06/04/2019 - Work Session - Minutes MINUTES OF THE SALT LAKE CITY COUNCIL WORK SESSION MEETING
TUESDAY, JUNE 4 , 2019
The City Council met in Work Session on Tuesday, June 4, 2019, in
Room 326, Committee Room, City County Building, 451 South State
Street.
In Attendance: Council Members Erin Mendenhall, Chris Wharton,
James Rogers, Charlie Luke, Andrew Johnston, James Rogers, Analia
Valdemoros, and Amy Fowler.
Staff in Attendance: Cindy Gust-Jenson, Council Executive
Director; Jennifer Bruno, Council Executive Deputy Director;
Patrick Leary, Mayor' s Chief of Staff; Jennifer Seelig, Mayor' s
Senior Advisor; Rusty Vetter, Deputy City Attorney; Lehua Weaver,
Council Associate Deputy Director; Benjamin Luedtke, Council
Public Policy Analyst; Karl Lieb, Fire Chief; Jennifer McGrath,
Community and Neighborhoods Interim Director; Sam Owen, Council
Policy Analyst; Vicki Bennett, Sustainability Environment
Director; Debbie Lyons, Sustainability Program Director; Lance
Allen, Waste & Recycling Division Director; Mary Beth Thompson,
Chief Financial Officer; John Vuyk, Budget Director; Dan Rip,
Housing and Neighborhood Development Policy & Program Manager;
Kimberly Chytraus, Senior City Attorney; Allison Rowland, Council
Public Policy Analyst; Callye Cleverly, Capital Improvement
Program Specialist; Jodi Langford, Deputy Human Resource Director;
David Salazar, Human Resource Program Manager; Scott Crandall,
Deputy City Recorder; and Cindi Mansell, City Recorder.
Guests in Attendance: Dave Smith, Utah Department of
Transportation Consultant
Councilmember Luke presided at and conducted the meeting.
The meeting was called to order at 2 : 05 p.m.
AGENDA ITEMS
#1. 2:05:34PM RECEIVE A WRITTEN BRIEFING ABOUT AN ORDINANCE
THAT WOULD GRANT A TELECOMMUNICATION FRANCHISE AGREEMENT TO T-
MOBILE WEST LLC. The agreement would allow the company to place
and maintain its facilities within the City rights-of-way. The
company would be governed by certain conditions, need to secure
appropriate permits and pay the telecommunications tax under state
law. View Attachments
2:06:10PM Councilmember Johnston expressed concern regarding
the Rocky Mountain Power pole with the T-Mobile antenna on top. He
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said the plans submitted did not reflect placement on top of the
pole and in discussion with Staff, this was not a one-time event.
He suggested the need for resources to monitor compliance after
the planning and permit process across the City and the perception
they had the right to ask for a permit in the right-of-way to
install the pole . He said the little oversight the City did have
seemed flawed, and this was most likely an issue with other
carriers . He said he was frustrated these were not being monitored
because the City did not have adequate resources and the companies
could not be trusted. He said he did not want to stand in the way
of progress yet at the same time did not have faith in the carriers .
He said he wanted to hear from the franchisee how they would ensure
what they submit would be followed. He said he had concerns there
was no ability to ensure the contractor was doing what was
proposed.
Mr. Rip said T-Mobile was aware of this meeting but had a
scheduling conflict . He said they had committed to responding to
questions and Staff would be happy to facilitate answers or direct
conversation. Councilmember Johnston said he had discussions and
expressed concern that Rocky Mountain Power had to apply for a
permit to construct the pole. He said T-Mobile did not submit plans
(a basic business process) and because the City did not have
oversight, companies were able to run free . Mr. Rip said Staff
would follow-up and/or bring T-Mobile back to the table to address
these issues .
Councilmember Mendenhall suggested these conversations take
place in a work session so the full Council could hear and have
dialogue with T-Mobile. She said there were also complaints
received from neighbors adjacent to where the tower was going and
noticing not being sufficient or robust. She said she wanted to
hear Staff process and/or efforts to resolve complaints .
Mr. Rip said this was a new process that Staff was learning
as they went and they were anxious for feedback as well . Ms .
Chytraus said it was helpful to share constituent comments with
Staff as they were putting the process together and hoped to
resolve issues . She said the T-Mobile application was submitted
prior to adoption of the Master License Agreements and Small Cell
Ordinance. She said the process going forward was more detailed,
would include more oversight, and the companies would be forced to
strictly abide by State law.
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Inquiry was raised as to the length of these franchise
agreements, with Mr. Ripp stating 10-years was standard but perhaps
Staff could negotiate a shorter timeframe moving forward. He said
this was true especially as fast as technology moved and changed.
Ms . Chytraus said these agreements could not be shorter than the
master license agreements . Discussion followed regarding the issue
being bigger than just T-Mobile or one provider, with the Council
requesting Staff do a better job of monitoring the providers and
making Council aware if additional resources were necessary to
accomplish that.
Agenda Items 2 & 3 were combined as one briefing.
#2 . RECEIVE A WRITTEN BRIEFING ABOUT A RESOLUTION THAT WOULD
GRANT A MASTER LICENSE AGREEMENT FOR WIRELESS FACILITIES IN THE
PUBLIC WAY TO VERIZON WIRELESS (VAW) LLC. The agreement would allow
Verizon Wireless LLC to install small cell wireless facilities
throughout the City. Small cell wireless facilities utilize
antenna and fiber optics to add capacity and coverage to a wireless
broadband network. View Attachments
#3. RECEIVE A WRITTEN BRIEFING ABOUT AN ORDINANCE THAT WOULD
GRANT A MASTER LICENSE AGREEMENT FOR WIRELESS FACILITIES IN THE
PUBLIC WAY TO NEW CINGULAR WIRELESS PCS . The agreement would allow
New Cingular Wireless PCS to install small cell wireless facilities
throughout the City. Small cell wireless facilities utilize
antenna and fiber optics to add capacity and coverage to a wireless
broadband network. View Attachments
2:36:10PM Councilmember Luke inquired if there were concerns
with the master license agreements for Verizon and New Cingular
(AT&T) (submitted after the State Legislation) if the Council were
to move forward. He said the Council was set to take action at
their next meeting on these two agreements while leaving the
broader discussion about the T-Mobile franchise agreement for a
future date .
Councilmember Johnston said the large cell provider
experience hurt the process for all providers . He discussed
limitations on oversight to Federal and State laws as well as to
design and location elements . He expressed concern for future
confrontations and encouraged providers not to abuse the
relationship further.
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Councilmember Mendenhall inquired about the City' s ability in
creating franchise agreements with applicants and small cell tower
distribution. She inquired if there were a way to tighten the
franchise agreement to prevent issues . Ms . Chytraus said that had
been provided in the master license agreement in the small cell
context. She said Staff could revisit franchise agreements to
provide for more enforcement mechanisms . She said the Verizon and
AT&T had the stronger enforcement mechanisms in them. She discussed
the need to treat all franchise agreements similarly under Federal
Law. She said Salt Lake City did not currently have an ordinance
that governed franchises and something could be put into place as
well as negotiating franchise agreements going forward to be
reflective of Council desires .
Councilmember Luke said there were no changes being proposed
for these two items .
#4 . RECEIVE A WRITTEN BRIEFING ABOUT THE PROPOSED BUDGET FOR
THE DEPARTMENT OF FINANCE FOR FISCAL YEAR 2019-2020 . View
Attachments
Written briefing only.
#5 . RECEIVE A WRITTEN BRIEFING ABOUT THE CONSOLIDATED FEE
SCHEDULE, WHICH IS A LIST OF FEES THE CITY CHARGES TO OFFSET
ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICE COSTS AND REGULATORY COSTS. It is updated
annually as part of the budget process. View Attachments
2:44:03PM Councilmember Wharton referenced the first policy
question regarding the Administrative Internal Working Group to
address Special Event Fees . He requested a briefing or update
before January 2020 .
#6 . 2:17:55 PM RECEIVE A BRIEFING ABOUT THE MOUNTAIN VIEW
CORRIDOR CONSTRUCTION PROJECT. Construction has started on the
next segment from 4100 South to S.R. 201 . The segment will connect
to the already open section of Mountain View Corridor at 4100 South
in Salt Lake County, and provide a connection to a major east/west
road in Western Salt Lake County. Construction includes two lanes
in each direction with signalized intersections, biking and
walking trails. The estimated completion date for this phase of
the project is summer 2021 . View Attachments
Dave Smith, Penna Powers/UDOT Consultant briefed the Board
with a PowerPoint. He provided a brief overview of the Mountain
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View Corridor program and said there were two projects under
construction: Utah County extending 2100 North West of Redwood
Road to SR73; and Salt Lake County/Salt Lake City that extended
Mountain View from 4100 South to SR201 with connections to
California Avenue . He said there were two future construction
segments not yet funded: continue California to I-80, and connect
to 160th South where currently open to that 2100 North area in Utah
County. He said there was Express Bus service planned for 5600
west, the International Center, Downtown Airport, and Downtown
Salt Lake City.
Mr. Smith said this was the first time Mountain View would
connect to major east/west traffic segment (additional four miles
from 4100 South to California Avenue) . He provided an aerial view
of the project with north/south/east/west movements depicted. He
said the intent was to start working on the 600 West and SR201
this summer and constructing temporary routes for traffic to use
when closing down existing access . He said all movements would be
maintained throughout the course of construction and discussed how
to stay informed about construction progress .
Councilmember Mendenhall discussed future funding realities
for the unfunded gaps (particularly the north end) and inquired if
there were estimated costs for the unfunded segments . Mr. Smith
said from California Avenue to I-80 was estimated at $860 million.
Discussion followed regarding potential funding sources or
methods . Councilmember Mendenhall said that area was within the
Inland Port area and she was curious about Port Authority Board
ideas/timeline/associated with their business plan and how it
might impact completion of this piece of Mountain View. Mr. Smith
said the other unfunded segment was in the Point of the Mountain
area totaling $311 million.
Councilmember Mendenhall inquired as to an update on the
baseline air quality monitoring and information on how those air
quality levels were looking. Mr. Smith said they did initial
monitoring but the Air Quality Working Group had not completed
monitoring because they were waiting for the remainder of
filtration systems to be installed. He said they were working with
avenue filtration systems to verify correct installation with the
right equipment . He said once complete, they would return and
conduct monitoring. Councilmember Mendenhall requested follow-up
at the next presentation to include more about the baseline
monitoring or secondary monitoring updates .
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Councilmember Johnston discussed the unfunded phases and the
rapid bus transit under reconsideration or evaluation. Mr. Smith
said Phase 1 transit was initially a bus rapid transit line on
5600 west that ran from 2700 south to 6200 south. He said that was
re-evaluated and express bus service proposed instead to expand
the service and triple the length of coverage. He said they
recently completed the re-evaluation, just issued the document and
30-day comment period, and then service could be funded. He said
they could not move to Phase 2 of Mountain View or convert
intersections or add lines until they had that transit line in and
operational . Further discussion followed regarding the transit
service including dedicated lanes in certain portions (needing to
add stops and purchase buses to run) . Inquiry was raised as to
prioritization regarding unfunded segments . Mr. Smith said one was
in the Wasatch Front Regional Council area and the other in the
Mountainland Association of Governments; each prioritized
independently but work collaboratively. Councilmember Johnston
discussed the overcrowded traffic and the great need in that area.
Councilmember Rogers inquired what municipalities were
allowed off-premise signs/billboards along the route. Mr. Smith
said he did not have that information and would have to return
with it.
#7 . 2:43:44PM RECEIVE A BRIEFING ABOUT THE ADMINISTRATION' S
PROGRESS ON THE COUNCIL' S LEGISLATIVE INTENT STATEMENTS FOR FISCAL
YEAR 2018-19, AS WELL AS LEGISLATIVE INTENTS FROM PREVIOUS YEARS
THAT HAVE NOT YET BEEN COMPLETED. Legislative intents are formal
requests the Council makes of the Administration. This briefing
will include updates on a variety of subjects, including special
programs for neighborhoods adjacent to the new Homeless Resource
Centers, streamlining the business permitting process, and fleet
insurance for high-risk City vehicles. View Attachments
Allison Rowland briefed the Council with attachments . She
referenced several pages of charts that reviewed previous year
FY19 Legislative Intents . She said the Staff made recommendations
as to whether an intent should be left open, closed, or continued.
The Council reviewed the FY19 Legislative Intent Statements .
Councilmember Mendenhall said she wanted to see timely adherence
to a) Performance Measures for Homeless Services Funding; and b)
Neighborhood Safety Program for Homeless Resource Centers (HRC) .
Discussion followed regarding the City' s role in the homeless
system, core functions, how it fit in with the County and State,
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process of monitoring, and potential for scheduled updates .
Further discussion followed regarding intents recommended to
remain open and the Council could request updates (c, d, e, f, and
g) . Ms . Rowland said the suggestion was for h) Cyber Security to
be closed and considered complete based on the Information
Management Services report. Discussion followed regarding j )
Funding our Future/new sales tax funds for Public Safety. Ms .
Rowland said this could vary based on how the Council framed their
motions for the FY20-21 budget. Ms . Gust-Jenson said Staff had
received instruction from the Council to include a motion that
defined "public safety" to include police, fire, and dispatch.
Councilmember Luke requested m) Parking Ticket Budgeted Revenue
Alignment with Actual Revenue be left open.
Ms . Rowland continued to review FY18, FY17, FY16, and FY15
Legislative Intent Statements . There were no further comments on
Staff recommended actions .
#8 . 2:58:35 PM RECEIVE A BRIEFING ABOUT THE CITY' S CAPITAL
IMPROVEMENT PROJECTS (CIP) , WHICH INVOLVE THE CONSTRUCTION,
PURCHASE OR RENOVATION OF BUILDINGS, PARKS, STREETS OR OTHER
PHYSICAL STRUCTURES. Generally, projects have a useful life of
five or more years and cost $50, 000 or more. View Attachments
Benjamin Luedtke, Mary Beth Thompson, Dan Rip, and Callye
Cleverly briefed the Council with attachments . Mr. Luedtke
discussed significant changes in FY2020 and stated the biggest
change was the deadline for the City Council to adopt project
specific budgets (previously fall/moved to September 1) . He said
there were changes to the City' s long-term planning documents as
well as a change to the Mayor' s Recommended Budget Book
(Administration working on a separate CIP book to include all
project details) . He said the Capital Facilities 10-year plan would
include potential policy, goals, and metrics . He said in FY22 there
was a bond which would be repaid and $5 . 5 million would become
available in General Fund (which could become available in CIP) .
Mr. Rip provided updates on recent reorganization where the
Real Estate and Capital Asset Group were moved under the Community
and Neighborhoods Administration (more objectivity and
accessibility to the process) . He said they would continue to
facilitate continual improvement to the CIP process, requests, and
funding amounts . He said the book would include projects eligible
for impact fees . Ms . Cleverly reviewed proposed CIP funding, with
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a total of 19 projects recommended just under $15 million in total
funds with a total CIP funding budget of $29 million.
Ms . Thompson said the intent was to expand into more than a
one-year snapshot to illustrate the process/progress of all
projects moving forward. She encouraged the Council to provide
input towards the new format.
Councilmember Mendenhall discussed timeline, and requested
Staff look back at 15 years of fund balance assessments and sales
tax in order to provide a historic context with regard to the size
of CIP with reference to overall budget and debt service carried.
Mr. Luedtke said each year, there was a debt service chart included
and said Staff would work with Finance to provide previous and
future scenarios .
#9 . 3:10:11 PM RECEIVE A BRIEFING ABOUT THE PROPOSED
COMPENSATION BUDGET, WHICH ACCOUNTS FOR PERSONNEL AND PAYROLL
COSTS, FOR FISCAL YEAR 2019-2020 . View Attachments
Benjamin Luedtke, David Salazar, Karl Lieb, and Jodi Langford
briefed the Council with attachments/PowerPoint. Mr . Luedtke
provided a brief introduction regarding compensation and said this
was the third year no cost increase was required for any of the
City' s retirement systems by the Utah State Retirement System
(URS) . He referenced the breakdown of Police Officers, recommended
percent of increase, and funding sources . He said part of the
increase created a new 12-year step (approximately 6% annual salary
increase) . He referenced the policy questions and said there would
be a Closed Session on the labor negotiations this evening.
Mr. Salazar provided an overview of FY2020 Employee
Compensation. He referenced benefits costs for the City' s high-
deductible Summit STAR Health Plan, Market Pay adjustments, non-
represented and represented salaries and wages . He referenced the
national Public Safety Compensation Survey (Mercer) results, four
categories of police officer wage increases, police officer versus
overall City turnover, range market pay comparison and SLC Police
Officer compensation. He said Police Officer turnover had
increased wherein firefighter turnover had decreased. He discussed
firefighter wages and potential future policy discussion regarding
compensation philosophy for Public Safety personnel .
Councilmember Mendenhall discussed turnover rates within
police and trends . Mr. Salazar discussed "resignation" versus
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retired or dismissed whether voluntarily to pursue another career
or to go to a different agency. Councilmember Mendenhall requested
current numbers for 2019 from Human Resources . Mr. Luedtke said
the Citizen' s Compensation Advisory Committee (CCAC) commented
that when looking at turnover of Police Officers, it had been below
the City' s average for several years and was now on par with the
City (they mentioned it was something to continue to monitor) .
Councilmember Mendenhall discussed analyzing police staffing as
comparable to other City departments and said the entire public
safety realm was very unique and distinctly different than other
City departments or divisions .
Councilmember Fowler inquired if the Mercer study included
dispatch, with Mr. Salazar stating it did not. He said the study
included Fire and Police . Mr. Luedtke stated a 911 Performance
Audit was recently completed, and one recommendation was to conduct
a salary survey.
Discussion followed regarding police officer compensation,
top out rates, and market level comparisons, increases based on
performance versus years of service. Mr. Salazar said in looking
at comparison to larger agencies in the area, SLC would be number
one (assuming the budget recommendations) .
Discussion followed regarding the proposed paramedic
incentive bonus plan (up to $4, 000 additional cash bonus per
employee who opted to pursue paramedic training and
certification/total budget request for $16, 000 allowed for up to
four candidates to receive this incentive) . Chief Lieb explained
any more than four employees resulted in staffing vacancies as
well as a significant amount of overtime . He said the department
was not in crisis but still low on paramedics .
#10 . 3:32:01 PM RECEIVE A BRIEFING ABOUT THE PROPOSED
SUSTAINABILITY DEPARTMENT BUDGET AND REFUSE FUND FOR FISCAL YEAR
2019-2020 . View Attachments
Sam Owen, Vickie Bennett, Debbie Lyons, and Lance Allen
briefed the Council with attachments . Mr. Owen provided a brief
overview and explained it had been five years since there had been
a Refuse/Recycle fee increase and there was justification for price
increase at this time.
Ms . Bennett provided an overview of the Refuse Fund balance
and said a fee increase was not a necessity at this time but was
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a matter of retaining a reasonable fund balance. She said if no
fee increase were adopted this year, the expectation was for a
larger fee increase next year. She said Staff had opted for smaller
increases on a routine basis .
Discussion followed regarding alternative scenarios for rate
increases with Ms . Bennett stating costs were increasing faster
than the Consumer Price Index (CPI) . Mr. Allen said a great deal
of this was attributed to increased costs of equipment and
containers . He said everything recycled prior would be recycled
now; he further discussed various recycling products, ratings, and
methods .
Ms . Bennett said the program was previously funded
differently (without using taxpayer money) but the County started
to push back about numbers . She said the Sustainability Department
provided waste collection and sustainability efforts funded
through a separate fund called the Refuse Fund. She said the
Department faced a projected deficit in each of the two divisions .
Ms . Gust-Jenson said there was an interesting policy the
Council could weigh in on or chose to support . She said the base
rate was set at actual cost to provide service/container pick-up
no matter the size . She said this fee structure was different in
that people were incentivized to go to the smaller containers but
the City would not be recovering the cost to pick-up that
container. She said the Council could encourage conservation by
offering the smaller container versus keeping the larger container
but not putting it out until it was full . She said there were ways
to ensure people recycle and did not throw away as much garbage.
Ms . Bennett said previous public input provided support of
the tiered increase . Ms . Gust-Jenson said there were quite a few
positive programs supported by taxpayers that could be balanced by
a rate increase. She said the Council could consider how funds
from the Landfill should be appropriated (whether as revenue to
the General Fund) or request Staff return with more information on
details of this proposal as soon as possible during the next fiscal
year.
Discussion followed regarding landfill data, total tons
versus per household, reduction in service levels, need for City
cleanup, and residential equity issues in terms of pricing. The
Council discussed pros and cons of the new Call-to-Haul program
versus the previous Neighborhood Cleanup program. Concern was
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expressed regarding households served, if the intent was to force
people to use outside service contractors, and making it difficult
if someone did not have resources to get something picked up. The
Council also raised objections about a proposal from the
Administration to increase rates for residential trash collection
services and multi-family recycling. Ms . Bennett said Staff was
happy to make improvements or come up with options/ideas as long
as they could ensure the program was being followed in an
environmentally sound manner. She discussed the qualifications of
her Staff and the amount of expertise involved in the work they
all enjoy and believed in doing.
Councilmember Fowler inquired as to measurements for success
with the Call to Haul or other programs and expressed concern about
the rate increase affecting large families and disproportionately
affecting people of lower economic income. She expressed concern
that the rate increase was not outlined up front within the budget
process . Discussion followed regarding rate increases, with the
Council stating they wanted like a more detailed discussion about
proposed increases .
Further discussion followed regarding special event fees . Mr.
Allen said fees were put into effect January 1, 2019 . Ms . Bennett
said Staff reached out and worked with affected entities and there
had not been much concern (small specific part of special event
fee increase/concerns were not specifically to the recycling
portion) . The Council discussed a request for Staff update on
implementation of those Special Event fees, with Ms . Gust-Jenson
offering explanation the Council delayed the effective date to
January 1 with the request the Administration return with a
comprehensive report and evaluation on all fees . She said that did
not occur and Administration was now starting to look at that fee
issue. She said Administration had agreed to return to discuss
what was being worked on and allow the Council opportunity to
provide additional ideas .
Ms . Bennett and Ms . Lyons further reviewed Sustainability
projects being worked on. Ms . Lyons discussed the three pillars of
sustainability: environment, social, and economic (people and
profit) . She explained over the past several years, social justice
and equity had become an over-arching theme in sustainability work.
Councilmember Valdemoros commented on the importance of this
Department and its function. She said many of her constituents
were interested in sustainable practices and inquired as to
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upcoming or new equity work being planned. She disclosed she was
the owner of Square Kitchen.
Councilmember Fowler inquired about staffing, with Ms . Lyons
stating additional support in Human Resources and Community and
Neighborhood would help with the work. Councilmember Luke
cautioned on equity work being duplicated across departments and
inquired as to overall management. Ms . Bennett discussed chain of
command and employee training to implement equity in all projects
and the attempt to have it institutionalized.
#11 . 5:22:00PM RECEIVE A BRIEFING ABOUT UNRESOLVED ISSUES
RELATING TO THE PROPOSED BUDGET FOR FISCAL YEAR 2019-2020 . View
Attachments
Cindy Gust-Jenson, Benjamin Luedtke, Jennifer Bruno, Mary
Beth Thompson, Jennifer McGrath, Jennifer Seelig, and Patrick
Leary briefed the Council with attachments . Ms . Bruno referenced
the Unresolved Issues Tracking spreadsheet and said the Council
should feel free to edit this document. She said the General Fund
dollars were separated from Funding our Future items .
The Council discussed unresolved issues and projects related
to the proposed City budget (Citywide or related to specific
departments) . Staff explained final tax numbers from the County
were expected soon, which would help the Council determine final
funding options .
Discussion followed regarding parking meter rates and parking
ticket late fees . Ms . Thompson said the tickets were restructured
in order to compensate for the loss of late fees . She said this
change was due to a legislative change and projected revenue
decrease (HB366) . The Council discussed economic impacts to
parking revenues . Ms . Thompson said 85% of tickets written were
paid within the first 30 days .
A 4-3 (Valdemoros, Rogers, and Luke against) Straw Poll was
conducted in support of the parking meter rate increase.
A unanimous Straw Poll was conducted in support of the
increase in parking ticket late fees.
Ms . Bruno discussed capture of 3-6 months of funding from
vacant department/division director positions (depending on
position) to use for one-time expenses . She said for FY19 this
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amount would fall to fund balance otherwise . Further discussion
followed regarding vacancies in FY20, structural deficits, and the
request was made for Staff tracking (color coding) to indicate
one-time sources/uses versus ongoing funding.
A 5-2 (Mendenhall and Johnston against) Straw Poll was
conducted in support of capturing 6 months of salary and benefits
for vacant Department Director positions for one-time expenses
only, but standing ready to expeditiously schedule a budget opening
to restore funds for any position that the Mayor elected to fill
before January 6, 2020.
Ms . Bruno addressed capture of funds not expended or
encumbered in the Funding our Future line items . She said the
amount was to-be-determined at this point and Staff flagged it as
a potential revenue source . Ms . Gust-Jenson said Staff knew what
was budgeted and what was remaining and would work with Finance to
determine what remained. She said those were items routinely
figured out within the last days of the budget.
A unanimous Straw Poll was conducted to capture funds not
expended or encumbered in the Funding our Future line items (only
if it becomes necessary) .
Ms . Bruno referenced expenses and review of all new proposed
full-time employees (FTEs) . She said Staff noted where they would
come with a corresponding revenue offset (such as airport funding) .
She said the Council could consider some or all of these FTE
additions . Discussion followed regarding consideration to capture
one-time savings for positions not offset by revenue that were
budgeted for 12 months, or one month (two months, etc. ) of one-
time savings for all positions not offset by revenue.
Councilmember Mendenhall addressed the Americans with
Disabilities Act (ADA) positions and how the City had functioned
without them given compliance requirements . Ms . Seelig articulated
the difference between the two requested positions and said
currently, ADA overall compliance Citywide was overseen by the
Human Rights Commissioner and there was a position under that dealt
directly with ADA outreach and compliance from an overall policy
perspective . She said in the divisions, there could be someone
assigned to individual department protocols .
Ms . McGrath said the ADA Administrator position would
continue to take that lead (reviewing ADA plans, City buildings
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meet needs, work closely with departments to assist them in
understanding and meeting their roles) . She said the Equity
Administrator was different in that this person would be taking
the lead on the development of a City Equity Plan (to ensure the
City had equity in all forms) . She said the City had not been
performing an analysis or assessment to determine how resources
were being utilized throughout the City (equitable distribution) .
Councilmember Mendenhall said that Equity position seemed
more like a cabinet level position if working across departments .
Ms . McGrath said Community & Neighborhood Services (CAN) already
had similar programs such as Civic Engagement, the functions of
CAN touched the different parts of the City, and Staff felt it
made sense . Councilmember Mendenhall inquired about departments or
divisions already doing ADA work and inquired if these new
position/s would free up those individuals . Ms . Seelig said she
did not see those department liaisons being replaced as they would
know intricate details of their area function (technical aspects) .
Councilmember Mendenhall inquired if the new positions would fill
gaps or areas being missed.
Councilmember Wharton said he served on the Human Rights
Commission for eight years and felt that body was underutilized.
He said the new requested positions made it even more likely that
the Human Rights Commission would be less utilized. Discussion
followed regarding this scenario, with Councilmember Wharton
stating the new position would not be working directly with the
Human Rights Commission. Mr. Leary said the entire goal with both
positions was to institutionalize them within the City and move
them from the political realm that might be associated with the
Mayor' s Office.
Ms . Gust-Jenson said the Sustainability briefing entailed
formation of a City Board replicating basically what the Human
Rights Commission was designed to do. Mr. Leary said that would
not be the intent . Ms . Seelig said there was always desire to work
with the Human Rights Commission and its purpose was to serve both
branches of government.
A 6-1 (Johnston against) Straw Poll was conducted to consider
holding off on adding the two positions (Equity and ADA Admin)
until September 1, 2019.
Ms . Bruno discussed potential transfer from Funding our
Future to the Housing Trust Fund. Councilmember Fowler said she
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MINUTES OF THE SALT LAKE CITY COUNCIL WORK SESSION MEETING
TUESDAY, JUNE 4 , 2019
would propose not allocating the $2 . 5 million and having an outside
firm engage in a housing study. She discussed the need for a
housing policy to ensure effective use of funding and build a
strong use foundation for the future . Councilmember Johnston
expressed concern as to how long this might be delayed and whether
the funding could be effectively utilized now. Discussion followed
regarding potential to establish a time limit.
Councilmember Wharton discussed the 4th Avenue well, the
health issues, importance of water supply, and safety and function
of existing facility. He said the importance of balancing those
public safety priorities with neighborhood feedback was critical .
A unanimous Straw Poll was conducted in support of the 4th
Avenue Well Project funding being contingent upon Staff returning
with a briefing on the alternatives considered to reduce the
building size and address noise concerns; the briefing could be
considered as soon as Staff was ready to be as timely as possible;
it would be particularly helpful to the Council to hear from an
another outside engineering resource to identify possible
alternatives to result in a smaller and quieter facility through
building design and footprint altercation and to report on the
incorporation of the public feedback; and realizing this would
potentially be a contingent budgetary consideration (additional
engineering) .
The Council determined to continue discussing housing
programs, homeless services, and other unresolved issues at the
noon Work Session on Thursday, June 6, 2019 .
#12 . 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 scheduling items.
None .
#13. REPORT OF THE CHAIR AND VICE CHAIR.
No report/discussion .
#14 . 6:32:06PM CONSIDER A MOTION TO ENTER INTO CLOSED SESSION,
IN KEEPING WITH UTAH CODE §52-4-205 FOR ANY ALLOWED PURPOSE .
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MINUTES OF THE SALT LAKE CITY COUNCIL WORK SESSION MEETING
TUESDAY, JUNE 4 , 2019
Councilmember Fowler moved and Councilmember Johnston
seconded to enter into Closed Session to discuss collective
bargaining pursuant to Utah Code §52-4-205 (1) (b) ; pending or
imminent litigation pursuant to Utah Code §52-4-205 (1) (c) ; and
Attorney-Client matters that are privileged pursuant to Utah Code
§78B-1-137, Utah Open and Public Meetings Law. A roll call vote
was taken. Council Members Johnston, Wharton, Luke, Valdemoros,
Mendenhall, Fowler, and Rogers voted aye . See File M 19-1 for Sworn
Statement.
In Attendance: Council Members Johnston, Valdemoros, Wharton,
Fowler, Luke, Rogers, and Mendenhall .
Others in Attendance: Cindy Gust-Jenson, Jennifer Bruno, David
Litvack, Jennifer Seelig, Lehua Weaver, Katherine Lewis, Benjamin
Luedtke, Dan Weist, Cindy Lou Trishman, Nick Tarbet, Catherine
Brabson, Jayson Oldroyd, and Scott Crandall .
The Closed Session adjourned at 7 : 15 p .m.
The Work Session meeting adjourned at 7 : 15 p .m.
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
June 4, 2019 .
clm
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