09/04/2018 - Work Session - Minutes MINUTES OF THE SALT LAKE CITY COUNCIL WORK SESSION MEETING
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4 , 2018
The City Council met in Work Session on Tuesday, September 4, 2018,
in Room 326, Committee Room, City County Building, 451 South State
Street.
In Attendance: Council Members Andrew Johnston, Erin Mendenhall,
Charlie Luke, Chris Wharton, Amy Fowler, James Rogers, and Derek
Kitchen.
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; Margaret Plane, City Attorney; Russell Weeks, Council
Senior Advisor; Mary Beth Thompson, Finance Director; Allison
Rowland, Council Policy and Budget Analyst; Benjamin Luedtke,
Council Public Policy Analyst; Todd Reeder, Community and Economic
Development Capital Asset Development Manager; Kristin Riker,
Public Lands Deputy Director; Sam Owen, Council Constituent
Liaison and Policy Analyst; Mike Brown, Police Chief; Jennifer
Schumann, Housing and Neighborhood Development Program Manager;
Laura Briefer, Public Utilities Director; Lynn Pace, Mayor' s
Senior Advisor; Randy Hillier, Finance Budget and Policy Analyst;
Robert McMicken, Fire Deputy Chief; Lani Eggertson-Goff, Housing
and Neighborhood Development Deputy Director; Jennifer Seelig,
Mayor' s Director of Community Empowerment; and Kory Solorio,
Assistant City Recorder.
Guests in Attendance: Sim Gill, Salt Lake County District Attorney;
Cameron Diehl, Utah League of Cities and Towns Executive Director;
Natalie Gochnour, Gardner Policy Institute Executive Director; and
Alan Matheson, Utah Department of Environmental Quality Executive
Director.
Councilmember Mendenhall presided at and conducted the
meeting.
The meeting was called to order at 2 : 07 p .m.
AGENDA ITEMS
#1 . 2:07:44PM BRIEFING REGARDING LEGISLATIVE INTENT STATEMENTS
FOR FISCAL YEAR 2018-19 . Legislative Intents are formal requests
the Council makes of the Administration that are adopted along
with the annual budget. This briefing will consist of conversations
with the Administration designed to exchange preliminary
information and feedback. Among other items, the Legislative
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Intents include: streamlining the building permits process; an
inventory of the City's surplus land; and two items related to the
recent sales tax increase—a report on the progress of affordable
housing programs, and a broadening of the definition of public
safety to allow funding of items beyond the Police Department.
View Attachments
a. Performance Measures for Homeless Services Funding
2:08:28PM Allison Rowland, Randy Hillier, Jennifer Schumann,
Lani Eggertsen-Goff, and David Litvak briefed the Council with
handouts .
Councilmember Johnston said funding homeless services had
been more for emergencies; and moving forward, on-going
allocations for homeless-specific services (in the General Fund)
needed to be tied to specific needs/outcomes to ensure specified
results . Ms . Schumann said the Federal Funding process was helpful
in creating a framework to collect information and identify needs
and outcomes . She said in previous years other needs would pop up
and funding was allocated towards them. She said the City tried to
take a strategic approach and look at what funding had previously
been used. She said there were many partners that helped create
outcomes who were not tasked with reporting that data to the City,
did not receive money to do so, and whose data might not be a
format usable for a dashboard.
Mr. Litvak said he did not currently think the dashboard data
collection related to Collective Impact were synced together. He
noted there were several initiatives Salt Lake City was a part of
through the Collective Impact and other partners including the
State of Utah that were developing a system-wide homeless services
dashboard. He said the State of Utah (about a year ago) unveiled
a Statewide dashboard and their administration was currently
working with the Brigham Young University (BYU) Romney Institute
on a much more tactical dashboard where the Collective Impact
provided (particularly) to the Shelter the Homeless Board. He said
the Board would then have data that would allow them to adjust
programing and funding on a regular basis .
Councilmember Johnston said the State dashboard was a
homeless management information system based on Federal guidelines
which had clear and succinct outcomes, one of which was the amount
of time spent in emergency shelter. He further discussed the State
dashboard and tracking the amount of time spent in homeless
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shelters/using homeless services . He said he believed the County
and State were the funders of homeless services (behavioral health)
and the City was doing things that were not being done by anyone
else (targeted to the City' s specific needs) .
Discussion was held regarding the State dashboard, tracking
time spent in homeless shelters and use of homeless services,
interaction/collaboration with the State dashboard system (other
systems) , taking smaller amounts of money to hit funding gaps ,
and measures for deciding what to fund.
Councilmembers requested the following items from Staff:
• Combine Salt Lake County' s Collective Impact on Homelessness
process of measuring outcomes and how it would assist in the
City' s own collection of data.
• Follow-up briefing on progress with the BYU Romney School of
Business and if there was an opportunity for the City' s
Departments/Divisions to tap into and modify the system for
the City' s own specific needs with Salt Lake City proper.
• A separate meeting with the Administration to explore gap
funding.
b. Neighborhood Safety Program for Homeless Resource Centers
(HRCs)
2:27:35 PM Allison Rowland, Lani Eggertsen-Goff, Jennifer
Schumann, and Randy Hillier briefed the Council .
Councilmember Mendenhall stated the Council asked the
Administration to consider options for creating safety programs to
offset negative consequences (similar to the Downtown Ambassador
Program) to serve neighborhoods where the two HRCs were planned.
Ms . Eggertsen-Goff said Housing and Neighborhood Development
(HAND) were working with the Downtown Alliance on funding with
liaisons from the Mayor' s office for the Downtown Ambassador
Program and other issues the HRCs had planned as they came on
board.
Ms . Schumann said looking at how the Ambassador' s Program had
served the downtown area and to replicate that in HRC areas was
something that could be done but it would look and feel different .
She said the draw to the area was different versus the core
downtown area in that there were different types of businesses and
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more neighborhood residential components . Councilmember Mendenhall
expressed concern (May, 2019 HRC opening) with not funding $50, 000
of $200, 000 needed for the Downtown Ambassador Program and whether
the Administration would propose expanding the Program or
contracting with another management entity. Mr. Litvack replied
the Administration was engaged in Neighborhood Action Strategies
in a quarter/half mile radius of the new resource centers and was
looking at infrastructure needs, projects already in the pipeline,
safety, as well as things which had not been thought about in order
to have success for both individuals experiencing homelessness and
the community. He said through efforts of various Departments, the
Mayor' s office, and the Redevelopment Agency (RDA) would soon start
working with a consultant to develop the Neighborhood Action
Strategies . He said it was premature to say whether a program like
the Downtown Ambassador Program was a good fit with the specific
neighborhoods but anticipated those kinds of questions would be
asked/answered as a part of the Neighborhood Action Strategies and
they would come back to the Council with recommendations .
Councilmember Mendenhall asked about funding to hire a 24-
hour police officer at the shelters similar to the Midvale City
family shelter which had State funding to do so. Mr. Litvack
responded that funding from the Legislature the first year was
specifically for South Salt Lake City and Midvale City. He said
this fall there was a grant process for expanded cities to apply
for funding.
Councilmember Johnston said the operators of the HRCs were
responsible to implement the conditional use requirement of having
a Neighborhood Advisory Group. He recommended when the operators
were chosen, a request be made that Shelter The Homeless have the
operators start the Neighborhood Action Strategy meetings before
opening the centers to collect feedback on specific needs
identified from the businesses and neighborhoods/residents . He
said the feedback could be used as part of the initial targeting
to get information/direction of the definitive things they were
looking to get help with.
Councilmember Rogers said another community severely impacted
by Operation Rio Grande was along North Temple (near the Gateway
Inn) . He said it seemed an ambassador-like program could be
implemented there and in other hot spots (not only for HRCs) which
was another way to help communities .
Councilmember Mendenhall said she believed the Council shared
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the desire with the Administration to not respond in a knee-jerk
fashion with the opening of the HRCs and whatever the needs of the
communities were . She said the Council looked forward to hearing
about the consultant' s work.
Council Members requested the following item from Staff:
• As soon as the operators of the homeless shelters were chosen,
request Shelter the Homeless to begin Neighborhood Action
Strategy meetings before opening the HRCs to collect
neighborhood feedback for information and direction of
specific needs .
e . Prostitution Outreach Program (POP)
2:55:53PM Allison Rowland, Sim Gill, Mike Brown, and Jennifer
Seelig briefed the Council .
Councilmember Mendenhall stated the Council requested the
Administration discuss and evaluate opportunities to bring back
the POP.
Ms . Seelig stated POP was started through a Department of
Justice grant and a partnership with Salt Lake City and the Salt
Lake Valley Health Department in 2000 and ran for six months . She
said the main goal was to provide people involved in prostitution
with the resources to leave which included counseling, health
services, and housing. She said funding was allocated for research
by the University of Utah for a Human Trafficking Needs Assessment
Study and the findings were due at the end of the month. She said
a collaborative partnership might be a good tool going forward and
the Health Department was interested in engaging in
conversation/assisting; however, they indicated the program might
be more suitable under the Salt Lake County Behavioral Health Unit.
Mr. Gill provided further history of POP saying the underlying
basis for POP was for a series of programs premised on the idea of
restorative justice (repairing the injuries/crimes caused to
victims, offenders, and the communities) . He said a series of other
programs were created at the same time including the John' s
Program. He said it was discovered early on dealing with this
population focus was on issues pertaining to substance abuse and
mental health needs . He said initially, there was great success
but the continuity was limited from a long-term policy commitment
to recognize the full scoop of the issues confronting these women
(specifically transitional housing) . He spoke about using the
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Mental Health Court as an opportunity for diversion to help women
get to the core issues of their mental health needs . He said he
and Chief Brown had discussed how to look at pilot projects going
forward and were looking forward to the Human Trafficking Needs
Assessment Study for insight and other opportunities . He said field
diversions could be done on some cases by hooking victims up with
some of the community connections the City had worked on and these
cases could be tracked. He said they could certainly (from a
prosecution perspective) go ahead and participate in the diversion
if there was an opportunity for assistance; however, the challenge
was going to be on the institutional commitment for these resources
(most critically transitional housing) . Councilmember Mendenhall
stated there had never been a greater opportunity with Salt Lake
City to discuss particular housing needs for underserved
demographics .
Chief Brown stated POP was a good program which was still
needed today. He said the City had a very good Organized Crime
Unit that tried to address these problems but so many times they
were only making an arrest and that was where it was left . He said
the underlying issues/causes were probably substance abuse, mental
health issues, lack of housing, etc. He discussed the need to look
at treating the cause not the symptom. He said this was a great
opportunity for the City to work with other organizations because
this program was desperately needed on the streets . Mr. Gill talked
about the issue of commercial sex work occurring in the community
and the different categories/strategies to address them. He said
they learned there was a lack of supporting infrastructure for the
women who found themselves either homeless or without physical
health needs .
Councilmember Mendenhall stated she was grateful the
conversation had grown on a community-wide level and the City was
not the only one conversing about the need of this particular
demographic. She asked if there were any current grant
opportunities available to help with the collaboration. Mr. Gill
replied problem-solving grants were available through the
Department of Justice and it was worthwhile to explore those
options . He also suggested (if grants were not available) that the
program could be done as a pilot program project to shore up the
Community Connection Center as well as an opportunity for field
diversion on these cases . He said in a concerted way it would not
only alleviate some of the pressures in the court system, it would
also provide options to law enforcement in the field as well as a
continuity of services for the Community Connection Center. He
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said resources were there and he thought it was simply coordination
of those resources . He said there might be some additional benefits
to derive systemically by committing to this model . Chief Brown
followed-up by saying he did not think the City should wait for
funding. He said they were already doing this work and he believed
the pilot program Mr. Gill spoke about was a good thing. He
suggested connecting the dots and doing the work now.
Councilmember Mendenhall asked what was needed from the
Council to move forward (next steps) . Ms . Seelig inquired about
any outcome measures/indicators the Council was looking for to
determine success . She said it was important to wait until the
information from the Human Trafficking Needs Assessment Study was
received because it would help target resources . Councilmember
Johnston agreed it was important to wait in order to know the
scope/number being looked at and if it was housing related there
was housing and other options already in the pipeline. He said
depending on the housing, consideration could be given to
opportunities in the current homeless revamp to look at
transitional options (not permanent) . Mr. Gill said this was the
highest risk/most demanding population there was to have a
continuity of contact and availability of resources .
Council Members requested the following item from Staff:
• Schedule a meeting once the Human Trafficking Needs
Assessment Study was received to discuss the questions/gaps
identified in the report.
#2 . 2:35:47 PM BRIEFING REGARDING THE CITY'S CAPITAL
IMPROVEMENT PROGRAM. Capital Improvement Projects (CIP) 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, Todd Reeder, Kristin Riker, and Mary Beth
Thompson briefed the Council with attachments . Mr. Reeder provided
the Council with a recap of the CIP (last discussion held May,
2018) . Discussion followed regarding the CIP log and other
additional information available to assist the Council . Mr.
Luedtke reviewed highlights and policy questions from the Staff
report. He stated the total requested funding of $36 . 7 million was
1300 of available revenue .
Discussion was held regarding project funding/availablity,
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ability to spend Impact Fee funds before expiration, Police project
funding (Impact Fees) for a potential East Side Police Precinct,
how City-owned parcels could be leveraged with a list of City-
owned properties, Impact Fee eligible/insufficient impact fee
dollars (Parks projects) , Impact Fee money set aside for a downtown
park acquisition, and the potential of the Parks Division being
flexible with impact fee money to use towards projects which were
impact fee eligible.
Council Members requested the following items from Staff:
• A proposal of public/private partnerships to leverage the
City' s $3 . 4 million.
• A list of all other investments made which went much further
with downtown partners .
Councilmember Luke joined the meeting at 2 : 42 p .m.
#3 . 3:15:56PM BRIEFING REGARDING THE STATUS OF SUBCOMMITTEES
THAT WERE CONVENED AT THE DIRECTION OF THE STATE LEGISLATURE TO
STUDY WATER-RELATED ISSUES THROUGH THE SUMMER AND FALL OF 2018 .
The subcommittee study topics include: extraterritorial
jurisdiction, surplus water, a constitutional amendment and
private property rights. Recommendations on water-related
legislative proposals will be forwarded from the subcommittees to
the State Legislature when these interim studies are complete.
View Attachments
Sam Owen, Laura Briefer, Cameron Diehl, and Lynn Pace briefed
the Council with attachments . Mr. Owen stated after the 2018
General Legislative Session , the Utah Department of Natural
Resources Director convened a number of working groups
(subcommittees) to study issues that had not been resolved during
the session. He said topics included the extra-territorial
jurisdiction of Salt Lake City and other First Class cities ,
surplus water sales (constitutional amendment related to surplus
water sales) , and private property conservation. Ms . Briefer
pointed out that the conversation about water was not specific to
or exclusive to Salt Lake City. She spoke about the subcommittees
(on water policy) , meetings she attended, items discussed, and
potential proposed legislation.
Mr. Diehl provided a PowerPoint presentation. Comments
included an overview of 2018 legislation opposed by the Utah League
of Cities and Towns (ULCT) , water study groups, ULCT survey
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questions, survey results (water supply and rates) , extra-
territorial update, proposed constitutional change, and proposed
changes to water supply and surplus water. Discussion followed
regarding whether or not Salt Lake City had more than 10% of
outside users (cities) that were provided water.
Mr. Pace stated the subcommittees were required to provide
their recommendations by the end of September and after the October
Interim Legislative meetings the Council would be provided a full
report of their recommendations (including the text) .
#4 . Tentative Break
#5. 4:02:54PM HOLD A FACT-FINDING SESSION ABOUT THE INLAND
PORT. Community members and stakeholders will present on issues
pertaining to local government, sustainability, economic
development, planning for future impacts to the city budget and
city resources. Participants in the discussion may include
representatives from Utah League of Cities and Towns (ULCT) ,
Department of Environmental Quality, The Gardner Policy Institute
and representatives from various City Departments and Divisions.
This is the second of three fact-finding sessions on the Inland
Port. The next session will be held on September 11 . During the
previous discussion on August 21, the Council was provided a
general overview of the Northwest Quadrant's Inland Port Authority
Board (IPAB) , the Board's subcommittees, and the future steps for
advancing the development of the Port. View Attachments
4:03:14PM Natalie Gochnour briefed the Council . She stated the
Salt Lake Inland Port Market assessment was complete. She addressed
three particular questions the Council had asked: 1) what needed
to happen to make the Inland Port successful; 2) how the City could
help make it successful; and 3) best practices for the Inland Port
Authority to implement. She responded to all three questions with
the same answer (2 components) : 1) the Inland Port effort needed
a unified vision, and 2) supported by the best technical support
available. Further comments included the City being a full partner
in creating the vision and ensuring the IPAB had the superb
technical support to create the vision, State/City partnership
investing in data and analysis, limiting controversy by investing
in data driven analytics that help inform a vision, City using
their influence as a major partner on the IPAB and being the
Capital City to encourage the investment in data collection and
analysis to create the right vision for the community, and no value
in perpetual fighting between the City and the State.
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4:07:45PM Councilmember Mendenhall provided an introduction
regarding the Inland Port fact-finding sessions and what she hoped
the outcome was .
4:11:20PM Ms. Gochnour further commented on available technical
support, upcoming Request-For-Proposal (RFP) for support of a
business plan to help with the formation of the Inland Port,
recommending to the IPAB that there was incredible local expertise
to form a technical team to support the Board (a different endeavor
than the RFP) , and looking at scenarios of Ports before building
the business plan. Discussion followed regarding conversations
between the Gardner Policy Institute (GPI) and the State regarding
the potential to participate in a scenario vision process,
appropriate engagement process for the development of a business
plan, how the Gardner Policy Institute could help engage the
public/interest groups, how the GPI could help others communicate
with the public, opportunities identified in the Salt Lake Inland
Port Market assessment, a 5/10 year vision of what to look for to
tell if the process was working/not working, how to stop
current/urgent global opportunities before having a business plan
developed, timeline to accelerate a technical analysis, timeline
for the business plan, identify Executive Director' s role in the
process, and potential of the GPI providing a similar presentation
to the IPAB.
4:47:39PM Mayor Biskupski briefed the Council . She addressed
concerns regarding the rush to address current global
opportunities and closed door meetings of the IPAB. Comments
included concern regarding current/continued closed door Board
meetings, voting on items not listed on an agenda, and the Council
sending a letter to the IPAB requesting they open all meetings and
the agenda reflect all items being voted on. Discussion followed
regarding Staff assisting the Board with meetings, letter sent to
the IPAB by Lara Fritts, Director of the Department of Economic
Development (addressing the Utah Open and Public Meetings
Act/listing all topics being consider on the agenda) , and how the
subcommittees could keep the public informed if they were not able
to comply with the Open and Public Meetings Act.
4:57:05PM Cameron Diehl briefed the Council . He addressed why
the ULCT supported the Inland Port compromised legislation and the
current position of developing the Inland Port and where it was a
year ago. Comments included the overall concern at the Legislature
was that cities were obstacles to progress and growth,
transportation in Utah and the Transportation Task Force, what the
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City was learning that that could be shared with other cities about
public engagement, letter the ULCT submitted to Governor Herbert
(the week of the Special Legislative Session) addressing issues
fellow cities were concerned about, significant improvement of
proposed legislation, more local government representation on the
IPAB, and constitutionality and precedence language . Discussion
followed regarding how the ULCT would track county benefits as the
Inland Port developed, concern of a precedent being set, concern
with the Legislature acting like a city council/planning
commission, and how the ULCT was pushing back on the narrative (at
the State level) that local governments were the hindrance to
economic progress .
5:21:08PM Alan Matheson briefed the Council . He addressed the
Inland Port and the intersection with environmental issues .
Comments included the announcement of the IPAB and the
concerns/questions which were raised, development in a sensitive
environmental (areas with environmental concerns) , environmental
progress made as a State, challenges to develop the Inland Port in
a way that addressed economic promise and provided human health
and environment benefits, role of the Department of Environmental
Quality (DEQ) , and a sustainability plan. Discussion followed
regarding potential short-term (1-5 years) possible errors, how to
help the community understand potential impacts, budget proposal,
navigating conversations (example electric transportation
infrastructure) of upfront investments which would have an impact
on air quality and economically, how the DEQ (from a staff
perspective) would support the process they were obliged to
participate in, realities of needed monitoring, and
incentives/dis-incentives to ensure the goals of a sustainability
plan.
5:49:43PM Jennifer Bruno provided an overview on the status of
the Inland Port legislation. Comments included boundary in terms
of jurisdictional land, IPAB' s land use appeal authority, aligned
terminology and process with existing State land use code, tax
increment/tax differential, IPAB composition, and environmental
concerns . Discussion followed regarding reimbursement of Staff
time for rezones and other preparatory services .
STANDING ITEMS
#6 . 3:39:24PM 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
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Council business, including but not limited to scheduling items.
See File M 18-5 for announcements .
#7 . 5:59:13 PM REPORT OF THE CHAIR AND VICE CHAIR.
Councilmember Mendenhall said this was a follow-up from last
week' s discussion of the funding gap in the construction budget
for the Homeless Resource Centers as a request for fee waiver (over
half a million dollars) and the Council' s reluctance to set a
precedence of fee waivers . She said it was discussed to do part of
the request as an impact fee waiver in the affordable housing
realm; however, it turned out that could not be done . She said
part of the contribution for the request could be included in the
open budget amendment. She asked if the Council wanted to take an
extra step and require a Public Benefits Analysis (which was not
required) for the contribution; and if so, the Administration would
need to conduct a Public Benefits Statement to submit to the
Council .
Discussion followed questioning if a Public Benefits Analysis
had already been submitted with the request . Councilmember Wharton
proposed that a Public Benefits Analysis be completed for donation
of the requested fee waiver. There were no objections from Council
Members .
Ms . Bruno said based on this direction, Staff would work with
the Attorney' s Office to get a Public Benefits Analysis drafted
and the Council could make a decision at a later date if the funds
were approved. Councilmember Mendenhall asked Council Members to
speak with Staff regarding any concerns they had. She said this
item would be on a future agenda and a public hearing would be
held.
#8 . 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 6 : 04 p .m.
COUNCIL CHAIR
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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
September 4, 2018 .
ks
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