 Okay, so let's go ahead, we need to order some more time so we have four here, we're in Monday and July 17th. That's, we'll screw you into John, I'll put you in the reading room. So, it's very agenda, we have general public comments. So I guess there's probably a few people for that. Do these are your first or? I was not here first. I think you were here first. Hi. Okay. I just touched base with seven. So I think I know what is happening with the 911 address but that's apparently the last thing that's holding us up. And I just wanted to make sure that you guys didn't have anything else for me. We thought like the lawyer told me last week, he's like, okay, you should be good to go. Karen's been on to do the permit. And then she said, actually need, I actually need the 911 paperwork. Right. So then I emailed Stefan and then it's already been paid for a year or last September. So she had all of that and then she sent the paperwork that she had gotten last September to here. So he has it now. And I'm just looking to see, have the board approve a road name because it needs a road name. And the road name they came up with is Treehouse Lane. There's nothing in Vermont with that name. I'm just looking for the approval of the board for that name. Email with savings. All right. All right, second. Well, the favor for aye. Aye. Aye. First, second. Perfect. No, I say it's a reason. We got to think carefully. What if the actual address is gonna be like, not one to two, but. No, I can't remember. I'll stop my head. I have, I wheeled it out and I got to contact the 911 board from that state. Which makes your mind. Free name, basically. Yeah, the street name was the big snack to get it going. Yeah, we deemed the private road or anything like that. Yeah, it'll be private. Name's gonna be Treehouse Lane. Okay. Thank you. Thank you. So we're good. Yes. Okay. You guys? Okay. Thank you. Anything else? Okay. Thank you. You're going down to my base. See you later. Bye. All right. What do you need next for the call of town? I just have a question. You know, I, the road crews done a fantastic job on River Road over in more town and really great job getting that. Once the water receded, they got the mud taken care of and it's great, but there were a fair number of more town residents that flooded. You know, luckily the village was spared, but I just wondered if we could, if the town could help out with the residents over there. I think at this point, since it was last week, it seems like most folks have gotten a lot of this stuff that was flooded and is ruined out. Now they just have large piles of wet, even wetter from the rain garbage that I'm wondering, can we get a dumpster? Can we get the town crew to pick that up and can we coordinate with Waterbury? That was my question was just what, you know, can we do something as the town for those folks? Yeah, I think, and thank you for bringing that to our attention and I know you said this a few minutes, that I think absolutely we can help out. Why don't, in the morning, Sasha and Pete could reach out to the cellar. I guess probably that's who goes to most dumpsters now. And do you have an idea where a dumpster would be the best place for one to be? Even in my house? Tereslank, right off the road. Is that a big enough area to put it? Yeah. Right up where are you? Tereslank, although there's many houses down further for me that are going to need help for sure. Step on, you got this. I just want to make it known that if we plan on trying to get reimbursed at all from FEMA for it, it has to be placed somewhere in the town property or right-of-way. All right, I guess I just want to, no, no, no, thank you. I appreciate that. So we just put it beside the road somewhere in near your house or in that area. And then, Martin, I know you guys are out stressed or whatever, but if we had a day next week, could we spend a half a day on with the loader over there? If you grab up, I think you'd throw a hand into a dumpster. Yeah, I'll record it and try to get a loader to the river road at some point. Anyways, we need to remove that silt that is on the river road where it flooded. Certain areas where the curb was moving, it didn't sift out, but where it was not moving rapidly, left in some places up to like four to six inches of silt and sediment. So in the very worst spots, I've pushed it off to the side, but we've got to go down with the loader, greater, bring it out, scoop it with the loader, haul it off, obviously going to lose a fair amount of decent material as well. It's going to mix in with it. All the guardrails may need cleaning, all the ditches will need to be redugged. I mean, literally I stepped in like, probably eight inches of silt sediment in a ditch, trying to cut a tree out of the wagons. So you'll start that next week? Possibly even this week, but I mean, we can try to coordinate something. So are we looking at like just piles of stuff to scoop up and put in a dumpster, or is it? Yes, it looks like it, I mean, I hope that's one. I've got to see anything that's necessarily on the side of the loader. Do you have to go up terrace to see it? Down terrace. Down terrace, if you want to go to the roof floor. Yeah. Yeah. Oh, okay, you're on the river side. That's great, you came up that far. No, I think it was just like a basement. Satellite. Yeah, yeah, it's for ground level. Yeah, I just had a couple, I mean, first of all, it sounds like maybe more than one dumpster is necessary. Oh, for sure. I think the Vera's house, I mean, probably could go in there too. I'm just wondering if there was two dumpsters centrally located, you know, we found a spot. So I mean, there must be some stuff that some of the folks could bring in throw in the dumpster, or is it all need to be picked up by the machine? Because that way they could start getting rid of some of the stuff. Yeah, the stuff that I have has been sitting outside and running for days since Wednesday, probably, Wednesday, Thursday. It'd be nice if we could segregate any scrap metal, if there's any metal in it, it could go for a recycle rather than just load the landfills with, you know what, I don't know what exactly you have in the dumpster for an hour or two. So I don't really thought people could pick stuff up and bring it to the dumpster if they were centrally located. I mean, Danny and his brother are just like moving things out like crazy. And they, it may almost be easier. I'm not sure where Cassell is taking this. I'm assuming to one of their dump in, whereas at, Probably, probably, yeah, So the transfer station? It'd be just as easy for them to actually use the loader to scoop it, put it in one of our trucks and bring it up straight, because it will take absolutely no time to load a dumpster. That's what I was wondering. If that would just be easier to get to the dumpster, we could pick it up. If I could, if I could be in phone number as a contact and if people wanted to call me and say, you can steer them towards me and I'll drive around and I'll kind of get a kick a survey. Cause I'm sure there's other people too, I would say. Yeah. Before and after the highway apartment, I still have some kind of ground floor saturation. The wardrobes have a big pile that by our house on Wardbrook. I can check up the Wardbrook people. That might be a good location somewhere near the dues property that Wardbrook people could come down, share their stuff up there. So if I can't get Cassell in a home phone number to everybody. And we can figure out maybe even a dumpster and loads of the water in the trucks. People have immediate stuff that you need to do. I think you missed what Robin said, you guys were talking about. Robin was going to go on to a survey of everything. See how much was reported to Mark and then coordinate whether the trucks or dumpsters involved. Right. If you look at, see what we got. I mean, I could stack some photos and throw them off to Mark and say, I'll send you a picture. Okay. That sounds good. Denise, yeah, why don't you pass your contacts, give them a paper, Robin, so they can write their contacts. Okay. The names of them. Yeah, it's on there. Okay. And you tell them numbers every time. I will. Is that it? And you tell them numbers every time. I will, yeah. Oh, are you signing in? Yeah. Okay. So is it there already? I'll put my phone number there. Okay. Yeah, Robin. I'll put what you give me your name and number. Yeah. And then, and Denise, or people there want to pass that on, let them know that Robin will be out the next day or two. Okay. How long do you get to that tomorrow? Continue? Yes, if they want to call me and tell me where the stuff is, I'm certainly gonna go out and do a survey. And then I'll just kind of go around our area and then if you guys are out, around anywhere you see any, just give your hands up. Guys, can I take the right one? Let's start with Riverbrook. I didn't think it's on. Yeah. It's just on the right. But there was some miscars or whatever in the large family. Well, sitting in the middle there all night too. Wall of Barrow is the one you're... Is Barrow's the one? Yeah. Also, that repeater, do you guys think, tell everybody maybe what you see on, you know, Contact Shoe 1-1 so you can get all the stuff started to try to get some help from FEMA? Mm-hmm. That'll, you know, that can help you along. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I'll maybe look into one. Okay, perfect. Thank you. Yeah, and Shoe, Shoe, what's your agenda, Carol? 20 sessions. It's the first house on the left. And what's your name? Diane. Diane. Do you think your Diane will do it all or something? Yeah, I don't know. Yeah, I don't think, you know, I think you're still gonna keep track of everything. Yeah, there was a name on this morning from Sheryl and about... Yeah, tracking it all. Something. All right, so why don't we go ahead, Denise, any else, or Mrs. Dragots. Diane and Dragots. Yeah, okay, thank you. Good, well thank you so much. Yeah, thanks. Yeah, thanks guys. Yeah, there was a thing by the state has the degree guidance. Yes. I don't know, Denise, have you seen that? It went through a ton of about 250 people or something, they said. Yeah, Sheryl, I don't know. I'm sorry to set it down to you, but yeah. I'll be in your place. Yeah, I'll tell you. You're all right. Okay, thank you. What's that? Yeah, I'm sure you know who you are. Thank you, thank you. Thank you, I appreciate you reaching out to me. Ray, why don't you step up and let me know what's going on with the storm water. Again, I'm glad that you're there, okay, are you there? Yeah, thank you. Yeah, we did well, you know. Very good, mostly good one. Yeah, we were just... coming out, come on, maybe you already know what day they have, but nothing you know with you. You couldn't get to the bar. No, the bar hadn't flowed out. They took it pretty hard. Oh, yeah, they're strong, they've been strong. The water level was to the top of the bar. Oh, well, I knew that. Yeah, so, I think that's all. I'm out of here, but anyway, I just wanted to go over the project a little bit. They started construction, June 1st, on the sand, built it up in the field out there. And they got those completed, had a couple issues with the sand, had to go back and do one, and they used the wrong sand. We got this straight out. Actually, they're pretty good crews out there, a younger group, but they're trying, I think they have everything they can do on a really good job. And a couple things I wanted to do, they run back and fixed real quickly. So they did that, they were working on, they started a line on the south side of the school, with the tie-in, the first cat racing men, and then the storm came, so they pretty much lost last week. But they're back to work over there today and they expect to be here, bargaining, another emergency, they expect to get to the end. So it looks like right now, they're going to finish out of that side of the school, and then they're going to start over here on the park a lot, very each next week, it looks like, and they'll do that going across the school and tie that on there. The pond will be probably the last thing we do at this point. So, but I fully expect them to be out of the school and parking lot areas by the time school starts at this point. Okay. They did really good, yeah. They look like they're keeping a clean, neat site. Yeah, they're bringing more people into my house, but they're pretty small crew at this point. They really didn't put the hammer down now and get doing other things. Do they have other drops going on there? They have, you know, it's a very rare word, you know, for some gaffas. They've finished up their stone water, part of it's going to be re-count, that's all there, so. They get a couple of things going on in the town, but not much, so they're pretty good. Yeah, I don't think they're going to go wrong. I'm pleasantly surprised. Right. And pleased, so. Another thing that came up though, I'm not sure what it is. It's not a way to get a word for it. There is water bubbling on this side of the side of the bucket. Right about where the more town entrance sign is. I walked down and looked at it today. Yeah, it's a small, it's almost like a sump pump. It could run through the stops, run through the stops, so this was later on in the afternoon that I noticed it, so I'm not sure if you know anything in that area. I know, but it's been doing it every spring since we put the sidewalk in. I've noticed it a couple of times, and I went and milled it, because I was coming down at the very end of the season and water was coming up out of the edge of the sidewalk. Is there a sump pump in one of the houses there? It's weird, it's like, it's not a continued flow of the stop. It's almost like a pump start at some point. Could it be from the basement, or isn't it, who's up? That's, I don't think it's you. It's a church, there's a drain coming out of the church when it's on the end of the sidewalk. So I was gonna ask, you know, if you want, they haven't made the heads of me here. You know, I'm like, if you want, that's it, unless I'm over three months now. No. I don't think they got enough to do it. I don't think we have a huge expense to try to figure out what it is. Hey, why don't you just look into it and see, I need to open the can of worms that we give it to, you know, something too extensive. But yeah, it might be, is it doing any damage, or it's just, I thought under the sidewalks, likely it underlined a team that we put material in. It's also a really strange thing, but I don't know if they're related. I will cure it on the edge of the wall or it drops off extremely wet. And I don't know if it has anything to do with the old town clerk's office. It could still be, I don't know. I personally don't know if septic in all that was removed when that was torn out. Since we tore it out, I know we didn't take the septic tank out or anything like that, but there's a really wet spot hoping when the drainage goes in the pond, it'll rectify that or at least drain it to that. But it's, yeah, a little bit of a mystery. Yeah. It's a little bit of a mystery. Yeah. You know, you let it go or, or it might just, it's starting to underline the sidewalk potential. We should address that. We need to get it at least, then if we really hate what we see, then we can just bury it. Forget it, lad. Throw the legs. Throw the legs. Throw the legs. Throw the legs. Does it rock at a four-inch height? I think we'll stay on the outside of the sidewalk. Okay. It looks like it's going to be for sidewalk, and that could be a big change. Yeah, and packing in there. And we'll pack it in with that. Some of you guys had to raise a comment about the pool and crew they were around. They stopped down in the morning. I think after the major flood offered their help to the, you know, to the towns that they would have. So they were good. I guess I already wind up a few people, but I don't want to go too big. Yeah, yeah, everything was really good crew. Oh, that's right. Yeah, that's right. Good. Yeah. Any questions from Ray? Comments? Concerns? Yes, sir? Yeah, I bet he heard that. You're muted. For four meetings, I bet that's a lot of things. I guess it was a big dog, yeah. Yeah. All right, so the dog will, there's a little heifer in the depth of the channel, man. There, Martin. Where to start, I guess? You want to spot the table? So first of all, we were extremely fortunate to have the foresight to make that excavator and before the big storm. Yeah, that was just extremely luck because we were doing work on the wardrobe ditch and whatnot, so we just got extremely lucky that it was there. Otherwise, we would not have been any help to anybody until Wednesday morning, which is the first time that I got eyes on the damage. Michael Shaw had some house issues that he had to do with so he had gone home before things got impassable. So he worked a copious amount of hours one day on Tuesday just with the excavator in the rectifying problems or getting things back open for people who get out. So that was a huge break for us. And then Wednesday, we hit it pretty hard. We were able to get everybody out. The only person that is, he may give him a throw over a ground, which has been an attack, but before he hit him a little more passable if you want a pickup truck, you might make it, but it's a class four. Other than that, I'm trying to kind of hold back and not do too much until FEMA gets eyes on it. I mean, we've done everything. I've read the decree and they want to see it in rough shape. Obviously we've filled tons of holes that were unsafe with a three-and-a-half-inch dense grade product. So we're, I guess, I wouldn't say decent shape, but we're better than the song, I guess. Yeah, and I know you guys have done a good job documenting the thoughts. Yeah, lots of pictures and stuff, but a picture could really do no justice to your damage, you know what I mean? You can see in the picture, I got it, I'm so bad. See, I didn't realize that you had a whole crap that's, I'm pretty awful, but yeah, we're documenting, as we go, as I spoke to Tom about class fours, we just kind of need some guidance as to how extensive we're going to get on trying to fix them. We're obviously, FEMA wasn't much out of class fours, I believe, during our reading, so. I think we've got to do maybe the minimum and then if they're going to pay something, then we go back and maybe do a little better job. But we have some hole where we have to reset or replace or that kind of stuff, but kind of speak more material-wise what we've put down, so. Is this A and B? I mean, bone health, yes. So, yeah, so I think you're going to continue with that thought is, yeah, get them to passable. Yeah. But, you know, decently, yeah. No, I don't want to walk away from anybody that's in, you know, travel right now. Exactly, yeah. I want to make sure that people are comfortable and have some treatment there, but it's really good. I've got to actually, if we don't have a few different troppers like Barrett's, I turn away tomorrow just because we're in the next stages to basically start putting down top coat material. So I really want to do that until if he, you know, gets an eye on it, gives us the guidelines what they want or what they're going to pay for. So we're kind of hurry up and wait on that hole and then we have Lover's Lane, which is the hole in the hole. It's completely, I have to look at the, yeah, and it's not there. So it's the right area. I had a discussion that people on the road can landowner. To me, if you're going to send some money to the road, it makes more sense to make a drill and blast the ledge and shift the road over and build yourself a road on the ledge rather than fix the erosion. Jared ordered from the state. I asked him to take a look at it. He said, you're probably looking at six figures to fix it. So to fix it or to do the blast? To fix it. I can't believe that blasting, you know, you basically blast the rock and the roll in the hole. And build the road on the ledge, that you know is going to be there for the rest of the time. So still not she, I guess we're not going to... What's the limit over seven? Random number of times with us shifting. I mean, I think we'd have to do obviously a deep end or something, a man agree. Like no way. Yeah, no, no, very agreeable to doing that. So this is past John Lachlan's old house, you know? It's well before that. So coming in from where to the group, you have the only passenger vehicle side of route two. And you go off where we do, I did all the work, that flooded, but hell, thankfully. And you go up around the corner and it's the first garden or else, basically. It just slumped right into the waterway out there. And then when the water receded, it just slumped down. Do you think... Alright, we thought about doing anything on the bridge and closing that road and just... Well, you know, when somebody says six figures, you have to start wondering if maybe a new bridge would be cheaper than that. And it's still up here on dead end road. But I think, you know, before, you know. Yeah, I didn't know that. Yeah, I was, you know, myself. Would that bridge be intact now? No. Right. Yeah, the bridge was fine. No, I mean, if it lived there with the new bridge there, the one that's there is... The old one was fine. Well, I mean, yeah, it just came down, I guess, for deterioration, I guess. Yeah, you know, it was not suitable for vehicles, but it couldn't have been changed. But it was going to be... That's what I thought about it there. So, now it may make sense to, you know... So, we will set up all options on that. But meanwhile, I have not... Obaricades on the road that is passable. I have reached out to all homeowners and have basically said, I'm reluctant to close it because it's going to be landmark if I do that. But I'm also not 100% sure that the rest of it couldn't go. And at times, I told them, like, you know, limit heavy trucks, fuel oil, you know, that type of stuff. I wouldn't have hoped one of my guys would have lost it with a dump truck right now. So, it's pretty sketchy. I wouldn't go where my pickup line is up. Yeah, that's all. So, I think that says to be more than everything in Warren Brook. I'm here in Warren Brook, come on in. Absolutely, but... What do you think this... Peter, are you going to be putting what you are on our box covers? I mean, third of the morning with Jared will be the stream alteration engineer. He'll be the first contact for that of what... I don't believe that's what they're going to want. I'm not sure where they're going to... if they're going to draw a hard line again. But yeah, it's just basically slightly above the last box cover. Yeah. So, it's... And the one by camping is... Yeah. Same thing. Yeah, Sean. Yeah, you get Remix cover, and then you have Sean's cover between Jared Brook and Sean's place. They're both notorious for not handling it. It comes down to debris is what it is. Laws, like... Yeah. Laws and debris coming down and jamming into the covers. And so, box cover is definitely going to stay, but it doesn't mean that's not going to go around it and wash through it. What's going to happen? Right. So, I think it was a 72-inch culvert back in the up-down stream. So, we put two 4-foot culverts in. It's not great. It's possible. It's definitely a temporary fix. It needs to be addressed before winter. I don't know if that was anything really moving that fast, but hopefully... Yeah. It's saying there's a lot of land. I mean, that needs to be addressed before winter. So, I mean, just a question. I mean, would there be any scenario where the bridge could be checked and it could be just temporary for the homeowners, you know? Oh, yeah. I mean, you know, I don't know, because you're saying you can't drive. There's a whole lot of metal under the bridge. Yeah. I think it needs to be able to put a temporary bridge on. Or maybe put some struts in. There's something. I mean, maybe that's a quicker fix somehow. So, I don't know. Because the other thing is going to take a while. A lot of time. Yeah. Why do you think that? State matters are really bridges. Yeah. And it's really not that long of a span. It's not long at all. I think that's a good idea. So, I don't know. We don't start those contracts and stuff, but we see that we turn against it. We have something going to get allies on it. I don't know if this person could help. I'm going to be talking to Chris Hansen who works with the state. Yeah. I mean, anybody on the sidewalk, we don't think I could ask anybody to make aware of it. Maybe my other suggestion about the bridge or something. I asked Jared who I should be on. Is there anybody else at the state that would like to have you recommend Michelle? Yeah. Several situations. Everything in the Brook area, I believe, is faceable by the counter contractors with the exception of that temporary cold earth situation, which, again, is faceable by a counter contractor who just needs the state to say, we're letting stuff slide right now. But we need to be ready for winter or so. So, we're in old age shape, I guess, but now the bills are going to start coming due. So, yeah. I think that's just a one-oriented cold earth. So, it's four-foot cold earth for 15, almost 15-grams, 80 feet of and everybody's well in. It gives that all. We're going to reach that one-day warm-up at three or four in the morning and show it until it was gone. I said, reached out and found E.B. It's cold earth, very fun, which were four-footers. It got a name on itself. Yeah, well, good job there. So, we expect to be able to participate in reimbursement by FEMA at 75%. And then we should get another 12 or 12 and a half percent from the local match out to David. And then we'll pay for it. We're going to raise to come out to about 88% reimbursement. About that other full-percent. It's going to be a lot of even for the community, where it's from probably, you know, $600,000 to $700,000 with the damage. Yeah, well, we're growing out without, I mean, I think you can double that. Right. And then another half a million of what we're selling to Tom. So, which obviously we'll have very little to nothing to do with. It's either going to be the last drill or it's going to be rich breakthrough or so long. So, we're okay, I guess. Frustrating to not have any issues anywhere out in town, just because anywhere out in town to speak of. But that heavily damaged over there it's just frustrating, you know, we're doing the same practices, we're doing the same work and it's just it's just his sort of you know, you understand it really well. You know, all of that would, you know, that's the thing, you know, the trees going down. There's so many trees in there, you know, that came down from like what I read, kind of that little way up on here. It's just been sitting there for like two meters, kind of slowing down slowly over. You're also obviously, if you look at the ones from Saturday and Sunday morning, it was, in that particular matter, it was clear when the knot was running high and dirt trees, because on Thursday and Friday into Saturday with those thunderstorms that came through, they got weed eyes on the man and we didn't, the valley didn't get that, so I think that was part of it. We were like, you know, our house raised, we were like, I think this end of the trees didn't come down far, and he stopped at the kids' place. None of mine fell in, because I had cut my own back as far as they could, no, there were any I could get. I was like to thank the residents of that way. They were beyond accepting and like, literally, the phone didn't ring, maybe through the life associated to that. I mean, they were just understanding, I guess, and it wasn't anything that could be done. I can assure you, I personally think human rights are either law or myself and your neighbors. Like I said, you guys back in Lower Iowa, you know, puts up 10, what, 12-hour days and there's no one at least that's cheered when you're having a new city. I mean, I saw a lot of my house from 6 in the morning until 6 in the morning, and I started not to work but it's a little bit of stressful all the way part of starting to have the sound of all the things together, there's another thing when you're managing contractors and trying to keep everything moving. And then there's soft spots everywhere right for you. Yeah. I mean, it's like the truck and you're like, whoa. And then there's some awesome residents of that way and then you can get in and frankly reach out to me. I want to share with them that you can have any of the streams and things like this. Yeah. Nice. We're going to go around and you let me go. Yeah, but there's a lot of things to come for the next five years. Yeah. There are a lot of house that I've noticed and I'm like, why that would be really nice. Yeah. It's a good route. Yeah. You're pulling up and you're pushing the pressure right in there. Yeah. I would bring right by race out to buy more than that and right there they used to be a lot way back in the before where we need I would honestly say I'm going to guess if you did it within the first five days after this one, they would probably look at the words and now it's probably Max I get a lot of records for it, but it's not something like point-brainer. It is point-brainer. Yeah. Yeah, yeah. We'll be doing something about that, and I'm sure you might know what we're going to do, but... So that's where we're going to go. I don't think we're going to go a little slower against now. I'm going to slow down a little bit as far as the trackers and stuff. Like I said, the trucks are... I have a couple trucks from them tomorrow. I'm not going to go the whole weekend until it's seen. I'm just trying to get the class fours as passable. And then I'll probably be just through a little bit of trying to be there, but obviously until winter we won't be... The other stuff I was scheduled to just get pushed back. So now I think we're... Okay. Thank you. Any other questions or concerns for Martin? Or step off? Right here? Yeah. You need help here? Do you want me to try to drag this over here? I'm going to come down and get a little bit of the culvert work. Yeah. Thank you for cheating on me. Thank you. Can you step up here as well? You can close it. Step off, do you have anything else? So I... And then going on during the flooding and such, I was talking about trying to make sure that those who say keep on top of monitoring and checking, see if the water is ever going to go down. I put in a substantial amount of time doing that under emergency management. And I wasn't sure... If and or where I can get some competition for that, I don't know exactly... Well, the current problem we're going to be with that, I didn't realize before this that it just kind of, of there is efficient. Right. That's those who require you to do that sort of thing. That is... So to begin with, what I did in your time, is set on to put in, I think, 31 hours. 38 hours. 30 hours of road crew time. And I think 28 hours of... 31 and a half hours of emergency management. Obviously you don't have emergency management budget. If you look at that, it's a fire department thing. That's a volunteer job. But for your money, we do pay a second of $1,500 for that. But also, I'm the guide for trying to hold. So the hours... It was on Monday, including three and a half hours. So they made full food that day, given six and a half hours, paying six and a half hours of emergency management to make up for the six and a half that you've been on. The six and a half not working at the road. Not working at the road. On Tuesday, he didn't work any hours on the road crew. So we paid him 10 hours of that emergency management time. So that's 16 and a half hours of paid emergency management time. And so that, at any extent, at the end of the week, he was working longer days to get his overtime. So that he gets... I think it was around 14 and a half hours of overtime or whatever it really... How it worked. What he did was add, make sure your food days were full. And so we were like, we're going to be over life. And then it came out, like I said, it was 16 and a half. I think we gave him more. It was reimbursed for. So we left another 14 or 14 and a half hours. We're putting that through the FEMA. Okay. We'll do management to see if we can get it reimbursed. And if it was due, we would have to get it reimbursed at least 75 percent. It really didn't do well. Minimum 75 percent, but probably the 88, total 88 percent. And then we would pass that on to you. Okay. So he ended up getting overtime. No, he doesn't. Well, he worked 68 hours. No, he's going to get everything. Okay. And just the remainder round, we're waiting to hear your feedback. We're going to put that on balance in a few weeks. I mean, right? I'm going to be better for you to get the money. No, she's waiting on that. I think that will work out. Yeah. That's right. I'm going to be experienced. Yeah. No, that's not actually it. And it's going to be better because the taxes will be better. Yeah. And making sure you weren't jailed. No. So I had said, you'd be able to put in 40, but then when I was speaking to Cheryl Lynn, and just making a 40, he still got screwed out in the first part of the overtime. Yeah. He's actually put that in. Yeah. So the reason I see it in the second time period, I was thinking probably, you know, I wasn't sure how it was going to work. That's why it's immediately going to end. No. So I think that if you're happy with that, you'll be paid your full week, plus the overtime you've got, and the 16 and a half hours, whatever it was, is potential, pretty much, yeah, right. Now I'll just be paid out on a separate check-in, so. And we had some travel time, too. Yeah. And plus like a week, there was a hundred and something miles from the truck. Further, yeah, there was a full emergency, and we used it for the truck. We're happy with that. So I had to pay you for both of those. Good. So one thing I was thinking about, and we'll submit a mile short screen version, too, but yeah. Right. I wonder if like going forward, like we've done, you know, like we do when we have some money on the budget that we're just funding, you know, what is it that we could fund? A reserve is a survey, I think. A reserve fund. I wonder if we have the next deal when we do the budget, if we should have something for, you know, emergency management, you know, as a line, and if it gets used, it gets used. It doesn't get used all the better. It's, you know, it's not going to be used for. So if there's something like a big event, you know, maybe it's in the budget, $100 a year, and then if something happens, you know what I mean, something like $500 or something. So if there's a... Well, yeah, so honestly, if we did it like that, we wouldn't want to do an article with it, so that way it was one of the light items. We don't want to have it go away. Right. Something like that. I think, like, if you needed to, you know, pay a lot of the special smug poured salary fund that we have. Yeah. But I think, let's just see what we can do. I don't want to care. Well, maybe, yeah, I can't believe it. Well, that's the thing. You know, when something happens, we don't have an article to put it in there. I mean, maybe a little more. Maybe, maybe $2,500. Yeah, something like that. Sorry. Yeah. So that way, if you have dollars, you know, some of it just really, kind of shake you down when you need to buy on something, you know, you could buy it, you know, when we were feeling something or whatever we had. Yeah. You know, some of it was discretionary. Right. Exactly. One of the other part can see, you know, hazards. Hazard funds. Yeah. But that's, it's probably not, that idea of what we're doing with the, this collection. Yeah. Don't get me wrong. You're half the idea, maybe. It's fine. It's fine. So, yeah, there was one, I was going home, like, I got on Thursday night, when we were going to have another round of storm, just as fast, right after the flood. Yeah. And, Stefan was there, by the way, Jack, he was there, you know. And the truck with the lights on and everything. So, he put the wire down. He was waiting for the green mountain power. Then I go, oh my God, so then I try it down, and I was like, there's a tree down. And so, I go, oh my God, I'm just parking here and walking, and it turns out it was kind of hanging on the water. So, anyways, when we were talking, I said, well, green mountain power is going to come on, look at both of these, just put some cones up and go home. And you fry, you know. So, I was just at home. I think there were around a little bit of a tree down there, too. They changed, because we got stuff on the line from, I think it was Thursday. Yeah, we got stuff on the back and it was like 10, 30, 11 o'clock at night from about the same lights. Yeah, I do a day when we moved the tree over there. Well, it was the same time. Well, we did, I lost one. Yeah. Yeah. We had a few different wires down by our phones. Well, it's just that once you get that saturated brown, you know, it's just a little bit of a little touch and go, still, like, to, you know, tonight at the tomorrow, I'll put serene sun with the ground so saturated, the concern becomes landslides. Yeah. That's for sure. Okay, so let's go ahead and run. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. That works. Um, as far as the, uh, the emergency unit goes, uh, you know, I had a few contact. We had one person reach out to 2-1-1 so far and I got a contact with them and there's not a lot for me. I'm going to stay prepared in their house. Yeah. Um, but I've been telling anybody, you can tell anybody here from, you know, make sure they reach out to you. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. It's just for the state. So when people call 2-1-1, they should also know that that. Doesn't help them and applying for any female paperwork at all. Yeah. Just for numbers for the state. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Just for numbers for the state for funding. Okay. Is it the BOR? So if anyone needs help with FEMA, they are at the BOR. Thanks. Oh, good. Yeah. That was too. All right. Good luck. So. Yeah. So, um, I think stuff on had some, had some damage at his house. So there is a. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So there is a, um, funding campaign. Right now. Yeah. I heard about that, but I don't see it. I don't see it anywhere. Sasha, do you know what? No one's on that? All right. Is that something you just go look up? No. I mean, his name. Yeah. Yeah. If you don't mind sending that out to us just so. We would have that. Um, I think some of the folks. More fast. Yeah. So. Yeah. There was someone out the other person on the. Yeah. Lindsey. Now Lindsey and the other one that. What's her name? Making sure. Yeah. So Sasha, what are you? Do you have any reports, communications? After talking. It is something. Yeah, no, we always do that. We never did we ever see that though? I never saw a letter or. Right. But we did that get sent out to us at all or. It's not. So he's looking at you. You have a motion. Who are you pointing? No. We'll make a motion. We appoint Neil Mastoff to the recreation. Callie seconds. Everyone knows Neil. Right. Yep. I'm going around for a long time. Yeah, pick them all just, then, um, actually, are you okay with that? He didn't say hi, and he's being quiet over there, I'll think there's a note on you. I'm staying? Hello. Okay. Okay, actually, it was anonymous, but I believe Neil and someone else made our bunches out of here. Oh, good. That's awesome. Can I ask you about that? Then, I wonder, I have the... Maybe capital reserve? That's awesome. Okay, there's a hundred and fourteen thousand. That would be a good place to start, right? It's capital reserve. Yep, I saw his email, and we have it here as well. Let's just take a quick... Yeah. I saw a bunch of guys in there. Let me... We'll talk to Martin and see if we can take a walk. We're either going to put a barrier up or any kind of sign. It's a name or something? What's the problem? Yeah, they actually have signs that you can get. We don't have any of that. I mean, some kind of sign like that, plus maybe look at the parking lot. You know, once you look through... What if the signs are something big? Is it labeled, no parking, right? Is it just parked there? Nope. In the sand pit towards her. Yeah, I mean, I... I thought some of them might have solutions to move the sand pit. The sand pit is just not a good spot for it. Yeah, I mean... There's always water in any of these, that's it. Let her get her... Reach back out toward, let her know that we are... We've got signage and we're going to take a walk down there and see if there's any possible way that we can do that. I have a sort of a site drawing. And, Sasha? Yeah. Robin, do you have anything else? No, I didn't have anything. Well, we were... One thing that we were thinking of doing was having... We were going to bring it to the classroom. We, at one point, had talked about it. So, we were going to have a session with the planning board and the DRV and so on, to talk about that, you know, some different issues and kind of just to do a brainstorm. So, I just wanted to throw that out there. Some was at this time... Maybe something in the fall. We visited the idea. So, we ran up to the site. Yeah, I think that's... Sometimes probably like four or maybe less. So, that was one idea. And then, you know, at that... Maybe at that... Other things on the agenda would be just talking about how we can engage people in public service. And so, I just was thinking about that the other day. And we'll have a little piece of news. Well, I will be talking to Chris Hunt tomorrow. I'm going to ask him, you know, because he was a gentleman. I met him at the crosswalk. When I filed for a permit. That's what Ed Pierce told me. I was like, we can do it that way. So, how we can work through that. That's about it. Callie, you're online here with us. Anything that you want to share with us? No, I think the road crew really appreciated on Thursday lunch. So, they really appreciated that. So, I know that may be something we should think about doing. If this happens again. Just so they have it. Because I know on Wednesday they were five or six to seven at night and none of them stopped for lunch. So, and something like sandwiches is easy. And so we did that in Berlin for our road and public works guys. They basically, we just got a bunch of sandwiches for Maple Woods and. You know, they stopped grabbed some. Went out because they can eat them while they're working. So. Just don't think that I'm so they don't have to stop. No, that's a good. I think. We have money in that select board. That type of stuff. But no, they deserve it. Long days like that. Certainly. I'm sure they. Like that. Anything else Kelly. I have to just jump back to one other thing. So, we're underway with the scoping study. Yep. One of the things that I just want to see. I don't remember it correct, but when the town manager from Waterbury came to us, he was talking about service. Yep. He did. He brought up the thing about the. The interest of maybe Waterbury connecting the wastewater system to fairgrounds and Gallup rate. The wastewater system. More not. But he brought that up as something that maybe we, the town want to consider or something. I'm just curious how that it is something that could be considered. And if it was going to be considered, we have to sort of get it into the scoping study. Right. Right. Proudly a lot. Probably the same side of the road. Sidewalk. So I'm just curious. Is that something our wastewater committee could look. Maybe they could look into their hands full or. I could go to all the Waterbury town manager and ask him about this. I don't know. Yeah. Why would we want to take that on? Well, the same reason we're sort of taking it on here because. People on a wastewater system. All this piece. Celtic system. Oh, Oh, people with tying to a wastewater system. I get 40 homes or something. Sure. I don't know. I just don't want to go through this whole. You know, while we're doing the scoping study, right? Turn every over every leaf or rock or whatever. Right. It'd be a shame to all of a sudden, you know, we'll be maybe all retired from across the board or something. 10 years from now. Some of them. Oh. Yeah. Yeah. Um. So whether we shouldn't. You know, why don't you want to do that? Reach out to the new town manager over there. And see if there's any. Interesting. He knows anything about it. You're a good town manager. I came to you that night. Oh, that's right. Oh, maybe I'll touch the clock and see what. Oh yeah. And then if there is interest. Maybe you could have him come in and present to us. You know, what type of opportunity is there? I was wondering, how are they going to maintain that? Well, that's going to have to have our road crew, but on the sidewalk. Well, that's going to be something. Yeah. Yeah. Maybe someone there. Maybe. It just came to mind when I was thinking about that project, I was like, wow, that's, you know, I mean, that's a half a day job for a guy to drive over there. Just a plow quarter of a mile. Or try to get a watery to do it. Fix it. Maybe it goes into their side. Yeah. Yeah. That's all I had is, yeah, it's like, we've got to consider that too. That's something that's ongoing. You know what I mean? We won't get any. We won't get any funds to do it. No. All those people paying the taxes, right? Yeah. Yeah. Thank you. No, I mean, I'm not saying. No, no, no, I understand. Paying taxes. That's not part of the sidewalk. That we'd have to do. That's very far away from the village center. And there's no, there's nothing comparable to that in the town. Are there any other segregated sidewalks that are 300 miles from the village? It's just a point. I don't understand what they are. They are. Just, yeah. They're charged. All right, gentlemen. How about the splitboard minutes for July 10th? Last week. We're going to sign out on your porch there. Callie. Yeah. Yeah. I'll make a motion to approve the blackboard. Thank you. I second motion. Seconded by. Campbell and any further discussions, changes, alterations. All in favor vote aye. Aye. Thank you. Can we find out anything about that picnic area? Yeah. Okay. That was one of the calls that Stefan went out. He was at the fire station. The picnic area was gone. No, no. There was a car with some people in it. Oh, wow. Oh, wow. He couldn't get there. He tried to get there. He couldn't get there. He couldn't get beyond the testing place there. Callie doesn't need mowing anymore. All right. So we've got old business. Is there any old business that we. To tackle here. The river road paving. I thought we had funds for that available. It's just. Oh, okay. Yeah. That's it for me. I don't see anything on the whole business. That's going to take precedence over what we got. I already got going. There's a question here for. Can we'll be on the other sidewalk, but I haven't had a chance to read it. And you. Did you care for anyone on the. Junkyard that was all taken care of. Careful. All right. I think that's it's. Is there any other new business that people have? Is there anything else I'm new that you want to look at or talk about or something that hasn't been. No, no, no. I mentioned when I was starting to get up to. Design phase. You know, far from the management would give me feedback to. Plan. Thursday. 26th of July. And. Traffic. So-called. Committee, you know, we're working on. Bringing a letter to select. What about. Village speeds into the village and speeds. Yeah. Drop it down. Yes. That'd be nice. All right. You know what's amazing just even you'll see when I write this. When you get on up. Come on up. I'll be through the curves. There's a 50 mile an hour sign. Just have to step. And this. You see another. This is going towards. This is going towards. There's another one just. Stevens. You do not see another speed. If you get all the way to it. Where it tells you 35. There's no other speeds. The whole distance. Coming south. You come out of the, you know, under. B. You have a 35 mile an hour sign. Drive on towards the dam. And it's 50. And you don't see another 50 mile an hour sign. So just before you drive. Stevens. The next 50. And then a 50. It's telling you it's still 50. And then you get down to Stephanie's or whatever. It's telling you 40 miles an hour. And it's a 40 mile an hour sign. And we're wondering why people are going so fast. Right. Well, you know, it doesn't make any sense. So that's part of the thing we're addressing. And just let it be. Trans transportation committee that Laura gains. First, you know, let's. Yeah, they used to have that. They would have a speed limit every so many miles. And it seems like they used to be more that lately. And now it's just. Remember he was telling us. It's like for as long as till you get to the next one. But that's, you know what, you know, I. On that road for years and years and years. I mean, I think the state's position is probably that. It's 50 mile an hour on all state highways. Unless otherwise posted. And they're just like, okay. Usually there's a few. There usually is. But they don't. There doesn't seem to be. Some half. Yeah. It's like 89. So we have. A good license. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Actually. So. So. This AP. I didn't get a chance to put it all together. So. Okay. You know. I was doing that. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. To join us. Well. I got sausage names. Two more. What's rich. The girl. What do they do. How many. Total licenses. Do they use V form. Underkäskard. Pre. They have. So many Yeah Yes. Fire High麟 glass. Morning, Hi! My mom and my twins. All right. In and out tonight. Thank you, everyone. Have a good night and make a motion to adjourn. Thank you. All in favor of what I? I. Thank you. Thank you, Kelly.