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<br />M I N U T E S <br /> <br /> <br />Eugene City Council <br />Regular Meeting <br />Council Chamber—Eugene City Hall <br />777 Pearl Street—Eugene, Oregon <br /> October 26, 2009 <br /> 7:30 p.m. <br /> <br />COUNCILORS PRESENT: Chris Pryor, George Brown, Andrea Ortiz, George Poling, Mike Clark, Betty <br />Taylor, Jennifer Solomon, Alan Zelenka. <br /> <br /> <br />Her Honor Mayor Kitty Piercy called the meeting of the Eugene City Council to order. She noted that the Consent <br />Calendar had been approved during the preceding council work session. <br /> <br />1. PUBLIC FORUM <br /> <br />Mayor Piercy reviewed the rules of the Public Forum. <br /> <br />Gaylyn Forster <br />, 1955 Minda Drive, expressed concern that Rick Brissenden might not be reappointed to the Civilian <br />Review Board (CRB). He had been following the aftermath of the tasering incident that had happened in May, 2008, <br />and he felt that there appeared to be a lack of meaningful police oversight. He considered the loss of Mr. Brissenden <br />to mean a loss of objectivity. He worried that the public might lose faith and to him, it felt like something was going <br />wrong. He asserted that the City Council had a lack of willingness to have meaningful police oversight. He was <br />concerned for the Eugene Police Department (EPD). He opined that without meaningful oversight the EPD “would <br />pay,” and thoughtful, careful oversight was in their favor. <br /> <br />Amy Pincus Merwin <br />, 2220 Sandy Drive, said she had emailed her comments to the council and the Mayor. She <br />declared that a dynamic had seemed to be “set up” since the tasering incident of May, 2008, which she believed had <br />been “without cause.” She opined that there had been a series of “manipulations, controls, procrastinations, <br />accusations” that had “undermined” the CRB process. She had been a witness and a speaker at the rally at which the <br />tasering incident had occurred. She was shocked by how little understanding there seemed to be of what had actually <br />occurred on that day, as she perceived it. She asserted that some members of the CRB were “in lockstep” with some <br />members of the Police Commission, the council, the EPD, and the Eugene Police Employee Association (EPEA). It <br />had been painful for her and had “re-stimulated the trauma” of witnessing the tasering incident. She feared the young <br />man who had been tasered would never recover from having a concussion and that he would probably never exercise <br />his civil liberties again. She felt that there was a syndrome she considered to be “battered community syndrome.” <br />She alleged that members of the community and the City Council seemed “to be afraid” to speak up. She asserted <br />that CRB members Rick Brissenden and Kate Wilkinson were willing to engage in dialogue and to question things, <br />looking hard at the issues. She had heard that Mr. Brissenden’s appointment was in jeopardy. She believed that he <br />was “just the kind of person” that should serve on the CRB. She urged the council to reappoint Mr. Brissenden. <br /> <br />Hal Reed <br />, 85139 Appletree Drive, stated that he had been asked by Eugene Advocates to speak up on behalf of <br />public safety downtown. He provided two handouts, both pictorials of the significant problems and examples of the <br />MINUTES—Eugene City Council October 26, 2009 Page 1 <br /> Regular Meeting <br /> <br />