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ATTACHMENT A <br /> <br /> MINUTES <br /> <br /> Eugene City Council <br /> Regular Session <br /> Council Chamber--City Hall <br /> <br /> May 23, 2005 <br /> 7:30 p.m. <br /> <br /> COUNCILORS PRESENT: George Poling, Jennifer Solomon, Bonny Bettman, David Kelly, Andrea <br /> Ortiz, Gary Pap6, Chris Pryor, Betty Taylor. <br /> <br />Mayor Kitty Piercy called the meeting of the Eugene City Council to order and welcomed all those <br />present. <br /> <br />1. PUBLIC FORUM <br /> <br />Mayor Piercy observed that 20 people signed up for the Public Forum. <br /> <br /> Councilor Bettman, seconded by Councilor Pap6, moved to hold 45 minutes for the Public <br /> Forum and to limit testimony to two minutes per person. Roll call vote; the motion passed <br /> unanimously, 7:0, Councilor Solomon having not yet arrived. <br /> <br />Mayor Piercy reviewed the rules of the Public Forum. <br /> <br />Councilor Solomon arrived. <br /> <br />Jeremy Hall, PO Box 11648, Eugene, said that he worked with the Oregon Natural Resources Council <br />(ONRC). He urged support for Resolution 4836. He averred that clean water and the big trees in the <br />McKenzie River watershed were some of the primary reasons why Eugene was a great place to live, work, <br />and raise a family. A "yes" vote on the resolution, he asserted, would say "yes" to clean drinking water, <br />"superb" recreational opportunities, and a balanced local economy. He attributed the quality of life for <br />Eugene residents, past, present, and future, to the public forests and clean water of the McKenzie River. <br />He underscored that the river provided jobs as well, both related to outdoor activities and to the businesses <br />that stay or relocate here in part because of the quality of life. <br /> <br />Mr. Hall stated that the "towering groves of ancient trees" were dwindling. He alleged that over 3,352 <br />acres of old growth forest were slated to be cut over the next few years. He averred that logging such <br />forests in past decades had contributed to massive sedimentation in river waters. He pointed out that <br />EWEB was forced to shut down its plant during the flood of 1996. He provided a spreadsheet that <br />described the logging projects for the council and a copy of a petition containing 5,180 signatures from <br />people calling on the Forest Service and Congress to permanently protect the old growth and mature <br />forests of the McKenzie River. <br /> <br />Amy Pincus-Merwin, 2220 Sandy Drive, spoke in support of Resolution 4836. She wished to call <br />attention to herbicide use on land that had been clear-cut in the McKenzie Watershed and all over Oregon. <br /> <br />MINUTES--Eugene City Council May 23, 2005 Page 1 <br /> Regular Session <br /> <br /> <br />