mayor's
office.
I'm
a
homeowner
in
District,
Five
and
I
was
actually
here
I
believe
five
years
ago,
when
then
councilmember
kitchen
suspended
the
council
rules
and
there
was
a
5-1
vote
in
favor
of
the
Adu
ordinance,
letting
folks
build
adu's
Citywide
and
removing
the
25
unit
cap
in
the
city.
That
was
a
great
day.
BF
Yeah
I
would
just
like
to
once
more
speak
in
favor
of
kind
of
appealing
back
some
of
the
zoning
requirements,
the
height
restrictions
and
the
the
the
easements
from
the
lot
boundary
I
do
intend
to
build
a
Adu
as
well,
and
one
of
the
advantageous
things
in
my
book
is
just
being
able
to
have
relative
shelter
in
place
as
they
age
for
the
homeowner
occupancy.
Removing
the
homeowner
occupancy
requirement.
BF
I
would
like
to
ask
the
council
member
to
have
a
put
in
a
safety
word
at
that
point.
I
think
it
kind
of
reminds
me
of
a
affordable,
homeowner
buyer
plan,
the
previous
marijuana
Administration
that
enabled
homeowners
to
buy
a
homeowner
another
house,
the
discounted
mortgage
rate
and
it
just
what
it
did
was
it
just.
It
gave
the
advantage
to
people
who
already
have
tremendous
economic
leverage,
so
yeah
I
request
to
keep
the
homeowner
occupancy
requirement.
Thank
you.
So
much.
AE
Hello,
thank
you
so
much
to
the
city,
council
and
everyone
today
for
taking
my
comment.
AE
AE
The
owner,
occupancy
requirement
is
really
a
a
significant
hurdle
to
get
over
to
actually
build
that
Adu
right
thinking
about
my
we've
heard
another
comment
today,
my
life
in
the
future,
the
owner
occupancy,
really
limits
a
the
the
pool
of
of
folks
who
will
be
possibly
willing
to
buy
my
house,
and
it
also
means
that
I
would
sell
my
house
and
possibly
evict
it
and
then,
if
I
needed
to
leave
for
for
a
period
of
time,
so
I
think
there's.
It
really
just
introduces
a
lot
of
practical
hurdle.
AE
Building
adus
in
the
city
and
I.
Think
we've
heard
a
lot
of
comments
today
about
how
we
need
to
wait
and
see
we
need
to
you
know:
owner
occupancy
is
kind
of
the
last
thing
we
have
to
to
limit
adus
and
I.
Think
that
that's
true
I,
think
the
the
question
in
the
city
for
the
city
council
to
to
address
is
is:
are
our
Adu
is
kind
of
a
serious?
You
know,
component
to
addressing
limited
housing,
Supply
and
housing?
Affordability
in
this
in
the
city
right?
Are
we
willing
to
build
smaller?
AE
You
know
inherently
below
Market
rent
units
throughout
our
city
to
to
address
housing,
affordability
or
is
the
priority
of
the
council
to
keep
families
coming,
keep
housing,
Supply,
limited
and
exact
rate
affordability,
issues
that
we
have
in
this
in
this
I
don't
think
restricting
Supply
is
a
a
good
way
to
address
housing,
affordability
and
I.
Think
the
kind
of
been
around
developers
is
really
not
borne
out
in
the
data,
so
yeah.
Thank
you,
city,
council,.
BG
Hi,
my
name
is
Paula
harleen
I
just
have
three
quick
things
on
my
mind
and
three
asks
I
guess.
First,
please
require
homes
that
host
adus
to
be
owner,
occupied
I'm
concerned
about
out-of-state
investors,
getting
rich
off
of
our
neighborhoods
and
I'm
concerned
that
properties
are
cared
for
by
an
owner
who
lives
in
the
home
and
cares
about
the
neighborhood.
BG
I
moved
away
from
Orem
Utah
about
35
minutes
south,
despite
beautiful
views
of
Mount
bonogas,
because
the
Orem
city
council
did
not
plan
and
regulate
housing,
growth,
random
buildings
and
developments
popped
up
here
and
there
until
Oren
became
really
ugly
and
I'm
hoping
that
won't
happen
in
our
neighborhoods
in
Salt
Lake
and
finally,
please
make
sure
that
neighbors
are
not
surprised
to
see
an
Adu
pop-up
next
door.
There
should
be
transparency
about
building
plants.
BG
AP
My
name
is
Brian
Burnett
I
live
in
District,
Six
I've
lived
here
for
30
years
and
I'm
also
on
the
foothill
Sunnyside
Community
Council,
my
wife
and
I
sold
a
home
last
year,
and
we
had
numerous
Real
Estate
Investors
contact
us
about
the
potential
purchase
of
that
home.
We
ended
up
selling
it
to
women
who
were
going
to
co-own
the
home.
AP
Businesses
are
not
they're,
primarily
interested
in
profits.
They
really
have
no
interest
in
maintaining
the
property
or
maintaining
the
neighborhoods
and
I
know.
People
are
intending
to
I,
know
people
who
are
intending
to
turn
these
into
short-term
rentals,
so
I
think
it's
really
kind
of
defeating
the
purpose.
AP
You're
just
you're
not
providing
affordable
housing,
you're
encouraging
investors
to
come
in
and
build
rentals
that
they
intend
to
many
of
them
and
tend
to
be
short-term
rentals,
which
will
not
help
affordable
housing
and
I
I
have
not
seen
or
Salt
Lake
City
is
effective
on
enforcing
its
current
ordinances.
For
short-term
rentals,
for
example,
I
know
Juan
I
looked
at
the
administrative
record
on
one
short-term
rental
or
the
city
tribe.
AP
They
went
out
several
times,
40
pages
in
the
administrative
record,
on
trying
to
shut
down
one
short-term
rental,
and
then
the
guy
appealed
to
district
court.
So
adding
a
couple
bodies
to
say:
oh
we're
going
to
monitor
the
short-term
rentals
that
that's
not
going
to
happen.
That's
just
completely
unrealistic
by
the
city
to
think
that's
going
to
happen
and
so
you're
just
encouraging
something
to
further
disintegrate
good
family,
neighborhoods
and
families
are
not
going
to
move
in
here
and
I.
AP
Think
you
want
to
encourage
that
support
our
schools
if
it
turns
up
being
just
a
bunch
of
rental
areas
that
are
degraded
and
I've.
Seen
that
happen
in
my
hometown
of
Logan
near
the
university
I
see,
people
in
Provo
have
seen
that
we
live
near
the
university
and
I.
Think
that's
exactly
what's
going
to
happen
to
our
neighborhood
I
appreciate
your
time.
A
AY
A
A
Y
A
A
A
Z
D
A
Other
discussion
on
this
all
those
in
favor
hi
that
passes
7-0
we
are
now
on
I
am
section
D
any,
which
is
questions
to
the
mayor
from
the
city
council.
Our
chief
administrative
officer,
I,
knew
it
was
in
there
somewhere.
Lisa
is
here.
Thank
you
for
joining
us
today,
council
members,
any
items
for
Lisa
nope,
okie
doke.
We
are
now
on
to
General
comments
to
the
council.
A
We
would
ask
that
if
it
has
already
been
discussed
in
a
public
hearing
today
that
you
not
rediscussed
that
so
this
is
a
general
comment
section
for
all
the
other
things
you
want
to
tell
us
and
I
believe
Isaac
is
here
to
help
us
with
the
commenters
and
with
that
I
will
go
ahead
and
turn
it
on
over
to
Isaac
or
Taylor
whoever's
doing
it.
Thank
you,
madam.
I
AD
Hi,
so
my
name
is
Christina
Robb
again
and
I
am
the
chair
of
Elko
I
am
coming
in
tonight
on
General
affordability
of
housing,
with
the
SLC
plan
and
thriving
in
place
in
the
affordable
housing
overlay.
So
Elko
advocates
for
Clear
evidence-based
decisions
with
clearly
reference
data
and
I
personally,
am
in
awe
of
the
your
commitment
to
well
all
of
your
commitment
with
every
decision
you
make.
So
thank
you.
Elco
supports
your
efforts
to
make
housing
more
affordable.
AD
But
if
we're
going
to
talk
about
equity
and
displacement,
then
we
also
need
to
continue
to
talk
about
taking
care
of
current
renters
by
incentivizing,
affordable
and
safe
housing,
rather
than
prioritizing
and
rewarding
speculators
and
future
renters,
who
will
benefit
from
our
displacement
for
more
of
a
gentrified
housing
stock?
We
support
the
city's
efforts
in
this
Arena
to
this
point.
I
want
to
provide
the
council
with
a
bit
of
a
SLC
geography
that
affects
renters
in
East,
Liberty,
East,
Central
of
Liberty,
Wells
and
Central
City.
AD
Many
of
our
R2
and
multi-family
zones
are
sandwiched
between
R1
and
other
single
family,
as
well
as
historic
districts
and
historic
overlays
prioritizing
low
density
zones.
Only
incentivize
displacement
of
families
already
residing
in
R2
and
other
multi-family
zones
at
the
expense
of
well.
Actually
it
just
is
inequity.
AD
If
we're
going
to
talk
about
equity
and
displacement,
then
we
need
to
start
talking
about
taking
care
of
our
current
renters
by
afford
by
incentivizing,
affordable
and
safe
housing,
rather
than
prioritizing
and
rewarding
speculators
and
future
renters,
who
will
benefit
from
our
displacement
for
more
gentrified
housing
stock?
Also,
please,
when
you
talk
about
nationally
recognized
studies
or
any
studies,
will
you
please
consider
providing
your
references
and
your
dialogues
I'm?
AD
I
BH
Hi,
my
name
is
Cynthia
I'm,
a
resident
of
marmalade
west
side
in
the
house.
Anyways
I
have
a
dog
she's
waiting
for
me,
so
I'll
be
quick
border
collie
Aussie.
She
keeps
me
safe.
Thank
you,
dogs,
the
dogs
of
marmalade.
They
keep
their
Hood
safe
anyways.
The
Joanne
sits
in
the
corner
of
200
West
and
300
North.
If
her
walls
could
talk,
I'm
sure
she
would
shut
up,
should've
got
to
get
99
juice,
but
that
building
has
a
history
and
we
have
to
keep
that
that's
a
red,
brick
building
with
a
neon
sign.
BH
BH
Sorry
Father,
forgive
me
I'm,
a
Westside
rad
I
will
die
in
that
Hill
I
would
gladly
die
in
a
studio
apartment
too,
because
I
would
take
care
of
that
thing.
I'm
Mexican,
but
yes,
I,
am
Mexican,
I'm,
proud
to
say
it
west
side
and
I
I
just
bothered
me.
It
bothers
me
that
just
there's
a
nice
building
they
tore
up
where's
their
consequences.
BH
BH
What's
the
question
who's
who's
who's
responsible?
You
know,
because
that
neighborhood
was
everything
to
me.
I
moved
there
with
the
dreams
of
raising
my
daughter
of
being
safe.
Those
dreams
are
dead,
I'm
moving
west
or
east
I.
Don't
care
at
this
point
because
those
landlords
have
taken
advantage
of
that
poor
building.
They
have
milked
her
and
milter,
and
her
orders
are
dry.
The
walls
are
falling,
the
neighbors
don't
care,
nobody
cares
I'm.
BH
The
one
out
there
waiting
taking
care
of
the
dog
poop
station
me
cheering
those
kids
up
me
because
I
was
the
one
reading
about
them
in
Lehigh,
high
them
trying
to
keep
warm
writing
UTA
them.
Looking
for
food
them
being
this
place,
called
them
homeless,
kids,
those
kids
have
a
home
that
maybe
they'd
rather
be
somewhere
else.
Let's
think
about
those
kids,
please,
let's
make
marmalade
safe
again.
Thank.
A
AK
Hi,
my
name
is
Katie
Pappas
regarding
the
annexation
petition
put
forth
by
excel
in
the
North
Point
area.
I
respectfully
request
that
the
city
deny
this
petition
or
defer
final
action
until
two
crucial
steps
have
been
taken
number
one:
current
conservation
proposals
for
the
critical
Great
Salt
Lake,
South
Shore,
and
the
Jordan
River
that
would
preserve
and
expand
sensitive
lands
must
be
thoroughly
considered
and
all
new
protected
areas
identified.
AK
There
will
be
no
opportunity
for
a
redo
on
this
number.
Two,
the
North
Point
small
area
plan,
needs
to
be
modified
to
reflect
those
protected
areas
as
well
as
protecting
existing
residential
uses.
Then
it
must
be
approved
by
the
city
council.
There
should
be
no
zoning
changes
prior
to
the
North
Point
plan
approval.
AK
As
has
been
pointed
out,
we
don't
need
another
Warehouse
District,
but
that's
exactly
what
this
petition
is
about,
enabling
rezoning
shortcut
to
M1,
The,
increased
noise
pollution
and
traffic
are
not
appropriate
for
an
area
where
people
live
or
in
close
proximity
to
important
bird
and
wildlife
habitat.
Please
take
the
time
and
consideration
required
to
get
this
right.
Thank
you.
BI
Thank
you
good
evening.
I
am
Lisa
Manuel
from
District
4..
My
comments
also
pertain
to
the
petition
requesting
annexation
of
the
land
at
approximately
2200
West
between
2800
North
and
3300.
North
I
urge
the
city
council
to
adopt
proposed
motion
2
in
your
packet,
because
it
would
be
the
first
step
in
working
towards
a
comprehensive
environmental
plan
for
the
southern
Shoreline
of
the
Great
Salt
Lake
through
annexation
of
all
Incorporated
land.
In
that
area.
BI
There
should
be
no
need
to
explain
the
importance
of
the
Great
Salt
Lake
I
think
that
the
city
should
be
looking
at
important
issues
still
unresolved
in
the
North
Point
small
area
master
plan
before
accepting
a
petition
pertaining
to
one
section
of
the
unincorporated
land
smile
permit
approvals
have
exacerbated
many
of
the
problems
the
city
now
faces
in
and
around
the
Utah
Inland
Port
Warehouse
farm
and
I
see
no
point
in
continuing
similar
bad
practices.
Thank
you,
foreign.
BJ
BJ
Due
to
the
existing
enforcement
limitations,
owner
occupancy
often
mitigates
the
negative
effects
that
short-term
rentals
can
have
on
a
neighborhood,
so
I
believe
it's
in
our
shared
interest
that
the
city
incentivized
both
housing,
availability,
housing,
affordability
and
committed
citizenship
in
the
Adu
ordinance
and
owner
occupancy
is
the
best
way
to
strike
this
difficult
balance.
Thanks.
So
much.
BK
B
If
motion
two
passes,
which
I
hope
it
does,
it
seems
as
if
this
will
be
favorable
to
some
of
the
outcomes.
I
I
hope
to
see,
especially
if
Salt
Lake
City
plans
to
work
closely
with
the
county,
around
issues
involved
with
an
annexing
properties
in
the
unincorporated
Salt
Lake
County.
As
I
understand
it.
This
motion
will
allow
serious
consideration
of
conservation
of
the
area
which
I
definitely
favor.
B
The
proposed
Industrial
Development
of
North
Point
threatens
air
quality
and
the
wetlands
next
to
the
lake,
which
seems
so
counter
to
everything.
Many
people
in
our
Valley
see
as
such
a
high
priority
right
now:
air
quality
and
saving
Great,
Salt
Lake
and
its
ecosystem.
Please
continue
to
do
everything
you
can
to
try
to
meet
these
goals.
Thank
you
very
much.
A
For
your
comments
now
we're
moving
to
new
business.
This
brings
us
to
item
E1
the
resolution
annexation
at
approximately
2200
West
between
2800
North
and
3300
North.
Now,
council,
member
Dugan
I
will
look
firm,
emotion.
Z
Z
I
further
moved
pursuant
to
Utah
code,
section
10-2-418,
the
council
initiated
legislative
action
requesting
the
city,
Administration
started
city-led
process
to
Annex
the
properties
in
unincorporated,
Salt,
Lake,
County,
generally
located
north
of
2100,
North
and
west
of
215..
This
will
be
formally
confirmed
at
an
upcoming
council
meeting.
A
BK
Chair
yep,
so
the
North
Point
small
area
plan
has
been
an
absolute
ball
of
twine
and
pulling
on
one
piece
loosens
up
another
and
has
proven
to
be
more
complex.
The
further
we
go
along
this
particular
parcel
being
no
exception.
We've
had
a
previous
annexation
request
that
mirrors
these
boundaries.
We
already
know
from
the
county
that
they
do
not
like
these
boundaries,
that
they
create
peninsulas
and
islands,
and
the
preference
is
to
address
this
through
cleaning
those
up.
BK
We
believe
that
a
city-led
annexation
will
be
in
our
benefit
because
we
will
be
able
to
not
only
comply
and
meet
the
needs
of
the
county,
but
any
development
on
this
property
will
disproportionately
become
a
burden
to
Salt
Lake
City
and
our
ability
to
determine
what
happens
on
that.
Property
is
Paramount
to
our
generational
success
here.
BK
I
also
want
to
thank
Ms
Denise
Payne,
who
is
in
the
back,
who
is
Vigilant,
who
represents
consistently
the
needs
of
the
constituents
who
live
out
there
and
who
keeps
us
aware
of
this
relatively
remote
area
and
the
unique
needs
out
there.
I
want
to
thank
councilmember
Dugan,
who
has
taken
his
district
six
environmental
Zeal
and
made
sure
that
the
west
side
is
going
to
benefit
from
it
by
showing
up
and
helping
us
to
understand
the
complexities.
This
issue,
this
current
annexation
request,
does
not
reflect
the
best
use.