11/10/2022 - Work Session - MinutesThe City Council of Salt Lake City, Utah, met in Work Session on Thursday, November 10,
2022.
The following Council Members were present:
Amy Fowler, Darin Mano, Chris Wharton, Daniel Dugan, Victoria Petro, Alejandro Puy
Present Legislative leadership:
Cindy Gust-Jenson, Executive Director; Jennifer Bruno, Deputy Director; Lehua
Weaver, Associate Deputy Director
Present Administrative leadership:
Rachel Otto, Chief of Staff; Lisa Shaffer, Chief Administrative Officer
Present City Staff:
Ben Luedtke – Senior Public Policy Analyst, Brian Fullmer – Constituent Liaison, Policy
Analyst, Cindy Lou Trishman – Salt Lake City Recorder, Andrew Johnston – Director of
Homelessness Policy and Outreach, Michelle Barney – Minutes & Records Clerk, Sam Owen –
Public Policy Analyst, Taylor Hill – Constituent Liaison/Policy Analyst, Mary Beth Thompson –
Chief Financial Officer, Isaac Canedo – Public Engagement Communication Specialist, Thais
Stewart – Deputy City Recorder, Wayne Mills – Planning Manager, Lindsey Nikola – Deputy
Chief of Staff, Kaletta Lynch – Senior Advisor - Mayor's Office, Moana Uluave-Hafoka –
Community Liason, Jonathan Larsen – Director of Transportation, Joe Taylor – Transportation
Planner III, Brady Fredrickson – Director of Airport Planning & Capital Programming,
Christopher Thomas – Senior Energy Climate Program Manager, Katie Lewis – City Attorney,
Michelle Mooney – Executive Assistant
Council Member Dugan presided at and conducted the meeting.
The meeting was called to order at 3:05 pm
MINUTES OF THE SALT LAKE CITY COUNCIL
Thursday, November 10, 2022
1
Work Session Items
1.Informational: Updates from the Administration ~ 3:30 p.m.
30 min.
The Council will receive information from the Administration on major items or projects
in progress. Topics may relate to major events or emergencies (if needed), services and
resources related to people experiencing homelessness, active public engagement efforts,
and projects or staffing updates from City Departments, or other items as appropriate.
Council Member Dugan welcomed everyone to the meeting and thanked all service
members for their service to the country.
Lindsey Nikola reviewed health updates, including:
• COVID-19 cases were up across the US 7% and in Utah 61%
• Differences between booster shots
• Locations for vaccinations
• Metrics as of November 10, 2022
• Case counts over time
• Waste Reclamation pick up data
• Monkey Pox Update – slight increase
• FLU/RSV update – vaccinations being key
• Germ watch with Intermountain Healthcare website
Lisa Shaffer presented the update on Public Engagement, including:
• Public Engagement www.slc.gov/feedback/
• Public Utilities
◦ Water Reclamation Facility (city-wide) – construction underway
◦ Tanner Reservoir (city-wide) – public engagement plan being developed
◦ City Creek Water Treatment Plant Upgrade (city-wide) – engagement begins
in November 2022
• Public Lands
◦ Gateway Triangle Park Project (D2) – survey closed
• Planning
◦ Shelter Zoning (city-wide) – Open House November 10, 2022- Planning
Commission expected December 14, 2022
◦ Northpoint Small Area Plan (D1) – tabled by the Planning Commission on
October 26, 2022
◦ Accessory Dwelling Unit Modifications (city-wide) – Transmitted to the City
Council
◦ Affordable Housing Incentives (city-wide) – holding focus groups
◦ Community and Neighborhoods
◦ Thriving in Place (city-wide) – Planning Commission on November 16, 2022
– City Council mid-December
• Transportation
◦ 2100 South Reconstruction (D7) – December 6, 2022, business and property
owner workshop
MINUTES OF THE SALT LAKE CITY COUNCIL
Thursday, November 10, 2022
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◦ Capitol Hill Traffic Calming (D3) – concepts were being finalized
◦ Neighborhood Byway Projects (D 5,7,1) – initial engagement has closed
◦ Sugar House Projects (Local Link) (D7) – presentations in Holladay and
Millcreek
◦ West Temple Reconstruction (D3, 4) – stake holder meetings beginning
◦ I-15 Environmental Impact Statement – Alternatives Open Houses and
Comment Period – November 10 – December 16, 2022
• Sugar House Fire
• Mayor’s Office – November 2022 Community Office Hours
• 2023 ACE Fund now accepting applications
• Upcoming events
◦ Winter Farmer’s market – weekly starting November 12, 2022 – April 15,
2023
◦ Park Rangers Jingle and Mingle – November 18, 2022, December 2, 9 and
23, 2022
Andrew Johnston provided the update on homelessness:
• Current and overflow shelter capacities
• Shelter contact and intake information
• Accessing Homeless Resource Centers (HRCs)
• Winter Emergency Shelter information
• Rescue Plan Community Grants
• Transportation and Land Use Connections (TLC) grant through Wasatch Front
Regional Council
• Key City-owned properties will be out for RFI specifically to promote economic
opportunity on the Westside
2.Informational: Equity Update ~ 4:00 p.m.
20 min.
The Council will hold a discussion about various initiatives led by the City's Office of
Equity and Inclusion. These initiatives include, but are not limited to, improving racial
equity and justice in policing. Discussion may also include updates on the City's other
work to achieve equitable service delivery, decision-making, and community engagement
through the Citywide Equity Plan, increased ADA resources, language access, and other
topics addressed in the ongoing work of the Human Rights Commission and the Racial
Equity in Policing Commission.
Kaletta Lynch presented the plan for Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion, highlighting:
•Staffing updates:
◦ New Chief Equity Officer search was underway
◦ New Policy Advisor for Refugees and New Americans, Roxana Orellana
◦ New Know Your Neighbor Volunteer Coordinator, Kristen Hansen
◦ Job posting currently open for candidates to apply on HR’s websites for the
Language Access Coordinator position
◦ Equity Manager Transition December 2022
MINUTES OF THE SALT LAKE CITY COUNCIL
Thursday, November 10, 2022
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•City-wide Equity Plan update:
◦ Keen Independent Research team concluded meetings, workshops and
surveys, reviewed and organized all feedback, analyzed data and completed
related literature reviews to be included in the plan with recommendations
of best practices
◦ Draft plan will be presented to the GARE Ambassadors, Cabinet Members
and City Staff over the next two weeks for revisions and feedback
◦ Equity plan was forthcoming to the Mayor and City Council for review
Michelle Mooney reviewed the Racial Equity In Policing Commission (REP) update:
• ◦ Phase II – review, adoption, and implementation of Phase I
recommendations, outlined in the Phase I Report
◦ REP Commissioners and Salt Lake City Police Department (SLCPD)
having worked collaboratively to follow-up on recommendations currently in
progress and track those that were up next for implementation
◦ Commissioners continued to be integrated into the City through their
participation in hiring committees, budgetary reviews, policy
recommendations, and review of the memorandum of understanding (MOU)
for school resource officers with the Senior Advisor for Education
•Human Rights Commission (HRC) update:
◦ Human Rights Day Celebration Saturday, December 10, 2022 (6pm-8pm,
MT), Sorenson Unity Center – Theme: “Advancing Human Rights”
◦ The completed HRC’s annual end of year report was forthcoming to the
Mayor and City Council for consideration
Kaletta Lynch reviewed:
•Language Access update:
◦ SLC Language Access Administrative Policy was approved and added to
City’s policy manual in September 2022; an implementation plan and
procedures have been drafted, each department has named a Language
Access Liaison to work with the Language Access Coordinator, accounts with
language services vendors have been set up for most City departments to
include Language Line Solutions, next will be to finalize training materials
•ADA update:
◦ ADA Coordinator Certification
◦ First Annual White Cane Walk
◦ Virtual Accessible Meeting Guide and Accessible Public Events Checklist
◦ Communications and volunteer efforts around snow removal in public right-
of-way
◦ SLC Mobile App: digital accessibility improvements for residents and visitors
◦ City-wide policy review: coordinating data collection of departments and
divisions policies in the areas of General Non-discrimination, Effective
Communication, Web Accessibility, and Program Accessibility
•Government Alliance on Race and Equity (GARE) update:
◦ GARE Race Forward Conference November 17-19, 2022 (Arizona)
◦ Salt Lake City’s GARE Ambassadors were researching best practices as it
related to marketing, recruitment, and hiring and comparing them with Salt
Lake City’s. Recommendations were forthcoming to the Mayor and City
Council
MINUTES OF THE SALT LAKE CITY COUNCIL
Thursday, November 10, 2022
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Moana Uluave-Hafoka thanked the Council for their support over the years and
helping to create a more equitable Salt Lake City.
Council Members thanked Moana for working so hard and being a great asset to the City
of Salt Lake.
Council Members thanked Kaletta Lynch working with the the REP Commission and
throughout the City.
3.Impact Statement
30 min.
The Council will receive an update on the Little Cottonwood Canyon Environmental
Impact Statement (EIS) from the Utah Department of Transportation. The stated
purpose of the project is to improve roadway safety, reliability, and mobility on S.R. 210
from Fort Union Boulevard through the town of Alta for all users on S.R. 210.
Josh Van Jura (UDOT Project Manager) presented the proposal, highlighting:
• Project purpose – substantially improve roadway safety, reliability and mobility on
S.R. 210 from Fort Union Boulevard through the Town of Alta for all users
• Alternative Impact study
• Public Comment Themes – support for gondola, bus alternatives, tolling, phased
implementation, consider all canyon users not just resort visitors, keeping existing
recreation opportunities intact (climbing boulders) and maintaining existing visual
experience
• Revision to Alternatives – enhanced bus service alternatives, Gondola B and Cog
Rail Alternatives
• Preferred Alternative – Gondola B, impact summary, preferred alternative
considerations, implementation
• Sub-alternatives Components – tolling or occupancy restrictions, base station
parking structure at La Caille Restaurant, avalanche mitigation, trailhead parking,
no winter parking
• Public Review and Comment Period – 45 days ended October 17, 2022
• Process and Schedule
Council Members and Josh Van Jura discussed:
• Design of a Cog Rail
• Size and capacity of the gondolas
• Cost saving for the gondola operation versus a bus
• Traffic in both Big and Little Cottonwood Canyons and why Little Cottonwood
Canyon was selected for the project
• Who would be required to use the transit
• Offering a toll waiver for workers and residents
• The importance of protecting the watershed
• Environmental impacts of the towers
• Emergency plans if evacuation was required
MINUTES OF THE SALT LAKE CITY COUNCIL
Thursday, November 10, 2022
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Informational: Little Cottonwood Canyon Environmental ~ 4:20 p.m.
• Gondola operation hours
• The possibility of gondolas increasing traffic versus decreasing the number of
vehicles in the area
• City-owned property in the canyon
4.Informational: Draft Transportation Master Plan Midpoint
Check-in ~ 4:50 p.m.
30 min.
The Council will receive a briefing about the draft Transportation Master Plan called
Connect SLC. The final document will replace the last version from 1996. The Plan
identifies high-level goals and long-term policy direction to guide transportation
decisions citywide over the coming decades.
Ben Luedtke introduced the proposal, including:
• Transportation Plan was last adopted in 1996
• New plan is titled Connect SLC- covers all modes of transportation throughout the
City
• Final plan expected to be available next year
• Review of the Policy questions in the Staff Report
Jon Larsen and Joe Taylor presented “Connect SLC”, including:
• The purpose, background and mission statement for the plan
• Community Advisory Committee – makeup, application process and duties
• Plan timeline
• Public Engagement
• Policy Topics – equity, active transportation and safety, curb, parking and demand
management, emerging technology and mobility options, sustainability, east-west
connections, and Land Use integration
• Next steps
Council Members, Jon Larsen, and Joe Taylor discussed:
• How the plan would integrate with other City Departments as a goal
• Ways to make policies work with each other to create a great end result
• Affect of trains on the Westside neighborhoods and prioritizing funding/plans to
address train crossings
• Future use of the roads in the Northwest quadrant and making sure roads were
user friendly for all types of transportation
• Traffic calming and Livable Streets
• Streamlining the process to show where the funding was being allocated and used
to its best potential
• Holding small group meetings to discuss ideas regarding railways
MINUTES OF THE SALT LAKE CITY COUNCIL
Thursday, November 10, 2022
6
20 min.
The Council will receive a briefing about a proposal that would amend the Central
Community Master Plan Future Land Use Map and the zoning of the properties at 1518,
1530, 1540, 1546 South Main Street and 1515 South Richards Street from CC (Corridor
Commercial District) and R-1/5,000 (Single-Family Residential District) to FB-UN2
(Form Based Urban Neighborhood District). The ordinance would also vacate a city-
owned alley situated adjacent to properties located at 1518, 1530, 1540, South Main Street
and 1515 South Richards Street. The intent of these petitions would be to combine all
parcels as well as the alley into one cohesive parcel under the new zoning in order to
build a mixed-use/multi-family development on the site. Consideration may be given to
rezoning the property to another zoning district with similar characteristics.
Brian Fullmer introduced the proposal.
Wayne Mills presented the Master Plan Amendment, highlighting:
• Project request – rezoning multiple parcels from Corridor Commercial (CC) and on
R-1/5000 Single Family to Form Based Urban (FBUN-2) Neighborhood
• Existing/proposed zoning comparison
• Master Plan amendment issues – location, amendment was not consistent with the
future land use map in the Cental Community Plan; however, since the Ballpark
Station Area Plan overrides the Cental Community Master Plan, amendment to the
Central Community Plan was no longer needed
• Ballpark Station Area Plan – Main street character area, future land use, main
street area, neighborhood area,
• Housing loss mitigation
• Alley vacation
• Planning Commission Recommendation – unanimous support for the rezone with
conditions: 1 – The housing being removed for the site must be replaced, 2 – the
property for the vacated alley to be integrated into the future development, and 3 –
the rezoned parcels must be consolidated through the appropriate process
Council Members, Brian Fullmer, and Wayne Mills discussed:
• Setbacks for the different zones
• Required setbacks for FBUN-2 zoning
• Zoning for neighboring properties
• How the petition aligned did not align with the Ballpark Station Area plan
• Parking requirements
Stephen Alfandre and James Alfrandre (Urban Alfrandre) presented how the
proposal fit within the area, environmental benefits of the project and how it addressed
needs in the community.
Council Members, Steve Alfandre, and James Alfandre discussed:
• Retail units included in the project
• Parking requirements and how many stalls should be required
MINUTES OF THE SALT LAKE CITY COUNCIL
Thursday, November 10, 2022
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Ordinance: Rezone, Master Plan Amendment and Alley ~ 5:20 p.m.
5. Vacation at 1550 S Main Street Assemblage
• Cost and size of the units
• Offering affordable units for families
• Development would offer bike storage and maintenance areas
• Need to preserve ADA access to the area during construction
• Water conservation in the park strip
• How to activate the street
6.Resolution: Salt Lake City International Airport Master Plan
Follow-up ~ 5:40 p.m.
10 min
The Council will receive a follow-up briefing about a resolution that would approve the
Salt Lake City Department of Airports’ 2022 Master Plan Update for continued
development of the Salt Lake City International Airport. The 2022 Master Plan evaluates
the ability of Airport facilities to accommodate user needs at existing and forecasted
demand levels and provides recommendations regarding additional facilities that are
needed to meet the forecasted demand.
Sam Owen presented the proposal, stating the Council’s request to address carbon
reduction and internal accessibility at the Airport were added to the document
appendixes.
Brady Fredrickson stated if the proposed plan was approved/adopted, the
information would be added to the plan as appendices and when the plan was formally
updated in the future these elements would be added to the main body of the plan.
7.Ordinance: Budget Amendment No.4 for Fiscal Year 2022-23 ~ 5:50 p.m.
15 min.
The Council will receive a briefing about an ordinance that would amend the final budget
of Salt Lake City, including the employment staffing document, for Fiscal Year 2022-23.
Budget amendments happen several times each year to reflect adjustments to the City’s
budgets, including proposed project additions and modifications. The proposed
amendment includes sales tax revenue bond funds for critical infrastructure and
investments in historic city-owned properties, additional funding for phase one of
creating the Glendale Regional Park, police officer overtime, renovations to fire stations
for gender equity improvements and emergency rental assistance funds from the U.S.
Treasury among other items.
Ben Luedtke presented the budget amendment, including:
• Revenue for FY2023 Budget Adjustments
• A-13: New Computers and Associated Devices for Airport Police ($155,028.26 from
IMS Fund)
Council Members, Mary Beth Thompson, and Ben Luedtke discussed why the funds
for the computers were not part of the Airport’s budget and that the Airport would be
MINUTES OF THE SALT LAKE CITY COUNCIL
Thursday, November 10, 2022
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reimbursing the City for the cost of the equipment.
Straw Poll: Unanimous support for item A-13 for new computers and associated devices
for Airport Police.
Ben Luedtke presented Item I-2 Electric Vehicle (EV) charging Infrastructure on 200
South ($38,000 Grant from Rocky Mountain Power)
Council Members, Mary Beth Thompson, and Ben Luedtke discussed what would happen
if the public hearing resulted in the charging stations not being approved.
Council Members requested more information on the one-time cost of installing the
infrastructure, the cost to provide the power and ongoing maintenance, and if there
would there be a match for the cost from Rocky Mountain Power.
Ben Luedtke presented:
• A-1 Elections Awareness ($38,509 from General Fund Balance)
• A-2 Re-scope Unspent Operation Rio Grande Funds for Homelessness Services
($490,847 from General Fund Balance)
◦ $274,000 for VOA, City Specific Outreach Team
◦ $177,847; Provider TBD, FY 2023 Winter Overflow Operations
◦ $30,000; Shelter the Homeless HRC Security
◦ VOA detox beds ($9,000)
Council Members and Ben Luedtke discussed the length of time the funding for the
Outreach Team would cover. Council requested more information on the metrics for the
outreach program prior to approval.
Council requested information on the use of funding for security, if security would assist
in areas surrounding shelters and the expected outcome of giving the funding to the
shelters for security purposes. Andrew Johnston stated the funding would be to fill the
current staffing shortage at the resource centers and explained the possible liability issues
with having private security respond to emergency calls.
Council Member Dugan stated due to time constraints the discussion would resume at a
future work session.
8.Informational: Utah Community Renewable Energy Program
Application Update ~ 6:05 p.m.
15 min.
The Council will receive a briefing about the Utah Community Renewable Energy
Program Application. The goal of the Program is to acquire renewable energy to serve
participating Utah communities. The program seeks to deliver an amount of renewable
energy to the grid annually that matches electricity consumed in participating
communities. The program is collaborative with Rocky Mountain Power (RMP).
Sam Owen presented the update, including:
MINUTES OF THE SALT LAKE CITY COUNCIL
Thursday, November 10, 2022
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• The Community Renewable Energy Agency (CREA), or Utah 100, was nearing a
landmark application submission to the State Commission who would
determine the program’s future and design
• Submission of the proposal was near the end of 2022, including the main part of
the draft ordinance for participating cities to consider adopting after the State
Commission issued an order on the program
• Soliciting feedback on the proposal to mitigate negative impacts on rate-burdened
consumers
• Reviewed the policy questions listed in the staff report
Christopher Thomas presented the program, highlighting:
• Agenda
• Seeking Council Member feedback on the proposed energy affordability plan and
draft model ordinance
• Goals of the program
• Participating communities
• Community Renewable Energy Agency Structure
• Achieving net 100% renewable electricity goal by 2030
• Milestones and anticipated timeline
• Energy Affordability (plan for low-income assistance)
• Low-income Plan requirements
• Plans for low-income assistance
• Community profiles for low-income assistance planning
• Potential programmatic strategies
• Automatic opt out
• Termination fee waiver
• Enhanced monthly bill credit
• Online donation function
• Outreach strategies
• Identified organizations to assist with services
• Request from the Council:
◦ Review the proposal programmatic approaches to energy affordability and
the organizations to include in the outreach strategy
◦ Were there any community organizations that the Council would like to
include in the outreach and communication efforts
◦ The agency expected to finalize low-income plans with the Board to vote on
December 5, 2022, for inclusion in the program application to be submitted
in the coming months
• Draft Model Ordinance (finalized in December 2022)
◦ Request from the Council:
◾Review draft model ordinance
◾Were there any major omissions? (customizations that applied to only
one community could not be included in the model ordinance)
◾Draft model ordinance may be finalized by the Board vote December 5,
2022
• Placeholders will be updated after Utah PSC approval and the ordinance must be
adopted within 90 days of that approval, as required by State law
MINUTES OF THE SALT LAKE CITY COUNCIL
Thursday, November 10, 2022
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• Utility Agreement (not yet drafted)
Council Members and Christopher Thomas discussed how the plan would apply to
renters who did not pay utilities, the importance for the Council’s review of the ordinance
(forward comments to staff), how the plan would affect those with solar panels, and the
number of residents that utilize the energy credit program.
Niu
5 min
The Council will interview Siliveinusi Niu prior to considering appointment to the
Business Advisory Board for a term ending Monday, December 28, 2026.
Interview was held. Council Member Dugan stated Siliveinusi Niu’s name was on the
Consent Agenda for formal consideration.
Standing Items
10.Report of the Chair and Vice Chair
Report of Chair and Vice Chair.
Item not held.
11.Report and Announcements from the Executive Director
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.
Item not held.
12.Tentative Closed Session
The Council will consider a motion to enter into Closed Session. A closed meeting described
under Section 52-4-205 may be held for specific purposes including, but not limited to:
a. discussion of the character, professional competence, or physical or mental
health of an individual;
b. strategy sessions to discuss collective bargaining;
c. strategy sessions to discuss pending or reasonably imminent litigation;
d. strategy sessions to discuss the purchase, exchange, or lease of real property,
MINUTES OF THE SALT LAKE CITY COUNCIL
Thursday, November 10, 2022
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9.Board Appointment: Business Advisory Board - Siliveinusi ~ 6:20 p.m.
including any form of a water right or water shares, if public discussion of the
transaction would:
(i) disclose the appraisal or estimated value of the property un
consideration; or
(ii) prevent the public body from completing the transaction on the
possible terms;
e. strategy sessions to discuss the sale of real property, including any form of a water
right or water shares, if:
(i) public discussion of the transaction would:
(A) disclose the appraisal or estimated value of the property under
consideration; or
(B) prevent the public body from completing the transaction on the best
possible terms;
(ii) the public body previously gave public notice that the property would be
offered for sale; and
(iii) the terms of the sale are publicly disclosed before the public body
approves the sale;
f. discussion regarding deployment of security personnel, devices, or systems; and
g. investigative proceedings regarding allegations of criminal misconduct.
A closed meeting may also be held for attorney-client matters that are privileged pursuant to
Utah Code § 78B-1-137, and for other lawful purposes that satisfy the pertinent
requirements of the Utah Open and Public Meetings Act.
Motion:
Moved by Council Member Fowler, seconded by Council Member Puy to
enter into Closed Session for the purposes of strategy sessions to discuss
the purchase, exchange, or lease of real property and attorney-client
matters.
AYE: Amy Fowler, Darin Mano, Chris Wharton, Daniel Dugan, Victoria Petro,
Alejandro Puy
ABSENT: Ana Valdemoros
Final Result: 6 – 0 Pass
Closed Session Started at 6:42 pm
Held via Webex and in the Work Session Room (location)
Council Members in Attendance: Council Members Dugan, Fowler, Petro-Eschler, Puy,
Mano, and Wharton.
City Staff in Attendance: Mayor Mendenhall, Katherine Lewis, Lisa Shaffer, Rachel
Otto, Mary Beth Thompson, Blake Thomas, Danny Walz, Cindy Gust-Jenson, Jennifer
Bruno, Sylvia Richards, Ben Luedtke, Brian Fullmer, Nick Tarbet, Tammy Hunsaker,
Beatrix Sieger, Lindsey Nikola, Taylor Hill, Scott Corpany, and Cindy Lou Trishman
Closed Session recessed at 6:58 pm by Council Chair.
Closed Session resumed at 9:05 pm by Council Chair.
Closed Session ended at 10:00 pm
MINUTES OF THE SALT LAKE CITY COUNCIL
Thursday, November 10, 2022
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Motion:
Moved by Council Member Fowler, seconded by Council Member Puy to exit
Closed Session.
AYE: Amy Fowler, Chris Wharton, Daniel Dugan, Alejandro Puy
ABSENT: Ana Valdemoros, Darin Mano, Victoria Petro
Final Result: 4 – 0 Pass
Meeting adjourned at 10:00 pm
Minutes Approved: December 6, 2022
_______________________________
City 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).
To listen to the audio recording of the meeting or view meeting materials, please visit Salt Lake
City Public Body Minutes library, available at www.data.slc.gov, selecting the Public Body
Minutes hyperlink. If you are viewing this file in the Minutes library, use the links on the right of
your screen within the ‘Document Relationships’ information to listen to the audio or view
meeting materials.
This document along with the digital recording constitutes the official minutes of the City
Council Work Session meeting held Thursday, November 10, 2022.
MINUTES OF THE SALT LAKE CITY COUNCIL
Thursday, November 10, 2022
13
November 10, 2022 WS
Final Audit Report 2023-02-03
Created:2023-02-01
By:Michelle Barney (michelle.barney@slcgov.com)
Status:Signed
Transaction ID:CBJCHBCAABAAu37Xzp4SvlRfstqjVLbrxRS1Zdru_XZU
"November 10, 2022 WS" History
Document created by Michelle Barney (michelle.barney@slcgov.com)
2023-02-01 - 9:59:56 PM GMT
Document emailed to Darin Mano (darin.mano@slcgov.com) for signature
2023-02-01 - 10:00:38 PM GMT
Email viewed by Darin Mano (darin.mano@slcgov.com)
2023-02-01 - 10:10:39 PM GMT
Document e-signed by Darin Mano (darin.mano@slcgov.com)
Signature Date: 2023-02-01 - 11:48:42 PM GMT - Time Source: server
Document emailed to Cindy Trishman (cindy.trishman@slcgov.com) for signature
2023-02-01 - 11:48:43 PM GMT
Document e-signed by Cindy Trishman (cindy.trishman@slcgov.com)
Signature Date: 2023-02-03 - 7:41:57 PM GMT - Time Source: server
Agreement completed.
2023-02-03 - 7:41:57 PM GMT