 for which it stands, one nation, under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all. But you were taken in each. Thank you, everyone. Now, our last staff, are there any additions or deletions to tonight's agenda? Staff has one change to tonight's agenda. Staff recommends continuing item 8A, as the applicant has asked not to hear that item this evening. OK. Can we have a motion to continue item 8A? So moved. Second. So motion and a second. And roll call vote, please. Council Member Brown. Aye. Council Member Brooks. Aye. Council Member Bertrand. I approve. Vice Mayor Keiser. Aye. Mayor Story. Aye. Thank you. Next tonight presentations, we have two presentations this evening. And we'll start with the A, which is one of my favorite presentations, because it's mayor for a day essay contest. And Nikki's here to introduce the Middle School Division winner recognition. Recognition. Go ahead, Nikki. Thank you, Mayor, Council Members. I am here with great privilege to introduce to you Sidney Swanson, who is the mayor for a day essay contest in our Middle School Division as a student of New Brighton Middle School. Would you like to? Well, yeah, I have a certificate. And is Sidney, are you going to come up and sit in the mayor's seat and read your essay? Go ahead and take this with you and we'll go over it. Yeah. Why don't you come do that, then I'll give you your certificate. As mayor of Capitola, I have a few ideas on things that could make a significant difference. Although I don't think it'd be possible to do all this in 24 hours. I'd work on more sanitary bathrooms, cleaner beaches, and creasing parking in the village. I think these issues need to be fixed because they affect how we enjoy Capitola. First of all, dirty bathrooms are a big issue. Bathroom cleaning is significant because the bathrooms affect how towards your community and how it feels. People come in wet and sand, which leaves the bathrooms nasty. As mayor, I will try my best to fix this issue by regularly cleaning and encouraging people to rinse off their feet or body before entering and be more conscious about the germ, sand, water, and dirt they bring in. Next, I will address the issue of dirty beaches. According to the Santa Cruz Sentinel of 10 beaches that made the list statewide, Capitola came in at third on the list for dirtiest water. To try and fix this problem of dirty water and trash in our beaches, I will get volunteers and school students in our district to help clean waste off our shore. I will also encourage community members and tourists to pick up their trash daily to help us get off that dirtiest water list. Lastly, I will add more parking around the village. I noticed it's becoming challenging to get parking many tourists leave or need to park far away. This could affect small businesses that rely on tourists to stay open. To fix this, we could make a multi-level parking lot. This will make parking easy to find, but how will we pay for it? We will try to get donations from local businesses, community members, and tourists. We'll also have an event like an auction to raise money for this parking lot. If we still don't have enough money, there could be a small tax for middle classes and the more significant tax for wealthy citizens. Overall, I have many ambitious goals that may not be possible to complete in a day. With more time, I believe I could achieve these goals and make a difference. Yes, you can. Yes. Great job. I think Sidney just set our work plan for next year. Yep. Thank you, you heard it. Shall we do a group photo? Yes, let's do that. Oh, yeah. Yeah. I'm back here, Sidney. Can you do one of mine, too? Family can come up. Jessica, I can. Take a group photo, what's the photo if you want it? Take a group photo. Yeah, yeah. Good deal. Okay. Sidney, I know. I know. I know, that was good. Come back here. You got it. I do. Here comes the map. Three, one, two. Oh, we got them all right there. Two of them? Yeah, come on in. Yeah. Yeah, good. That's great. One, two, three, we'll do one this way with the... Smile. Okay. Great. Thank you. Thanks. Thank you so much. Good job. Congratulations. And here's your certificate of commendation and to proudly present it to Sidney Swanson, city of Capitola, mayor for the day. There you are. Okay. Thank you. You're very welcome. Thank you. Good job. That's it. Good job. Thank you. Nice job. You know, we have an election coming up for city council members. And so if there's city council members out in the audience or out in Zoom who are listening in, I think you may have heard some campaign talking points that you may want to address. And certainly sounds like there's some goals there for the future council. So, thank you, Sidney. Well done. Several of our boards and commissions have youth seats also if you're interested in influencing the city before you run for council. Environment committee. Just saying. And well, next I'm gonna move us on to the next presentation, which is the introduction of a new customer service office coordinator, Lailana Carusoza. Did I say that correctly? Well, who's gonna do the introduction, Chloe? Yes, please. Thank you so much, Mayor Story and council. We are all thrilled to introduce you to Lailana Carusoza. She is our new customer service office coordinator that is a position formerly known as our receptionist. That's our front desk person, better known as the face of the city. And we love her, so I'm so excited that she's here and able to meet you. She brings excellent customer service experience to the city, started working as a parent legal for about three years, then moved to working for Santa Clara County Behavioral Health as a lead mental health peer support worker. So she's seen it all. She can meet everything that comes her way. And we are just already so impressed with her wonderful personality, her customer service, her willingness to help, her can-do attitude. She came today at six to help me set up for her introduction. So that just is a tidbit about who she is and what she brings to the city. So Lailana, come on up. Thank you all. It's an honor to meet you, Mayor, Vice Mayor and council members. I'm truly excited and blessed to work in a community where I live. And so serving the same people, community members has always been a dream for me because I've commuted over the hill to Santa Clara County. And so being home in the county that I grew up and is truly a blessing and I really appreciate everyone's time and I look forward to what I can bring to the table. Absolutely. Thank you. Well, on behalf of the city council and the city of Capitola, welcome to Capitola. We feel fortunate to have you. And now that we're opening back up after the pandemic, it's your position is going to be, I think very crucial for the city as you will be interfacing with the public. And that's just gonna get, I think, more and more of an increase in people coming back to city hall. So welcome and other council members wanna say a few words or? I'm just happy to know that you are local and you get to live and work here. And that's, I think, something that everybody strives for and we're lucky to have somebody who's invested in the community to help others too. So thank you and welcome. Thank you so much. Good night. Okay, good night, yes. Next, we have additional materials. Do we have any additional materials for on tonight's agenda? Yes, so we did receive three regarding item eight A, so as you did just vote, that item has been continued. Thank you. Okay, but those comments will be made a part of the record for future reference. Yes, and they are at the back of the room as well. Great, thank you. Next is oral communications. This is an opportunity for members of the public to address the city council on items that are either not on tonight's agenda or are on the consent agenda for this evening. Just so that everybody is aware, we have a short consent agenda items that are consideration of the minutes from the October 13th meeting. The development services technician job description, consider staffing changes in the city manager and police departments, and consider adopting proposed resolution allowing for continuation of teleconferencing during the COVID pandemic. Those are the consent items. Does anyone wish to address the council during public comment? Seeing none. Chief, did you wanna take this opportunity? Nope, not yet, okay. Then I'll go out to our Zoom audience and see if there's anyone there that would like to address the council. I don't see anyone. Okay. All right, next we'll move to staff and city council comments and we'll start with staff comments. We have a couple of them for you this evening. The first is that unfortunately, the tech gremlins have bitten again and it doesn't look like our timer is working this evening. So if everyone's is gonna need to make sure they're paying attention to the three minute timer for future speakers. In addition, we have actually also gotten another piece of equipment that Chloe and I are very hopeful is gonna help make these hybrid meetings less stressful for the two of us. So we hope to have that new piece of equipment installed and ready by the January meeting. That's our goal. So I know that it's all behind the scenes stuff but I think that it's gonna be a positive change and we'll let the operator back there operate the camera that's going out on Zoom which would then let that camera pan over to me for example when I'm talking now or to the speaker at the podium. And then lastly, I think the chief has an update for the public safety incident that occurred today in the county. Evening mayor and council. I just wanted to provide a quick update or just let you know about the alarming call that we had this morning of a credible, what we thought was a credible threat of an active shooter at Santa Cruz High. It initiated a countywide response that all of our agency responded along with the other agencies. It took a while to determine that it was actually a hoax that it was a hoax but understanding that it really put a lot of shock and fear into the community. Like I said, it was a really good collective effort on a part of like law enforcement. I will say I'm so proud of our staff. Immediately responded, we had officers coming in off duty to come and backfill what assignments that they needed to do. It took several hours before it was able to kind of untangle itself and figure out that it was a hoax. But like I said, it was a very, very alarming call that no one wants to hear definitely from our community that put all the schools into lockdown and so it was really traumatizing for all the students and it's gonna have pretty lasting impacts. And so I just want to let everyone know about that. It seems to be kind of a common theme that's going around with these kind of these spoof calls and these hoax calls, but they come in and they seem very, very credible. And we have a lot of mechanisms that kind of triage those calls. And so it's really unfortunate that that had to happen and it's really unfortunate it had to happen in our community. So I just want to update you on all that and really just kind of let you know of how proud I am of our staff and our response. And I will say too that there's gonna be some lessons learned here as well because we practice with the training but when it actually happens we have everyone kind of coming in and getting those assignments. So I'm sure there's gonna be debriefing with it and then we'll have a lot of lessons learned from it and then we can learn from that as well. So we'll do what we can to take away from it. Yeah, well thank you Chief for briefing us on that incident. And yeah, I know I think that, well I certainly when I heard about it it was a scary episode. And it's one of the worst things that a parent can imagine happening. And I think it is at least a tribute to I guess the force turnout and the fact that Capitola PD provided mutual aid. And just wanted to sure if something like that were to happen at New Brighton or around in our school district would that level of mutual aid be reciprocated and there would be that? Okay. Absolutely, yeah. That's reassuring to know. Well thank you for that update. And we're very glad to hear that it really, I mean was a hoax. I mean that's tremendous in and of itself but it's good to know that there was nobody that was actually hurt or injured in that process. So thank you. Does council members have any comments? Seeing none. Are there other staff comments? Then I'll go to city council comments. I just wanted to say briefly that if anyone hasn't had a chance to check out the new lights on the palm trees in the village, they're up and they're beautiful. So take a moment to check them out. Yeah, I just wanted to commend the BIA and the city staff on putting up those lights. It was a while coming but I think it was well worth the wait and they are very attractive. So good job BIA. So hearing no other city council comments, I'll move on to the consent items tonight that I read earlier. These items will all be passed with one vote unless the council member would like to pull an item for further discussion. Are there any items that council would like to pull? Seeing none, I'll entertain a motion to approve the consent agenda. Move approval of consent. I'll second. We have a motion and a second. Can we have a roll call vote please? Council member Brown. Aye. Council member Brooks. Aye. Council member Bertrand. Aye. Vice mayor Kaiser. Aye. Mayor Story. Aye. The motion passes unanimously which will bring us to the general government public hearings for this evening. Item A has been continued to a future date, not yet set. And then so we'll move on to item B which is the permanent local housing allocation grant. The recommended action is just to accept the staff presentation on the five year plan for permanent local housing allocation funds and provide direction on the proposed allocation of funds. And Katie, you're going to? Yes. Leave us on that. Good evening Mayor Story and good evening council. Before you tonight is an exciting new source of funding towards our affordable housing program in Capitola. It's called the Permanent Local Housing Allocation, PLHA program. The history on this is that back in 2017 when Senate Bill SB2 was approved, it created a new supply of funding for towards affordable homes in California. The bill established a $75 recording fee for all real estate documents and created this new fund with that money. So of the $75 recording fee, 70% of that is put towards the PLHA fund, the permanent local housing allocation fund. And the money goes to the local governments in which the transaction occurred. And then as a city council, you get to make a decision on how those funds are spent within our city. The intent here is to provide a permanent ongoing source of funding to local governments for unmet housing needs. So very exciting. So the fund, they started collecting the funds in 2019. And then from 2020 on, we'll be getting funding every year from this fund. In 2020, we received our allocation is 105,000. I won't go through all of the numbers here, but for the five years through 2024, it's estimated that we'll get 630,000 total. The requirements for an application is that we put together a five-year plan. We also need to hold a public hearing, which we'll do tonight and also at our next meeting. And we need to adopt a resolution that will be sent into the state, giving Jamie authorization to apply for this funding. So what qualifies for your permanent local housing allocation on the slide, I list 10 items. There was a brief description of each of these in the staff report. Tonight, we're suggesting three that can be spent more easily in Capitola with knowing what our needs are. So the money that I'm suggesting the majority of it be put towards a rental housing project so that we can partner with local nonprofits that wanna do a development project in our city limits. Also, matching funds for the local housing trust fund. I'll talk a little bit about that on a later slide. The further I've looked into this item, there's not much guidance on what the qualifications are there. So I'm gonna modify my recommendation that was in the staff report. And last, assisting persons at risk of homelessness. We already do this. We contribute funds through the county and that's the other area that I think we should utilize this money. So first, the rental housing projects. The description from the state is that we can utilize for pre-development, development, acquisition, rehabilitation and preservation of multifamily, residential, live work rental housing that is affordable to extremely low, very low, low or moderate income households, including necessary operating subsidies. So projects that we could utilize would be similar to say the Dakotas on Claire's Ave or the Bay Avenue senior apartments where there's a third party managing these affordable housing projects. The city is not, we're not overseeing. We make sure that they do their reporting annually to the state, but it's not very intense for our staff. But we could partner, give them funding, help with the production of the housing. So tonight I'll be suggesting that the majority of the money be spent there so that we can partner with local nonprofits. A second item that they listed is matching funds for your local housing trust fund. Our local housing trust fund currently has $160,000 in it. So we could ask for matching funds for this. There's very little guidance on what strings are attached if we were to get our local, if we did a match. I am working with Paul Ashby, who gives us a lot of, he's got a really good working relationship with the state HCD office. And he sat in a few minutes, in a few meetings and asked questions about what strings are attached if we were to go to do this match. And at this point there's not any documentation of exactly what is required. So at this point I think we should hold off on that until we can do more research. And if we decide in the later years that we wanna do an amendment, we could always amend our five year plan and go back to the HCD. Last is assisting persons at risk of homelessness. Right now we contribute $31,000 to the housing for health partnership. This used to be called the HAP with the county and this program supports year round emergency shelter operations for the Salvation Army in Watsonville and also housing matters in the city of Santa Cruz. So I think that's a good use of these funds because we're already utilizing funds for that. So here's my original recommendation that was in your staff report. This evening I am suggesting that we not contribute towards the housing fund and we put that money also towards affordable housing rental projects. So on this slide this is my final recommendation for the permanent local housing allocation. So with that this is the five year plan that I would suggest that we submit to the state with our application. So the first three years all of the funds would go towards affordable rental projects and then in years 2023 and 2024 we would fund the homeless partnership with these funds up to 35,000. So bumping our funding to the county from 31,000 to 35 and then utilize the rest of the funding for affordable rental housing projects. And these are estimates for years 2023 and 2024. If there were, if we were actually to, if the number ended up being larger we would get that larger sum. And I also wanna comment that for the affordable rental housing projects I have been in contact with a couple different non-profits that are interested in doing projects in Capitola. So I think if we were to dedicate this money towards those funds we could see some projects happening in the next few years during this five year cycle. So with that that concludes my presentation. I'm happy to take any questions. Yes, council member Brooks. Thanks, Katie. So my first question is, so this is, these are restricted dollars, correct? They are. Okay, and what happens when we don't use those dollars in the year to year throughout the five year plan? It just rolls over into the next year? So that's an excellent question. I have that, that's one question that we are asking HCD currently is like, what is the timeframe for spending and does it roll over? Paul Ashby quickly commented on this this afternoon and said that he thinks it's all going to be tied to the five years and so it will continue to roll over. But we are trying to get answers on that, so. Okay, and so do you know how much we give to, oh not half anymore, the H? 31,000 a year. But we already fund them. Do we know how much we already fund them? It's 31,000, it was the last funding and that's why I did not suggest funding 2020, 2021 or 2022 because those years have been funded. Okay, and that comes out of our general fund? That, the most recent money came out of our redevelopment agency fund because we have some housing funds in there due to a loan being paid off last year. So I guess I'll get to the comments later about why I'm asking that question but I'm just trying to make the connect of why we would want to fund in 2023, 2024 if we're already funding and we know the cost of building, if we want to use some of those funds here in the city, it's so expensive. So what made you want to continue or want to begin to fund them again in 2023 and 2024? Sure, I think our, the redevelopment agency fund is more flexible than probably the funding from the state. So that was my initial thoughts on that of why we would stop taking money out of our redevelopment agency dollars and utilize this funding because we know you can use this for shelters. And the redevelopment funding can be used for projects. So it's sort of the same thing. It is. Okay, that's okay. There's one other detail is that under redevelopment law you're supposed to spend, you're supposed to spend down your balances and there are actual timelines to do so in the health and safety code. As you know, redevelopment agencies have been dissolved and so it's not clear necessarily who would be enforcing those timelines. So I do think that we need to get those funds out the door. And so I think that our target is to get those funds out the door if we can in the next couple of years. And so then transitioning our funding for the, what was called the HAP over to these PLHA funds for the go forward period. So that's kind of the overall strategy is that we do think we can't just continue to use the RDA funds. It was a $2 million loan, $35,000 at a time. Okay. Thank you. Are the questions from council members? I think I just need a clarification. So the, I think it was like activity six, which is the, yeah, sorry. Thank you for the homeless. So that goes, is that directly into Capitola or is that part of a county wide thing? It's a county wide program. Okay. All right. Which qualifies under this program? Okay. Thank you. Okay. Any other questions? I had a question. And I wanna, I'll preference it with a little recognition that over the past decades, Capitola has participated with our mobile home park residents and assisting them to buy out their parks. And we have successfully done that except for one, which is Cabrillo mobile home park. And I know that's not currently an opportunity, but if it were to become an opportunity sometime in the near future, are there any other funds that are here? It doesn't look like it. That would be available for that purpose. And then a two-part question. I also understand concerning the housing trust fund and the balance that was shown, I thought didn't the nonprofit payback to us, the loan to them from Castle? And that was about a million dollars. So I was just wondering if that is somehow connected to this additional funding. Okay. Thank you. So for your first question on more for the mobile home park, that's an ownership opportunity. And under the PLHA program, we could put future funds towards ownership rather than rental. So that is an option. So that's something we can look at down the line and start collecting money for that purpose. Also, the Castle, when they paid off that $2 million is the $2 million that we're referencing for the redevelopment funds. So that is what we paid for the homeless, the regional homeless contribution after the past three years. Well, the last year we utilized it for that because the money had just come in. But so that is active and that money can also be utilized for if the opportunity arose for the mobile home park. Yeah. Is there any risk of that redevelopment money of it being taken back by the state if we don't utilize it within? So that was what I mentioned to council member Brooks in that last response. So they're technically under redevelopment law. They have a situation where they call excess surplus which describes a situation where you've accumulated in your low-mod housing fund, this fund that we hold our money in more than I think it was three years worth of accumulated receipts. It's not clear to anyone who's looked at this who I've talked to about what that means today because there's no new money coming in other than loan repayments. So there used to be a situation where you could end up in excess surplus where you had too big a balance and ostensibly you'd have to transfer it away to somebody else. So I do think we should prioritize getting those funds out first. I don't know for sure whether anybody's actually looking very closely at it for a timeline. I would also note to go back to your question about potentially using some of the PLHA funds to assist with a for sale project for a mobile home park acquisition. I do believe that we could amend this plan during the five year period if an opportunity became available. All right. Thank you for that response. So with that I'll I'll see now if there's any members of the public that would like to address the council on this item. Seeing none I'll see. Is there anyone in the zoom world that would like to. No. No thank you. OK. Well then I will bring this item back to the council for further discussion and and possible action. And actually the recommended action is to just to provide direction on the proposed allocation of funds. You don't need a motion to approve the particular plan. No I'll be coming back at the next meeting with a resolution for at that time. Thank you. And is this going into our new housing element. It will be mentioned in our new housing element is one of our programs. Yes. All right. So with that I don't are there any other council comments on the item. All right. Seeing none. I think I would just like to close and encourage future council members to I think keep it on our radar and our ability to you know really assist the residents of Kessel mobile home park be able to buy out you know their homes and then that will cover that will be all them mobile homes in Capitola will now be resident owned. So thank you for that. We look forward to receiving the resolution at the next meeting with that that will bring us to item. Eight B strike that eight C which is donations report for your twenty twenty one twenty two and the recommended action is to receive the annual donations and contributions report. Yeah. Jim are you. Good evening. Mayor and council. So our last item on tonight's agenda is the annual donations report which we try to bring to each October and this covers the donations that were received in the prior fiscal year as well as grants just by way of background. The city of Capitola obviously benefits greatly from generosity from from grants and from nonprofit agencies and others that donate to the city and in July of twenty thirteen we passed a city council adopted an admin policy for donations and through that policy it authorizes the city manager to accept an appropriate donations or grants of five thousand or less and also established a procedure that we're doing tonight to acknowledge and report on the donations that we have received. And so first on the donations total total donations we received about two point four million dollars of donations and grant funding. Just under seventy nine thousand of that was well we have values of five thousand or less but I also like to acknowledge through this process the so Cal unified elementary school district which donated sixteen thousand dollars towards scholarships for the after school program. Also slightly over five thousand we had fifty two hundred and fifty dollars from the public safety foundation for the camp program camp Capitola and recreation. The ninety two sixty six museum donations those are donations that come in on a weekly basis anywhere from could be ten dollars all the way up to five hundred dollars and that was actually a pretty good year that's a couple thousand higher than we've been doing so that was a good year. Couple of three donations for plein air that came in and then we had a really good year for donations for the twilight concerts forty six thousand and I wanted to just kind of daylight a few of them because some folks gave twice last year and usually we see donations from a thousand on up to usually two thousand but we had a number of folks that donated over two thousand dollars and so I just kind of wanted to acknowledge those folks and I've listed them up there on the screen. They're also in the agenda packet but a really good year as far as donations for the twilight concert series as we got that going again. I don't want to read all of them. You can read as far as the grant side we were just under two point three million and the basically five grants. The first one was for Park Avenue storm damage that was Department of Transportation. Almost two hundred and eighty seven thousand. We got just under forty six thousand dollars for the street ballards in the village we put up for the special events. That was a homeland security. We got our second installment of the American Rescue Plan funding. So one point two million and that's kind of been classified as COVID revenue replacement. And the majority of those dollars have been programmed towards the Wharf project and CIP. We've drawn down this next one the five twenty five or almost five hundred and twenty six thousand. That is the portion that we've drawn down of the one point nine million dollar grant. So we're starting to spend the coastal conservancy grant that we got for one point nine million a little over half a million last year. And then the final one was two hundred and just under thirty six thousand for coronavirus relief through CDBG. A lot of that I want to say one hundred and fifty thousand of that was small business loans to local businesses to help them get through the pandemic. And then the remainder went out to nonprofits. I want to say community bridges gray bears and second harvest as kind of a supplement replacement supplement whatever for the community grant program to keep those programs going. And that is the end of my report for tonight and our recommendation is to just receive the report and I'd be happy to answer any questions. All right. Thank you. Other questions from council members. Does the city send out acknowledgments or thank yous to the individuals or businesses that donate. I know the twilight concerts. You know we acknowledge them you know at the actual concerts. But is there something that goes out officially from the city to for the museum. Yes. Frank was really good and Deborah has continued that every time that we get a donation regardless of size we let Deborah know and she sends out a thank you letter. I have a small handful of folks that will that are bigger donors that would like to get take it off of their taxes. So I do send out some letters for that as well throughout the year. I don't know about Plain Air and I think Kelly does. I think through the banners there's advertising for the twilight concerts and I think she sends out stuff as well. For the concerts. Yeah. OK. I just think it'd be nice. I mean you know as the city because it's a significant amount of money and trying to just to provide some of that acknowledgement which would be you know and it's kind of nurturing the donors to be able to give year after year. So with that yes. You know just one question if I may. So the money that comes in through the fireworks display I thought those were donations and just don't know how that works. Maybe you could explain that. I don't know that there's money that comes in through the fireworks display. I think the Monte Foundation just I thought they donate to us and they put on this. They put on the fireworks show. They yeah we don't put on the fireworks show. No I know we don't. But I don't think they don't not for the fireworks. Monte Foundation donates for a variety of things. I don't think we've gotten any. The last was the library. I think we have a new one that'll show up on next year's report. OK. I don't recall at the top of my head what that was. So the money foundation uses the fireworks as a fundraising mechanism. And then the money foundation then has turned around and made donations to the city for all sorts of wonderful things. We had the Skate Park and McGregor the resurfacing project at the tennis courts as well as the Children's Wing in the library. So that's sort of the connection between the fireworks and ultimately donations the city's received from the Monte Foundation. Any other questions? Any members of the public like to address the council on this item? Seeing none. Do we have anyone on Zoom at all? No. OK. That answers that question. Well, then I'll bring it back. And I think our only task this evening is to receive the report. And it looks like it has been received. Thank you so much. And I just want to thank here publicly all the individuals and all the businesses that donate their hard-earned money to the various causes here in Capitola and the events that we put on, the Twilight Concerts in particular, the plein air, Camp Capitola, and all our granting partners. We couldn't do this without them. And we should, whenever we can, show our gratitude to the donors. So thank you for that and bringing that to us so that we can be aware of it. And with that, I'll move us on to the next item, which is actually adjournment. So I will adjourn this meeting this evening to our next regularly scheduled meeting on November 10, 2022, starting at 7 PM in these council chambers. Thank you, everyone. And good night. Good bye. Goodbye.