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<br />Carol Berg-Caldwell <br />, 2510 Augusta Street, read a poem protesting the recent addition of signs painted on the <br />sidewalk that prohibited loitering in certain areas around the downtown transit station. She felt that young people <br />were being targeted. <br /> <br />Santiago Gause <br />, 2520 Van Buren Street, said he was the "happy owner" of five hens and twelve pullets. He <br />believed that the Eugene code restricting the number of chickens was unfair. He thought everyone should be allowed <br />to add a number of chickens to their backyard. He cited the benefits of having chickens, such as the manure which <br />contained good minerals such as nitrogen, potassium, and phosphorous and was more nutritious for gardens than <br />horse or steer manure. He said it also increased the moisture-retaining qualities of soil. He considered raising <br />chickens to be a good life lesson for children. He felt that chickens provided a good food source, but were also <br />"loving and sweet companions." He said because of his brother's allergies they could not have cats or dogs. He <br />enjoyed raising chickens with his family. He stated that raising their own meat meant they did not have to drive to <br />the supermarket to buy it. He noted that Tyson brand chickens were raised on factory farms. He declared that eating <br />his chickens' eggs and meat kept him and his family "strong and healthy" and "strong and healthy citizens equals one <br />big happy healthy family." In closing, he wished the mountain bikers good luck. <br /> <br />David Burham <br />, 1310 Arthur Street, echoed opposition to the Amazon Canal route option for the EmX. He <br />reiterated that their neighborhood was bucolic. He noted that he was a violin teacher and a member of the Eugene <br />Symphony and had been for 27 years, as well as playing for the Sugar Beets and making electric instruments for <br />customers all over the world. He said his work happened in his house. A bus route by his house would be the last <br />thing he would want in the neighborhood. He pointed out that there were seven bus stops within a half-mile of the <br />area. He noted that routes were currently being cut because of revenue shortfalls. He declared that to spend between <br />$120 to $135 million, with 20 percent local money, for an entirely new bus route which would "destroy the bike <br />path, destroy the creek, and at the end of that time change what [they] had now," would go against the open space <br />plan. <br /> <br />th <br />Ilona Koleszar <br />, 871 West 11 Avenue, Ward 1, testified on behalf of Residents for Responsible Rapid Transit <br />(3RT). She also sat on the West Eugene EmX Corridor Committee for LTD. She considered the 13th Avenue and <br />Garfield Street neighborhood an "intimate enclave" of modest homes with a healthy mix of renters and owners. It <br />was unfathomable to her that any bus would go through there. She urged the council to "push away" from the <br />Amazon and West 11th Avenue route options. She urged the council to support the option that would use 6th and <br />7th Avenues, accompanied by a transportation system management option. She had handed out a list of Bus Rapid <br />Transit (BRT) attributes to council staff for the councilors. She felt that of the eight attributes, seven could be done <br />without a BRT system and had marked them as such. She listed them. She opined that the more she learned about <br />this, the more she thought the EmX was just "smoke and mirrors." She said the first leg was $24 million, the second <br />was $43 million, and the next one might be $150 million. <br /> <br />Jan Spencer <br />, 212 Benjamin Street, said he raised chickens and he voted. He related that he kept a folder in his <br />computer of New York Times articles he felt represented a declining civilization. He had found several in the most <br />recent edition, including one in which it was reported that the press corps for the President was shrinking because of <br />the expense. He had retained another article that had been about cuts to the program that subsidized daycare for <br />working mothers. He explained that this was being cut in a lot of states because it was not affordable, but women <br />who wanted to work could not do so because they could not afford daycare. He had ridden his bicycle to the meeting. <br />He opined that he had never seen Maurie Jacobs Park and the Owens Rose Garden "look so ragged." He did not <br />know if this was due to budget cuts in Eugene. He thought that the chicken issue had arisen because a lot more <br />people see the indicators and trends, both locally and worldwide, and want to take care of themselves more locally. <br /> <br />Mary Wood <br />, Program Director for the Environmental and Natural Resource Law Program at the University of <br />Oregon, School of Law, stated that she had taught property law for more than 17 years and had been appointed as <br />MINUTES—Eugene City Council May 24, 2010 Page 6 <br /> Regular Meeting <br /> <br />