05/15/2018 - Work Session - Minutes MINUTES OF THE SALT LAKE CITY COUNCIL WORK SESSION MEETING
TUESDAY, MAY 15 , 2018
The City Council met in Work Session on Tuesday, May 15, 2018, in
Room 326, Committee Room, City County Building, 451 South State
Street.
In Attendance: Council Members Erin Mendenhall, Derek Kitchen,
Chris Wharton, James Rogers, Charlie Luke, Andrew Johnston, and
Amy Fowler.
Staff in Attendance : Cindy Gust-Jenson, Council Executive
Director; Jennifer Bruno, Council Executive Deputy Director;
Jacqueline Biskupski, Mayor; David Litvack, Mayor' s Deputy Chief
of Staff; Patrick Leary, Mayor' s Chief of Staff; Elizabeth Buehler,
Civic Engagement Manager; Mary Beth Thompson, Finance Director;
Lisa Shaffer, Public Services Director; John Vuyk, Budget
Director; Jonathan Larsen, Transportation Director; Nole
Walkingshaw, Deputy Director of Public Services; Benjamin Luedtke,
Council Public Policy Analyst; Julio Garcia, Human Resources
Director; David Salazar, Human Resources Program Manager; Russell
Weeks, Council Senior Advisor; Samuel Owen, Council Constituent
Liaison/Public Policy Analyst; Mike Reberg, Community and
Neighborhoods Director; Allison Rowland, Council Public Policy
Analyst; Kira Luke, Council Policy & Budget Analyst; Melissa
Jensen, Housing and Neighborhood Development Director; Jonathan
Larsen, Transportation Division Director; Margaret Plane, City
Attorney; Brent Beck, Community and Neighborhoods Financial and
Administrative Services Director; Tamra Turpin, City Risk Manager;
Matt Kammeyer, Golf Program Associate Director; Jaysen Oldroyd,
Senior City Attorney; Gregory Daly, Chief Information Officer;
Jodi Langford, Human Resources Deputy Director; DeeDee Robinson,
Deputy Recorder; and Kory Solorio, Assistant City Recorder.
Councilmember Mendenhall presided at and conducted the meeting.
The meeting was called to order at 1 : 13 p .m.
AGENDA ITEMS
#1 . 1:13:58 PM WRITTEN BRIEFING REGARDING THE TAX AND REVENUE
ANTICIPATION NOTES, SERIES 2018 . The resolution authorizes the
issuance and sale of not to exceed $25 million salt lake city,
Utah tax and revenue anticipation notes, series 2018, and entering
into certain covenants and making certain representations in
connection therewith; giving authority to certain officers to
approve the final terms and provisions and confirm the sale of
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the notes within the parameters set forth in the resolution,
approving the form of notes; approving a preliminary official
statement, official notice of sale and related matters. View
Attachments
Written briefing only.
#2 . WRITTEN BRIEFING REGARDING 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
Written briefing only.
#3 . WRITTEN BRIEFING REGARDING THE PROPOSED BUDGET FOR THE
DEPARTMENT OF FINANCE FOR FISCAL YEAR 2018-19. View Attachments
Written briefing only.
#4 . 1:14:21 PM OVERVIEW FROM COUNCIL STAFF OF THE MAYOR' S
RECOMMENDED BUDGET FOR SALT LAKE CITY FOR FISCAL YEAR 2018-19 .
View Attachments
Jennifer Bruno, Benjamin Luedtke, and Sam Owens briefed the
Council with attachments . Ms . Bruno discussed revenue increases,
revenue decreases, sewer, water, storm water fee increases, City
staffing increases, and the supplemental sales tax proposal . She
went on to list other priorities including homeless service
expenses, affordable housing, sustainable funding for
infrastructure, economic development, and priority-based
budgeting. Ms . Bruno detailed revenue-related items of note,
including New Growth property taxes, judgement levy, one-time
revenues versus one-time expenses, and inflationary adjustments to
fees . She went on to discuss other expense-related items of note,
including compensation, infrastructure, golf revenue, fleet fund,
parental leave policy, health insurance, and retirement.
Councilmember Johnston asked if the Fleet Fund could be
discussed sooner than scheduled, in order to have more time to
review numbers before adoption.
Councilmember Mendenhall asked if Staff could help reorient
the Council to the most current contingent appropriation
decisions/opinions previously made by the Council (particularly
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Fleet and Golf) .
#5 . 1:38:52PM BRIEFING REGARDING THE PROPOSED COMPENSATION
BUDGET, WHICH ACCOUNTS FOR PERSONNEL AND PAYROLL COSTS, FOR FISCAL
YEAR 2018-19 . View Attachments
Julio Garcia, Jodi Langford, David Salazar, and Benjamin
Luedtke briefed the Council with attachments . Mr. Garcia discussed
areas of compensation aspects, including step increases, general
increases, market adjustments, and police department 401K
contributions .
Councilmember Luke thanked Staff for their work and for the
proposed compensation plan for Police. He said it had taken awhile
for other local police departments to catch up with the City' s
compensation. He said Salt Lake City was different from other local
municipalities which was why the Council had pushed to conduct a
national compensation survey. He said he hoped the City could get
back to the point where compensation was above what some of the
other departments offered (not only Police but Fire as well) .
Mr. Luedtke addressed the Citizens Compensation Advisory
Committee (CCAC) report addressing employees above median market
salaries and the costly/growing pay issue . Councilmember
Mendenhall asked for a comparison between the significance of the
benchmark jobs on the CCAC report and this report. Mr. Salazar
said it was the group of benchmarks along with additional job
titles and the encumbrance in those jobs . Discussion continued
regarding explanation/different interpretations of percentages for
employees above median market salaries .
Ms . Gust-Jensen said in past years the pay scale increased
along with pay increases and asked if this was still the current
practice. Mr. Salazar replied historically ranges were admirable
compared to market median salary and it was not necessary to make
an adjustment in the pay range. He said what needed to be done was
adjusting the pay of employees in order to make that more
competitive with market salaries .
Mr. Luedtke addressed pay-range adjustments and stated there
was no policy governing when pay ranges were changed. He said the
City' s compensation plan was silent on the matter and the Council
could decide if they wanted to put in a policy governing when pay
ranges should be moved. Councilmember Fowler asked for explanation
regarding the effect of moving a pay range . Discussion followed
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regarding current practices of adjusting pay ranges .
Councilmember Wharton asked about increasing counseling
sessions for Public Safety employees with Post Traumatic Stress
Disorder (PTSD) . Mr. Garcia explained the new Employee Assistance
Program (EAP) expansion called "Salt Lake City Strong" would
increase counseling sessions for Public Safety employees and their
dependents (8 to 15 sessions) . Ms . Langford shared further details
on the program expansion and addressed additional questions .
Councilmember Johnson asked for further information as the program
moved forward. Councilmember Luke thanked Staff for their work on
the program and said the Council would be interested to hear if
there were additional ideas to expand the program.
Councilmember Mendenhall shared her views/concerns in
addressing elected official compensation. Councilmember Johnston
agreed with Councilmember Mendenhall' s comments and reiterated
this was a difficult process and said he was willing to further
discuss the issue . Councilmember Luke said he had concerns
discussing this issue so soon after recently voting to increase
sales tax and believed timing was important in this matter.
Councilmember Wharton addressed gender pay equity and asked
if the Employees' University was designed to assist with the issue
to bring down the 7% gap. Mr. Garcia said he was happy to take
this back to the Employees' University Board to see what could be
done collectively/offered.
Councilmember Kitchen joined the meeting at 1 : 41 p .m.
#6 . 4:38:53PM BRIEFING REGARDING THE PROPOSED COMMUNITY AND
NEIGHBORHOOD DEVELOPMENT BUDGET FOR FISCAL YEAR 2018-19. View
Attachments
Mike Reberg, Brent Beck, John Vuyk, Jennifer Bruno, and
Allison Rowland briefed the Council with attachments . Mr. Beck
discussed the department budget, division budget, funding sources,
key budget changes (including proposed reductions) and proposed
sales tax changes .
Councilmember Rogers questioned why Hive Pass marketing was
proposed as a reduction (specifically with all the transportation
coming on-line) . Mr. Beck replied budget cuts with the least impact
had been selected; however, he said they were planning a thorough
overview of the Hive Pass during the fiscal year. Councilmember
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Rogers requested Hive Pass marketing be marked for discussion when
moving forward with "Funding Our Future" (sales tax) discussions .
Councilmember Mendenhall also added a request for coordination
information (where marketing was currently happening, including
geographically) and to share that kind of distribution overlaying
with the bus routes currently being discussed.
Discussion was held regarding the General Fund operating
process . Councilmember Fowler requested the funding transfer from
RDA (roughly $2 million) into the General Fund (to be used for
homeless services for Community and Neighborhoods (CAN) ) be noted
in the budget to assist with future discussions on homelessness .
Further discussion continued regarding the vacant Engineering
position.
Mr. Reberg reviewed division highlights including Civic
Engagement, Facilitation training, events scheduling for community
outreach, and a new online survey tool (Qualtrics) . He went on to
discuss Building Services data such as an increased permit
applications, issued permits, inspections, and valuations . He also
noted the building permit plan review decreased from an average of
114 days to 59 days (from 2015 to 2017) for a plan review.
Discussion followed regarding challenging outliers throughout the
development application/permit process (lag time) , concern with
justifying use of increased sales tax funding, and concern with
the Northwest Quadrant in relation to Senate Bill 234 and the 60
day timeline for plan reviews . Councilmember Mendenhall requested
the Administration create greater permitting efficiencies for
affordable housing developments .
Mr. Reberg discussed the Planning Division' s workload stats
which included increased applications, appeals, ordinance
interpretations, new construction in historical districts, planned
developments, and sales tax funding implementation. Councilmember
Mendenhall instructed Council Members to send any questions they
had to Ms . Rowland.
#7 . 3:01:29PM BRIEFING REGARDING THE PROPOSED NON-DEPARTMENTAL
FUND BUDGET FOR FISCAL YEAR 2018-19, WHICH ACCOUNTS FOR TRANSFERS
TO OTHER FUNDS, GRANTS AND OTHER SPECIAL REVENUE FUNDS THAT DO NOT
BELONG TO PARTICULAR CITY DEPARTMENTS . View Attachments
Russell Weeks, Mary Beth Thompson, John Vuyk, and Mayor
Biskupski briefed the Council with attachments . Ms . Thompson
provided an overview saying the non-departmental budged was a very
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large fund which included everything that did not fit anywhere
else (City memberships, transfers from the General Fund to other
funds (Capital Improvement Program (CIP) , Information Management
Systems (IMS) , Governmental Immunity, and Risk Management) .
Mr. Weeks reviewed Staff policy questions . He stated two
requests had recently been made to the Council office : 1) from the
Downtown Alliance for additional funding (to raise the proposed
appropriations from $150, 000 to $200, 000) and 2) from the Salt
Lake Legal Defenders Association for additional funding (to
restore money to their budget allocation) . Councilmember Fowler
disclosed she worked for the Salt Lake Legal Defenders Association
and explained her involvement with the organization.
Councilmember Rogers said he was in favor of: considering a
contingent appropriation on the proposed $91, 000 for the phased
creation of an Arts Division (to allow follow-up to occur within
a certain timeframe in order for the Administration to access the
funds) and discussing with the Mayor the strategy of how City
lobbyists would be deployed to address legislative issues . Further
discussion continued regarding City lobbyists .
Councilmember Wharton inquired about the proposed funding
increase for Animal Services . He said he had received feedback
from residents requesting more of a presence for animal control
enforcement in District 3 . Mayor Biskupski said the increase was
due to inflation and the City would receive the same amount of
services . Discussion continued regarding the potential of added
services to the Animal Services Contract.
Councilmember Wharton asked about the timeline to phase in
the proposed creation of an Arts Division in the Department of
Economic Development . Mayor Biskupski said this matter arose
following a piece of legislation addressing the gray area of non-
profits and government . She said the Administration was also trying
to gain more ground in arts and culture.
Councilmember Mendenhall questioned the proposed funding for
Legal Defenders . Mr. Vyuk said a 22% funding increase request was
received from the Legal Defenders . He said the cause of the
increase was related to the addition of police officers into the
system. Discussion continued regarding the proposed funding
increase.
Councilmember Mendenhall asked Staff to add funding for Legal
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Defenders and the Council Lobbyist discussion to unresolved issues
for future discussion.
Councilmember Mendenhall discussed the funding request from
the Downtown Alliance Safety Ambassadors program. She said she
supported continued education about the progress of the program
and also supported fully funding it. Councilmember Kitchen
commented about the program and said he would also like to see it
fully funded. Councilmember Mendenhall asked Staff to add this
item to unresolved issues as well .
Mr. Weeks said conducting a customer survey on how people
were being treated by ground transportation businesses in the City
would be helpful . He continued to say that ground transportation
was a complaint-driven industry and the Council office had not
received a complaint in months . He said Staff was concerned if the
allocated funding for Airport Ground Transportation Enforcement in
the City was cut, what would happen to the Department of Airports
enforcement of off-site ground transportation enforcement.
Councilmember Rogers said he would support funding a survey;
however, he wanted more information on how the survey would be
conducted.
#8 . 3:38:05 PM BRIEFING REGARDING THE PROPOSED INFORMATION
MANAGEMENT SERVICES (IMS) BUDGET FOR FISCAL YEAR 2018-19 . THE
DEPARTMENT PROVIDES TECHNICAL SUPPORT FOR THE CITY. View
Attachments
Kira Luke, Greg Daly, Mary Beth Thompson, and John Vuyk
briefed the Council with attachments . Mr. Daly reviewed the IMS
recommended budget request including security upgrades, City staff
computer replacements, network/hardware purchases, licensing fee
increases, and personnel changes .
Councilmember Rogers asked how IMS could help inform the
City' s small cell wireless facilities of the City' s ordinance and
policies to advance development of infrastructure for a `connected
city' . Mr. Daily responded that IMS was not involved in discussion
about incentivizing the position of carrier equipment. He provided
an overview of the need for small cell antennas throughout the
City. Discussion continued regarding IMS and Economic Development
working together concerning the economic potential with 5G
Networks . Councilmember Kitchen asked Staff to send the Council
any information they received regarding 5G Networks .
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Councilmember Rogers complimented the changes and quicker
processing of queues in the 'City Sourced' app (for service/fix it
requests) and asked how IMS would continue improvements . Mr. Daly
replied 'City Sourced' was a component of the Constituent Resource
Management (CRM) project and provided an overview of the process .
Councilmember Kitchen inquired about the City' s network
(current context and vulnerabilities) . Mr. Daily stated it was
tough to know where vulnerabilities lie until you have been
successfully attacked. He explained further details regarding the
City' s current network status . Councilmember Kitchen said he
wanted to further discuss this matter with Mr. Daily.
Councilmember Kitchen asked if IMS was aware of grant
opportunities . Mr. Daily said they did not have knowledge of all
possibilities . Councilmember Kitchen said he wanted to hear from
the Administration if there were any missed opportunities .
Councilmember Mendenhall asked about a Geographic Information
System (GIS) assessment (a layering of/data source to indicate
changes in a community) and if/when it was likely to happen. Mr.
Daly talked about the specifics of establishing/creating this type
of data. He said if it was a Council priority, IMS would coordinate
as necessary and plan for the delivery of information. Discussion
followed regarding the CRM project and the correlation to GIS/data
sources . Ms . Gust-Jenson suggested a future policy discussion
concerning IMS and the centralizing/sharing of data. Council
Members agreed to hold a future policy discussion regarding the
centralization conversation of IMS . Councilmember Mendenhall asked
the Administration along with Mr. Daily to explore the data concept
of change potential (in the community) around Homeless Resource
Centers (HRCs) and Accessory Dwelling Units (ADUs) in the future.
#9. 4:03:05 PM Tentative Break
#10 . 4:26:31 PM BRIEFING REGARDING THE PROPOSED GOVERNMENTAL
IMMUNITY BUDGET FOR FISCAL YEAR 2018-19, WHICH IS THE CITY' S SELF-
INSURANCE FUND FOR LIABILITY CLAIMS . View Attachments
Russell Weeks, Tamra Turpin, and Margaret Plane briefed the
Council with attachments . Ms . Turpin said the Governmental
Immunity Budget was the fund from which the City paid self-insured
claims (general and auto liability) . She provided an overview and
said the funding increase requested was to restore the
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Governmental Immunity Fund balance and to transfer two full-time
equivalents from the Attorneys office to the Governmental Immunity
Budget. Ms . Plane further explained the Attorney' s office was
trying to correct the cost of services and determine how many
employees would be paid out of the Immunity Fund versus the General
Fund (costs were paid out of the Enterprise Fund) in order to
shift costs for services accurately.
Councilmember Wharton asked if the current funding level for
Government Immunity was adequate, if other revenue needed to be
considered, and if more money was needed for Risk Management . Ms .
Plane replied one issue (residing in different places) was the
on-going need for departments to inspect, maintain and fund (an
important aspect) their own facility. She said in terms of
determining how much should be in reserve, Staff worked with the
actuary to provide needed information and to set the amount to
hold in reserves . Further discussion continued regarding the
ability to do a levy (property tax) and the process (if needed to
pay a large judgement) , excess liability policy, breakdown of the
requested funding increase, and overview of the Annual Litigation
Report.
#11 . 2:16:05PM BRIEFING REGARDING THE PROPOSED GOLF FUND BUDGET
FOR FISCAL YEAR 2018-19 . View Attachments
Nole Walkingshaw, Matt Kammeyer, Allison Rowland, and Lisa
Shaffer briefed the Council with attachments . Mr. Walkinshaw
discussed golf revenue and intentions needing to be considered
(how to: increase revenue, bring golf up, and making golf more
sustainable) . He said the next appropriate steps to pursue were
Requests For Proposals (RFPs) for Nibley Park and Rose Park golf
courses with the intent to increase revenues and increase access
to public spaces . Mr. Walkingshaw further explained the RFPs,
potential opportunities associated with each golf course, and
addressed additional questions . Councilmember Fowler said she
liked the proposals and it was a great way to start looking at
open space . Councilmember Wharton said he was open to the multi-
use proposals . He said as the proposals go forward he wanted to be
sure and hear from communities surrounding the golf courses .
Councilmember Kitchen asked for specification on how many
residents utilized the golf courses last year or were projected to
use it this year. Mr. Kammeyer said roughly 8-10% of the City
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population used the golf courses . Discussion continued concerning
the Golf Fund deficiency, the importance of knowing how many
residents actually benefit from the program if subsidizing
continued, and comparing the gap in Fleet with the gap in Golf
(prioritizing one over other the other) .
Councilmember Fowler requested the percentages of population
that use the Tracy Aviary versus the Sorensen Community Center and
also number comparisons (numbers of others who pay to use
facilities versus free-to-use facilities) . Discussion continued
regarding comparison of parks maintenance versus golf maintenance
and moving the golf deficient to the General Fund.
Councilmember Wharton inquired what the economic impact of
golf was in the City (was Salt Lake City a golf destination, if
golf courses were subsidized would there be other ways to get back
revenue) and asked if there was a way to obtain the data. Ms .
Shaffer said she would get back to the Council with that
information. Councilmember Rogers spoke about continued/on-going
construction projects throughout the Rose Park Golf Course and the
effects to rounds played there . Councilmember Rogers asked if
anyone on the Council wanted to see golf operate outside of an
enterprise fund. Council Members Wharton and Luke said more
information was needed before a decision could be made.
Councilmember Mendenhall mentioned the `Guiding Policy
Principles for Changes to the Golf Enterprise Fund' the Council
had previously created. She said she did not want it to lose the
context the Administration had been asked to find solutions for
and that it could be revisited in a future meeting. She asked the
Administration to look at the policy and bring the Council some
solutions .
Councilmember Luke said he appreciated Councilmember
Mendenhall highlighting the Policy Principles the Council had put
together. He said what needed to be addressed was long-term Golf
Fund issues and what took place with Wingponte Golf Course. He
said transferring Wingponte to the Airport was a life-support
effort to keep the course going but did not work as hoped and it
would now cost millions of dollars to do anything with Wingponte
because of the rash decision to close it down. He said we have had
policy discussion about not supplementing the General Fund money
to the Golf Enterprise Fund (which he voted for and continued to
support) . He said he was interested in seeing different ideas to
keep moving forward but if it came down to not using General Fund
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money (which would close a golf course) he was not willing to make
that decision (let alone have the discussion) . Councilmember
Fowler spoke about the Policy Principles and said a lot of them
applied to the Rose Park Golf Course/area. She said she believed
it was time to start investing in the area. She said another thing
to consider was that Bonneville Golf Course actually had a trail
running through its golf course . She spoke about multi-use golf
courses and said she looked forward to having them.
Councilmember Mendenhall said she heard about the challenges
Rose Park Golf Course had faced (proximity to the sewage treatment
plant) . She said she had also heard reference to the amenity part
and making it a community asset . She said if there was desire to
invest in the Rose Park area then there should be a parks plan and
complete study to figure out what kind of a park would work there.
Councilmember Rogers stated the difficulties for the Rose Park
Golf Course had come from construction/sewer lines running through
the facility. He said it all goes back to what the community
wanted. He said they were given the opportunity to discuss a park
and they did not want a park. He said it would be a hard sell to
go back and present a multi-use golf course to the community but
that was something he was willing to do.
Councilmember Mendenhall said there was the legal reality of
Enterprise Funds needing to be self-sustaining and the need to
talk about dividing Rose Park from the Golf Fund in order to make
it more functional . Councilmember Rogers suggested adding
discussion to eliminate the Golf Enterprise Fund.
Councilmember Luke said the trail going through Bonneville
Golf Course was actually Wasatch Drive which was a controversial
issue and was currently being discussed.
#12 . BRIEFING REGARDING AN ORDINANCE THAT WOULD REZONE
PROPERTY ADJACENT TO THE SALT LAKE CITY INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT
TERMINALS AND RUNWAYS FROM OPEN SPACE (OS) , COMMERCIAL CORRIDOR
(CC) , AND BUSINESS PARK (BP) TO AIRPORT (A) . The nearly 489 acres
of land located south of the airport includes the former Wingpointe
Golf Course, which was closed in 2015. The Airport director has
not specified the intended long-term use for the property. If the
zoning amendment is approved, the entire property could be used
for any use allowed in the airport zone. The planning commission,
which reviews all requests for rezones and text amendments,
forwarded a negative recommendation to the council . View
Attachments
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Item not held.
#13 . 5:41:36 PM BRIEFING REGARDING THE CITY' S FUNDING NEEDS AND
REVENUE OPTIONS, INCLUDING THE RECENTLY-APPROVED 0 . 5 PERCENT SALES
TAX INCREASE AND A POSSIBLE GENERAL OBLIGATION BOND. New revenue
from the sales tax increase could be used toward streets
maintenance, transit, neighborhood safety, and affordable housing.
The Council's will discussion the mayor's proposal for sales tax
allocations and a demonstration of the accountability dashboard,
among other things. View Attachments
Lehua Weaver, Elizabeth Buehler, Mary Beth Thompson, Melissa
Jensen, Jonathon Larsen, and Mike Reberg briefed the Council with
attachments . Ms . Thompson reviewed the sales tax detail (year one
funding) from the Mayor' s recommended budget, with an estimated
$25 million in anticipated revenue proposed to spend towards
Neighborhood Safety, Infrastructure, Housing and Transit.
Councilmember Fowler commented there were Fire Department
programs which could also benefit from the funding and questioned
why it was not included with the proposed Neighborhood Safety
funding. She said she wanted to see it considered moving forward
because it would take some of the burden off of the Police
Department. Ms . Weaver replied Staff was tracking Council
scenarios/interests in a spreadsheet and anticipated to have it
ready next week.
Councilmember Luke suggested moving the Planner position from
Street (infrastructure) to Housing because he believed there was
more of a need to have the Planning Department involved with the
Housing discussion as opposed to Infrastructure. Mr. Reberg said
he agreed and believed it was an error in placement.
Councilmember Johnston asked if there was opposition from the
Council to set the expected Fund Balance contribution amount from
10o to 11% . Ms . Bruno said Staff would include it with the Council
scenarios for discussion/review. Councilmember Luke said it would
be good to discuss the Fund Balance; however, it was also important
to realize there were other areas (CIP) which were consistently
underfunded as well .
Ms . Jensen reviewed funding details for the Housing portion of
the recommended budget and said it was important to address the
housing crisis in multiple ways : including shared housing
opportunities, incentivized rent programs, down-payment
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assistance, support/enhance service models for the most
vulnerable, and expedited processing system for new affordable
housing-unit developers . Discussion followed regarding coupling
funding/funding sources and Community Land Trust funding practice.
Councilmember Fowler said she wanted to have a policy discussion
about contributing/setting an expected funding percentage into the
Community Land Trust and to help increase home ownership.
Councilmember Fowler asked if there was a different/better way
to spend $400, 000 of tax payer money for affordable housing rather
than creating an expedited processing system for developers of new
affordable housing units . Ms . Jensen replied it was in response to
the developer community and the need to incentivize housing.
Councilmember Fowler asked if the expedited processing system
could be off-set in an already current/existing process .
Councilmember Luke questioned the funding for the $250, 000 for
Parks Capital Replacement in Infrastructure. Ms . Thompson replied
it was for some sidewalk replacement and asset replacement
(deferred maintenance) within Parks .
Mr. Larsen further reviewed funding details for the Transit
portion of the recommended budget including Fiscal Year 2017/2018
accomplishments, ongoing and future goals, and key budget
considerations . Discussion followed regarding operation of the
proposed On-demand Shared Ride service, first year metrics for
success of the On-demand Shared Ride service, and concern regarding
integration between the City and Utah Transit Authority (UTA) to
implement a seamless service.
Councilmember Mendenhall asked Staff to provide a map showing
where the On-demand Shared Ride services corridor would overlap in
the City.
#14 . 6:21:06PM INTERVIEW LINDA WARDELL PRIOR TO CONSIDERING HER
APPOINTMENT TO THE BUSINESS ADVISORY BOARD FOR A TERM EXTENDING
THROUGH DECEMBER 31, 2018, STARTING FROM THE DATE OF ADVICE AND
CONSENT. View Attachments
Councilmember Mendenhall said Ms . Wardell' s name was on the
Consent Agenda for formal consideration.
#15 . 6:27:42PM INTERVIEW WASIM KHUDHAIR PRIOR TO CONSIDERING HIS
APPOINTMENT TO THE HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSION FOR A TERM EXTENDING
THROUGH MAY 15 , 2022 . View Attachments
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Councilmember Mendenhall said Mr. Khudhair' s name was on the
Consent Agenda for formal consideration.
#16 . 6:30:32 PM INTERVIEW LUNA BANURI PRIOR TO CONSIDERING HER
APPOINTMENT TO THE HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSION FOR A TERM EXTENDING
THROUGH MAY 15 , 2022 . View Attachments
Councilmember Mendenhall said Ms . Banuri' s name was on the
Consent Agenda for formal consideration.
#17 . REPORT OF THE EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, INCLUDING A REVIEW OF
COUNCIL INFORMATION ITEMS AND ANNOUNCEMENTS .
Item not held.
#18 . REPORT OF THE CHAIR AND VICE CHAIR.
No discussion was held.
#19 . 6:37:49 PM CONSIDER A MOTION TO ENTER INTO CLOSED SESSION,
IN KEEPING WITH UTAH CODE §52-4-205 FOR ANY ALLOWED PURPOSE .
Councilmember Fowler moved and Councilmember Johnston seconded
to enter into Closed Session to discuss strategy sessions to
discuss collective bargaining pursuant to Utah Code §52-4-
205 (1) (b) . A roll call vote was taken. Council Members Rogers,
Fowler, Johnston, Kitchen, and Wharton voted aye. See File M 18-1
for Sworn Statements .
In Attendance: Council Members Rogers, Fowler, Johnston, Kitchen,
and Wharton .
Absent: Council Members Mendenhall and Luke.
Others in Attendance: Cindy Gust-Jenson, Benjamin Luedtke, David
Litvack, Jaysen Oldroyd, Jennifer Bruno, Lehua Weaver, Margaret
Plane, Patrick Leary, DeeDee Robinson, and Kory Solorio.
The Closed Session adjourned at 7 : 07 p.m.
The Work Session meeting adjourned at 7 : 07 p.m.
COUNCIL CHAIR
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MINUTES OF THE SALT LAKE CITY COUNCIL WORK SESSION MEETING
TUESDAY, MAY 15 , 2018
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 May
15, 2018 .
ks
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