12/10/2019 - Work Session - Minutes MINUTES OF THE SALT LAKE CITY COUNCIL WORK SESSION MEETING
TUESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 2019
The City Council met in Work Session on Tuesday December 10, 2019,
in Room 326, Committee Room, City County Building, 451 South State
Street.
In Attendance: Council Members Andrew Johnston, Amy Fowler, Chris
Wharton, Erin Mendenhall, Charlie Luke, James Rogers, and Analia
Valdemoros .
Staff in Attendance: Cindy Gust-Jenson, Council Executive
Director; David Litvack, Mayor' s Deputy Chief of Staff; Jennifer
Seelig, Mayor' s Senior Advisor; Lynn Pace, Acting City Attorney;
Benjamin Luedtke, Council Policy Analyst; Sylvia Richards, Council
Policy Analyst; Allison Rowland, Council Policy Analyst; Lani
Eggertsen-Goff, Housing and Neighborhood Development Director;
Jennifer Schumann, Housing and Neighborhood Development Deputy
Director; John Vuyk, Budget Director; Mary Beth Thompson, Chief
Financial Officer; Shellie Dietrich, Police Financial Manager;
Mike Brown, Police Chief; Tim Doubt, Assistant Police Chief; and
DeeDee Robinson, Deputy City Recorder.
Guests in Attendance: Carl Maupin, International Association of
Chiefs of Police (IACP) Consultant (Item #1) ; and Joe Price, IACP
Consultant (Item #1) .
Councilmember Luke presided at and conducted the meeting.
The meeting was called to order at 3 : 22 p.m.
AGENDA ITEMS
#1 . 3:22:42PM BRIEFING FROM THE INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF
CHIEFS OF POLICE (IACP) CONSULTANT REGARDING THEIR 2019 MANAGEMENT
AND OPERATIONS STUDY OF THE SALT LAKE CITY POLICE DEPARTMENT
(SLCPD) . The Council will hear a response from SLCPD and discuss
the recommendations and conclusions. View Attachments
Benjamin Luedtke, Carl Maupin, Joe Price, Tim Doubt, and Mike
Brown briefed the Council with attachments . Mr. Maupin provided an
introduction/background/commitment regarding the IACP. Mr. Price
provided the methodology/scope of work (purpose of the report) ,
primary areas of focus, secondary areas of focus, and an overview
of their recommendations .
Councilmember Mendenhall inquired about a possible conflict
of interest on IACP' s behalf (Salt Lake City' s Chief of Police
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being a member of IACP/IACP being contracted to provide an
operations analysis of SLCPD) . Mr. Maupin said it was not a
conflict as they were committed to the profession and not to any
one individual/specific agency. He said the findings &
recommendations for their reports were drawn from experts across
the profession as well as academia to perform an objective
analysis . Councilmember Mendenhall inquired if the IACP identified
both effective and ineffective processes in place. Mr. Maupin said
there was a general mix of effective/ineffective processes found,
as was similar with most agencies .
Councilmember Mendenhall asked Mr. Brown how SLCPD planned to
move forward/prioritize/evaluate the recommendations, and what the
process would be for coming back to the Council regarding the
resource allocations needed. Mr. Brown said during the audit
process the department looked at building out three different
patrol divisions which placed more officers with more
command/accountability in all neighborhoods . He said this process
was more than complying with an assessment, it required getting
the buy-in, figuring out which squads could be downsized, and
utilizing all recently hired officers . Councilmember Mendenhall
asked for Mr. Brown to answer her initial questions . Mr. Brown
said they would address every recommendation and many had already
been implemented. He said within the work they were doing, going
forward he wanted to review the status of staffing on an annual
basis and report to the Council to continue the IACP recommended
formulas .
Councilmember Mendenhall inquired if there would be a need to
bring in any additional outside consultants, or could some of the
recommendations be assessed/addressed internally. Mr. Brown said
he believed they were currently on the right track; however, it
was healthy to look for outside/independent review to assess any
"blind spots" . He said the department was currently working with
auditors in the process of acquiring CALEA (Commission on
Accreditation for Law Enforcement) accreditation. Mr. Doubt added
they planned to implement an external/citizen review board for
policies in the near future.
Councilmember Wharton said in regards to increased
patrol/perception of safety, the Council regularly received
criticism (especially in traditionally marginalized communities)
regarding increasing the perception of safety with more officers
in their neighborhoods . He asked what additional recommendations
were made regarding this issue on a local level . Mr. Price said
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the most effective tool in Public Safety was building trust in the
community, and in order to build that level of trust, you needed
to have the ability to create positive interactions . He said by
increasing the amount of proactive time the officers had, this
allowed them the opportunity to be in the neighborhoods more, to
meet community members/store owners/residents, and build a sense
of mutual understanding and trust. He said other agencies had
assigned specific command officers as the liaison to
marginalized/diverse communities to build that level of trust from
the top down.
Councilmember Wharton inquired about diversity in
recruiting/retention within the SLCPD. Mr. Price said the SLCPD
mirrored very closely the diversity in the City, with the exception
of Hispanic representation. He said the SLCPD also suffered the
same challenges that most other (police) agencies had in that
female staff proportions did not match the general population.
Councilmember Wharton inquired if there were any recommendations
to improve this issue. Mr. Price said it went along with hiring,
as the goal of any police agency in the 21st century was to have
the highest quality officers possible and officers who were
reflective of the community. He said by building those partnerships
within the community, trust was built, and then recommendations
were built . He said the effective way to recruit today was personal
recruiting/recommendations from people in the
neighborhood/recommendations from other law enforcement employees .
Councilmember Luke said his son was participating in the SLCPD
Explorer Program and what he found remarkable as part of the
program was the fact that the majority of the participants in the
program were minorities and females . He said there was still a
ways to go; however, this was where the City would find future
officers, through youth participating in these programs .
Councilmember Fowler said she wanted further
discussion/dialogue with the Administration regarding types of
incidences the Police Department responded to, including
information regarding prosecuting.
Councilmember Luke encouraged the Council and future
Administration to be cautious about looking just at numbers (hiring
more officers) , and instead looking at what the overall objective
was going to be (what would help residents and visitors feel safe
in the community) . He said he worried about the mindset of the
Police Department; concerns about officers not feeling heard, and
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more emphasis was needed on morale in the department . He said to
inform the Council if more resources were needed.
#2 . 4:22:36 PM QUARTERLY UPDATE REGARDING HOW THE FUNDING OUR
FUTURE SALES TAX REVENUE HAS BEEN USED TOWARD PUBLIC SAFETY
RESOURCES AND STAFFING. Funding Our Future is an initiative to
address four critical needs: public safety, affordable housing,
improved streets, and better transit options. The Council approved
a 0. 5 o sales tax increase in May 2018, and during the City's annual
budget process, allocated funding from anticipated sales tax
revenue to each of those needs. View Attachments
Benjamin Luedtke, Tim Doubt, and Mike Brown briefed the
Council with attachments . Discussion was held regarding Police
Department staffing (new officers/additional civilian personnel) ,
Police salary adjustments, officer equipment costs, enhanced body
camera initiative, and the Police hybrid sedan initiative.
Councilmember Valdemoros joined the meeting at 4:25PM.
#3. 4:33:37PM BRIEFING REGARDING A REQUEST TO FUND A NEW MOBILE
COMMAND CENTER (MCC) FOR THE SALT LAKE CITY POLICE DEPARTMENT
THROUGH PARTIAL USE OF GRANT FUNDS. If approved, a portion of
funding would be available through the 2019 Edward Byrne Memorial
Justice Assistance Grant Program and the 2020 Jurisdictions with
Halfway House and Parole Violator Centers Grant. View Attachments
Mike Brown, Shellie Dietrich, Benjamin Luedtke, Sylvia
Richards, and Tim Doubt briefed the Council with attachments .
Discussion was held regarding grant funds awarded to the Police
Department for a new MCC, uses of the MCC, and possible funding
sources for the MCC.
Councilmember Mendenhall inquired how the City could use the
Halfway House State grant funds for a new MCC. Ms . Dietrich said
the Halfway House funding was limited to enforcement & safety
regarding individuals who had been through the system. She said
the MCC would serve those in crisis/severe situations and was part
of the qualifications to use the grant funds . She said Halfway
House grant monies also paid for surveillance/pole cameras around
halfway houses . Mr. Doubt added that the Halfway House grant also
funded Police over-time shifts for halfway houses .
Councilmember Johnston said he understood the need; however,
he was troubled about using the Halfway House grant funds for the
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MCC. He said the list of things it could provide seemed fundamental
to the core issues the City faced, including the social work
programs (mental health response team patrol) . He asked for more
information as to why they wanted to use this particular funding
for an MCC. Mr. Brown said many times when someone had barricaded
themselves, a homicide, a large scale investigation, or an active
shooter situation; most of these people had previously been in the
system, and the MCC would be deployed for those types of
operations . He added that this was one stream of possible funding
the department could use that had provided flexibility in the past.
Councilmember Rogers said he would rather see the City funding
items that had a direct impact to residents, specifically mobile
cameras, so residents felt safer.
Councilmember Luke said he fully supported the Department' s
request for the MCC; however, he did not like how they were going
about procuring the vehicle with the grant money. He said what the
Council/public needed to understand was if the grant money was
used for the MCC, what other services would not be funded. He said
what would be helpful in the future would be to communicate the
Department' s needs to the Council and allow the Council to figure
out how to fund what was needed. He added that the optics of using
the Halfway House grant funds for a new MCC was not optimal .
Ms . Dietrich said the Halfway House grant funds had been used
in the past for one-time uses (cameras/pole cameras/solar
panels/maintenance) , and in looking at this long-awaited need, (as
the budget process was limited/looking for creative funding
sources without burden to General Fund) , the intention of the
Department was trying to actively off-set some of the expense, and
not go around the system.
#4 . 4:56:43 PM FOLLOW-UP BRIEFING REGARDING THE SECOND AMENDMENT
TO SALT LAKE CITY' S BUDGET FOR FISCAL YEAR 2019-2020. Budget
amendments happen several times each year to reflect adjustments
to the City's budgets, including proposed project additions and
modifications. The proposed amendment includes funding for
maintenance of existing art in the City and a study to learn more
about maintaining that art collection; funding police overtime for
patrols in City parks and urban trails; and a roundabout at 2000
East Parley's Canyon Boulevard to improve traffic flow and safety;
among other changes. (Budget Amendment No. 2) View Attachments
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Benjamin Luedtke, Mary Beth Thompson, and John Vuyk briefed
the Council with attachments . Discussion was held regarding the
last remaining items including two grants : 2016 Bureau of Justice
Assistance Grant (JAG) and Halfway Houses and Parole Violator
Centers Grant (Commission on Criminal and Juvenile Justice) , a
place holder for $100, 000 for police over-time, $49, 000 for Police
over-time for patrol in parks, and $87, 000 for the Police officer
in the City & County Building.
Straw Poll: Support to defer action until January 2020 for
the JAG Grant (included $100, 000 for new MCC, $35, 000 for travel
training for sworn/civilian Police staff, $11, 700 for cell phone
analysis software, $25, 000 for less-lethal shotguns, $13, 900 for
security camera upgrades, $19, 500 for security system server,
$8, 300 for over-time specific to loud party patrols/pharmaceutical
take-back events, $9, 000 for outreach related to the Explorers &
Gang Prevention Programs, $55, 500 for a Salt Lake County sub-
award, and $55, 500 sub-ward to the Unified Police Department) . All
Council Members were in favor, except Council Members Rogers and
Fowler, who were opposed.
Straw Poll: Support to defer action until January 2020 for
Halfway House grant, dependent on receiving a full breakdown of
information requested in the grant . All Council Members were in
favor, except Councilmember Rogers, who was opposed.
Straw Poll: Support to defer action until January 2020 for
$100, 000 for Police overtime from Fund Balance. All Council Members
were opposed, except Council Members Valdemoros and Wharton, who
were in favor.
Straw Poll: Support to defer action until January 2020 for
Police Overtime ($100, 000 from General Fund) scope of flexibility
(used for parks, hotspots, or as flexible as necessary) . All
Council Members were opposed.
Straw Poll: Support to defer action until January 2020 for
$87, 000 for Police officer in City & County building, and $49, 000
for Police overtime for patrols in parks . (Includes request for
legislative intent of re-evaluating the service level of CBI/need
for the officer in the building) . All Council Members were opposed.
#5. 5:17:31PM FOLLOW-UP BRIEFING ON THE MAYOR' S RECOMMENDATIONS
FOR APPROVAL OF PROGRAM APPLICATIONS SUBMITTED TO THE FISCAL YEAR
2019-2020 FUNDING OUR FUTURE (FOF) HOUSING PROGRAM FUNDING
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PROCESS. As part of the Fiscal Year 2019-2020 budget discussions,
the Council requested that the Administration make significant
changes in its process of selecting FOF programs to be provided by
community-based organizations, with the goal of improving
transparency and equity. In response, the Housing and Neighborhood
Development Division (HAND) developed and shifted to an annual
process of accepting applications from service providers that was
structured similar to the City's CBDG funding process. The Council
may choose to approve these recommended applications or modify
them. View Attachments
Allison Rowland, Lani Eggertsen-Goff, and Jennifer Schumann
briefed the Council with attachments . Discussion was held
regarding rental assistance (Shared Housing Program) for The Road
Home (Mayor' s recommendation of $100, 000) , rental assistance
(House 20) for The Road Home (Mayor' s recommendation of $125, 000) ,
Landlord Assurance & Incentive for Housing Authority of Salt Lake
City (Mayor' s recommendation of $350, 000) , rental assistance
serving vulnerable populations : school-aged homelessness & Severe
and Persistent Mental Illness (SPMI) for YWCA (Mayor' s
recommendation of $60, 000) , Alliance House (Mayor' s recommendation
of $40, 000) , and Volunteers of America, Utah (Mayor' s
recommendation of $100, 000) , prevention/elimination of housing
discrimination for Community Development Corporation of Utah
(Mayor' s recommendation of $76, 000) , and Salt Lake Community
Action Program/Utah Community Action (Mayor' s recommendation of
$224, 000) , home ownership down payment assistance for Community
Development Corporation of Utah (Mayor' s recommendation of
$133, 000) , International Rescue Committee (Mayor' s recommendation
of $122, 000) , and Salt Lake Neighborhood Housing
Services/NeighborWorks Salt Lake (Mayor' s recommendation of
$45, 000) , emergency rent assistance for First Step House (Mayor' s
recommendation of $385, 000) , International Rescue Committee
(Mayor' s recommendation of $15, 000) , YWCA Utah (no funding
recommended) , and available unspent Fiscal Year 2019 funding of
$878, 612 .
Councilmember Johnston recused himself from discussion
regarding Volunteers of America funding only, due to his
affiliation with Volunteers of America.
Straw poll : Support for $76, 000 to be moved from Community
Development Corporation (prevention/elimination of housing
discrimination) to Salt Lake Community Action Program/Utah
Community Action. All Council Members were in favor.
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#6. QUARTERLY UPDATE REGARDING TRANSIT-RELATED PROJECTS AND
PROGRESS AS PART OF THE FUNDING OUR FUTURE INITIATIVE, SUCH AS THE
FREQUENT TRANSIT NETWORK, TRANSIT ROUTE IMPROVEMENTS, AND BRANDING
AND OUTREACH EFFORTS. Funding Our Future is an initiative to
address four critical needs: public safety, affordable housing,
improved streets, and better transit options. The Council approved
a 0. 5% sales tax increase in May 2018, and during the City's annual
budget process, allocated funding from anticipated sales tax
revenue to each of those needs. View Attachments
Item not held.
#7 . 5:36:44 PM INTERVIEW ALYSON GENOVESE PRIOR TO CONSIDERING
HER APPOINTMENT TO THE COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT AND CAPITAL
IMPROVEMENTS PROGRAMS ADVISORY BOARD FOR A TERM ENDING JUNE 6,
2022 STARTING THE DATE OF COUNCIL ADVICE AND CONSENT. View
Attachments
Councilmember Luke said Ms . Genovese' s name was on the Consent
Agenda for formal consideration.
#8 . 5:38:10PM INTERVIEW MICHAELA BUCCOLA PRIOR TO CONSIDERING
HER APPOINTMENT TO THE ARTS COUNCIL BOARD FOR A TERM ENDING
DECEMBER 10, 2022 STARTING THE DATE OF COUNCIL ADVICE AND CONSENT.
View Attachments
Councilmember Luke said Ms . Buccola' s name was on the Consent
Agenda for formal consideration.
#9. 5:40:05PM INTERVIEW BRANDON DEW PRIOR TO CONSIDERING HIS
APPOINTMENT TO THE CITIZENS' COMPENSATION ADVISORY COMMITTEE FOR
A TERM ENDING AUGUST 30 , 2021 STARTING THE DATE OF COUNCIL ADVICE
AND CONSENT.
Councilmember Luke said Mr. Dew' s name was on the Consent
Agenda for formal consideration.
#10 . 5:42:03PM INTERVIEW GREG SANCHEZ PRIOR TO CONSIDERING HIS
APPOINTMENT TO THE TRANSPORTATION ADVISORY BOARD FOR A TERM ENDING
DECEMBER 10, 2022 STARTING THE DATE OF COUNCIL ADVICE AND CONSENT.
View Attachments
Councilmember Luke said Mr. Sanchez' s name was on the Consent
Agenda for formal consideration.
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#11 . 5:43:52 PM INTERVIEW GABRIELA KNUDSON PRIOR TO CONSIDERING
HER APPOINTMENT TO THE BICYCLE ADVISORY COMMITTEE FOR A TERM ENDING
DECEMBER 10, 2022 STARTING THE DATE OF COUNCIL ADVICE AND CONSENT.
View Attachments
Councilmember Luke said Ms . Knudson' s name was on the Consent
Agenda for formal consideration .
#12 . INTERVIEW JACQUELYN THIEL PRIOR TO CONSIDERING HER
APPOINTMENT TO THE BICYCLE ADVISORY COMMITTEE FOR A TERM ENDING
DECEMBER 10, 2022 STARTING THE DATE OF COUNCIL ADVICE AND CONSENT.
View Attachments
The applicant was not available for the interview.
STANDING ITEMS
#13 . 5:45:17 PM REPORT OF THE EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, INCLUDING A
REVIEW OF COUNCIL INFORMATION ITEMS AND ANNOUNCEMENTS . Report of
the Executive Director, including a review of Council information
items and announcements. The Council may give feedback or staff
direction on any item related to City Council business, including
but not limited to
• The National Alliance to End Homelessness 2020 Conference;
• Approval of Annual Meeting Calendar; and
• Scheduling items.
See File M 19-5 for announcements .
#14 . REPORT OF THE CHAIR AND VICE CHAIR
Item not held.
#15 . CONSIDER A MOTION TO ENTER INTO CLOSED SESSION, IN
KEEPING WITH UTAH CODE §52-4-205 FOR ANY ALLOWED PURPOSE .
Item not held.
The meeting adjourned at 5 : 49 p.m.
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COUNCIL CHAIR
CITY RECORDER
This document is not intended to serve as a full transcript
as other items may have been discussed; please refer to the audio
or video for entire content pursuant to Utah Code §52-4-203 (2) (b) .
This document along with the digital recording constitute the
official minutes of the City Council Work Session meeting held
December 10, 2019 .
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