 So, you, let's just do a roll call so we don't lose here. Go ahead and start. Diane Frist, present. Just names, yeah, it's precision. Oh, Sean McCoy. Sean McCoy. Diane, why don't you go first because of the last recession we had that was actually called by Harold and you wanted updates. We'll just let you go first. Okay, so talking about the strain, what I wanted to mention was the North I-25 coalition is still in existence? It's gone virtual. Oh, okay. There's actually 114 people on the list, but not all are, you know, hauled in. And the big push for them is the FRPR, the front-range passenger rail. I guess what was interesting to learn about that is 0.8% is the maximum sales tax that the state can ask for. But they're studying 2020 indicated that 0.5% should be adequate, which we currently pay 0.4% for RTD. So, I think I might be able to swap those dollars for the FRPR. Okay. Yeah, that might be kind of a neutral. So, anyway, this will see what I have to say. Okay. And then I handed out about the minimum wage that we're going to 14.42. So, we're like fifth in the nation, the 23 states that changed the minimum grade, we're like fifth out of that. And I don't think we want to exceed New York City in terms of minimum wage changes. I think they're at 610. So, just an observation. So, what's going on in the country? Thanks. All right. That's my two seconds. Thank you. All right. Thanks. So, sister cities was canceled. So, I didn't get a chance to go to that meeting. But this Thursday, we're having an annual, our annual meeting where we get to talk about all of our trips that we're going to have. And I'm shopping, running to Japan. I still, hopefully Thursday, I'll know the dates for that. But the annual meeting is this Thursday. And unfortunately, we would not be bringing a cohort back from Japan. So, for whatever reasons that I'm sure we're going to hear about it on Thursday as to why that's not happening. So, the only meeting I really had was transportation meeting. They hired a new coordinator. And the coordinator will be starting January 27th for vision zero. So, yay. Yeah. What's next? Yeah. Yeah. So, and then next Thursday at the library, we will be having, they are having transportation mobility meeting at the library. It's next Thursday. And I think it's from 5.30 to 7. Not this coming? Is it? I don't think so. I think it's the 20, what's next? 25th. I think so. Yeah. I don't think the date down before. Okay. For me. And then on February the 9th from 7 to 9th is the winter bike. I don't know how that's going to work, but I don't bike like that. But anyway, that's what the February 9th is where you could bike to work. Yeah. So, they have the different stations throughout town for people from 7 a.m. to 9. But I think the main thing is the new coordinator that's coming on January the 27th for Vision Zero. Good. Yeah. Very exciting. Yeah. When are they going to open it up for the test course too? Well, I'm pretty sure they've waited until that coordinator gets settled. So, for first day. Like we threw Kyle in for it. Right. Exactly. Exactly. Yeah. So, we'll see. Yeah. Yeah. Once she gets her legs under. Has Native been meeting at all? We will be meeting towards the latter part of this month. I think I have it on my calendar. But yeah, we need. I think that's also on Thursday. Yeah, that Thursday is going to be a big Thursday, busy Thursday. But yeah, and we're meeting at a different location only for this month. Next month it will still stay in Adams County. Adams County. Would you do me a favor and ask them something? Ask them if FRPR has ever presented to them. I know that Phil asked and I asked Andy if they could. FRPR because we would like their support. So, it's just the municipalities that are I-25 because I wanted to bring Louisville in. And they said they're not really on I-25. So, it's a different mindset, but we all work together. Okay. Thank you. So, I started new on the Parks and Open Space Commission. And their first issue was having Price and Bryce, the two partner features. They were updating us on new municipal codes for chapter 13.20. And things around pallet craft and what that meant. And then some issues around trash and storage of items and how they were going to, there were some folks that, they didn't want to put trash and storage items and things like that. In with also people spreading their families remains in. So, they were separating that out to add another amendment to it. What are you talking about? Is this what you were talking about? Composting bodies? Yes, ma'am. Yeah. We're doing that? No, we're not doing that. We're making sure that if you do that because people will be out there trying to go to the golf course or to different places and drop off remains or on the trail to Button Rock or places like that. They'll spread the ashes of their loved ones. Oh God, I was thinking of chopped off fingers. No, no, no, no. It's that sort of stuff. And then we had people that were doing, would use ammunition boxes for geocaching. And they had to bring in the SWAT team and stuff like that, the bomb squad for that. And they had people that would take metal things to do geocaching that look like pipe bombs. So they finally got people to understand that if you wanted to do that you had to put in a clear container so that it was not construed. That it said, yeah, this is geocaching. And then issues around camping and permitting and the issue around sales of goods and services on public lands and stuff like that. So this is all going to come to us in council after they get a few of the things hammered out. There was a couple of things that we suggested that the board suggested they change. And they had to then take it back to the legal council, city legal council and make sure that those things were appropriate. And then we'll see it here. Issues around wildlife, then they had some issues around the levels of the class one, class two and class three electric bikes on some of the trails and everything. And then the last thing was charging people with changing the language of a ticket you may get. That if you want to go ahead and pay it, you can and basically leave no contest like you do with your traffic tickets. But if you want it that way, what they were finding is that people would come to court. Price and price would come to court and have to go and always show up to court. Unlike our police officers that don't always have to show up to court because the tickets are not being challenged or anything. And so instead they're getting it so it's a little bit more in line with that sort of thing. But if you want to challenge it, you can, then they'll show up to court. And if you don't want to challenge it, then you can just pay the fine. Now hearing things from people out there, I heard my daughter say her friend went up to Button Rock and made the mistake of bringing the dog with them. And it ended up, they got a ticket, not a warning, but a ticket for around $400. And you either pay the $400 or you went to court to see if you get 90 days probation and then pay a $100. Well, like a lot of people, you don't want to put anything that would show that you had probation in the court system. So that's something we probably need to look at a little bit to see how to speak that fine. We certainly don't want people up there with dogs if we told them not to. And I'm sure we've got plenty of signage up there, but it's something to realize that we've got to probably keep that in mind. So there's some issues around that. And the levels of fines, like the first defense $100, second offense for certain things, $200 and so on and so forth. I don't think this person that my daughter was telling me about had been like the third offense. So I think it was like the first offense that it was pretty high. So it's something that I'd have to look at specifically to see what they were getting written for other than having a dog with them on the trail. Yeah, it's good to be before we discuss that. Yeah, so it's going through legal to make sure that it's all in line with other departments that issue tickets and that type of thing. So then in December I had a meeting with the consortium of cities and that was pretty interesting. We went to the emergency unit where they, whenever they have a serious emergency, maybe they have these screens that are larger than that computer. They have that big screen there, six of them around the room or eight of them around the room. So you can see the different maps and the different things that are going on in different areas. They've got computers that are just as needed to animal collection. So somebody who mans that from the county, another one around different varieties of problems. They run scenarios, they run what they call a fish bone of every incident. And do some practice incident delegations so that people kind of know what their part is and how they're distributing materials. That was to a site and where the incident command starts and everything and where they fall back to. It's just really, really interesting. There's some south boulder over near the airport so it's kind of an interesting place to check out so near the jail. But if you get a chance to check it out, it's got some cool features to it. Can I add one thing? The one that came up on my calendar was February 1st for the transportation mobility. Yeah, I was going to tell you that. It's on the Thursday, I was half right. February 1st, 5.30 to 7. What is that? That's the transportation mobility plan where they have an open house for them. But also I wanted to add on to what you were saying, Sean, that transportation, we always talked about red light cameras. And the engineers have always said, you get a lot of backlash from the citizens. Anyway, a lot of contested situations. So it's almost better just to have law enforcement catch them than the white cameras. Because, you know, that no contest is a problem. People feel like they didn't have a day to order. Well, we see that we have been finding results in Fort Collins and Boulder. They must not have too much of that going on because they keep them around and they expand on them. About a year or so ago, my daughter got money for costs. So I'm thinking, okay, I'm thinking that there's probably some value to it. It's just around the idea of how expensive each one is, like, some $30,000 to $40,000. Maybe I've got that low by it. Yeah, it's like, the council gave this direction to look at that before. And it's like $40,000 of light pole or some version. So it's pretty expensive. There's some other things occurring in the state legislature on some of these issues. So they're looking into it again. From a public safety standpoint, when we look at the number of crashes that we have at intersections, I think, you know, if we can manage a cost, it makes sense to make people aware of them. Because even if you don't generate a lot of tickets, it's really about stopping those folks that are blowing the lights, based on the amount of T-bones that we have. But we're trying to figure out the cost. This is our worst accident problem. The intersection is now similar. I don't think it is anymore. 66 in Maine is more than 67 in Maine. 17 in Maine is another one. Some of our most significant accidents now are people running red lights. The challenge is it's almost impossible to have all of these intersections. So that's the utility in it that we're trying to figure out the cost. Maybe a vision zero will help with that. Susie, do you have a minute or two to get ready? Yeah. Is there somebody else who wants to come over? So the question I want to say is that I have the ethics thing done. The ethics code, I sent it to somebody to edit it and make sure that, I mean, formatted, make sure that I have all of the ones, twos, A, B, Cs in the correct order. And are you still willing to edit it, Susie? I'll send it to Susie. And then it'll go to you. And then it'll come to us in a pre-session. And everybody had it and decide whether you like the way it says or what it doesn't say. And then it'll go back to the drawing board or it'll all be okay. So I'm happy that's done. Also, there's been a lot of input. From the Colorado Sun did a thing on all of the utility companies as they were moving forward to meet the state's greenhouse gas emissions timetable. And PRPA was at the bottom. So there was a lot of backlash, a lot of backlash for that. And that PRPA is not meeting goals and standards, et cetera. So I reached out to another mayor and actually Javier from PRPA sent out a news release as to what that was about. I can send it if you're interested. But I got another mayor, Jenny, for cons. I got her input on it just because sometimes I think maybe I'm not understanding it correctly. So here's what she wrote. She said PRPA is following all laws. The law said an interim goal and also said that for entities not reaching that new goal in 2027, they need to file their plan with the state for reaching the 2030 goal, which PRPA has done. And it is on target to reach the 2030 goal. The transition is not smooth. According to the Colorado Sun, they feel that we are at a place where we can't in three years, well, it would be two years now, meet the 2027 goal. But there's nothing really definite saying we can't. So it is still our goal, but we put in a plan to meet for 2030. I do have some questions I'm going to ask at the next meeting and I'll let you know what that is all about. So there's a lot of talk going around PRPA, which is, in a way, I'm glad. So I just got an email, Susie, that the formatting was done. So I'll just send you that and code it. The other thing is the Historic Commission Board is, it's interesting that they are going to have their retreat the same time that the council retreat, same day, same place, same time. But I think we are now in the process of changing that. I think it's going to be on the 17th. So we found that out at the border. Well, hold on. We're using that room same day, same time. We get priority, so they changed that around. That's an interesting board to be on and I'm glad I'm on it. I can't really report much because it was only the first meeting and they were kind of looking at the new year and what they were going to do. So at the retreat, I'll learn more specifically since it was the first one. I think that's about it. Oh, I forgot. No, Front Branch has some derail district. Okay. There's also a lot of talk about FRPR and there's a lot of support. But as Diane had said, the taxes for RTD and FRPR, that's going to be about .9% for us just for rail. So that's one of the reasons that we need to look at RTD very closely and say, we can't do this. You're either going to build it or you're not because we need to have our service delivery plan, the SDP, done by April or May, that RTD has no plans. And I talked to our director Eric Davidson last week. RTD has no plans to have forward for Front Branch passenger rail. None. They haven't made any input on it at all. So I think it's only fair to the residents that we look at it and say, FRPR is the real deal. It's a real railroad operator. It's a real BNSF. It's a real railroad. RTD is not. They never have made plans to do the Front Branch passenger rail. I'm very sorry you said that wrong. They never made plans to build or complete the Northwest border in the 20 years we've been on. And at 2050 it'll be 46 years. I personally cannot be in the seat and say that's okay. So that'll be another meeting. And I've also been doing some research on it. I think there is a way in my... in professional legal... I'm not a lawyer. I just think it'd be. So yeah, at presets. So that's it. These are all pretty heavy duty things, I think. The other things I said to both Harold and Zach, that the Supreme Court is hearing sometime this week if they haven't already. I haven't kept up with it. The ordinances and the issues on homelessness and the things that I've read about and heard is that they want to undo all ordinances on homelessness that local municipalities and counties have put in place for not arresting... that you could arrest homeless people. This is the Colorado Supreme Court? No, I think this is the general... but no, Colorado wouldn't do that. I'm not exactly sure of the details of that but I think we should keep our eye on it because it's going to affect us. Definitely going to affect us. There's also been some legislators working on a universal healthcare bill for Colorado. We now have a bill number for that so I'm going to ask Sandy to bring that forward so that we can read it. Let me tell you what the bill number is and you can look it up if you're interested. Because I want to testify so we need to have a good discussion on counsel about is this something that we want to support or not? Is there a date set for hearings? Not yet. Right now they're looking for different organizations, individuals who will write letters to the editor. But at this point I don't know... if I do I want to write it as a mayor and I can't do that unless the council adopts it and supports it. So the answer is no. So it looks like my folder didn't come out on my phone it's only on my laptop. So I'll send you that then. For concerning the analysis of universal healthcare systems. It's the same bill that we supported last year and that was House Bill 23-1209. But this has been an issue, the one that was sponsored by McCormick. Yes, and Martian and right now you know what happened to that last one? That last bill? It was sent to the committee, but the committee chair didn't pull it and read it because he didn't understand that he kept putting it on the bottom of the pile. So it never made it to committee. And then I guess Karen was furious with the guy and said once she explained it to him that it wasn't to actually, it was only to study other states that had universal healthcare. Was it working? How did they get through, you know, the ins and outs of? Okay. Well now they can't, Cory just found that they can't do that. Look, the valuation software that they were using to determine which bills came forward and had priority. So maybe Eugene, you have some input on that to explain if anybody doesn't understand that. I thought it was an open meeting issue. Yeah, let's... That it was the public policy meeting but not on the public side. Is it prioritized which bills got the right of the day? Right, in the House Bill 24-1075. Meeting where I was at, we were discussing that. Oh, okay. So I just didn't have it on this note. I made a folder for it on my laptop because I was getting all these emails. It didn't come on my phone with some slides. So that's all I got. Okay. So, well, I have... So library is meeting next week. So I had already updated council from the last meet time we met. The Museum Advisory Board is tomorrow. I had already updated you all for that. Our cab will be... This month will be my first meeting with them. They meet the fourth Wednesday. And then our public places meets on Thursday. So this will be my first meeting with them as well. However, I do have a couple of updates. One with the Youth Council. They are interested and wanted to collect council feedback. I kind of mentioned a little bit about this before, but to actually have a round table with City Council and Youth Council. One of the things that I was talking to folks about is maybe coming up with questions that we would have for us and that we can answer. So I just kind of wanted to throw that out there to see if there was interest. I mean, we'd have to set it up ahead of time. Have it open to the public because it would be from our side having to have an open meeting. So if there is interest in that, we can kind of work out dates and times. I like that idea. I think more boards need to talk to each other. Not just a council. So it would be nice to invite other related boards to... Yes. And this one would be led by high schoolers. So that, yes. And some of them have really invested interest in local politics and they have a lot of good questions, very positive groups. So I will let them know and then we can get the ball rolling on that component. So in addition to the other boards and commissions, I also sit on the Corps and Leeds Steering Committee and we had our meeting last Friday and I felt that it was very prudent to bring forward the information we're talking about on this. So, you know, we do have an annual report that will be sent public and I'll forward it to... I'll let Don know once that comes and see if she can forward it to the rest of the council. Okay. As well as newsletters. One of the things that we felt over the last year and a half that I've been meeting with them with getting this information out to the public and really having people understand what the dynamics of Corps and Leeds... I know I've heard from constituents and being in a place where we've had Corps come out to our house and it can be intimidating if you don't understand because there were four individuals there and they have their vests for protection and it looks intimidating. However, there's only one who's a police officer. You have your Corps person who's also an officer there as well. Social worker, you know, a clinician and so it's a lot of mental health people. So, by having them come and talk to my son he was really diverting from jail and having him, you know, calm down. He's having a meltdown or getting very accelerated. And, you know, he's six foot so we can't restrain him. I mean, when he was little and he didn't melt down I'd be able to wrap him in his blanket into the burrito thing and I can't do that now that he's an adult. So being able to call somebody who can work with him and calm him down rather than going to the ER or having him arrested. So that kind of piece and really helping the public to understand that it's not a bad thing when they come to your door and how to utilize that service. So, we were kind of, you know, one of the ideas was to have the newsletter that comes out and kind of update the public on that. So we have those going and I can share those with you as well. One of the things that, you know, as we were discussing with Emily Van Dorn, Dorn, is that right? Yes. She was mentioning that as far as statistics wise, 40% increase in case referrals to core needs with 15% increase in connectivity with unhoused. So when I think about, you know, legislators or Supreme Court making these rulings the impact that it has on services that we're already providing can be, you know, having a negative impact. And, you know, working with unhoused individuals to get them in that correct line of service. So I think the work that we're doing with the impact teams and core and leads team that I think we're making positive headway in addressing this. It just, it takes time. And then it also breaking down and perceptions that people have, these biases that people have towards seeing police presence and kind of breaking down that. And I think that's kind of one of the things that we've been discussing as a group and how we want to address that moving forward. So on the team we have different representatives, you know, from used to be health, we have someone from the DA's office, he met with us when we were dealing with the pooter, or not the pooter on the Purdue, sorry, Purdue issue. So that's where I met him before. And I knew that I had seen him that I finally connected the two. We have Andy Feaster, who's the core core team leads for public safety and as well as a paramedic, Omar Narassi, you know, say these names right. So, you know, we have you know, just not within the city but other community agencies involved in this work. One of the questions that we're working to address for this next quarter is, are we as trauma informed as we think we are? So we're evaluating that. I think we're operating on a lot of assumptions. You know, one of the things that was brought up from the DA's office is work that's happening in the jail and then conversations that I've had with the county commissioner Ashley Stoltzman about money going towards expanding the jail and I think you know, really, okay, what are we, what are we why? You know, let's look at what are we looking to address. We're looking to address mental health. So if we're looking to address mental health are we wanting to go to the jail avenue or are we wanting to provide services. So that's why we really need to know how much money we're getting from that not fentanyl. Is it fentanyl money? Obi-Wan? Obi-Wan money. So getting that dollar amount because there are opportunities for us to be able to tap in to you know, if we do something we're expanding the jail or maybe have like an in-between where people are transitioning out of the jail system because maybe it's mental health related, drug addiction related and transitioning them to something that has more wraparound services that address needs. One of the issues that we discussed and I spoke to this is you know, the human mind is not a silo there are many different aspects whether it's mental disability in line with mental disorder along with drug addiction so there's multiple things but we have service providers that maybe specialize in mental illness but not the other or they can deal with mental disabilities but they can't deal with drug addiction if there's somebody who's disabled who has a drug addiction how do you deal with streamline those two services. So it's less about there are no beds available it's finding people who can provide those services in these facilities. So kind of filling in those gaps have you thought about the entry initiative? That's what they do. Yes, yes because we were so we were analyzing our processes and how we can collect feedback from people who've been who went through the process and one of the things that and you know it's like Facebook it's toxic I'm sorry but I have you know I feel like okay it's kind of good to know what people are saying but some of the things that people are saying you know the complaints I read one piece and I want to try to find a way to reach out to that individual that I can't find their real name but you know complaining about how the core team needs to be disbanded and you know that bad interaction it was like well we really want to come you know let's find out why that bad interaction is happening and what was it was it perception you know because your perception is your reality so was it a perceived issue that you know you kind of want to navigate that piece I think by the time things come to council they've already exhausted all other measures or they're just wanting to complain so how can we elicit you know a streamlined system where people can provide specific feedback that would help us as an organization improve what the core and leads team is doing I think from my own personal experience I've not had bad experience and this is talking about years before I was on council so it's not like giving me specialized treatment it's like they didn't know it was for me back in 2017 or 2016 so so I think just getting that education piece out there as well as giving people an opportunity to provide feedback so those were some of the big things that we were talking about I think staffing is also a challenge so what do we do to get more people in if we're trying to move people from patrol to core team but we don't have new people coming into patrol we can't share this there's a shortage of people that are qualified to actually be that case worker and psychologist on site in general and so then gets us thinking back even farther to the educational institutions where people are what's happening and are people even going to school for these things and much less applying for these roles so how can we connect with area, universities and schools to we're seeing that the pay if you go to the Bureau of Statistics will tell you that it's one of the amount of school that you need to have to accomplish this there's no it's a 40 year payback the cost of the school yes it is it is yeah it's easier if you're already on that panel and then you're just adding on and that's as far as the core team goes we're going to add patrol moving people from patrol who gain that experience and then just move them over to the core team but it's finding the patrol staffing so actually finding officers to come in is when a challenge so that recruitment piece or even retention because there are people who say oh yeah I'll join join on and then they do not they took a job somewhere else just from my education this is core so yes oh it's a pre-session but I'm so sorry you can join help me with the core team acronym I'm sure this was part of my orientation it's a lot to take in it is so yeah I can pull that up I have a response it's a response it's a word somewhere what is the core crisis outreach response and engagement I knew response I didn't know anything else was that the only one that you I have to report on or is there so it was the library they're all meeting this week before at the end of the month there's youth council and core is what I have but I feel like it's important that council knows especially as we are approving or setting priorities you know I want to make sure that this how we've operated with this lens is and core reaches so many things LHA, mental health partners the residents I mean this is a separate yes lead do you have the acronym for lead there's too much stuff for my grade so one's more crisis and one's more that transition in the case management yes law enforcement assisted diversion and then the angel just did with the drug if I can add to some of what the mayor said that's the group that has come in in terms of another center of excellence so where they've all met so Christina can be core and lead senior services housing, youth services anywhere where there's a mental health touch and they're starting to work on building that center of excellence so they're now not operating in the time of the silence there's a curve and there's more moving to integrated operation which will tie in to the three clinicians that counsel that we have what's on the housing side too where the mayor all has to be other that support the broader and there's also going to be a collaboration with the school districts that was also brought so they're going to be allocating a clinician FDE to be able to work with schools I think it's at one more time yeah I think that clinician will kind of work with the SROs generally and they may be house somewhere but if there's a situation we don't move to that location and then if we find that this is really working then the school district will start finding more information is mental health partners fully staffed that's probably going to tie in to the next conversation but yeah definitely some stuff and then we meet quarterly so our next meeting much I forgot I had an email I got an email today I don't I've talked about this probably over the summer I don't remember but the life skills yes yes yes so the life skills I call it the life skills carnival I don't know what the kids are going to call it or children youth and families are going to call it but I got an email today asking if they're getting ready to put they're working on the marketing for it and they're going to create an instagram reel to promote the event which will be in April at the fairgrounds which the two commissioner Ashley and Martha were the ones who supported it and we got this you know covered and Christina has really been working really hard and Hilda and is it Giselle Giselle Giselle close okay I didn't get a chance to meet her when we first started all of this so I mean I can't remember I have met her I'm sorry I have met her anyway so they want to schedule a time where we they all have the students the kids at the center and then all of us to be a part of this video this instagram video for the life skills so for you Diana life skills is about teaching young teenagers and kids how to change a tire how to tie a tie just regular life skill things that I know probably our age group we knew those things we had to learn those things and so kids nowadays you know everything is on your phone and there's no practical learning that's just trying to figure it out through your phone or YouTube videos which there's absolutely nothing wrong with that but it also brings the community together so like Ace Hardware said let us know what you need because at the end whatever the life skills that we are able to do that day I would like to create a basket like if someone shows them how to thread a needle have a basket with a needle a wrench in it and all those things that they learn at the life skills I call it carnival I don't know what they're going to call it just have businesses local businesses come together and teach these kids how to just regular skills that we some of us know some of us don't like I don't know how to tie a tie but but yeah how to turn on the stove you know how to wash your clothes I don't know if we're going to do that and how to let them decide on what it was because I had a whole list of things that my kids we kind of do all that but but that's okay and what we can do we will do and I'm totally excited about it and it's going to be in April I don't have the we don't have the date yet but it will be at the fairgrounds so the commissioners approve that for us to utilize that space at the fairgrounds for the our life skills yes so when you say they are going to do the marketing who just do they commission families yeah so they want to get it done by the end of the month so they want to have the video done by the end of the month because they like to start marketing is Erika doing that video no it would there are two or three Erika's here so no Erika Ellington took a job she took a job with the other organizations they're probably working I don't know yeah I really like her yeah I know get some teens to do a TikTok I know TikTok and Instagram that would be good and then also we're going to get a new I forgot to mention this I don't have a meeting with DDA until later the 24th but we're getting a new pizza place I can't remember the name of it but the guy on Main Street and he is also in Upper Mountains Upper Lions? No, Estes Park he says he sells 600 pizzas a day and so New York style pizzas is that the one in Allen's Park? I don't know I don't know so Longmont we are truly lucky to have him to come on Main Street I got a call from Estes Park I answered but nobody was so he'll be on Main Street we're going to get a new deli on Main Street the magic fairy people bought the building or whatever so they're going to have a deli right next door to it which is right across from Cheeverhut which is kind of weird but it's going to work so but I'm excited about the pizza I'm like hey you don't do gluten free but it would be appreciative if you did do gluten free and also vegan I don't have to have no vegan cheese just give me some veggies and you're good I forgot to tell you all they set in spring so hopefully by April both of those businesses should be up on Main Street then T.O. Cowley is opening out yeah that one too what is? it's kind of like the best way is more of a Californian max oh ok they're in Lafayette and then they're in Nevada and Harold's excited for that because Harold's life's excited for that where are they going to be? the old guitar or etc building oh ok I mean yeah they're pretty busy and rockin' bass if you don't have reservations it's hard to get a walk up in there really? where? Lafayette you know you have to have reservations to go to Swayla's practically dead really? I got this you've got them on camera ok that's over the tiki head over near where the old outback was good for them though people complain we don't have a good place to eat in Swayla well they're very people the people? ok I'm not sure so upcoming events it isn't in cement yet but we're planning David Hornbuffer and I talked about as well as Javier from PRPA a tour of the PRPA solar panels solar panels as well as the cold plant that's going to go out of commission because I think it's really important to see what we are actually doing hands on type of stuff hopefully about depending on when or March or April probably April yeah I think of bonanza when you say that did you speak to the legislative breakfast that we attended? yes I was there no did you get a chance to talk to council? no because I went to that it was interesting it was interesting go ahead I had never gone to one so I didn't know what to expect but we heard from the governor really the top three priorities transportation and housing right however my thought is but I didn't really hear anything concrete and what are they going to do to help municipalities achieve those goals because I see it with the education all the time unfunded mandates that's what Phil and I were looking at each other where's this before so yeah I'll allow us to get it done so not micromanages it's really it's fun to go because you can network and people are there but yeah it's a lot of what have we achieved which I think is really good because we complain a lot in all of those areas about what we need to do so that part of it was really good this is what community solutions has done over the past year and then it's always interesting to the governor he's very excited about all of it but there's no teeth that's it I just wanted to I was waiting to hear something specific and to make this happen we are going to that was a part of it so we're just really back to basically what he says this is what I want all of you to do but we need the funding and we need just the respect that we know what we're doing for our locality let us do what we have to do it's always interesting to walk out with like Joanie Marsh and she said we only knew what planning went through to get our our Phil okay that's good I like seeing it so yeah, so if anybody has I think it was open to council or I just invited myself I don't know because I've done that too I just show up I'll bring my own Phil now the same as a member yeah the same as a member of community solutions so see you there next year Daya so that that is if you have something else that you want to throw out there I'm trying to go through the change so I'm glad it wasn't us okay so if we're done at least you have something else you want to I had heard that the governor is kind of pushing for the 0.8% tax for the front range passenger rail I feel like we've already done our 0.4% without any without any product and that point has been made with the FRPR board and they're very well aware of that because we're not the only ones there are three other communities or I guess counties that have been promised rail and haven't gotten it but one of the things that we're batting around is doing a segmented rail and you don't pay the taxes until your segment is being built will that give us enough money to start we don't know so again there are all kinds of interesting things discussions I guess and how do you put that on a ballot measure because they're so hard to read and to understand from a general public's point of view so the marketing has to be great the other thing is that Faith Winters is in charge of redoing our TV coming up with some big fiscal ideas for transportation in general and she did they are taking to account my in my point of having a transportation fee for everybody in the state especially for you know if you're going to go skiing and you're from Texas you have to pay for our roads as well and you can be using them so much but be on your ticket Faith Winters is the new RTD director no Faith Winters is a Senator and she's been on transportation for a long time but when the governor broke up his land use bill into three sections of land use transportation and housing he put her on the transportation part all under the land use of Rola 213 up in smoke so do you have just a minute or two before they come in yep nope I was just trying to figure out looking at the time I'm sorry if we're adjourning then we can let them come in oh yeah yeah we are adjourned