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<br />M I N U T E S <br /> <br /> <br />Eugene City Council <br />State of the City <br />Hult Center for the Performing Arts <br /> <br /> January 7, 2008 <br /> 5:30 p.m. <br /> <br />COUNCILORS PRESENT: Andrea Ortiz, Chris Pryor, Betty Taylor, Bonny Bettman, Jennifer Solomon, <br />George Poling, Mike Clark, Alan Zelenka. <br /> <br /> <br />I. WELCOME AND INTRODUCTIONS <br /> <br />Council President Andrea Ortiz welcomed those present at the 2008 State of the City. She said that all those <br />present made Eugene a great place to be. She recognized the public officials present at the event. She <br />welcomed the students present from Eugene’s Sister City Chinju, Korea, who stood to be recognized. <br /> <br /> <br />II. MUSICAL SELECTION <br /> <br /> <br />Those present heard a musical selection entitled Dancing Bear by Tonn Nua Celtic Band, which included <br />members Ansel Dow, Daphne Garcia, David Garcia, Zoe Garcia, and Alison Helser. <br /> <br /> <br />III. CITY COUNCILOR REMARKS <br /> <br />Ms. Bettman, Ward 1, welcomed those present and thanked the mayor for allowing the councilors to speak. <br />She expressed appreciation to all those present for their participation. She noted that the mayor would soon <br />celebrate the positive achievements of the past year, and she shared her pride in the City’s achievements. <br />However, she perceived systematic problems that would continue to undermine progress and sustainable <br />change and hoped they could be addressed in 2008. <br /> <br />Ms. Bettman offered the following for facilitating progress. She proposed the creation of the office of <br />independent auditor to provide data, research, and information to public officials; she noted the risk that such <br />an office could be diluted in the initiative process, and suggested her fears were well-founded in the opposition <br />of the administration to an independent police oversight process with authority or power. She suggested that <br />the administration manipulated an outcome to minimize the power of the police auditor and civilian review <br />board, although it was better than nothing and most people were satisfied with the outcome. She said the <br />independent auditor could face the same fate of providing a façade of accountability superimposed over <br />“business as usual,” delaying true reform for decades. She advocated for an external professional auditor’s <br />office with a caveat that the public must be informed and vigilant to ensure true accountability. <br /> <br />Ms. Bettman called for the City Manager to create an in-house city attorney’s office. She said the City needed <br />such a fully staffed office to save money and eliminate conflicts on the part of the existing firm, which <br />represented many other clients who often had interests contradictory to the City’s. She said it was not an <br />adverse judgment on the existing firm; it merely had too many bosses, and Eugene deserved attorneys <br /> <br /> <br />MINUTES—State of the City January 7, 2008 Page 1 <br /> <br /> <br />