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From YouTube: Sustainability Committee September 17, 2020
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B
B
C
C
E
All
right
here
we
are
at
six
o'clock,
so
I
would
like
to
go
ahead.
D
F
I
see
her
gallagher.
F
Okay,
I
know
mrs
gallagher
was
going
to
try
to
join
us
without
video,
but
I
don't
see
her
yet.
F
Okay,
maybe
that's
her
and
mrs
singer
right
here.
Thanks.
D
Very
good
all
right.
So
the
first
item
on
the
agenda
tonight
is
the
approval
of
the
august
20th
meeting.
So
we
all
had
a
chance
to
take
a
look
at
that
and
there
aren't
any
questions
or
concerns,
and
I
would
like
to
entertain
a
motion
to
approve
those
minutes.
I
I
F
B
D
Then
we
can
either
wait
like
was
just
suggested
or
we
can
just
go
ahead
and
prove
them
this
evening.
I'll,
wait
and
hear
emotion.
I
G
E
H
E
D
Very
good
so
that
moves
us
on
to
our
second
item
on
the
agenda,
and
that
is
our
presentation
from
ms
shannon
brewer,
the
municipal
arborist.
I
want
to
thank
you
for
being
with
us
tonight
and
we're
looking
forward
to
hearing
what
you
have
to
share
with
us.
So
please
take
it
away.
L
L
L
I'm
not
someone
who
sits
behind
a
desk.
I
have
worked
for
the
parks
department
for
10
years,
hauling
brush
taking
care
of
hanging
baskets
downtown,
adding
perennial
peanut
to
the
trail,
among
other
activities
that
kept
me
outdoors
over
a
little
bit
of
a
year
ago,
I
moved
into
the
permitting
side
of
the
municipality,
where
I
have
really
enjoyly
truly
enjoyed
the
role
of
the
municipal
arborist,
but
the
outdoors
is
still
my
happy
place
next
slide.
L
Tarpon
springs
is
a
piece
of
paradise.
We
are
all
lucky
to
be
a
part
of
this
community.
Trees
are
just
one
piece
of
this
puzzle.
There
are
two
ways
to
approach:
tree
management,
abort
culture
which
is
tree
care
of
individual
trees
or
small
project-based
groups
of
trees,
and
then
there's
urban
forestry.
L
Tonight
I
want
to
talk
about.
Tarpon
springs,
how
it
relates
to
urban
forestry,
each
limb
of
the
tree
that
you
see
there
is
crucial
to
a
sustainable
forest.
Many
the
most
important
part
of
this
tree
is
the
community
values
towards
conservation.
L
L
L
It
is
a
volunteer
nationwide
movement
that
provides
the
framework
necessary
for
communities
to
manage
and
expand
public
trees.
Since
2007
cts
achieved
a
tree
city
usa
status
by
meeting
four
core
standards
of
sound
urban
forestry
management
practices,
while
having
a
community
tree
protection
ordinance
and
celebrating
with
an
annual
arbor
day
proclamation
and
tree
giveaway
cts
spent
over
three
times.
L
Participation
in
this
program
is
a
minimum
requirement
that
resid
that
we
spend
two
dollars
per
resident
on
the
management
of
the
urban
forest
city
of
tarpon
springs
in
2019
spent
three
times
that
amount,
so
I've
been
collecting
documents
and
tracking
certain
aspects
of
the
work
being
done
throughout
the
year
for
this
program,
and
it
made
city
of
tarpon
springs
more
aware
of
the
condition
of
publicly
managed
trees
in
2019.
L
For
the
first
time
ever,
tarpon
was
awarded
the
growth
award
for
education
and
public
relations.
It
was
due
to
a
partnership
that
I
joined
with
with
uf
ifas
and
project
learning
tree
together.
We
got
tarpon
springs
middle
school
to
participate
in
an
arbor
day
foundation
tree
campus
program
for
k212.
L
Our
work
was
recognized
as
the
first
in
the
state
to
start
also
very
proud
that
in
2019
project
learning
tree
named
city
of
tarpon
as
partner
of
the
year,
the
plt
program
combines
environmental
education,
service
learning
and
leadership.
Opportunities
for
teachers
of
k
through
12.
attendance
in
the
workshop
provides
each
teacher
with
a
curriculum
guide,
with
activities
to
teach
tree
science
in
and
out
of
the
classroom.
L
L
L
L
L
Just
like
all
carbon-based
life
forms
trees,
age,
the
mean
life
expectancy
of
a
tree
is
19
to
20
years
within
the
urban
setting,
a
sustainable
system
doesn't
does
allow
for
removal.
So
please
keep
that
in
mind
when
you
start
to
talk
about
sustainability,
putting
large
species
on
small
planting
spaces
can
cause
damage
to
infant
structure.
L
L
L
L
L
Really
this
is
a
living
document,
not
not
something
that's
supposed
to
sit
on
a
shelf,
their
courage
and
insight
helped
to
make
the
city
of
tampa
a
world
leader
in
urban
tree.
Canopy
sustainability
over
20
years
of
research,
went
into
making
the
city
of
tampa
urban
forestry
master
plan,
leading
up
to
updated
land
development
codes,
which
was
codified
may
of
2020.
L
L
L
The
chart
on
the
bottom
left
is
an
eco
goods
and
services
chart
produced
from
the
research,
the
tampa
bay
watershed
and
the
city
of
tampa
collaborated
on
during
their
20-year
endeavor
discovering
this.
These
relationships
was
really
a
driving
force
to
change
the
paradigm
of
thought
from
abort
culture
to
urban
forestry,
in
order
to
support
a
larger,
dbh
or
diameter
breast
type.
The
industry
standard
on
measuring
trees,
more
soil
volume
is
needed
for
proper
rooting.
L
L
There
are
many
new
and
exciting
structures
that
help
provide
increased
soil
availability
to
trees,
silva
cells,
structured
vaults,
engineered
sidewalk,
these
methods
get
pricey.
So
in
the
end,
it's
up
to
the
community
to
create
a
sustainable
environment,
to
support
larger,
healthier
trees,
which
provide
the
most
roi
I've.
Provided
these
charts
and
talked
to
project
administration
about
starting
to
incorporate
these
new
methods,
the
cemetery
expansion
has
included
root,
barriers
and
engineered
ways
to
prove
preserve
those
larger
pines
that
you
see,
I'm
excited
to
see
how
these
trees
respond
over
the
next
few
years.
L
L
L
L
As
mr
rob
northrop
uf
ifis
extension
hillsborough
county
states,
urban
forestry
is
an
ongoing
conversation
between
biophysical
world
and
social
values
carried
out
in
the
language
of
ecological
processes.
It's
hard
to
convert
a
conversation
to
start
necessary
to
have,
but
rewarding
in
the
conservation
from
a
land
management
aspect
as
tampa
discovered.
What
truly
allowed
change
was
the
social
values
which
motivated
the
economic
drivers
to
change
the
approach
of
conservation,
academia
on
its
own
separately
from
practitioners
and
users
of
the
urban
forest
working
on
the
ecological
problems.
L
Please
take
time
to
watch
research,
the
ecosystem
approach
to
urban
forestry
talk
to
each
other
afterwards,
debate
this
worthy
endeavor
to
pursue
for
tarpon,
come
up
with
questions
of
the
group,
I'll
try
to
answer
what's
relevant
to
my
skill,
set
I'll
share
it
with
other
staff
and
send
them
to
the
team
from
tampa.
If
we
have
to
then
in
time,
we
can
circle
back.
This
process
is
not
quick.
Every
step
needs
collaboration.
L
In
the
end,
we
are
just
one
generation
next
slide,
I'm
sorry,
we
are
just
one
generation
away
from
what
we
could
be.
We
are
one
generation
from
what
we
will
become.
We
are
only
one
generation
from
a
tremendous
place
or
a
treeless
place.
We
are
the
leaders
and
the
educators
of
that
one
generation
that
can
make
a
difference
and
that's
one
of
my
other
favorite
quotes
of
so
thank
you.
D
B
Questions
shannon
you
mentioned
the
term
engineering
sidewalks.
Could
you
talk
a
little
bit
more
about
that
and
kind
of
flesh
that
concept
out
for
us.
L
So
there
are
products
out
there
and
ways
to
create
usable
soil
volume
without
the
compaction
that
development
has
and
then
also
to
be
able
to
give
enough
space
underneath
that
sidewalk,
so
the
roots
that
need
to
come
to
the
surface
for
oxygen,
because
trees
do
need
air
in
their
root
system
and
in
that
ground
to
provide
them
space
for
water
and
nutrient
storage
capacity,
and
I've
noticed
that
there's
a
lot
of
sidewalks
that
have
damage,
and
we
all
have
seen
it
something
like
this.
Maybe
some
may
be
one
approach
to
providing
a
larger
space.
B
Okay,
boy,
there's
a
lot
of
good
information
that
you
just
threw
out
and
it'll
take
some
time
to
digest
it.
But
going
back
a
couple
of
months
when
renee
vincent
talked
to
us,
he
said
that
she
felt
that
the
land
development
codes
had
a
robust
tree
canopy
plan,
but
she
she
felt
it
needed
upgrading
it
needed.
B
In
spite
of
what
the
land
development
plan
says
and
ms
vincent's
argument
argument
was,
we
probably
need
some
demonstration
projects
to
show
that
hardwoods,
shade
trees
can
be
put
along
sidewalks
and
streets
without
being
disruptive.
What
do
you
think
about
the
concept
of
her
concept
or
yours
of
development
of
demonstration
projects?
Excuse
me.
L
So
I
did
not
go
down
there
specifically
and
see
it,
but
I
do
have
conversations
with
the
mr
art
artfin,
who
just
recently
retired
from
there
and
we've
talked
about
it
extensively
with
so
what
they
did
is
they
have
the
syllabus
cells
actually
underneath
the
sidewalk,
as
well
as
the
adjacent
parking
spaces.
He
took
a
lot
of
photos
while
this
was
being
constructed.
B
Speaking
for
myself,
I
think
that
would
be
great
curious
to
hear
what
the
other
members
of
this
committee
think.
Thank
you
very
much.
It's
very
interesting
presentation
and
a
lot
of
food
for.
M
M
Well,
shannon,
thank
you
for
your
presentation.
It's
it's
wonderful
to
to
hear
your
passion
towards
the
work
that
you're
doing,
and
it's
only
good
for
the
city
that
you're
doing
so.
I
appreciate
that
deeply.
I
really
also
appreciate
what
you
said
about
mono
species.
I
think
that's
something
to
keep
a
close
eye
on
and
these
subtle
ways
where
we
think
we're
re
replanting
and
doing
well,
but
it's
it's
not
quite
I
would
love
to.
M
I
also
agree
with
what
dr
robinson
said:
I'd
love
to
hear
more
about
this
and
be
able
to
keep
this
conversation
going,
even
if
it's
snippets,
if,
if
you
hear
something
or
there's
a
maybe
a
video
that
you
could
send
to
irene
or
or
paul
and
could
send
out
to
the
committee
so
that
we
can
educate
ourselves
as
we
go
when
you
come
across
something
interesting,
I
would
love
to
see
that,
and
hopefully
we
can
get
a
copy
of
your
presentation
so
that
I
can.
M
I
didn't,
write
everything
down
so
that
I
could
just
look
and
and
check
out
those
websites
and
webinars
that
you
mentioned.
So
I
appreciate
it
and
I
just
love
the
direction
that
that
you're
going
and
it
seems
like
the
city
of
tarpon-
is
doing
a
really
nice
job
with
this.
So
thanks,
you
talked.
L
About
monoculture
there's
a
rule
of
thumb
within
urban
forestry,
where
you
do
30
20
10..
There
are
some
variations
where
you
get
down
to
5
and
10
at
the
other,
but
it's
30
family,
twenty
percent
genus
and
ten
percent
species.
So
if
we
all
keep
that
in
mind
as
we
review
these
things
and
I'm
trying
to
and
not
just
think
of
the
project,
but
where
is
that
project
occurring?
L
M
Way,
thank
you
and
I
noticed
I
did
a
tour
at
whedon
island
and
they
said
in
our
particular
area.
There
are
little
microcultures.
Basically,
so
you
can
go,
you
may
think
pines
are
great,
but
the
pine
could
not
be
part
of
a
of
a
microculture
that
50
yards
away.
It
would
be
appropriate
for
so
there's
also
these
increments
and
how
the
oak
leaves
are
curved
down
so
that
they
excess
their
water,
is
more
accessible
to
them
and
to
retain
water
during
drought
and
things
like
that,
just
fascinating.
M
L
Take
the
crepe
myrtle,
there's
many
different
cultivars
that
are
out
there,
so
it's,
but
that
all
is
still
in
the
same
genus
and
species.
So
just
because
there's
a
different
cultivar
does
not
mean
that
it's
the
same,
it's
different
for
the
genus
and
the
species.
That
would
be
one
example
did
that
answer.
A
A
G
Had
a
quick
question
about
the
you
mentioned:
an
ecosystem
approach
to
urban
forestry.
Does
that
kind
of
tie
into
the
family
genus
species?
Is
that
like
30,
you
want
to
have
same
family
or
like
kind
of
to
have
like
a
more
diverse
ecosystem,
where
different
things
can
benefit
from
the
different
trees?
Is
that
kind
of
like
where,
where
that's
going.
L
It's
more
of
once,
you
watch
the
webinars.
I
would
like
to
more
address
that
and
and
circle
back
on
that
question,
but
really
what
they
were
really
trying
to
push
was
the
inclusion
being
collaboration
and
really
what
pushed
forward
on
their
ecosystem
approach
was
getting
the
value
of
the
community.
What
is
the
val
who
values?
What
and
what
value
do
they
have?
L
You
know
an
hoa
is
going
to
have
a
different
value
than
somebody,
that's
honest
and
getting
everyone
involved
and
then,
like
miss
sanger,
said
with
the
micro
niche
communities
and
if
you'd
really
see
it
across
tarpon,
the
coast
over
by
the
gulf
is
way
different
than
over
by
jasmine,
and
then
everything
in
between
with
the
way
we
have
values
so
a
full
holistic.
L
I
Thank
you
for
your
presentation
and
I
was
hoping
that
we,
we
would
be
just
to
reiterate
what
what
robin
said
that
we
would
be
able
to
get
copies
of
the
presentation
so
that
we
have
the
links
to
the
webinars
that
were
on
there,
and
I
really
appreciated
the
great
quote
at
the
beginning:
I'm
a
huge
lover
of
trees
and
support
8
billion
trees.
It's
a
project,
a
worldwide
project
to
help
replace
many
that
are
being
lost
through
improper
agriculture
right
now.
I
So
it's
exciting
what
you're
doing
here
in
our
own
city,
I'm
very
excited
that
we
could
be
involved
or
more
directly,
but
I
would
appreciate
the
education
first.
So
thank
you
for
forwarding
the
presentation.
C
C
If
I
said
that
okay,
shannon,
I
also
saw
a
lot
of
parallels
with
what
she's
coming
up
with
in
her
presentation
and
what
we're
doing
with
sustainability,
the
collaboration,
the
fact
that
it's
going
to
take
some
time,
you're
not
going
to
fix
you,
know
long
running
problems
overnight
and
there
are
resources
out
there.
Just
like
we
went
out
and
looked
at
different
sustainability
plans.
C
D
I
have
got
a
few
questions
that
I
wanted
to
wait.
We
wait
and
make
sure
that
everybody
else
got
a
chance
to
ask
theirs.
I
really
very
much
appreciate
you
taking
the
time
shannon
and
like
to
echo
what
what
robin
said.
You
can
hear
your
passion
for
for
your
work
and
that's
that's
a
a
wonderful
thing.
D
So
I
guess
my
question
is
besides
looking
at
the
resources
that
we
need
to
do
and-
and
I
would
take
it
a
step
further,
if
you
wouldn't
mind,
shannon
giving
us
a
list
of
like
the
the
links
in
order.
That
would
be
helpful
for
us
so
that
we
don't
miss
something.
D
That's
in
the
powerpoint,
so
you're,
like
top
top
five
things
to
look
at
or
that
would
be
really
helpful,
and
I
think
that
it
would
be
helpful
to
try
to
pass
that
list
along
to
the
board
of
commissioners
as
well,
because
I
think
that
that
is
always
very
good
to
go
to
the
top
too
and
make
sure
that
they're
on
being
educated
as
long
as
we
are
as
well.
D
So
that
would
be
really
helpful
to
me
to
have
that
list,
but
then
also
if
you
could
start
to
brainstorm
a
list
of
like
what
are
the
like
top
five
things,
that
we
could
do
as
a
committee
that
like
priorities
and
because
we're
gonna
have
to
start
to
tackle
this
at
some
point
sequentially.
So
I
think
that
would
be
really
helpful
for
me,
at
least
in
the
way
that
I
kind
of
process
and
think
like
tell
us
what
to
do
and.
L
D
Okay,
I
appreciate
that
I
have
a
question
about
the
when
we
do
the
tree
giveaways.
Do
we
talk
to
people
about
right,
place
right
type,
so
that
they
aren't
does
that?
Is
that
all
part
of
the
education
that
goes
with
it?
Yes
and.
L
L
I
give
them
how
to
water
the
tree
properly,
because
you
just
can't
take
it
from
a
nursery
setting
and
drop
it
in
a
yard
and
expect
mother
nature
to
take
care
of
it
so
that
establishment
period
I
talked
to
them
about
it
and
then
also,
if
you
have
seen
the
signs
that
I
put
up
for
each
one,
I
want
them
to
make
an
informed
decision.
So
I
put
the
characteristics:
is
it
going
to
be
70
feet
tall?
Is
it
going
to
be
15
feet
tall?
Is
their
yard?
Need
salt
tolerance?
L
I
talked
to
them
about
that.
So
on
my
sign,
there's
quite
a
bit
of
information,
so
they
can
try
to
quickly
make
a
decision.
Some
of
them
can't,
but
my
table
probably
has
one
of
the
most
covered
pamphlet
tables.
We
have
there
and
then
I
have
two
ginormous
boards
that
I
I
also
display.
So
it
is
a
real
education
event.
So
come
talk
to
me.
If
you
need
to
find
me.
D
Excellent
and
then
I
also
is
the
city,
I
guess
I'm
just
not
totally
understanding.
Are
we
creating
kind
of
a
master
plan
of
where
we
would
like
to
add
more
trees
in
in
certain
areas?
Is
that
part
of
what's
happening?
D
E
I
Good,
can
I
ask
one
more
question
quickly,
I'm
just
curious:
is
there
a
percentage
of
canopy
that
is
ideal
in
a
city
like
ours,.
L
Honestly,
that
goes
back
to
the
values
of
the
community,
as
other
places
have
higher
and
you
know
gainesville
being
the
highest,
but
they
value
those
trees
on
on
that
level
of
for
their
preservation
for
their
master
plan,
I
don't
think
there's
a
magic
number
we
can
pluck
out
of
the
air.
We
have
to
look
at
what
we
have
on
the
ground
in
relationship
to
you,
know,
buildings
and
infrastructure,
and
things
like
that.
So
there's
a
lot
to
that
that
magic
number.
I
I
Doesn't
it
seem
you
know
to
keep
it
cooler.
I
mean,
I
know
know
that
just
from
you
know
the
streets
that
I
walk
around
here
are
right
on
my
bike.
It's
substantially
cooler
when
you
go
into
the
shade
under
the
trees.
So
well,
that
would
be
an
overall
benefit.
You
know
and
they
do
create
an
environment
too,
in
a
climate,
so
you've
already
identified.
D
The
end
of
the
day
you
you've
already
worked
full
day
and
taken
time
out
to
to
come,
help
educate
us
and
help
to
make
our
sustainability
plan
even
better.
So
appreciate
you
very
much.
Thank.
I
H
D
N
N
L
I
don't
know
the
answer
to
that
question
and
I
would
have
to
defer
that
to
supervising
planning
and
zoning
or.
N
M
Can
I
ask
one
more
question
it
just
came
to
me
when
after
julie
spoke,
is
that
you
know
she
mentioned
the
mangroves
and
the
mangrove
is
our
city
tree
and
I'm
wondering
if
it
would
be
possible
to
have
when
we
have
the
tree
giveaways?
Would
it
be
feasible
to
do
mangrove
seedlings
for
folks
who
live
along
the
water,
or
is
that
difficult.
L
That
depends
on
time
of
the
year,
and
traditionally
we
have
had
them
in
more
february
I
to
march
it's
gone
back
and
forth
over
the
years.
I
can
start
to
try
to
request
that,
but
that's
only
going
to
be
for
homes
that
are
along
the
water,
so
making
sure
that
that
gets
the
right
tree
in
the
right
place.
Again,
we
can
look
into
that,
especially
for
coastal
homes,
cool.
Thank
you.
D
I
have
a
follow-up
to
that
then
sorry,
you're
so
close
to
getting
home.
Is
there
a
like
a
seasonality
when
tree
giveaways
would
be
better
more
likely
for
the
tree
to
survive,
and
should
we
be
looking
at
that
as
a
city
instead
of
just
because
it's
when
touch
a
truck?
Is
I
mean.
L
There's
been
actually
two
giveaways
this
year,
we
didn't
have
one
because
of
cobin
19.,
but
before
in
the
past,
there
was
one
on
eco
fest
and
then
I
was
able
to
get
larger
and
that
might
actually
be
the
best
time
to
hand
out
the
mangrove,
because
that
was
in
the
summer
time
frame
you
know
kind
of
just
before
school
started.
They
they
tied
the
back
to
school
bash.
L
So
maybe
that
might
be
the
best
time
to
give
out
the
mangrove,
but
doing
the
two
times
when
it
when
allowed
and
available
more
trees
in
the
urban
forest,
I'm
all
for
it
very
good.
Okay,.
D
Number
three:
a
discussion:
a
follow-up
of
the
last
meeting,
the
presentation
from
the
public
works
department.
I
think
there
may
have
been
a
question
or
two
that
was
asked.
C
O
All
right,
a
little
technical
difficulty
there
all
right.
So,
yes,
I
did
follow
up
with
tom
as
well,
so
he
was
letting
me
know
that
the
items
are
generally
taken.
Recyclables
are
generally
taken
by
waste
management
to
the
recycling
center.
They
are
separated,
they're,
broken
down
into
bundles
and
they're
sold
on
market
and
then
a
percentage
of
those
sales
goes
back
to
the
city
to
purchase
more
recycled
products.
C
One
thing
I
also
learned
talking
to
tom:
just
recently:
the
county
is
reaching
out
to
the
communities
to
see
about
the
feasibility.
Just
talking
early
talk
here
about
a
county,
a
local
recycling
type
of
co-op,
where
they
would
they
would
take
the
lead
and
do
it
at
a
more
local
level.
So
I
think
that's
an
exciting
proposition.
B
B
I
Okay
and
I
have
one
more
question-
it
was
brought
to
my
attention
maybe
a
year
ago
that
some
of
the
local
restaurants
and
businesses
don't
have
any
requirement
to
recycle
at
all.
Is
that
something
that
you're
aware
of?
I
mean
I
just
didn't
think
of
it,
but
it's
a
gigantic
impact
that
a
lot
of
stuff
that
could
be.
I
mean
you
know
whether
it's
local
taverns,
I
know
maybe
this
year,
it's
not
as
bad
as
it
is
in
some
other
years,
but
there
are
glass
and
aluminum
that
would
be
so
easy
to
recycle
100.
I
O
M
N
I
Well,
to
me
is
a
sustainability
committee.
That's
you
know
super
low
hanging
fruit.
You
know
if
we
could
accomplish
something
like
that.
It's
you
know
may
seem
like
it
might
be
an
imposition,
but
it's
really
not
when
people
are
in
the
habit
of
doing
it
and
employees
get
in
the
habit
of
doing
it.
I
know
we
do
that
at
my
job,
so
you
know
it'd
be
nice
to
to
tackle
that
as
a
very
easy
way
of
making
our
city
more
sustainable.
D
D
C
Right
now,
I
believe
it's
the
the
different
municipalities
and
local
governments,
but
we
can
find
out
more
about
that
and
report
back.
D
And
then
I
had
a
question
about
another
follow-up.
I
don't
know
it
wasn't
in
the
this
particular
public
works
presentation.
It
was,
but
it
was
it's
a
follow-up,
so
I'm
gonna
ask
it
now.
I
think
ashley
you
were
gonna,
look
into
the
newsletter
and
being
able
to
that
karen
lemons
puts
out
and
us
being
able
to
engage
with
that.
O
She
was
originally
interested
in
allowing
us
to
utilize
that
website
to
post
that
flyer
or
to
post
sustainability
related
material.
O
D
Just
she
had
expressed,
I
guess
the
ability
for
us
to
communicate
with
the
community
through
her
newsletter,
and
you
were
going
to
follow
up
and
ask.
I
thought
what
that
entailed.
If
it
was
specifically
for
the
the
flyer
or
if
it's
for
other
upcoming
events
to
be
able
to
communicate.
O
Okay,
I
I
will
definitely
follow
up
with
her
with
that
tomorrow
and
I'll,
send
you
guys
all
an
email
I
apologize
for
that.
That
is
something
I
will
get
done
tomorrow
for
sure,
but
she
is.
She
was
definitely
on
board
with
us
being
able
to
use
the
website
for
sustainability,
so
yeah
I'll,
follow
up
and
get
back
to
you
guys
great.
Thank
you.
D
Were
there
any
other
comments
or
questions
on
follow-up
from
the
public
works
presentation
from
last.
K
Can
I
just
ask
on
your
comment
with
the
newsletter.
K
J
I'm
sorry,
I'm
working
from
a
very
different
place
than
I've
been
working
before.
Does
that
help
at
all?
Can
you
hear.
H
E
N
J
Okay,
sorry,
I
just
I
lost
connection,
I'm
sorry,
I'm
working
from
a
really
really
different
remote
spot
than
I
was
before.
So
my
question
was
whether
that
newsletter
provides
an.
J
Opportunity
for
us
to
continue
that
education,
not
specifically
just
with
that
flyer,
but
to
extend
that
with
additional.
Did
you
know
talking
points
with
either
a
little
bit
of
education?
What
we,
as
a
committee,
are
looking
for
from
the
community
or
are
proposing
or
moving
forward
on,
is
that
kind
of
the
direction
that
we
that
we're
thinking
to
go
with
that
newsletter
blurb
and
are
we
able
to
do
it
with
each
newsletter
that
comes
out.
J
Yeah,
well,
I
don't
I
don't
know,
maybe
the
committee
first
you
know
like
is
that
kind
of
the
direction
that
that
we're
thinking
or
how
do
we?
How
do
we
want
to
ask
ashley
to
propose
being
part
of
the
newsletter.
M
I
have
one
I
just
remember
this
from
when
when
mr
function
was
presenting
when
we
talked
about
the
roundup
and
he
said
that
they're
decreasing
it
and
then
we
said
asked
if
there
was
some
type
of
a
plan
for
for
decreasing.
I
I
you
know.
I
know
that
can't
be
like
flipping
a
switch
and
going
from
one
whole
process
to
another,
but
I'm
wondering
if
there
how
we
could
support
that
decrease
in
that
roundup
product
in
our
city,
or
you
know
just
to
think
about.
When
will
we
be
somewhere?
M
I
think
that's
pretty
important,
I
mean
as
far
as
a
toxic
substance,
and
you
know
when,
when
the
the
parks
folks
are
spraying,
you
don't
know
what
it
is.
You
know,
so
I'm
walking
my
dog
and
it's
like.
Should
I
walk
on
this?
Is
you
know?
I'm
sure-
and
I
usually
say,
is
this
safe
and
they
say
yes,
but
I
don't
know
what
it
is.
So
I
think
that
would
be
something
that
would
be
helpful
to
understand
better.
I
I
I'm
hopeful
that
we
have
a
sustainability
committee,
but
I
have
friends
that
are
in
washington,
oregon
and
california,
including
my
sister
and
I've,
been
seeing
pictures
and
it's
terrifying,
and
not
that
fire
is
a
threat
here,
but
I
mean
we're
part
of
a
globe
and
a
global
situation
that
requires
exceptionally
aggressive
back
peddling.
I
I
mean
I
think
about
when
I
was
a
kid
and
the
congress
heard
about
the
silent
spring
from
rachel
carson
and
realized
that
ddt
was
a
problem,
how
quickly
there
was
action,
but
there's
so
much
corporate
influence
nowadays
over
government
decisions,
it's
really
hard
for
things
to
happen
quickly,
and
I
just
talk
to
people
all
the
time
and
in
conversation
I
say:
well,
if
the
government
doesn't
do
it,
you
can
do
what's
right.
You
know
if
the
government
doesn't
isn't
ready
to
do.
I
What's
right,
do
it
yourself,
you
know
I
mean
I
think
we're
at
that
point
where
we've
all
got
to
we've
all
got
to
be
doing.
What's
right,
we've
got
to
be
doing
something
for
the
effort,
but
yes
robin.
I
100
agree
that
we've
got
to
find
out
what's
being
sprayed
and
be
as
environmentally
friendly
as
we
possibly
can.
As
a
city.
B
If
I
remember
what
tom
function
said
last
last
month,
he
said
the
alternative
to
using
roundup
was
to
hand
pull
weeds.
B
So
if
that
is
the
the
only
alternative,
are
we
talking
about
a
manpower
issue,
a
budget
issue
versus
a
chemical
issue?
Is
it
more
than
that,
or
is
it
really
quite
that
simple,
more
people
versus
more
chemicals
specifically
directed
at.
A
C
I
don't
think
it's
quite
that
extreme.
There
are
products,
natural
products
that
are,
or
at
least
less
harmful
products
that
are
available.
They
just
don't
work
as
well,
unfortunately,
but
that's
what
you're
talking
about
you're
talking
about
having
to
do
more
applications
more
time,
and
so
I
think
it's
a
combination
of
finding
the
right
products
and
the
right
methods
and
possibly
engineering
these
problems
out,
in
other
words,
try
to
make
things
that
don't
require
weeding
as
much
using
mulch
in
places,
and
so
I
think
it's
yeah.
I
This
is
kind
of
comical,
but
in
seattle
area
there
was
a
guy
that
had
a
company
called
rent,
a
goat
and
he
would
take
a
crew
of
goats
out
to
do
certain
jobs
like
they
were
going
after
noxious
weeds,
for
instance,
and
ducks
do
kind
of
the
same
thing
in
a
garden,
a
lot
of
people
do
have
ducks
because
they're
real
selective
about
eating
certain
weeds.
I
just
think
it's
kind
of
a
fun
concept.
I'm
not
sure,
I'm
not
sure
that
it
would
work
in
our
setting.
I
But
you
know
there
are
a
lot
of
natural
ways
that
weeds
can
be
plucked
other
than
by
human
power.
E
D
Right,
so
I
think
that
that's
definitely
something
that
we
need
to
address
in
the
action
plan
when
we're
looking
at
materials
being
used,
and-
and
thank
you
robin
for
bringing
that
up
again,
because
I
agree
it's
very
important
conversation
and
we
need
to
remedy
it
to
your
point
denise
quickly.
D
C
You
want
to
make
one
comment
and
I
didn't
get
it
out
to
the
group
yet,
but
karen
found
one
little,
not
a
typo,
but
it's
just
it's
redundant.
So
if
you
go
down
to
the
third
question
mark
and
you
see
we
got
after
2100,
we
got
sea
level
rise.
The
word
rise
twice.
We
don't
really
need
that.
So
I
took
that
first
rise
out,
so
it'll
read,
2100
sea
level
is
predicted
to.
A
D
I
think
I'm
pretty
happy
with
where
we've
landed
with
this,
and
I
would
support
putting
it
out
in
the
next
billing
cycle.
If
we
can.
O
So
I
did
talk
to
utility
billing
about
that.
The
next
cycle
would
end
up
being
actually
the
next
day
that
we
can
get
it
out
is
gonna
end
up
being.
I
can
find
it
here
september
28th,
if
you
guys
are
okay
with
that,
then
I
can
move
forward
with
sending
it
over
to
erin
and
having
her
disperse
it
on
that
day
and
the
it
actually
will
be
dispersed
in
segments.
C
Yeah
I'll
add
on
to
what
ashley's
saying
the
way
they
bill
it's
in
bill
cycles.
They
call
them
cycles,
I
think
there's
over
10
of
them
and
it's
based
on
how
many
meters
the
staff
can
cover
in
one
day
or
week.
So
this
effort
when
we
started
on
the
28th
that
that's
what
we
all
agreed
to
do
will
probably
take
about
four
to
six
weeks
to
get
fully
into
all
the
bills.
But
I
think
that's
a
reasonable
amount
of
time.
D
All
right
we've
got
a
green
light.
The
next
item
is
the
update
on
the
city's
rfi
for
community
engagement
platforms.
C
Yes,
I
do
renee
the
plan
and
zoning
director
has
been
sort
of
heading
up
the
committee
to
evaluate
various
platforms
and
the
committee
met
a
few
days
ago
and
made
a
recommendation
so
that
isn't
public
yet
I'll.
Just
you
know
the
name
of
the
company,
but
I'll
just
say
that
recommendation
has
been
reached.
So
now
it's
a
matter
of
figuring
out
what
level
of
this
product
do.
C
We
want
to
recommend
to
the
city
manager
come
up
with
a
strategy
to
fund
it,
but
I
think
there's
definitely
a
will
there
for
staff
of
various
departments,
it's
a
real
tool
that
I
think
can
work
very
well
for
us,
with
sustainability,
along
with
other
city
functions,
to
get
interaction
with
the
public.
So
I
will
continue
to
keep
you
updated
as
we
get
this
further
along
and
hopefully
approved.
D
E
D
Robinson,
you
had
sent
that
to
to
paul
and
irene
and
they
sent
it
to
us.
So
I'm
gonna,
let
I'm
gonna
turn
it
over
to
you
for
that.
D
D
You
had
asked
that
the
pinellas
mitigation
questionnaire
be
sent
to
us
as
a
committee,
so
that
was
sent
out
and
you.
B
Right,
I
did
it
yes,
but
that's
information.
That's
new
information
to
me.
I
did
not.
I
haven't
gotten
any
feedback
from
it.
So.
D
B
I
don't
have
the
survey
in
front
of
me
and
I'm
not.
I
there's
been
no
feedback
from
the
committee
about
what
we
think
would
be
useful.
So
I'm
not
sure
what
more
I
can
say
about
it
to
me.
As
I
reviewed
it,
it
seemed
like
there
was
good
questions,
good
thought-provoking
questions
and
it
could
be
utilized
in
outreach
not
just
to
get
information
but
also
to
educate
the
public.
Do
other
members
of
the
committee
have
an
opinion
about
portions
of
that
survey
that
we
think
are
particularly
useful
for.
G
J
I
I
think
I
did
not
know
what
the
ask
was
when
that
came
out
other
than
you
know
to
review
it,
and
I
so
I
I
don't
know,
maybe
maybe
could
there
be
a
directive
from
tonight
with
an
action
for
all
of
us
to
move
forward
with
that,
because
I
did,
I
did
not
realize
there
was
an
ask
that
was
associated
with
it.
B
Well,
karen,
there
may
not
have
been
an
ask
associated
with
it.
It
was
simply
to
be
forwarded
to
the
committee
as
as
information,
but
also
for
us
to
think
about
hey
what
parts
of
this
might
we
find
useful
in
communicating
with
the
the
community
at
large.
J
So
so
I
think
that
that's
actually,
I
think
what
the
ask
is
so
that's
perfect,
but
but
I
was
not
prepared
to
bring
that
to
the
table
because
I
did
not
know
that's
what
that
other
than
reviewing
that
that's
where
we
were
going
with
it.
So
sorry
about
that,
but
you
know
like
I
said
I
just
I
got
it.
J
D
I
think
that
sounds
great
and
in
just
I
think
that
this
is
a
good
kind
of
learning
opportunity
for
us
as
a
group
that,
if
we
do
have
something
that
we
want
to
share
and
have
a
conversation
about,
then
when
we
send
it
on
to
to
to
ashley
or
to
irene
or
to
paul.
If
we
could
tie
an
ask
to
it
so
that
it
makes
a
little
clearer.
D
Because
when
we're
trying
to
set
the
agenda,
I
want
to
be
respectful
and
make
sure
that
we
put
it
on
the
agenda
so
that
we're
not
missing
something.
But
I
wasn't
terribly
clear
about
what
what
we
were.
You
know
I
just
wanted
to,
like
I
said,
give
space
tonight
for
that
conversation.
But
in
the
future.
D
I
think
if
we,
if
you
would
like
to
bring
something
as
a
conversation
for
the
group,
then
if
we
could
just
say
that
in
the
email
so
that
we
all
have
a
better
understanding
of
what
to
do
with
it
or
if
it's
just
an
fyi,
then
like
we
asked
you
know,
shannon
brewer,
to
pass
along
information
and
and
if
it's
going
to
be
that,
then
just
fyi
just
so
that
you
you
know
so
we're
all
aware.
B
Yeah,
I
think
that's
good
advice
and
I
will
take
that
to
heart
next
time.
Do
you
think
we
need
to
follow
this
brief
conversation
up
with
a
specific
ask
to
the
committee
again.
D
No,
I
think
we've
got
it
for
tonight
for
this
particular
item.
So
we'll
all
take
a
look
at
that
at
that
questionnaire
and
then
be
prepared
to
have
a
conversation
about
what
you
think
would
be
useful
to
use
from
it
and
maybe
consider
an
application
of
when
we
would
use
it,
how
we
would
use
it.
C
What
you're
going
to
find
is,
I
think,
what
the
county
was
doing
was
coming
up
with
a
couple
of
I'll,
say
versions,
so
you're
going
to
see
23
detailed
questions
and
then
what
looks
like
to
be
two
summary
questions
at
the
end
and
I
suspect
what
they
were
doing
is
sending
the
23
questions
to
one
group
and
perhaps
the
two
summary
questions
on
a
postcard
or
something
like
that
and
those
two
summary
questions
are:
what
hazards
are
most
common
are
most
concerned
to
you
and
then
what
should
be
the
top
goals
of
the
local
mitigation
strategy?
C
So
just
keep
that
in
mind.
Perhaps
some
of
those
questions
get
used
in
different
ways
when
you
evaluate
that.
D
All
right,
moving
on
to
the
next
item
on
the
agenda,
which
is
an
update
of
the
university
of
florida
and
ifis
sea,
grant
community
flood
risk
empowering
underserved
communities.
That
is
the
script
that
we
have
put
together
and
sent
out,
and
I
just
want
to
before.
We
get
too
far
into
this
remind
everybody
what
we're
trying
to
do
with
this.
So
we
decided
that
we
were
going
to
reach
out
to
community
leaders
and
we
identified
those
community
leaders
and
we
each
have
been
assigned.
D
We
remember
we
went
through
and
kind
of
said
I'll
talk
to
them,
I'll
talk
to
them.
So
that's
what
this!
The
intent
of
this
is
to
have
some
direction
for
those
conversations.
So
when
you
call
those
community
leaders
and
you're
inviting
them
to
participate
in
the
information
gathering
sessions
that
are
being
led
by
ifis
and
the
secret
project,
it's
just
guidance
of
basically
trying
to
explain
to
them
what
we're
trying
to
do
so,
it's
not
that
you
have
to
take
the
script
verbatim
and
read
it
to
them.
D
We
just
wanted
to
have
similar
enough
talking
points
that
we're
all
kind
of
singing
from
the
same
page.
So
I
don't
think
we
need
to
get
bogged
down
in
in,
like
details
of
you
know
exactly
how
you're
gonna
say
it.
I
think
that
what
we
really
need
to
focus
on
is
having
this
conversation
sooner
rather
than
later,
and
that's
because
if
you
I'm
gonna
share
my
screen
really
quick,
so
that
we
can
so
I
can
pull
that
up.
F
D
Nope
nope
there.
E
C
Yeah,
I
was
thinking
when
we
use
the
word
script
it
might,
it
might
be
misleading.
It's
not
meant
to
be
a
verbatim
just
start
reading
when,
when
someone
picks
up
the
phone,
I
think
that's
an
important
point.
D
Right,
it's
mainly
to
give
us
confidence
that
we
are
all
saying
similar
enough
things
so
that
people
get
the
gist
of
it.
With
a
similar
idea
and
like
I
was
saying,
we
need
to
be
having
these
conversations
sooner
rather
than
later,
and
that's
because
there
are
going
to
be
three
different
meetings
times
that
are
being
offered
so
remember.
This
is
not
the
community
at
large
listening
sessions.
D
These
are
just
for
the
leaders
that
we're
hoping
will
be
kind
of
the
water
bearers
of
the
sustainability
message
that
we're
trying
to
get
more
get
them
to
encourage
their
community
members
that
they
engage
with
to
come
to
the
table.
So
there's
going
to
be
a
meeting
on
october,
7th
at
7
p.m,
or
on
october,
8th
at
3
p.m,
or
on
saturday
october
10th
at
9
30
in
the
morning,
and
they
don't
need
to
attend
all
of
those
meetings.
D
They
would
just
need
to
attend
one
if
they
want
to
attend
more
than
one
because
they
may
feel
like
they
missed
something
they're
certainly
welcome
to.
But
the
idea
is
basically
just
to
try
to
encourage
them
to
participate
and
get
them
to
come
to.
One
of
those
those
meetings
using
you
know
this
explanation
of
what
we're
trying
to
get
accomplished,
so
I
guess
I'll
leave
it
there
and
see.
If
there's
any
questions
or
comments
about
that.
B
E
K
I
K
B
If
you
want
to
convince
somebody
to
pay
attention
to
what
you're
telling
them,
even
if
you're
reading
it
over
the
phone,
you
need
you
limit
it
to
one
page
also,
it
says
we
are
partnering
with
the
university
of
florida.
Ifas
we've
talked
about
them,
but
are
in
what
way
are
we
partnering
with
them?.
E
D
D
So
I
was
answering
the
first
question
about
the
length.
The
second
question
I
didn't
get
to
yet,
and
that
is
how
we're
partnering
with
them
and
we're
partnering
with
them
and
that
they
are
leading
the
conversation
and
helping
us
to
pull
the
community
into
these
conversations
about
sustainability.
B
C
Let
me
add
a
little
bit
of
that.
If
I
may,
the
ifis
actually
reached
out
to
the
city,
they
received
a
grant
to
engage
communities,
particularly
underserved
communities,
to
talk
about
how
different
impacts
from
climate
are
affecting
these
communities
and
they
asked
if
we
wanted
to
participate
with
them.
So
this
is
not
our
only
community
outreach.
This
is
rather
sort
of
a
a
very
efficient
way
to
get
an
early
start
with
this
segment
of
our
plan.
B
Is
on
under
committees
of
communities?
That's
great!
We
all
know
that
underserved
communities
can
be
disproportionately
affected
by
some
aspects
of
climate
change.
You
know,
rich
people
can
pick
up
and
move
sticks
and
stakes
and
poor
people
can't
do
that.
But
if
we're
talking
about
using
this
to
go
out
to
the
community
in
tarpon
springs
to
our
prospective
champions
it
it
isn't
going
to
sell,
I
mean
it
might
sell.
B
If
we're
talking
to
the
shepherd
center,
it
might
sell
if
we're
talking
to
a
minister
who
takes
care
of
the
poor,
but
it
isn't
going
to
sell
to
the
merchants
association
it
isn't
going
to
sell
to
the
chamber
of
commerce.
It's
not
going
to
sell
to
the
rotary
club,
and
I
think
it
would
be
a
mistake
if
what
we
use
as
our
background
information
to
communicate
with
our
champions
varies
from
group
to
group.
I
think
it
should
be
uniform.
B
B
We're
under
the
rubric
in
blue,
more
points
of
information
as
conversation
dictates,
resilience
answers
the
question:
do
we
have
a
community
where
everyone
has
access
to
the
systems
and
resources
etc?
Well,
first
of
all,
that's
not
grammatical;
secondly,
it's
illogical;
and
thirdly,
it's
counterproductive
for
us
we're
redefining
resilience
and
sustainability
for
the
umptium
time.
B
I
think
that
let
me
go
on.
Let
me
think,
let
me
talk
a
little
bit
more
about
this.
If
we
want
points
of
information
to
sell
to
our
champions
to
our
various
groups
within
our
community,
the
best
thing
we
could
use
as
backup
information
is
the
introduction
to
the
sustainability
plan
that
we,
as
a
group,
have
written
in
draft
form.
G
That's
so
I
kind
of
when
I
look
at
this
this.
If
the
was
it
iflas,
ifas,
the
you
know
just
this
page
that
we're
looking
at
right
now.
I
didn't
even
mention
the
whole
sea
grant
thing
when
I
reached
out
to
somebody
at
spc,
because
I
emailed
them
before
the
last
meeting,
and
I
wasn't
thinking
about
the
ifs
ifas
thing
I'm
thinking
like.
Maybe
we
can
just
mention.
I
did
mention
our.
You
know
that
we're
working
on
the
plan
and
we
wanted
community
input.
G
So
maybe,
if
you're
thinking
you're
talking
to
somebody
that
you
don't
think
it'll
sell,
maybe
you
know
mention
all
of
our
stuff
first
and
then
include
this
in
there
and
if
you
think
it
will
so
we
can
invite
them
to
these
meetings
and
see
if
they
want
to
give.
You
know
the
ifas
and
us
some
input
as
well.
B
D
So
we
I'm
trying
to
find
the
on
the
city's
website
where
we
have
and
we
agreed
to
definitions
of
resilience
and
sustainability
so
that
we
can
just
change
that
out.
But
I,
like
I
said
I
I
don't
know
that
we
need
to.
D
B
D
Well,
the
city
partners
with
ifis
all
the
time
like
they
were
mentioning
earlier
in
the
evening.
They
help
the
arborist
partner
with
the
city
to
get
the
message
out
about
what
is
happening
with
the
with
the
work
that
the
arborist
is
doing.
D
B
H
C
I'd
like
to
back
up
a
step,
and
let's
just
talk
about
exactly
what
this
is.
There
may
be
a
fundamental
misunderstanding
of
what
this
is
this.
This
document
is
intended
to
be
an
invitation
to
participate
in
some
listening
sessions.
It's
really
not
us
telling
them
what
to
think
it's
inviting
them
to
participate
as
the
champions
in
some
sessions
to
hear
from
them.
C
So
really
it's
meant
to
just
frame
what
we're
going
to
be
talking
about
and
listening
about,
so
I'm
trying
to
salvage
this
thing
here
if
we
need
to
cut
back
the
background,
because
that's
not
looking
good
and
get
back
to
just
the
invitation
reaching
out
the
hand
to
say
we've
got
some
listening
sessions
coming
up
on
october,
7th,
8th
and
10th
we've
identified
you
as
an
important
part
of
our
community.
M
I
think
that
perhaps
what
paul
the
direction
that
you're
going
paul
smith
and
paul
robinson
both
of
you
guys-
is
that
to
take
it,
streamline
it
a
little
bit
to
where
it's
just
says.
You
know
we're
partnering
with
this
organization,
because
we
want
to
know
more
about
our
community.
We
think
you're
an
important
voice,
we'd
like
to
hear
from
you
here
are
some
opportunities.
M
If
you
choose
to
meet
with
us
and
then
just
make
it
bing
bing
bing,
because
if
we
have
the
the
three
opportunities
there
as
well,
that
should
be
very
concise
where
we
can
pretty
much
send
someone.
This
we'll
have
the
conversation
with
them
individually,
but
this
will
be
something
that
they
can
pull
up
to
agree
to
go
to
one
of
those
zoom
meetings,
and
you
know
I
think
it
could
be
streamlined
a
little
bit
because
it's
it's
kind
of
a
long
way
around
to
get
into
where
we're
trying
to
get
with
them.
M
You
know
it's
the
simpler.
We
can
make
our
request.
I
think-
and
you
know
the
the
simpler
we
can
make
our
framework.
It's
not
a
complicated
thing.
We're
trying
to
engage
the
community
to
know
how
climate
change
is
going
to
affect
especially
underserved
communities,
and
we
thought
that
you
know
they've
been
around
town
a
long
time.
They,
you
know,
work
with
different
communities
and
we're
looking
for
their
to
have
a
conversation
basically
and
share
their
wisdom.
B
B
There
are
some
things
I
think
that
obviously
should
not
be
included
as
information
shared
with
with
our
champions
across
the
board.
So
I
think
we
can
use
for
parts
of
this.
I
think
we
can
streamline
it
to
one
page
after
hearing
what
dory
has
said,
I
I
would
like
to
know
what
the
context
and
content
of
the
three
listening
sessions
is
intended
to
be.
B
C
D
M
I
think
what
paul's
robinson,
dr
robinson's,
mentioning
is
some
type
of
facilitator
to
move
this
along
to
where
we
can
get
the
information
that
we
want.
Do
we
have
a
facilitator
in
mind
and
is
that
something
that
we
might
want
someone
to
kind
of
commit
to
doing
these
three
and
facilitating
someone
who's
a
adept
facilitator
with
community
meetings.
D
C
Okay,
now
my
thought
was
that
the
ifas
representatives
would
be
taking
the
lead
and
facilitating
and
we
as
city
would
be
participating.
Is
that
your
understanding
as
well
dory.
D
Yes-
and
one
of
them
is
spanish
speaking
and
that's
part
of
having
them
facilitate,
would
be
useful.
C
E
D
A
O
D
D
Sustainability
is
and
think
help
us
to
understand
what
people
think
that
they
need
the
city
to
focus
on,
and
the
idea
is
that
the
optional
question
is:
if
participants
need
some
prompting,
if
they
can't
think
of
what
types
of
efforts
this
city
should
prioritize
to
be
able
to
give
some
ideas
like
public
health
quality
of
life.
D
B
There
are
answers
to
that
question
and
999
of
them
have
nothing
to
do
with
climate
change
or
sustainability.
This
is
not
structured
enough
to
get
the
kind
of
information
back
from
our
from
our
champions
that
we
need
to
move
forward.
This
is
going
to
take
a
lot
of
work
before
we
are
in
a
position
to
have
a
listening
session.
D
D
So
this
isn't
like
part,
this
isn't
the
whole
plan
of
engaging
with
the
community
at
large.
This
is
to
try
to
get
feedback
from
community
leaders
that
have
the
pulse
on
the
community,
what
they
think
is
of
concern
or
or
even
what
is
going
well
and
and
what
can
be
continued
to
be
built
upon
for
the
city.
J
Can
I
reject
for
a
second
I
I,
my
question
would
be
if
we
were
to
reach
out
to
the
pers,
the
respective
people
that
we've
said
we've
become
responsible
for
reaching
out
to
and
explained
to
them,
hey
that
we
have
a
sustainability
committee,
because
again
we're
just
assuming
everybody
in
turpan
springs
know
that
we
exist
as
a
committee
and
explain
to
them
that
there's
a
listening
session
where
we're
reaching
out
to
these.
A
J
Because
there
are
leaders
in
their
community
and
they're
important
and
their
community's
input
is
important
and
then
it
was
to
be
followed
up
with
these
questions
so
that
when
they
come
to
the
listening
session,
they're
prepared
to
give
feedback
and
again
it
can
be.
You
know
to
dr
robinson's
point:
it
can
be
generic
in
that
it
reaches
all
communities
and
not
just
focusing
on
the
minority
communities
just
because
ifis
is
directing
that
way.
They're
not
directing
these
questions
to
those
communities.
J
Specifically,
these
questions
are
very
generic
and
would
work
in
every
single
community.
So
if
we
reached
out
at
to
our
respective
community
leaders
and
explained
that
there
is
a
you
know,
the
sustainability
committee
we're
trying
to
engage
their
help
initially
in
understanding
what
they
perceive
their
communities
needs
are,
and
then
we
have
an
ask
for
them
that
in
the
future
we
will
come
back
to
them
and
and
ask
them
to
engage
with
their
community
and
report
back
to
us.
M
I
think
that
completely
changes
the
conversation
and
it
can
be
focused
it
can
be
very
balanced
as
far
as
what
are
our
assets.
Let's
look
at
it
from
our
what
we
have
going
on
here
that
we
can
build
on
rather
than
you
know,
there's
people
without
houses
and
there's
people,
because
we
we
know
what
that
what
needs
are,
but
the
lens
that
we
ask
these
questions
through
is
also
important.
So
I
I
like
that
balance
of
saying
what
is
the
culture
of
our
city?
M
What
does
our
community
care
about
because
that's
very
valuable
to
our
work,
so
that
we'll
know,
as
we
move
forward
with
our
plan,
that
there's
this
the
support,
this
cadre
of
people
who
are
concerned?
Who
are
more
engaged
with
us
and
even
for
the
purpose
of
connecting
to
the
sustainability
committee
and
knowing
what
we're
working
on
that
they
have
a
part
to
play
in
it.
I
think
that's
very
valuable.
M
It's
looking
at
our
internal
and
external
assets
and
what
we
can
build
on
to
create,
after
misfortune,
other
personal
societal
community,
nature
weather
whatever
how
we
can
rebuild
from
that
and
how
we
can
regroup
from
that
as
a
community,
and
I
think
by
seeing
what
the
assets
are
when
people
look
at
that
and
those
questions
are
in
there
too.
What
do
you
value
about?
The
community
of
tarpon
springs,
focus
on
opportunities
that
are
here
as
well.
The
fact
that
we
have
a
public
health
department
here
we
have
a
hospital
here.
M
M
What
their
point
of
view
is
in
the
lens
that
they're
seeing
things
through
and
how
that
intersects
with
the
work
that
we're
doing
as
a
committee,
I
think
that
community
health
community
resilience
all
those
things-
are
completely
intertwined,
as
are
the
the
infrastructure
and
everything
else.
As
we
talked
about
so
this
is
like
taking
a
little
piece
of
it
and
addressing
it,
it's
not
the
whole
picture.
It's
not
everything.
We
need
to
know
it's
a
little
piece
of
it,
but
let's
get
something
going
here.
M
I
think
it's
important
for
us
to
get
move
in
a
direction
that
we
can
start
seeing
where
we
are.
If
this
isn't
working,
it's
not
like
we're
developing
our
sustainability
action
plan
around
these
three
meetings.
This
is
for
us
to
be
a
fly
on
the
wall,
but
also
to
see
and
listen
to
what
community
leaders
are
thinking.
I
think
that's
important.
It's
like
having
extra
eyes
and
and
brains
and
everything
else
at
the
table
with
us.
B
These
people
are
busy
and
if
we
want
to
talk
about
sustainability
and
the
resilience
of
this
city,
that
is
going
to
have
to
dramatically
upgrade
itself
in
the
next
decade,
we're
going
to
need
to
present
not
just
my
people,
my
champions,
but
everybody
else's
champions
with
some
specificity
of
what
we
want
to
engage
with
them
on
and
how
we
move
forward
with
their
portions
of
the
community.
D
I
would
respectfully
disagree.
I
think
that
we
need
to
start
somewhere.
I
think
this
is
the
place
where
we
need
to
start,
I
think,
to
robin's
point.
D
So
I
I
am
proposing
that
we
go
ahead
and
move
forward
with
this.
We
need
to
like
the
dates
are
coming
soon,
so
we
need
to
tighten
this
up
and
we
don't
have
time
to
do
it
this
evening
as
a
group.
So
I
think
that
we
will
have
to
just
agree
right
now
on
shortening
it
and
putting
in
the
definitions
of
resilient
sustainability
from
the
page
on
the
website
or
taking
it
from
the
powerpoint
and
have
no
problem
shortening
it.
D
Taking
out
the
picture,
it
was
all
just
trying
to
have
additional
information
so
that
people
have
kind
of
a
background
of
what
sustainability
is,
but
I
don't
think
that
they
need
to
have
every
detail
or
every
aspect
of
what
a
plan
might
include
to
try
to
get
this
initial
feedback
from
what
the
of
what
the
community
values
so
we're
gonna
need
to
be
able
to
reach
out
to
community
leaders
within
the
next
week
or
so
in
order
to
be
able
to
move
forward
with
this
october
early
october
timeline,
because
every
month
that
we
don't
move
on
it
we're
losing
time,
and
I
would
really
like
to
be
able
to
start
to
get
some
community
feedback
at
this
point.
D
J
I
ask
something:
maybe
a
little
unconventional
unconventional
assume,
I'm
a
community
leader
and
you're
reaching
out
to
me.
How
would
you
phrase
what
you're
trying
to
get
across
so
I
could
understand,
and
maybe
that
will
help
help
us
as
we
try
to
do
this.
My
my
feeling
on
this
is
you
know.
I
appreciate
the
background
that
that
came
from
that
email
that
we
got
reaching
out
to
the
community.
J
I
do
still
think
it
needs
to
be
followed
up
with
some
sort
of
an
email,
because
there's
no
way
I
can
tell
somebody
in
a
very
short
sense
sentence
to
go
to
on
this
date.
To
https
I
mean
they
need
the
web
address
to
like
that.
Could
you
kind
of
assume
one
of
us
is
a
prospective
leader
in
the
community
or
a
leader
in
the
community
and
how
you
might
approach
that
phone.
D
Call
yes,
so
that's
I
I
I
would
reach
out
and
explain
that
we
have
a
sustainability
committee
and
that
we
are
trying
to
engage
the
community
to
create
a
sustainability
action
plan
and
what
we're
doing
is
reaching
out
to
community
leaders
like
yourself,
so
that
we
can
get
your
thoughts
on
what
the
people
that
you
engage
with
value
about
our
community
to
help
guide
that
plan.
So
we've
got
these
three
different
listening
sessions.
If
you
could
please
attend
one
of
them,
we
would
very
much
appreciate
hearing
what
you
value
about
the
community.
J
I
think
when
we
went
back
when
we
first
started
and
were
I'll
put
these
in
air
quotes,
because
I
don't
have
video
on
looking
for
a
script
that
I
think
you
just
summed
up
exactly
in
a
very
brief
way
how
we
can
approach
our
community
leaders
without
the
extraneous
variables
the
the
email
that
came
out.
J
The
portion
that
came
out
gives
us
us
personally
a
lot
of
background
information
to
speak
to,
should
there
be
a
question
or
what
have
you,
but
what
you
just
said
was
very
succinct
and
it
got
to
the
point
you
you
threw
your
ass
in
there.
This
is
what
we're
asking
for
you
to
do.
Please
be
a
part
of
this.
If
you
can,
you
can
come
to
any
one
of
the
three
sessions.
J
Please
be
a
part
of
it,
because
your
your
perspective
on
on
your
the
communities
that
you're
involved
with
are
really
important
for
us.
So
that
was
perfect,
that
that's
what
I
was
looking
for,
dory
was
when
I
get
on
that
phone.
What
is
and
to
pause?
You
know,
credit,
the
other
one,
absolutely
that's
way
too
long,
but
we're
not
reading
that
script
itself.
I
D
D
J
But,
like
I
said
that,
I
personally,
I
have
absolutely
no
problem
reaching
out
to
the
community
leader
tools
and,
as
a
committee
do
not
know
what
our
community
is
looking
for,
you
know
or
what
they
value
and
what
have
you
and
each
of
these
pockets
may
have
a
better
approach,
and
then
obviously
we
have
you
know
our
second
ask
after.
K
J
G
So
this
is
that
this
page
is
basically
all
the
background
we
would
need
just
in
case
they
asked
more
questions
and
then
the
script
would
pretty
much
be
that
ask
that
short
and
sweet
thing
that
dory
just
mentioned.
I
mean
we
could
even
go
back
in
the
youtube
video
that
I'm
watching
right
now
and
get
it
word
for
word
and
write
it
up
if
we
wanted
to.
I
D
Excellent,
okay:
we
are
really
low
on
time.
We've
got
10
minutes
so
very
quickly.
I'm
just
gonna,
throw
it
out
there
and
maybe
move
it
forward
as
an
item
for
the
next
agenda.
But
I
would
like
to
have
a
conversation
about
how
we
can
tie
events
that
are
already
on
the
city's
calendar
and
how
we
can
how
we
can
partner
to
maybe
do
some
community
outreach
through
those
events,
for
example
the
touch
of
truck
or
earth
day.
D
That
way,
so
I'd
like
to
be
able
to
try
to
put
some
stuff
on
the
calendar,
even
if
knowing
that
we
may
not
have
in-person
events
even
into
the
beginning
of
next
year,
but
I
just
think
it
would
be
good
for
us
to
have
that
conversation
of
how
and
brainstorm
of
what
the
city's
already
got
so
that
we
can
mash
up
instead
of
trying
to
create
new
events
but
ways
to
engage
the
community
through
events
that
are
already
on
the
city's
calendar.
D
So
let's
go
ahead
and
just
table
that
there,
if
you
don't
mind
and
then
we
can
put
it
on
as
an
item
for
the
next
agenda,
so
moving
on
to
item
number
five
items
for
the
next
agenda,
we
will
have
a
presentation
from
building
development
director
kevin
powell,
I'm
assuming
he
wasn't
able
to
make
it
tonight,
but
it
was
great
that
shannon
brewer
was
able
to
step
in
and
and
have
that
presentation
in
his
place.
So
is
that
something
that's
feasible.
C
I'm
gonna
make
that
request
he's
on
a
long-term
assignment,
so
I'll
just
need
to
find
out
when
he's
back,
but.
D
C
D
Not
is
there
another
department
that
we
had
lined
up.
That
would
be
good
to
have
a
presentation.
B
Mean
high
high
water
or
the
mean
high
water
exceeds
the
height
of
the
street
along
dodecanese
and
let's
just
throw
out
two
places
along
dota
canis
and
along
south
spring
plus
whitcomb
boulevard.
B
D
I
think
it
might
be
helpful
to
have
a
presentation
about
the
like
budget
and
capital
improvement
projects
and
how
that
cycle
works
so
that
we
can
understand
like
how
far
into
the
future,
we
need
to
be
looking
at
some
of
the
you
know,
maybe
bigger
ticket
items
or
like
looking
at.
I
know
that
that
was
a
commissioner
carr.
I
think,
wanted
us
to
give
some
recommendations
for
those
kind
of
big
ticket
items,
so
maybe
having
a
better
understanding
from
the
finance
department
how
that
works.
That
would
be
useful
to
me.
D
G
Sorry
have
we
heard
from
the
parks
department,
yet
like
parks
and
recreation,
I'm
not
sure.
C
When
tom
function
spoke
last
time
with
public
works,
he
does
have
the
parks
department.
So
we
did
hear
from
recreation
has
more
to
do
with
programming
and
that
sort
of
thing.
D
Okay,
so
items
to
the
next
agenda,
so
we'll
hopefully
have
a
presentation
from
one
of
the
departments
and
then
we
will.
I
would
like
to
continue
on
with
the
discussion
of
community
engagement,
any
other
items
that
you
guys
would
like
to
have
on
the
next
agenda.
J
Yeah,
maybe
some
talking
points
to
how
the
listening
sessions
went.
A
J
And-
and
on
that
note,
I'm
sorry
jewelry,
because
this
is
pulling
away
from
the
topic
I'm
running
with
squirrels
here.
Did
we
need
to
make
a
motion
for
that
last
comment
on
using
a
script,
because
as
soon
as
we
hang
up
from
tonight,
the
assumption
is
we're
going
ahead
with
whatever
script
comes
out
to
address
our
community
leaders
or
do
we
need
to
make
an
emotion
that
we
are
reaching
out
to
the
community
leaders
and
moving
forward?
I
just
don't
know
the
proper
chance.
D
Are
we
in
agreement
that
we
will
take
the
talking
points
and
reach
out
to
community
leaders.
B
We
should
not
reach
out
to
community
leaders
until
we
have
restructured
these
talking
points
and
have
an
opportunity
to
discuss
them.
As
a
committee.
D
B
We
need
to
do
it
somehow
dory.
This
is
not
settled.
D
Okay,
then,
let's
go
ahead
and
take
it.
Let's
take
it
for
a
a
vote.
Then.
Can
I
get
a
motion
of
how
to
proceed
with
the
reaching
out
to
community
leaders.
J
I'll
make
a
motion
that
if
we
can
get
verbatim
what
dory
said
earlier
and
if
we
have
a
script,
I
make
a
motion
that
we
reach
out
with
that
script
to
community
leaders.
G
B
D
Okay,
so
I
will
get
those
talking
points
out
tomorrow
morning
and
then
we
will
be
reaching
out
to
community
leaders
and
putting
the
wrap-up
of
the
listening
sessions
on
the
agenda
for
the
october
meeting
as
well.
Are
there
other
items
that
we
would
like
to
have
on
october's
agenda.
B
There's
something
else
that
I
I
would
have
brought
up,
but
perhaps
this
is
a
good
time.
We've
put
writing
the
sustainability
plan
on
hold.
While
we
engage
in
community
outreach
and
the
longer
we
spend
not
finalizing
our
draft
versions
of,
for
example,
the
introduction
the
the
further
our
memory
gets
from,
what
we
wrote
and
what
our
intentions
were.
I
don't,
I
think
we
should.
B
Choose
gum
at
the
same
time
as
a
committee.
I
think
we
should
be
continuing
our
writing
of
the
sustainability
plan
at
the
same
time
that
we're
doing
community
outreach,
if
you
think
about
it,
any
community
group,
any
committee
or
citizens
group
can
engage
in
community
outreach.
B
I
think
we
can
do
both
at
the
same
time,
and
we
should
be
and
I'll
repeat
what
I
said
about
the
information
to
share
with
our
champions.
I
think
that
sharing
the
information
in
our
introduction,
I'll
use
as
an
example,
the
financial
information
that
karen
shared
with
us,
which
is
so
thorough
and
so
powerful,
would
be
a
better
body
of
information,
just
as
one
example
to
share
with
our
champions
going
forward
than
the
definition
of
sustainability,
resiliency,
etc.
B
D
Yeah,
I
think
that
you
make
a
good
point,
and
I
do
think
that
paul
smith,
if
we
could
also
add
to
the
agenda
then
because
I
think
you
were
going
to
tighten
up
all
of
the
wording
that
we
sent
for
the
intro
if
we
could
maybe
have
that
as
an
agenda
item
for
the
next
october
meeting.
I
think
that
would
be
good
too.
D
So
we
can
have
that
as
a
as
a
point
and-
and
I
think
paul
robinson
to
your
point-
I
I
think
that
there's
value
in
sharing
that
powerpoint
with
the
community
leaders
as
well,
and
I
don't
think
that
those
listening
sessions
would
preclude
that
at
all.
But
I
do
think
that
we
can.
I
think
we
can
do
both
like
give
them
the
information
and
make
sure
that
they
have
access
to
that
as
well.
J
I
think
story
the
script
and
dr
robinson,
I
think
the
script
and
again
air
quotes
the
script
that
dory's
putting
out
provides
kind
of
the
structure
for
that,
but
the
introduction
to
our
sustainability
action
plan
and
the
fact
that
we
have
one
coming
up
and
things
like
that.
That's
great
background
information
like
additional
information
as
well
to
to
add
to
when
you
are
reaching
out
to
those
community
leaders.
So
when
I
said
I
would
like
verbatim
what
dory
said
it
really
was
like
that
was
so
concise.
J
But
obviously
you
know
you
and
I
are
going
to
speak
a
little
differently
to
the
you
know
to
some
of
the
leaders
that
have
questions
for
us
or
things
like
that.
So
to
your
point,
I
think
that's
a
great
way
to
kind
of
bring
some
of
that
other
information
in
whether
it's
you
know
hey,
you
know
financially.
This
is
the
impact
it
has,
and
things
like
that.
So
am
I
talking
my
talking
points,
my
two
cents.
D
C
I
think
there's
still
some
editorial
decision
making
that
needs
to
be
made,
so
I
think
that
it's
a
little
bit
further
away
than
yeah
accepting
you
know
what
do
they
call
that
accept
all
changes
and
move
ahead,
but
I
will
work
to
keep
that
moving
and
get
you
something,
but
it
won't
be
before
the
listening
sessions.
If
that's
what
you're
asking.
I
Okay-
and
I
do
have
one
one
more
question,
because
I
I
you
know
for
some
reason
and
I
I
apologize
that
I
wasn't
ready
with
all
of
the
handouts,
but
I
I
couldn't
see
them
on
on
my
computer.
I
could
see
them
on
my
phone
and
I
sent
them
to
my
husband
and
he
printed
it.
But
this
item
that
is
was
originally
getting
the
community
talking
about
sustainability
dory
was
that
something
that
you
worked
on
by
yourself.
D
I
Can
I
ask
that
in
the
future,
as
you
go,
if
you
collaborate
together
on
something
like
this,
that
we
could
more
in
advance,
I
mean
I
don't
know
how
how
recently
you
did
it,
but
it
must
have
been
fairly
recently
that
we
didn't
get
it
sent
out
until
we
got
the
agenda
and
back
up.
But
if,
if
there
was
a
little
bit
more
time
in
advance,
we
might
have
had
some
opportunity
to
say
that
it
needed
to
be
kind
of
simplified.
I
B
Let
me
reinforce
what
denise
just
said.
I
think
if
we
had
had
time
and
been
encouraged
to
respond
to
this
getting
the
community
talking
if
we
had
been
encouraged
and
given
the
opportunity
to
respond
to
this
in
writing
before
the
meeting,
then
the
points
of
view
that
we've
all
made
would
be
more
clear
and
the
time
we'd
spent
on
it
would
have
been
less.
D
Okay,
so
if
we
don't
have
anything
else
for
the
next
agenda,
then
let's
go
on
to
public
comments.
Are
there
any
public
comments.
H
O
I
just
have
a
quick
comment:
slash
update
I'll,
be
brief,
so
I'm
still
working
on
ickley
for
our
greenhouse
gas
emissions
inventory.
I
did
send
out
the
first
template
to
the
wastewater
treatment
plant
and
I
am
currently
awaiting
the
data
from
them.
So
we
have
gotten
that
started
and
I
just
want
to
let
you
guys
know.
D
That
awesome,
when
are
we
putting
like
a
deadline
or
an
anticipated
date,
so
that
we
know
like
when.
O
I
did
not
give
them
a
deadline.
No,
I
I
definitely
can't
I
was
thinking
about
that
actually
today,
so
I
will
talk
to
paul
a
little
bit
more
about
that
and
see
where
we
can
go
as
far
as
deadlines.
C
C
We
are
working
with
one
of
our
own
divisions
in
our
department,
first,
as
sort
of
a
test
to
see
how
efficient
our
communication
and
requests
are
and
make
changes
to
that,
so
that
we're
very
aware
that
what
we're
asking
of
other
staff
is
representing
time
their
time.
So
we
want
to
respect
that
we'll
have
more
better
idea
of
deadline
once
we
get
through
this
first
part.
J
Just
one
on
I'm
gonna
go
back
to,
and
this
is
dory
because
you
you
by
mistake,
you
put
up
a
different
email.
The
draft
on
that
I
I
was
kind
of
like
flipping
through,
like
we'd
like
to
invite
you.
I
still
think
that
there
needs
to
be
a
little
bit
of
follow-up
to
our
phone
conversation
should
that
be
via
email
to
give
them
the
links
that
they
have
to
go
to
for
the
listening
sessions.
K
D
And
everybody
has
the
the
list
of
and
understands
who
they're
reaching
out
to
correct.
D
G
D
Then
quickly,
I
will
just
follow
back
with
david
keys,
who
had
reached
out
via
email.
I
did
reach
out
via
phone
and
we
played
phone
tag
and
still
waiting
for
him
to
call
me
back.
So
that's
where
we
left
that
also,
I
noticed
on
the
sustainability
page
for
the
city.
D
The
powerpoint
that
was
given
to
the
boc
is
not
on
the
page,
and
I
think
that
that
would
be
helpful
to
have
it
there
so
that
as
another
resource,
even
when
we're
talking
with
community
leaders,
if
we
want
to
reference
that
as
a
resource
for
them
to
look
at
it's,
it's
not
on
the
city's
web
page
on
our
or
on
our
sustainability
subpage.
D
So
if
we
could
have
that
added,
I
think
that
would
be
really
useful
and
helpful
to
have
that
powerpoint
and
then
the
last
thing
I
know
we're
all
were
10
minutes
over.
But
the
american
lung
association
published
a
report
that
talks
about
the
importance
of
quickly
electrifying
our
transportation
sector
and
the
very
serious
health
impacts
to
the
transportation
system
has
on
human
health.
D
And
so
I'm
gonna
ask
that
that
report
be
sent
out
to
to
you
all
and
if
you
would
please
take
a
look
at
it
and
if
we
could
add
that
to
the
documents
that
we're
using
for
as
resources,
I
think
that
that's
a
useful
report
and
I
don't
know
that
we
necessarily
need
to
have
a
conversation
about
it
next
week.
D
But
if
everyone
could
take
a
look
at
it
just
so
that
they
have
it
in
their
memory
bank,
so
that
when
we
start
talking
about
focus
areas
that
we
have
that
as
a
resource-
and
I
think
that's
all
I
have-
does
anybody
else
have
anything
else.
They
would
like
to
add
before
we
adjourn.
D
All
right
well,
then,
thank
you
all
we'll
go
ahead
and
call
this
meeting
adjourned
at
8,
12
p.m.
Look
forward
to
seeing
you
all
next
month.
Thank
you.
Thank.