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MINUTES – Eugene City Council Work Session October 30, 2019 Page 1 <br />MINUTES <br />Eugene City Council and Eugene Urban Renewal Agency <br />Harris Hall, 125 East 8th Avenue <br />Eugene, Oregon 97401 <br />October 30, 2019 <br />12:00 p.m. <br />Councilors Present: Betty Taylor, Emily Semple, Alan Zelenka, Jennifer Yeh, Greg Evans (via phone), Claire Syrett, Chris Pryor <br />Councilors Absent: Mike Clark Mayor Vinis opened the October 30, 2019, work session of the Eugene City Council. City Manager Pro Tem Sarah Medary thanked partners at Lane County and St. Vincent de Paul for quickly working together to open a warming center. She reminded people that both branch libraries and community centers are open for drop-in warming during the day. <br />1. WORK SESSION: Downtown Fiber Project UpdateEconomic Development Planner Anne Fifield gave an update about the completion of the downtownfiber project and its positive impacts.Council Discussion: <br />•Councilor Pryor – said he remembers the fiber project vision and initial conversation thatstarted 25 years ago and now the results are being seen; thanked Milo Mecham for hiscontributions to this vision. <br />•Councilor Syrett – said she’s excited to see such success for a project that could have appeared arisky investment when started; said she’s excited to see the employment opportunities andproducts that have come out of this; expressed desire to see the next phase of this projectscoped out, expanding to residential and other areas of the city. <br />•Councilor Zelenka – said this project has been worth the investment of resources, noting thejobs it has created and the revitalization of downtown; talked about this originally being a hub-and-spoke conversation with the downtown as the hub and asked how the City will expand tothe spokes and what the costs will be; asked about potential public-private partnerships; saidhe’d like to see a rate of return on the investment made. <br />•Councilor Semple – said she’s happy to hear how successful the fiber project has been andwould also like to see what it would take to expand the network; talked about the goal ofputting utilities underground, acknowledging how expensive that is; expressed desire to lookfor feasibly opportunities to do so; said she’s interested in keeping the internet publicly ownedto be affordable and available to more people. <br />•Councilor Pryor – talked about the policy decisions around fiber and how they have beenrelatively easy to this point, but they will likely get harder as the City thinks about the ultimategoal of getting high-speed fiber into homes. <br />•Councilor Evans – said he thinks 4J has access to the fiber network right now but wondered ifthere are plans to connect the Bethel School District; said there may be federal dollars tosupport the connection to rural communities, such as a partnership with Junction City. <br />ATTACHMENT D <br />November 25, 2019, Meeting - Item 2A