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appeal the penalty. Mr. Keim issued a "Notice of Failure" to the City Council. He said he had been <br />sweeping his own and his neighbors' sidewalk every ten for the last ten years and found it upsetting to <br />have to do so. He encountered feces, spray painting, and vandalism in downtown. He said the bar scene <br />downtown contributed to the overall chaos of the area. He asked the City to stop "passing the buck to <br />local business owners" and to pick up the trash. <br />Charles Hibberd, 5555 West 11 Avenue, said that LTD indicated that it was building the EmX system <br />to accommodate the 30,000 it expected to move to Eugene - Springfield in the next 30 years. He suggested <br />that if ten percent of those people used the bus, LTD would have 3,000 more riders at a cost of $83,333 <br />per rider. He questioned the population forecasts used by LTD. Mr. Hibberd commended the existing bus <br />service and suggested that population growth would increase ridership on the existing system. <br />Mayor Piercy closed the Public Forum. <br />Mayor Piercy thanked Drix for his comments about Veterans Day and thanked the community's veterans <br />for their service to their country. She also thanked all those who spoke, in particular the University of <br />Oregon students for offering a forum for community dialogue. <br />Councilor Clark thanked all those who spoke for what he considered exceptionally productive testimony. <br />He continued to be concerned about the proposed West Eugene EmX route and was leaning toward the <br />"no build" option because of the route's disproportionate impact on businesses. Councilor Clark was also <br />troubled by the potential that an unelected body such as the LTD Board of Directors could authorize <br />condemnation of private property, as well as by the lack of sustainable funding for system operations. <br />Councilor Clark tended to prefer the 6 avenue option if the system was to be built because of Ms. <br />Butler Boyson's comments that one did not need to have a car to be a consumer. He understood that <br />businesses on West l I 1 Avenue needed consumers, but most were coming in cars and would be for some <br />time. He suggested the value of such a system was to move employees rather than consumers. Councilor <br />Clark said that West 11 Avenue was currently configured as a retail corridor, and if the City was to build <br />more areas for jobs, that should be part of its considerations. <br />For those who spoke to the issue of zoning, Councilor Clark said that Eugene was planning transportation <br />corridors that would be well- served by transit and dominated by three- and four -story buildings. He <br />suggested that the question to be answered was whether West l I Avenue was an appropriate transit <br />corridor. <br />Councilor Poling thanked Drix for his service to his country. <br />Councilor Poling was unsure what property Mr. Benson was referring to in his remarks. He clarified his <br />earlier comments about rezoning, which was a response to whether the question of the route was a <br />rezoning issue. That put a spin on the subject by suggesting the City was piggybacking on the project in a <br />back door manner to do major rezoning on West 11 Avenue. Councilor Poling said the question for him <br />was whether the route would be built and where. He took things one issue at a time. <br />Councilor Ortiz thanked those who spoke. Regarding downtown, she thanked Ms. Gladen for her <br />remarks. She clarified that the City always had two officers downtown but during the summer months the <br />officers that had been working in the schools were deployed downtown. She anticipated that in another <br />year there will be more officers dedicated to downtown. <br />MINUTES— Eugene City Council November 8, 2010 Page 6 <br />Regular Meeting <br />