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<br />M I N U T E S <br /> <br /> <br />Eugene City Council <br />Work Session <br />McNutt Room—Eugene City Hall <br /> <br /> November 30, 2005 <br /> Noon <br /> <br />COUNCILORS PRESENT: George Poling, Jennifer Solomon, Gary Papé, Betty Taylor, Andrea Ortiz, <br />Chris Pryor, David Kelly, Bonny Bettman. <br /> <br /> <br />Her Honor Mayor Kitty Piercy called the November 30, 2005, work session of the Eugene City Council to <br />order. <br /> <br />Mayor Piercy welcomed the students from Kelly Middle School who were present to observe council <br />proceedings. <br /> <br />Mayor Piercy introduced Paul Carlson, regional coordinator of Pacific Northwest and Alaska United States <br />Inter-Agency Council on Homelessness, who was in the City of Eugene for several days reviewing local <br />efforts related to housing and homelessness. She read a proclamation in support of Mr. Carlson’s work into <br />the record. <br /> <br />Mr. P. Carlson thanked everyone. He said he enjoyed the tours of homeless providers. He stated that his <br />agency was a small one charged with “knitting together” the efforts of all of the federal agencies. He noted <br />that he was in Oregon with the Housing and Urban Development Department Community Planning Division <br />Director for Oregon and Idaho, Doug Carlson. He related that he and Mr. D. Carlson met with Mayor <br />Piercy to discuss some of the specific issues of developing a ten-year plan to end homelessness. He wanted <br />to underscore that homelessness was ubiquitous throughout the country at unprecedented levels. He said <br />many times progressive areas, such as the City of Eugene, did work toward ending homelessness leading to <br />an impression among elected leaders that providing too many services for homeless people would draw them <br />from other areas. He noted that many mayors and county commissioners shared this impression, a <br />perception that was both real and perceived. He stated that among federal, state, and local governments, <br />local government was a key partner to develop local movements to address homelessness. <br /> <br />Mr. Papé arrived. <br /> <br />Mr. P. Carlson reported that when he began this work, 12 communities were working on plans to end <br />homelessness and now, three years later, over 200 were working on such plans. He stated that four or five <br />plans had been completed in the past year and he hoped the rest would be completed in the coming year. He <br />said he would meet with Governor Kulongoski’s staff to start crafting a way to plan at the State level that <br />would help local agencies with this work. He thanked everyone for allowing him to speak and particularly <br />the Mayor for her proclamation. He declared that efforts in the past had not been successful as evidenced by <br />the unrelenting growth in the numbers of homeless people and attributed this to thinking too small. He <br />averred that the nature of the 10-year planning requirement was not to satisfy a HUD requirement but to <br />garner broad community will to do such planning work. <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />MINUTES—Eugene City Council November 30, 2005 Page 1 <br /> Work Session <br /> <br />