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ATTACHMENT C <br /> <br />M I N U T E S <br /> <br /> <br />Council Committee on Intergovernmental Relations <br />McNutt Room—Eugene City Hall—777 Pearl Street <br />Eugene, Oregon <br /> <br /> April 12, 2007 <br /> Noon <br /> <br />PRESENT: Bonny Bettman, Chair; Chris Pryor, Betty Taylor, members; Mary Walston, Brenda Wilson, <br />Jessica Cross, Randi Zimmer, Mary Feldman, City Manager's Office; Ellwood Cushman, <br />Kristi Wilde, Eugene Police Department; Eric Jones, Lacey Risdal, David Breitenstein, Steve <br />Gallup, Public Works Department; Nancy Young, Stuart Ramsing, Planning and Develop- <br />ment Department; Myrnie Daut, Larry Hill, Sue Cutsogeorge, Glen Svendsen, Jeff Perry, <br />Greg Rikhoff, Karen Hyatt, Char Mauch, Central Services Department; Glen Potter, Fire and <br />Emergency Medical Services Department; Jerry Lidz, City Attorney. <br /> <br /> <br />1. Call to Order and Review Agenda <br /> <br />Ms. Bettman called the meeting of the Council Committee on Intergovernmental Relations (CCIGR) to order <br />at 12:03 p.m. and reviewed the agenda. <br /> <br /> <br />2. Review Pending Legislation <br /> <br />HB 2872 <br /> <br />Mr. Cushman explained that the bill was one of those intended to govern cell phone use while driving. <br /> <br />Ms. Bettman, seconded by Mr. Pryor, moved to oppose the bill unless it was amended to <br />exclude two-way radios. The motion passed unanimously, 3:0. <br /> <br />SB 810 <br /> <br />Ms. Bettman, seconded by Mr. Pryor, moved to accept the staff recommendation to take a <br />Priority 3 Support stance on the bill. The motion passed unanimously, 3:0. <br /> <br />HB 3106 <br /> <br />In response to a question from Ms. Bettman, Mr. Cushman stated that the potential negative impact to the <br />City of Eugene included that it might create a situation in which the Department of Public Safety Standards <br />and Training (DPSST) would not be able to provide all of the basic police training it was committed to <br />providing when Eugene had to give up its academy and go there. He said any mandate for additional <br />training on DPSST would exacerbate the budget problem. He related that he had looked into the training <br />curriculum and it appeared that about 24 hours of training would fit into what the bill addressed. He <br />believed that it would be like a 16-hour expansion, meaning that it would either cut 16 hours out of another <br />curriculum area to accommodate it or they would have to lengthen the academy at an additional cost. <br /> <br /> <br />MINUTES—Council Committee on Intergovernmental Relations April 12, 2007 Page 1 <br />