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MINUTES <br />Eugene City Council <br />Council Chamber —City Hall <br />777 Pearl Street—Eugene, Oregon <br />February 27, 2012 <br />7:30 p.m. <br />COUNCILORS PRESENT: George Brown, Pat Farr, Betty Taylor, Andrea Ortiz, George Poling, <br />Mike Clark (via speakerphone), Chris Pryor, Alan Zelenka. <br />Her Honor Mayor Kitty Piercy called the February 27, 2012, regular meeting of the Eugene City Council <br />to order. <br />1. PUBLIC FORUM <br />Mayor Piercy reviewed the rules of the Public Forum. <br />Carol Berg Caldwell, Ward 3, read a poem in opposition to the Downtown Public Safety Zone (DPSZ), <br />asserting it was unequally enforced against the poor, could not be fixed by amendments, and would be <br />challenged in court if extended. <br />Bill Bezyk, Ward 1, Backyard Farmers, advocated for code changes that gave residents greater <br />opportunities to keep micro livestock and engage in urban farming. He believed his business's chicken <br />sales demonstrated the strength of the local urban farming movement. He suggested that his store might <br />be able to initiate a mobile processing unit (MPU) for on -site butchering in the urban environment as <br />another business endeavor. <br />Genie Harden, a Lane County resident, responded to comments and questions at the earlier council work <br />session. She reported that the Oregon Department of Agriculture had strict rules about slaughtering inside <br />and outside the city limits. Mobile units were an option. She suggested that people were less likely to <br />keep pygmy goats for urban agriculture as opposed to Nigerian dwarf goats and recommended the council <br />employ the term "miniature goats" to describe the size of goats. She said her type of goats did not smell <br />when neutered and she doubted they had any more fleas than a typical cat. <br />Claire Syrett, representing the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), asked the council to end the <br />DPSZ, which she termed an "end run" against due process protections, or at minimum to suspend it until <br />improvements were implemented. She called for details about the offenses being targeted by police and <br />the reasons cases were denied or dismissed by judges. She questioned the zone's effectiveness in keeping <br />repeat offenders from downtown given that offenders violated their exclusion orders an average of four <br />times each. She objected that the advocacy program had not been mentioned during the zone's review. <br />She questioned the nature of the proposed program enhancements and how the council would know they <br />were effective. <br />Joe Tyndall, Ward 1, opposed the exclusion zone because he believed it was being used to exclude <br />homeless people and nonviolent individuals from downtown. He said that Occupy Eugene sought police <br />reports regarding the zone and had received three different reports that the organization found to be <br />incomplete. He shared some statistics from the reports in support of his contention about how who was <br />MINUTES— Eugene City Council February 27, 2012 Page 1 <br />Regular Meeting <br />