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area, saying “location, location, location.” He hoped the council action regarding the West Broadway <br />redevelopment did not threaten the gas tax, which was a tax he supported. <br /> <br />Greg Bryrant <br />, 2173 Alder Street, noted his receipt of a general notice regarding the money he could receive <br />for relocating his business, which was for up to $20,000. He averred that he and his volunteers had put <br />more than $1 million in sweat equity in his business, and termed the offer absurd. He said that staff had <br />assured the council no jobs would be lost due to the redevelopment project, but he believed jobs would be <br />lost and people’s lives destroyed. He noted his attendance at his high school reunion, during which people <br />who had moved away had commented about the talent and interesting projects that Eugene had lost. He <br />attributed that to an institutional lack of respect and said that the City should not be bulldozing projects that <br />people put their hearts into. He called the proposed remuneration woefully inadequate and asked the council <br />to pass legislation to require full compensation. <br /> <br />th <br />Paul Nicholson <br />, 1855 East 28 Avenue, objected to the course of action the City was contemplating as it <br />had failed in other places as well as in Eugene in the past. He agreed with Mr. Byrant’s remarks, saying <br />there was something fundamentally wrong with a situation where government harmed some and protected <br />others and collected taxes from some while exempting others. He asked the council to rethink the proposal <br />and consider using public funds for truly public purposes for a project that brought the public together <br />instead of dividing it. <br /> <br />Zachary Vishanoff <br />, a resident living on Patterson Street, asserted the City was in collusion with the UO and <br />University Foundation to get money from Phil Knight. He hoped to ferret out the many ways that was <br />occurring, and wanted conversations to occur about eminent domain, the Fairmount neighbors’ rights and <br />the ability to appeal the rezoning of the bakery site. He objected to the fact a UO planner sat on the Historic <br />Review Board and participated in historic reviews of “very important” buildings of cultural significance, <br />such as the Joe Romania building. He thought that person should recuse them self from such decisions as <br />they were effectively a “double agent” working for the UO. He said the City should remove the UO’s <br />ability to exercise eminent domain and to influence the Historic Review Board. <br /> <br />William Ivanoff <br />, 1810 Harris Street, called for conversion of one-way streets in the city to two-way streets <br />to facilitate travel by visitors unfamiliar with the community. He said such streets created more accidents, <br />some of which he had personally witnessed. They also created anger and frustration for motorists. <br /> <br />Drix <br /> spoke to the subject of the kids on the mall and said that the kids were always different kids coming <br />from other communities to Eugene because it represented a “new way of thinking.” The kids were learning <br />the street. He did not know what to do about it but thought it was interesting. He expressed pride for the <br />undeveloped holes in downtown Eugene, calling them a metaphor for Eugene as their fate was in the hands <br />of the citizens. He suggested new names for the sites, the ‘A’ hole and ‘S’ hole. <br /> <br />Cathy Saranpa <br />, 3015 Friendly Street, chair of the Crest Drive Citizens Association, said the Crest Drive <br />Community Team was working on designs for the streets in the area. The team was seeking permission for <br />nine-foot travel lanes for certain parts of the street system. The association passed a resolution in support of <br />nine-foot travel lanes, which she shared with the council. <br /> <br />st <br />Scott Landfield <br />, 29 West 31 Avenue, owner of Tsunami Books, shared a petition with the council signed <br />by 300 people calling for urban renewal funds to be spent on affordable housing, helping local businesses, <br />and building public institutions such as the library. The funds should not be spent to subsidize non-local <br /> <br /> <br />MINUTES—Eugene City Council August 13, 2007 Page 2 <br /> Work Session <br /> <br />