04/02/2024 - Work Session - MinutesThe City Council of Salt Lake City, Utah, met in Work Session on Tuesday, April 2, 2024.
The following Council Members were present:
Victoria Petro, Daniel Dugan, Chris Wharton, Alejandro Puy, Darin Mano, Eva Lopez Chavez
The following Council Members were absent:
Sarah Young
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
Present City Staff:
Kimberly Chytraus – Senior City Attorney, Cindy Lou Trishman – City Recorder, DeeDee
Robinson – Minutes & Records Clerk, Thais Stewart – Deputy City Recorder, Taylor Hill –
Constituent Liaison/Policy Analyst, Scott Corpany – Staff Assistant, Ben Luedtke – Senior
Public Policy Analyst, Brian Fullmer – Constituent Liaison, Policy Analyst, Nick Tarbet – Senior
Public Policy Analyst, Nick Norris – Planning Director, Kelsey Lindquist – Senior Planner,
Roberta Reichgelt – Business Development Director, Michelle Hoon – Housing Stability Policy
& Program Manager, Brooke Olson – Principal Planner, John Anderson – Planning Manager,
Grant Amann – Principal Planner, Sylvia Richards – Public Policy Analyst, Sam Owen – Public
Policy Analyst, Laura Briefer – Public Utilities Director, Brian Pantle – Economic Development
Project Manager, Heather Royall – Deputy Director of Housing & Neighborhood Development,
Amy Thompson – Planning Manager
The meeting was called to order at 2:05 pm.
MINUTES OF THE SALT LAKE CITY COUNCIL
Tuesday, April 2, 2024
1
Work Session Items
1.Informational: Updates from the Administration ~ 2:00 p.m.
15 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.
Michelle Hoon provided information regarding:
Homelessness Update
•Homeless Resource Center utilization data (shelter/bed capacity)
•Encampment Impact Mitigation (EIM) – this week at Folsom Trail, North Temple,
Gadsby Trailhead, and Archuleta Bridge
•Rapid Intervention Team (RIT) – this week at Cottonwood Park, Day Riverside
Library, Riverside Park, and Fife Wetlands
•Resource Fair to be held April 12, 2024, 9:30-12:30pm at Pioneer Park
•Hygiene Kit Assembly Event tonight (April 2, 2024) at the Sorensen Unity Center,
5:30-7:30pm, benefiting both of the City’s resource centers
•Updates regarding homelessness found at: www.slc.gov/homelessness/whats-
happening-now/
2.Ordinance: Ballpark Station Area Rezone and Text
Amendments ~ 2:15 p.m.
20 min.
The Council will receive a briefing about a proposal that would make the following
amendments to City code:
•Zoning Map Amendments: rezone properties to align with the goals, policies,
future land use recommendations, and community vision established in the plan.
•Zoning Text Amendments: establish a new zone, Form Based, Mixed Use 8 (MU-
8), and rezone some properties within Ballpark Station Area to MU-8.
MINUTES OF THE SALT LAKE CITY COUNCIL
Tuesday, April 2, 2024
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Council Member Mano recused himself from this agenda item and agenda item No. 3.
Nick Tarbet provided an introduction to the proposal.
Nick Norris, Brooke Olson, and John Anderson provided information regarding:
SLC Ballpark Station Area Rezones
•Planning Commission having forwarded a positive recommendation
•Details of the project areas including portions of Heart of the Neighborhood,
Jefferson Park Mixed Use, and Main Street & State Street Areas
•Existing zoning in the surrounding area
•Proposed zoning details (rezones and preserved zones)
•MU-8 zone details (proposed locations and overview)
•MU-8 zone standards (forms established, development requirements)
•Open space, design, sidewalk width, ground floor use requirements
•MU-8 zone design standards
•FB-UN1 zoning details (proposed locations and overview)
•FB-UN2 zoning details (proposed locations and overview)
•Parking requirements varied by the context area of zone/sight
•Affordable housing incentives taken into account with the development of this
proposal
•Ballpark NEXT Draft Guiding Principles published in January 2024, rezoning of
the Ballpark properties would be considered in a second phase
•Public process details
◦June 2023 – Input period began
◦July-October 2023 – Proposal modifications
◦October 2023 – Planning Commission recommendation
•TRAX and bus services for the area being on a livable schedule for users
•Reasoning for leaving the ballfield and parking lot for the ballfield out of the
process and retaining PL (public lands) zone
•This proposal being the first step in a effort to consolidate mixed use and
commercial zones City-wide
Nick Tarbet inquired if the Council was amenable to adding the following uses to the
MU-8 zone/proposed ordinance: Amphitheater Formal and Informal, Health and Fitness
Facility, Community Recreation Center, Plaza, Stadium. No Council Members were
opposed.
3.Ordinance: MU-8 Zone Sign Text Amendments ~ 2:35 p.m.
20 min.
The Council will receive a briefing about a proposal that would amend various sections of
Title 21A of the Salt Lake City Code to establish sign regulations for the Form Based
Mixed Use 8 (MU-8) zoning district. The proposed amendments are intended to establish
sign regulations for the proposed MU-8 zoning district.
MINUTES OF THE SALT LAKE CITY COUNCIL
Tuesday, April 2, 2024
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Brooke Olson, Nick Norris, and John Anderson provided information regarding:
Text Amendment – MU-8 Zone Sign Regulations
•Request details – establishing on-site sign regulations for the proposed MU-8 zone
•Proposal details – modifications to 21A.46.096, signs for Form Based Districts, and
21A.46.125 (vintage signs)
•Planning Commission having forwarded a positive recommendation
4.Resolution: Northpoint Area Annexation Initiation ~ 2:55 p.m.
20 min.
The Council will receive a briefing about a proposal that would initiate the annexation
process for land located in unincorporated portions of Salt Lake County, generally
located along 2200 West and within the area identified as the Northpoint community.
This resolution would only start the annexation process. The annexation will eventually
come back to the Council for final approval, including designating the zoning of the
properties annexed into the City after it has gone through the public process.
MINUTES OF THE SALT LAKE CITY COUNCIL
Tuesday, April 2, 2024
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Council Member Mano rejoined the meeting during this agenda item.
Nick Tarbet provided an introduction.
Thais Stewart provided information regarding:
Next Steps for the Council Regarding the City Initiated Annex
•Adoption of the proposed resolution initiating the annexation process at today’s
Formal Meeting (April 2, 2024)
•Advertising for the Public Hearing for the annexation on April 16, 2024
•Protest period runs from April 2 – May 7, 2024 and are received at the City
Recorder’s Office
•Public Hearing held on May 7, 2024
•After protest period and public hearing the Council had the option to adopt the
ordinance
•Once the ordinance was adopted and consent from Salt Lake County and North
Salt Lake to annex the area were obtained, the documentation could be sent to the
Leiutenant Governor’s Office for processing
5.Ordinance: Attached Garages Zoning Text Amendment ~ 3:15 p.m.
20 min.
The Council will receive a briefing about a proposal that would amend various sections of
Title 21A of the Salt Lake City Code pertaining to attached structures, including garages.
In 2021, Utah State code was amended, changing standards required for these structures.
The changes to the state code imposed limitations on what municipalities can require in
terms of design elements. As a result, City code needs to be updated to match these
regulations. The Planning Division is proposing a text amendment to update standards
related to these structures, which include garages, entrance landings, and building
foundations. The amendment focuses on aligning the standards with City goals and
addressing state law. The proposed text amendments apply Citywide.
Brian Fullmer provided an introduction.
Nick Norris and Grant Amann provided information regarding:
Zoning Text Amendment – Attached Garages
•Text amendment being in response to changes at a State level forcing a change at
the City level
•Planning Commission having forwarded a positive recommendation
•State required updates (HB1003, passed in 2021, prohibiting regulation of design
elements; locations of garage doors; exterior building colors; exterior building
glass, and roof materials and colors)
•Clarification updates being made to the current code
MINUTES OF THE SALT LAKE CITY COUNCIL
Tuesday, April 2, 2024
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•Accessory structures and building code change details
6.Ordinance: Rezone at Approximately 536 South 200 West ~ 3:35 p.m.
20 min.
The Council will receive a briefing about a proposal that would amend the zoning of
properties located at approximately 536 South 200 West, 216 West Orchard Place, 224
West Orchard Place, 226 West Orchard Place, and 230 West Orchard Place from D-2
(Downtown Support District) to D-1 (Central Business District). The proposal would
align with a recently approved D-2 to D-1 amendment for a neighboring property to the
north. Future development plans were not submitted by the applicant at this time.
Consideration may be given to rezoning the property to another zoning district with
similar characteristics. The project is within Council District 4. Petitioner: Jason Boal,
representing the property owners.
MINUTES OF THE SALT LAKE CITY COUNCIL
Tuesday, April 2, 2024
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Brian Fullmer provided an introduction.
Grant Amann, Kelsey Lindquist, and Nick Norris provided information regarding:
Zoning Map Amendment – 536 South 200 West
•Request details – includes 216, 224, 226, and 230 West Orchard Place, changing
from D-2 to D-1 zoning
•Planning Commission having recommended approval
•Zoning district comparison (D-2 vs. D-1)
A brief recess was taken from 3:00 to 3:35pm to allow for the applicant to arrive and
for the Council to catch up to agenda items.
Jason Boal (Applicant) provided information regarding:
•History and reasoning for the proposed change to D-1 zoning
7.Tentative Break ~ 3:55 p.m.
20 min.
8.Informational: Salt Lake County Animal Services Annual
Report ~ 4:15 p.m.
20 min.
The Council will receive a briefing about the Salt Lake County Animal Services Annual
Report. The contract with Animal Services provides administration, personnel,
equipment, and supplies necessary to support a modern, well-equipped animal control
department in compliance with applicable laws and standards including, but not limited
to; licensing, regulation, controlling and shelter services, and special programs.
Sylvia Richards provided an introduction.
Talia Butler (Animal Services Division Director) and Carrie Sibert (Contracts and
Program Coordinator) provided information regarding:
Salt Lake County Animal Services 2023 Annual Report
•Celebrating a decade of no-kill sheltering
•Ten organizations and individuals recognized at annual Spayghetti Gala for
supporting the no-kill mission
•Officially launched Hang Ten Shelter Club campaign
•Animal control officers responded to over 18K calls for service
•Over 2,600 pets were adopted or sent to rescue organizations
•3,500 pets were sterilized by the in-house veterinary clinic
•15 time winner for Best In State
•Summary of overall Asilomar Statistics (intake totals, adoptions, transfer/rescue,
redemption, euthanasia)
th
MINUTES OF THE SALT LAKE CITY COUNCIL
Tuesday, April 2, 2024
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•Live release rate of 93%, 1281 animals fostered, and 673 animals rescued
•Salt Lake City’s intake data by species/type of intake
•Salt Lake City’s field statistics, citations/notice of violations (most common:
running at large, no license, no rabies vaccination)
•Licensing information (type and totals)
•Urban Wildlife Program statistics
•Officers of the Year awards
•Volunteer and outreach program statistics
•Workshop opportunities offered monthly for the community
9.Fiscal Year 2024-25 Budget: Metropolitan Water
District Preview, Property Tax Proposal ~ 4:35 p.m.
30 min.
The Council will receive a briefing about a proposed property tax increase by the
Metropolitan Water District of Salt Lake and Sandy, for Fiscal Year 2024-25.
MINUTES OF THE SALT LAKE CITY COUNCIL
Tuesday, April 2, 2024
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Sam Owen provided an introduction.
Tom Godfrey (Board Chair), Annalee Munsey (Metro Water General Manager), and
Laura Briefer provided information regarding:
Fiscal Year (FY) 2025 Property Tax Certified Rate Increase Proposal –
Metropolitan Water District of Salt Lake and Sandy (MWDSLS)
•Background:
◦Special water district providing drinking water to SLC and Sandy City
◦Sandy City having joined the district in 1990
◦District’s board comprised of seven trustees (SLC appoints five of the
trustees, Sandy City Council appoints two of the trustees)
•Revenue sources (water sales, property taxes, assessments, miscellaneous)
•FY25 escalating costs and capital needs for aging infrastructure – $9.3M of
revenue needs
•FY25 tentative budget – review of certified rate increases
•Property taxes vs. water rates
◦Increasing the certified tax rate to 0.00035 would generate revenue of
$8.6M
◦Increasing water rates by 36.33% would generate the same amount of
revenue
•Summary of MWDSLS property taxes vs. water rates – if an increase to the
certified tax rate was not approved by Salt Lake and Sandy City Councils, the
District would increase water rates to its member cities
•Background on the FY 25 budget process
•Requirements of Statute 17B-2a-608
•FY25 budget process timing considerations (from early discussions in March 2024
to submitting budget to State Auditor in September 2024)
•How other states handled similar increases (majority utilized property tax
increases)
•History of Salt Lake City’s rate increases and how usage rates were variable and
might not meet the needs of the fixed costs of running the water utility
10.Ordinance: Economic Development Loan Fund – Parea,
LLC.~ 5:05 p.m.
10 min.
The Council will receive a briefing about an ordinance that would approve a $350,000
loan for Parea, LLC at 320 East 900 South from the Economic Development Loan Fund
(EDLF). Parea, LLC is a new restaurant/market for Greek food from Chef Manoli
Katsanevas. This loan will assist in the creation of fifteen new jobs in the next year and
the retention of thirty current jobs.
MINUTES OF THE SALT LAKE CITY COUNCIL
Tuesday, April 2, 2024
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Roberta Reichgelt and Brian Pantle provided information regarding:
•Parea LLC was an expansion business to Manoli’s (402 East Harvey Milk Blvd)
•The loan applicant owned the land the building was located on and was bringing a
portion of their own investment to the table in addition to the EDLF loan
•This project having been highly recommended by the Loan Committee
11.Fiscal Year 2024-25 Funding Allocations for One-year Action
Plan for Community Development Block Grant & Other
Federal Grants Follow-up
~ 5:15 p.m.
20 min.
The Council will receive a follow-up briefing about the resident advisory board's and the
Mayor's funding recommendations and an appropriations resolution that would
authorize grant funding to selected applicants and adopt the One-Year Annual Action
Plan for Fiscal Year 2024-25. The plan includes Community Development Block Grant
(CDBG) funding, HOME Investment Partnership Program funding, Emergency
Solutions Grant (ESG) funding, and Housing Opportunities for Persons with AIDS
(HOPWA) funding. The resolution would also approve an Interlocal Cooperation
Agreement between Salt Lake City and the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban
Development (HUD).
For more information visit tinyurl.com/AnnualHUDGrants.
MINUTES OF THE SALT LAKE CITY COUNCIL
Tuesday, April 2, 2024
10
Ben Luedtke and Heather Royall provided updates to the most recent unresolved
items, including:
•Recent Council funding decisions were now added to the funding log (dated
March 27, 2024) in bold blue font
•Item #6 – Fix The Bricks (CDBG Housing/Housing Stability Division) :
◦The Council previously selected to fund this item instead of the Community
Land Trust (CLT)
◦A transmittal was received today from the Administration that contained
draft policies for several housing programs including the CLT – these
policies would be coming to the Council for review and also included
addressing how to handle ongoing funding related to the CLT
•Item #18 – Gail Miller Resource Center and Geraldine E. King Security
(CDBG Public Services/Shelter The Homeless):
◦Project scope had been updated to show that the $30K would be limited to
security (the applicant did not have any concerns with this update)
•CDBG-CV Funding Log – Using $287K of one-time pandemic related
funding for the Public Services category:
◦The Council previously selected Funding Scenario A, using all of the $287K,
whereas 26 of the 29 applications would receive grant awards between the
two funding sources
◦The Council asked the Administration to communicate to applicants that
these were one-time funds
◦A new five-year plan for 2025 to 2029 would evaluate if $30K awards
should be adjusted
•Item #1 – Tenant Based Rental Assistance (HOPWA/Housing Connect;
County Housing Authority):
◦A previously awarded $100K non-profit local assistance grant (approved
previously by the Council) to the Rape Recovery Center was recaptured (the
recipient was unable to use the grant) and the Community and
Neighborhoods Department has submitted an item in Budget Amendment
#5 proposing to use nearly $28K from the recaptured grant funds to fill the
funding gap for this item
◦Straw Poll: Support for using a portion of recaptured local non-profit
assistance grants for Housing Connect, helping bring the total amount to
$550K, assuring no tenants were displaced. All Council Members present
were in favor
◦The Administration would be looking at how to ask earlier in the process,
what minimum funding level would be needed to avoid housing loss
•Funding Contingencies (Page 21):
◦Final funding awards had not yet been received from United States
Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD)
◦A vote was scheduled for April 16, 2024 and the Council might/might not
receive final awards from HUD before this date
◦The funding contingencies (as part of the funding log) would be attached to
the adoption resolution
MINUTES OF THE SALT LAKE CITY COUNCIL
Tuesday, April 2, 2024
11
•The five-year consolidated plan being due at the same time as the Action Plan and
Funding Recommendation for the first year of the consolidated plan and the
Administration anticipated bringing the Council into the process conversations
well in advance of any funding recommendations the Council makes next year
12.Board Appointment: Housing Authority of Salt Lake –
Fraser Nelson ~ 5:35 p.m.
5 min
The Council will interview Fraser Nelson prior to considering appointment to the
Housing Authority of Salt Lake Board for a term ending April 2, 2028.
MINUTES OF THE SALT LAKE CITY COUNCIL
Tuesday, April 2, 2024
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Interview held. Council Member Petro said Fraser Nelson’s name was on the Consent
Agenda for formal consideration.
13.Ordinance: Enforcement on Work Without A Certificate of
Appropriateness Zoning Text Amendment ~ 5:40 p.m.
20 min.
The Council will receive a briefing about a proposal that would amend various sections
of Title 21A of the Salt Lake City Code for work done without a certificate of
appropriateness. The proposal would address unlawful construction and demolition
activities in the H Historic Preservation Zoning District Overlay. The proposed
amendments are intended to protect historic resources, including designated local
historic districts and local landmark sites. The changes are aimed at adding
enforcement tools to prevent and counter potential code violations and at establishing a
clear process to remedy alterations or demolition that occur without approval. The
proposed changes will affect Chapter 21A.34.020 and related provisions of Title 21A-
Zoning.
MINUTES OF THE SALT LAKE CITY COUNCIL
Tuesday, April 2, 2024
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Brian Fullmer provided an introduction.
Amy Thompson, Nick Norris, and Kelsey Lindquist provided information
regarding:
Text Amendment – Enforcement on Work Without a Certificate of
Appropriateness (COA)
•Overview;
◦City initiated
◦Addresses unlawful construction and demolition activities
◦Impacts properties subject to the H Historic Preservation Overlay District
citywide
•Background/issue; development pressure, zoning enforcement, loss of historic
resource was irreversible
•Objective: prevent, deter and counter violations
•Proposed changes include:
◦Adds enforcement subsection within the H Overlay
◦Limits redevelopment on the site (vacant for 25 years or reconstruct the
building)
◦Establishes a reconstruction process
◦Addresses violations and historic status determinations
◦Clarifies eligibility for economic hardship
◦Changes to related sections (definitions and changes to the nonconforming
use and noncomplying structures chapter)
•Related proposed changes:
◦Work without COA for full/partial demolition of a contributing structure or
landmark site: $250/day (new)
◦Increased boarded building fee: $14,000 (increased from $1,560)
◦Enhanced fee for boarded contributing structures: $14,850 (new)
◦Stop work order: $250/day (new)
◦Increase general fines for violations: $50-$200/day
◦Consideration of the new fees came from researching other cities with
similar ordinances relating to preservation
•Key considerations:
◦Enforcement limitations
◦Additional tools
◾Restricting future redevelopment
◾Prevent greater development potential
◾Additional costs
◾Unfavorable outcomes
◦City goals and policies – current proposal being consistent with SLC
Community Preservation Plan and Plan SLC
◦Feedback from Historic Landmark Commission (HLC) and Planning
Commission (PC)
•Public process: notices, briefings, hearings
•Council considerations:
◦PC having forwarded a positive recommendation to the Council
MINUTES OF THE SALT LAKE CITY COUNCIL
Tuesday, April 2, 2024
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◦HLC having forwarded a positive recommendation with the following
conditions:
◾Increase the 25-year limitation on redevelopment to 50 years
◾Exploring a fee charge for vacant property (if no reconstruction was
proposed)
Council Member Mano expressed interest in looking at an even different set of
standards for any building in a local historic district vs. a locally landmarked building,
which the latter should be at a higher level of scrutiny and being perhaps more valuable
to the community and/or those who chose to landmark the structure/property.
Council Member Puy said it was important to note that the Administration had been
working through this process over the past few months, as updates to the ordinance
were long overdue, but inquired if there was a way to protect/deter landmark structures
from deteriorating, preventing it from getting to the point of needing/requiring
demolition (purposeful negligence of the structure to qualify for demolition). Kelsey
Lindquist said she recognized the issue was of high concern and the Planning
Department was currently working on an ordinance to address demolition by neglect.
Standing Items
14.Report of the Chair and Vice Chair -
-
Report of Chair and Vice Chair.
Item not held.
15.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.
Cindy Gust-Jensen provided the following information:
•Next meeting on April 16, 2024 – seeking interest if the body would be willing to
meet at 1:00pm instead of 2:00pm
•Seeking interest if the body would be willing to start the following meetings
through budget season at 1:00pm instead of 2:00pm
•Packets containing information about meetings would be distributed on Fridays
throughout the budget season
•Seeking interest if any Council Members wanted to attend X4:The Experience
Management Summit (held May 1-3, 2024) and to let Council liaisons know if
they wanted to attend
MINUTES OF THE SALT LAKE CITY COUNCIL
Tuesday, April 2, 2024
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Straw Poll: Support for starting Council Meetings at 1:00 pm on April 16, 2024 and
throughout the budget season. All Council Members present were in favor.
16.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,
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 under
consideration; or
(ii) prevent the public body from completing the transaction on the best
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.
Closed Session started at 5:40 pm
Held via Zoom and in the Work Session Room (location)
Council Members in Attendance: Council Members Petro, Puy, Wharton, Lopez Chavez,
Mano, and Dugan. (Council Member Mano left at 6:12 pm.)
City Staff in Attendance: Rachel Otto, Lindsey Nikola, Kimberly Chytraus,
Jaysen Oldroyd, Katherine Pasker, Jonathan Pappasidderis, Debra Alexander, David
Salazar, Mary Beth Thompson, Lisa Hunt, Steven Schuback, Cindy Gust-Jenson,
Jennifer Bruno, Lehua Weaver, Ben Luedtke, Matthew Brown, and Cindy
Lou Trishman.
Closed Session ended at 6:48 pm
MINUTES OF THE SALT LAKE CITY COUNCIL
Tuesday, April 2, 2024
16
Motion:
Moved by Council Member Wharton, seconded by Council Member Lopez
Chavez to enter into Closed Session for the purposes of strategy sessions to
discuss collective bargaining and attorney-client matters.
AYE: Victoria Petro, Daniel Dugan, Chris Wharton, Alejandro Puy, Darin Mano, Eva
Lopez Chavez
ABSENT: Sarah Young
Final Result: 6 – 0 Pass
Motion:
Moved by Council Member Puy, seconded by Council Member Wharton to
exit Closed Session.
AYE: Victoria Petro, Daniel Dugan, Chris Wharton, Alejandro Puy, Eva Lopez Chavez
ABSENT: Sarah Young, Darin Mano
Final Result: 5 – 0 Pass
MINUTES OF THE SALT LAKE CITY COUNCIL
Tuesday, April 2, 2024
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Meeting adjourned at: 6:48 pm.
Minutes Approved: May 21, 2024.
_______________________________
City Council Chair – Victoria Petro
_______________________________
City Recorder – Cindy Trishman
Please refer to Meeting Materials (available at https://data.slc.gov by selecting City Council
Meeting Information) for supportive content including electronic recordings and comments
submitted prior to or during the meeting. Websites listed within the body of the Minutes may
not remain active indefinitely.
This document along with the digital recording constitutes the official minutes of the City
Council Work Session meeting held Tuesday, April 2, 2024 and is not intended to serve as a full
transcript. Please refer to the electronic recording for entire content pursuant to Utah Code §52-
4-203.
MINUTES OF THE SALT LAKE CITY COUNCIL
Tuesday, April 2, 2024
18
Victoria Petro (Jun 5, 2024 13:13 MDT)
Approved May 21, 2024 - April 2, 2024 Work
Session Minutes
Final Audit Report 2024-06-05
Created:2024-05-24
By:DeeDee Robinson (deedee.robinson@slcgov.com)
Status:Signed
Transaction ID:CBJCHBCAABAAdfmwTWXwF2CqRMcgY_RY-m48qTiH5Y2V
"Approved May 21, 2024 - April 2, 2024 Work Session Minutes"
History
Document created by DeeDee Robinson (deedee.robinson@slcgov.com)
2024-05-24 - 2:34:54 PM GMT
Document emailed to victoria.petro@slcgov.com for signature
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Signer victoria.petro@slcgov.com entered name at signing as Victoria Petro
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Document e-signed by Victoria Petro (victoria.petro@slcgov.com)
Signature Date: 2024-06-05 - 7:13:34 PM GMT - Time Source: server
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Document e-signed by Cindy Trishman (cindy.trishman@slcgov.com)
Signature Date: 2024-06-05 - 9:25:46 PM GMT - Time Source: server
Agreement completed.
2024-06-05 - 9:25:46 PM GMT