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grocery store had been in the top 100 employers since 1998, and most years it was in the top 50. She said <br />the store fostered community participation by giving five percent of its profits to local charities and by <br />paying employees to volunteer. She related that the store had salary caps with maximum margins between <br />its lowest and highest paid employees. Additionally, she pointed om that Whole Foods supported <br />sustainability by buying local produce and by recycling and reusing materials and reducing waste. She <br />quoted a favorable letter to the editor of The Register-Guard from a former Eugene resident who was <br />employed by the store, noting in particular that the store offered domestic partner benefits. She averred <br />that a downtown was most vital when it included national retailers. For her, downtown revitalization <br />meant people living downtown and, for that reason, a full service grocery store was a primary need. She <br />related that an opinion piece in the Eugene Weekly was errant in its assertion that Symantec had left <br />downtown after its tax exemption was exhausted. She understood that there never had been a tax <br />exemption and Symantec was still paying the City for parking. She also disagreed that the Downtown <br />Athletic Club (DAC) was built with block grants that ultimately decreased money for low-income <br />housing. She asserted that the loans were paid back with interest. She felt the DAC remodel spurred · <br />surrounding development that made for full tenancy in that area. <br /> <br />Bob Foster, 369 West D Street, #11, Springfield, expressed concern about Whole Foods moving to <br />Eugene and hoped it would not drive om the smaller stores. He had not heard that Whole Foods bought <br />local produce, but if this was so it alleviated some of his concerns. He asked for a dialogue between the <br />City Council and the smaller stores before a large store was invited into the neighborhood to ensure that <br />the larger store would not undercut the small ones and put them om of business. <br /> <br />Moshe Immerman, 1290 McLean Boulevard, opined that Whole Foods was far from an optimal choice <br />for a store because it would be investor-driven. He asserted that the average morsel of food in the United <br />States traveled more than 1,400 miles to its eventual destination. He alleged that the Wild Oats Natural <br />Food chain was highly suppressive of free speech among its customers. He claimed that he was a healing <br />arts practitioner and was not allowed to speak to clients about the health benefits of the formulas bought at <br />that store. He supported forming a food cooperative. He provided the Mayor and council with copies of a <br />newsletter from a food co-op in Sacramento that he shopped at while visiting. He pointed out that the co- <br />op in Sacramento focused on purchasing local produce. <br /> <br />Mr. Immerman requested that the council direct the City Attorney to render a legal opinion on whether the <br />City could partner with an retailer such as Whole Foods. He did not think it was legal or ethical. He also <br />wanted the City Council to put om a Request for Proposal (RFP) from all non-profits and private and <br />corporate sources for what kind of option to put in that location and he wished this to be followed with a <br />public hearing, to be held in the Convention Center. He alleged that he had an initial commitment for a <br />$10,000 grant from a "national organization" for a feasibility study for a food cooperative and that he had <br />also secured an initial commitment for a $50,000 grant for a market and marketing study. <br /> <br />Paul Nicholson, 1855 East 28th Avenue, commented that it was difficult to know what was going on <br />regarding the possibility of Whole Foods locating in Eugene. He asserted that some projects in the city of <br />Eugene quickly moved "directly from rumor to a signed memorandum of understanding." In response to <br />Ms. Mosely's testimony, he said he stood by the statement he made in the Eugene Weekly that the DAC <br />received a large "way-below-market rate loan" backed by Community Development Block Gram funds. <br />He thought the issue boiled down to whether the City was conducting its planning ad hoc or in a "real <br />way." He pointed out that some of the elected officials expressed support for small businesses in their <br />campaigns. He noted he had nothing against Whole Foods per se but he averred the "twin millstones that <br />grind up small business" were the long-term policy of arbitrary changes in consolidation of land and <br /> <br />MINUTES--Eugene City Council June 27, 2005 Page 2 <br /> Regular Session <br /> <br /> <br />