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MINUTES – Eugene City Council Work Session June 10, 2019 Page 1 <br />MINUTES <br />Eugene City Council <br />Harris Hall, 125 East 8th Avenue <br />Eugene, Oregon 97401 <br />June 10, 2019 <br />5:30 p.m. <br />Councilors Present: Betty Taylor, Emily Semple, Alan Zelenka, Jennifer Yeh, Mike Clark, Greg Evans, Claire Syrett, Chris Pryor Mayor Vinis opened the June 10, 2019, work session of the Eugene City Council. <br />1.WORK SESSION AND ACTION: An Ordinance to Fund Community Safety with a Payroll <br />Tax and Adding New Section to the Eugene Code, 1971Assistant City Manager Kristie Hammitt and Eugene Police Chief Chris Skinner talked aboutthe community safety plan and revisions made to the proposed ordinance regarding thepayroll tax.Council Discussion: <br />•Councilor Clark – talked about amendments he has previously mentioned; said that hethinks this money needs to get spent on public safety but that this manner of paying forwhat we must do cannot sustain public support; expressed his commitment to referringthe proposal to the voters. <br />•Councilor Taylor – agreed with Councilor Clark that this will be put to a vote whethercouncil sends it to a vote or not and it will fail as currently proposed; said she wouldconsider the tax if people making under $25 an hour were exempt, but cannot vote for itwhen people who are barely making enough to live would get taxed; expressed concernabout what would happen if the tax was put to a vote in seven years and the measurefailed. <br />•Councilor Pryor – talked about the need to spend this money on community safetyservices, acknowledging the significance amount of the tax; said that after spendingmonths looking at revenue options this was the one that floated to the top; noted therewill always be opponents to any tax proposed, but that this was the most practical andviable way; expressed frustration that council continued to talk about the problemwithout solving it; talked about reasonably reduced rate for low-income workers. <br />•Councilor Syrett – expressed the need to find sources of revenue for public safety andtalked about the vetting that took place to land on this revenue choice; acknowledgedthat there would be no proposal that would be seen as perfectly fair or acceptable toeveryone; supported amending the ordinance to provide an exemption for peopleearning $15 an hour or less; noted that the public safety budget has remained staticwhile the population has grown and that while there might be a ballot challenge, councilhas a responsibility to step up and pass this tax; talked about the significance of supportfrom the Chamber of Commerce, which represents many businesses affected by the tax. <br />•Mayor Vinis – spoke about the broad positive impacts across the community and thatthe tax on any individual is shallow; talked about the need for police response tolivability crimes across the community; said she was prepared to advocate for this taxand present it accurately. <br />•Councilor Semple – asked if the community safety budget will later replace money infuture budgets or be in addition to the current budget; shared concerns about needing <br />July 22, 2019, Meeting – Item 2A <br />ATTACHMENT A