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77-acre park and wetland preservation would be questionable. She also predicted that little consideration <br />would be given to assimilate the development with the present neighborhood without the swap. She urged <br />the council not to let this opportunity slip by without looking into its feasibility. <br /> <br />Claire Syrett, 363 Adams Street, wished to speak about the establishment of community standards within <br />the proposed enterprise zone. She stated that she was an organizer for the Eugene/Springfield Solidarity <br />Network: Jobs With Justice (ESSN). She asserted that public money used to subsidize private business <br />should result in a measurable public benefit. She indicated that a business providing low-wage jobs with no <br />benefits ended up costing tax payers twice, first in an enterprise zone subsidy and then again when the low <br />wage worker needed help to feed his or her children or showed up at the emergency room for medical care. <br />She related that the United Way 2004 State of Caring report indicated that Lane County's working families <br />were struggling to meet basic needs. She reported that among households earning between $20,000 and <br />$34,000 per year, 30 percent lacked enough money for food and 25 percent lacked enough money for decent <br />housing. She noted that a full-time, minimum wage worker would make approximately $15,000 annually. <br />She supported the establishment of community standards in the enterprise zone so that Eugene could help to <br />move Lane County toward wage and benefit standards that would meet the basic needs of families. She said <br />having employers who benefit from the enterprise zone provide a living wage to its workers by the time the <br />tax incentives expired was a goal of ESSN. She defined a living wage as a wage on which workers could <br />support themselves and one dependent. She hoped Eugene would pass such standards, calling it the first <br />important step to move surrounding cities and the Lane Board of County Commissioners to adopt similar <br />standards. <br /> <br />Russ Brink, 132 East Broadway Street, # 103, Downtown Eugene, Incorporated (DEI), said among many <br />positive developments in the downtown area were a series of activities and programs in the summer that <br />were to be coordinated with the City's efforts to promote the arts and outdoors. <br /> <br />Mr. Brink favored the application for the enterprise zone, adding his observation that "there must be some <br />reason" why so many local governments in Oregon used the tool. He thought the previous enterprise zone <br />program had worked well for Eugene. He strongly recommended prompt submittal of the application. <br /> <br />Kevin Matthews, 1192 Lawrence Street, president of the Friends of Eugene, expressed his enjoyment of the <br />comments provided at the Public Forum. He averred, however, that only a few of the residents of Eugene <br />could come to a council meeting. He wondered what the citizens "at large" think on issues such as nodal <br />development, UGB expansions, and enterprise zones. He noted that an economic news release, which he did <br />not cite, had called Oregon the second fastest growing state in the country. He felt this meant that Oregon <br />was "open enough" for business. <br /> <br />Continuing, Mr. Matthews reviewed a graph taken from former councilor Shawn Boles' personal analysis of <br />the 1998 Eugene Growth Management Study, copies of which were provided to the council. He <br />extrapolated from it that the citizens who were members of the Eugene Area Chamber of Commerce were <br />diametrically opposed to the desires of the rest of the citizens of Eugene regarding growth management. He <br />said the citizens were "shouting into the wind." He registered his opposition to the enterprise zone. <br /> <br />Karl Sorg, 1555 West 18th Avenue, # 11, supported the resolution addressed to the federal government and <br />its "acts of terror." He recounted the military service he volunteered for during World War II, noting that he <br />volunteered for it because he was terrified at the fascism he had seen in Spain, Germany, Italy, and France. <br />He opined that he now saw his country engaged in terrorism he perceived to be outlandish. He expressed <br /> <br />MINUTES--Eugene City Council April 11, 2005 Page 6 <br /> Regular Session <br /> <br /> <br />