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ATTACHMENT B <br /> <br />M I N U T E S <br /> <br /> <br />Eugene City Council <br />Regular Meeting <br />Council Chamber—Eugene City Hall <br />777 Pearl Street—Eugene, Oregon <br /> <br /> July 28, 2008 <br /> 7:30 p.m. <br /> <br />COUNCILORS PRESENT: Chris Pryor, Bonny Bettman, Betty Taylor, Andrea Ortiz, George Poling, Jennifer <br />Solomon, Mike Clark, Alan Zelenka. <br /> <br />Her Honor Mayor Kitty Piercy called the meeting of the Eugene City Council to order. <br /> <br />1. PUBLIC FORUM <br /> <br />Mayor Piercy reviewed the rules of the Public Forum. <br /> <br />Susan M. Truax <br /> said although she had patronized downtown businesses for many years, was involved as a volunteer <br />with the Eugene Celebration, and spent considerable time downtown, when she read the recent article in The <br />Register-Guard about the experience of Betty Snowden, she realized she did not know what was going on downtown. <br />She called the treatment of Ms. Snowden unacceptable. She wanted to participate in a solution and was ready to act, <br />including sitting down in front of Ms. Snowden’s business to demonstrate support. She asked the council to give her <br />direction. <br /> <br />Kathy Saranpa <br />, representing the Crest Drive Community Advisory Group, noted the council’s passage of a motion <br />calling for the Planning Commission to investigate the potential of reclassifying the street and said she had since <br />learned from City Manager Jon Ruiz and Public Works Director Kurt Corey that the council could take that action <br />without input from the commission. She asked the council to take that action. <br /> <br />Jim Torrey <br />, 3393 Arlington Avenue, spoke in support of the exclusion ordinance as a means to respond to the racial <br />harassment experienced by resident Betty Snowden and others. He thanked councilors Ortiz and Clark for raising the <br />issue. He acknowledged that the proposed ordinance might not be perfect but suggested to do anything less was not <br />acceptable. He believed that the offense of failure to appear was not an acceptable approach. He noted the recent <br />successful Olympic Trials and said the volunteer committee, which he had chaired, had worked long and hard to <br />determine how each visitor to Eugene felt welcome. He asked the council to consider the impact the article about Ms. <br />Snowden’s experiences in The Register-Guard would have had on visitors had it appeared during the event. He did <br />not think that the City could fail to deal with the situation. He called on the council to take responsibility and deal <br />with the issue or it would send a message he did not believe the citizens supported. He said that “Justice delayed was <br />justice denied.” <br /> <br />Zach Vishanoff <br />, a resident living on Patterson Street, questioned what prompted the council to change the closing <br />date for public comment for the University of Oregon’s arena project. He asked “what’s the rush” and why the <br />University could not wait until September. He raised the issue of a new dormitory proposed to be built one block <br />south of the existing arena, which would impact housing. He believed that too many development projects were <br />going forward at the same time. Mr. Vishanoff also noted a proposal to build a new laboratory in the Riverfront <br /> <br /> <br />MINUTES—Eugene City Council January 16, 2008 Page 1 <br /> Meeting <br /> <br />