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ATTACHMENT A <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 /> May 11, 2009 <br /> 7:30 p.m. <br /> <br /> <br />COUNCILORS PRESENT: Chris Pryor, George Brown, Andrea Ortiz, George Poling, Mike Clark, Alan <br />Zelenka, Betty Taylor, Jennifer Solomon. <br /> <br />Her Honor Mayor Kitty Piercy called the meeting of the Eugene City Council to order at 7:36 p.m. <br /> <br />1. PUBLIC FORUM <br /> <br />Mayor Piercy reviewed the rules of the Public Forum. <br /> <br />Carol Berg-Caldwell <br />, 2510 Augusta Street, invited the councilors to attend a town hall on tasers, to be held on May <br />21, in the Training Room of the Eugene Water & Electric Board (EWEB). She said panelists would share their <br />views and there would be questions and answers with the audience. She noted that the panel included James <br />Salisbury, father of Ryan Salisbury – a young man who was shot and killed by police officers responding to a call for <br />help from the family. She greatly respected Mr. Salisbury for his willingness to share his personal tragedy with the <br />community and to provide input. She hoped the Police Chief or another Eugene Police Department (EPD) designee <br />would attend. She noted that Police Commissioner Juan Carlos Valle had indicated that he would attend. She <br />provided copies of the flier for the event to the council. <br /> <br />Maritza Herrera <br />, 2583 Park View, stated that she was a resident of North Eugene. She requested that there be a <br />park for the area. She said when she took her dog for a walk she had to drive to Alton Baker Park or to Armitage <br />Park, which cost $3. She related that her fiancée loved to play soccer and had to drive south to do so. She <br />understood that land had been purchased for parks in South Eugene, but parks were really needed in North Eugene. <br /> <br />Margaret Thumel <br />, P.O. Box 1966, had been recently annoyed by some of the things that the City of Eugene was <br />doing and proposing. She objected to spending $6.2 million on a bicycle flyover from Willagillespie Road over an <br />abandoned quarry and freeway. She opined that the idea of charging a fee to garbage collectors was “hare-brained.” <br />She called this a “phantom tax” for the City to repair potholes. She had been galled by the request for matching <br />funds from the City of Eugene, available for the project from Systems Development Charges (SDCs), for a skate <br />park. She averred that she did not know where the councilors lived or “which reality zone” they were in, but she <br />considered these types of decisions to be irresponsible. She asserted that the number one responsibility of the council <br />was public safety. She alleged that the City had the lowest per capita amount of police officers in the nation; it was <br />not uncommon for the City of Eugene to have only five officers on duty at one time. She observed that Lane County <br />Jail was letting felons out guided by a matrix based on the dangers the felons posed to the community, rather than a <br />time matrix. She asked the councilors when they had last done a ride-along with a sergeant of EPD during a regular <br />shift. She asked the council to forget the skate park and the “other tidbits” and prioritize public safety first. <br /> <br />Erik Humphrey <br />, 777 High Street, Suite 120, vice president of the Eugene Police Employees Association (EPEA), <br />indicated that he was providing testimony specifically under the guise of Eugene Code (EC) 2.400(2) to file an <br />MINUTES—Eugene City Council May 11, 2009 Page 1 <br /> Regular Meeting <br /> <br />