About this meeting
- Government Body
- Council
- Meeting Type
- Council
- Location
- Glenwood Springs, CO
- Meeting Date
- January 15, 2026
Transcript
121 sections
Um, this is a regular meeting and Ryan, would you please take a roll call? Mayor Dame here. Mayor Prom Zalinski, Councelor Townsley, Councelor Schmal, Councelor Wymer here, councelor Shaker, councelor Smith. We have a quorum. Thank you, Ryan. Do we have any agenda changes? We'll see none. Item three, disclosure of any council or conflict of interest for tonight. Also see none. Item four is citizens appearing before council and a council respond for items that are not on the agenda. And you guys know the know the drill. It's three minutes for you. Uh please raise your hand if you're interested in speaking. Um state your name and whether you live in city limits at the podium. Where's Chase? Sorry. Oh, we have a list. [clears throat] Lori Chase. Lori Chase. You're right. 705 Calvin Drive. Good evening. Okay, not deviating from my writing. Good evening, Mayor Dem and the rest of council. Thank you so much for all you do. I'm here to talk about our beautiful new park [clears throat] landing, excuse me. I've had occasion to be there after dark since our gallery is located right next door. The lights are so bright they can actually be blinding if you look anywhere near the direction. Mo most of my information comes from John C. Wells planetarium
article light pollution the overuse and misuse of artificial light at night. I understand the intent is to keep people safe and perhaps discover discourage overnight camping. However, there's several concerns with lighting that is too bright and poorly directed. Light trespass is when unwanted light escapes from one property to another. Overillumination is excessive lighting where it is not needed. Light clutter is excessive or redundant groupings of lights that create confusion and discomfort. Studies show that artificial light can disrupt circadian rhythms and melatonin production in humans. The effects on wildlife can be equally disturbing impacting, sorry I'm out of breath, a little out of condition here, impacting m migration, reproduction, feeding, and hunting in this park. The glare from 18 lights is significant, bright enough that you can be momentarily blinded if you look towards them. I'm asking the city to consider a solution that balances safety with comfort and responsible lighting. My suggestion would be either illuminate every other light pole, dim the lights, adjust the fixtures so the light is directed more downward and where it's needed. This would make the park more enjoyable at night without sacrificing safety for everyone. Thank you very much. Thank you, Miss Chase. Um, let's go through the list and then we'll respond to uh somebody's comments. Uh, Mr. Burner. Hi, I'm Doug Burns. Greetings call. Um, and um, I am a small business owner on Sixth Street and
I've lived on Sixth Street in the same apartment for 30 years now. And I just want to reiterate what Lori was saying. Um, um, the lighting design there is I I think is really really poor. It's what's known in the industry as light bombs. you basically it's just glaring, you know, spots of light and it makes it impossible to see basically across the see the face of nobody across the park which is a safety issue really. Um, and I would refer everybody here to the Dark Sky Foundation. I don't know if you've ever heard of it. Um, but I was down in Santa Fe last fall in uh in the middle of the city which is much bigger than this and I walked outside and there were stars everywhere and we don't have that here and that's a shame. It really is. Um, if there's any way to to shade those lights or I mean you shouldn't be able to see the source of the light, you should be able to see what the light is lighting, right? The pathway. Um, but basically it's just a it's just a bombs of glare. I mean, it's not good design at all. And the other part of the six, um, the six sheet looks great. I'm very happy with it as a business owner. Uh, the other thing was that, uh, you know, they put the plants right up next to the street there. So, when people open their doors to get out of their cars, they step right on the plants. I mean, poor design. Really poor design. The other thing is I would like to see the the two-hour parking signs, you know, the actual real two-hour parking signs go up as soon as possible. Um, I sit in my store there and I watch people unload their cars and go to the pool and park there all day. Uh, that really hurts the businesses there. Um, and in addition, I would like to have like maybe a couple of 30 minute or one hour parking spaces there just for people who want to come in and shop real quick and leave. Um, because people try to come to the liquor store or, you know, go to the to the uh consignment shop or whatever and um, they can't find a place to park because people are just parked there all day. So, um, I know there are on both corners of Kevin's liquor store,
Cooper's Liquors, there's 30 minute parking on both sides of the corner of his store. I'd like to see something like that for us, too. Thank you. Thank you very much. And lastly, Mr. Hower. My name is David Hutter. I North Glennwood resident. And I too want to I want to reinforce what the two previous people said. The lighting is excessive and unnecessary. And uh it's not it's not a good design solution. And I I like what uh the gentleman just before me articulated. I mean what the goal of lighting in that park should be because I know there's considerations for safety. But uh this is way beyond that. Uh and there's other long as I'm here and I have a few minutes. There's other problems with the reality of this park design and uh there I think it's flawed in many areas. For one thing, there's way too much fixed sitting. Uh there it is not what you would call a green design. there's too much concrete. uh the fixed sitting and the car the way the concrete is articulated it is it it rather than becoming a flexible public space it is becom it is constricted and I think I am very happy that we have this open space here and I think it will improve over time and I think one of the things over time that I would hope that the city would do is integrate this open space with the buildings that exist now and will be in theuture future because that building or this area is going to be subject to so much redevelopment and and I'm thinking particularly of where they have now fenced in where the rest public restroom
is going to be which is to be a prefab rest which is I don't know what the design is going to look like but I look at that as being an interim solution and the permanent solution should I think come from cooperation with the adjacent property owners and should probably be integrated ated uh into that building complex where the arts council is and the liquor store and everything. So that the open space, you know, building a building in open space, it's it's not open space anymore. And that open space is so valuable and over time it's very very important. And uh it's it's cluttered now and uh much less than it could be. Thank you. Thank you very much. Anybody else from the public like to come forward comment tonight? We'll see none. I will close the public portion. Bring it back to council. Do we have any responses to uh what we heard tonight? Go. I go again. Trying to remember how this works. I know. Mic on. There you go. Yeah. So So we don't disagree. I think we think that the lights could probably be better over there. Um, we had a a meeting at the Hotel Colorado last night and it was something that we noticed and so um figure we'll work with parks and find out if like maybe we can change the lighting to stop lighting or if there's other um solutions as far as just the lighting goes perhaps. Who are you looking to? I'm looking at Rod's reaction. I'm like I don't know trying to read your face. Did you see? We would be happy.
There's been lots of um work to make that part be able to work. And there obviously are some things that could be done to improve the the um usability and ambience of that for for folks. Um and safety is a concern too. So trying to find that balance something. Yeah, I know that was a big community concern about the the loitering and not creating dark spaces that we're going to create an unsafe. So totally appreciate that. But maybe we can strike a little bit of balance. You bet. And just for your information, one of the things we've recently done, we had a a meeting of uh various departments of the city uh coming together and talking about that space and how we might manage it and how we might use it. Um whether it's food trucks and how often to the benches and and the need there to make some modifications to them. So, we had we had good representation from most of the departments and then we've also had some discussion on it at the parks and rec advisory commission. So, we're working on we gave it to me. Awesome. That's so good to hear. Thank you. Thank you. All right. Anybody else? We got Ray Commissioner I mean um councelor Small. Um I I concur. I go by there frequently going to the pool and those lights are really bright. Um, but I also appreciate the desire for them to be bright at times that can probably be modified and fixed somehow and probably should be. I I'll um follow up on the other comment about design and the parking. the the plantings adjacent to the parallel parking right now are
interfering with cars opening their doors and those those plants are going to get when they grow up it's going to be 10 times the problem and then people are going to park halfway in the street that's only half a street to begin with. So that's another thing to be looking at as we as we try to improve what we started with there. Thank you, uh, Councelor Tanley. That's that's exactly where I was going with it, too, is, you know, I think that the the park is awesome. It's got some issues that, you know, probably more readily apparent after the fact than before the fact. So, I think it sounds like everybody's kind of on the same line here. We take a look at the lighting. I've noticed the same thing because I park over there occasionally and you know, you do it's like, okay, the plants are right there when you step out. So, then you tend to park a little further out. it's already too far out. Uh the other thing is is I think the idea of of possibly having shortening some time slots in those some of those parking spots would be good. It appears to me there's somebody living in a white van over there. Uh so maybe we could have code enforcement take a look at maybe just hitting that street a little more often and like I say not making it a permanent parking spot for a couple people that may be living out there. So awesome. Thank you. I think this is great feedback. I think it's something we can get to where it works for everybody. Thank you. Anybody else? Okay, we'll see none. Thank you. Um Oh, councelor Smith. Thank you. Um I too strongly concur with the comments about the lighting at North Landing and with comments from colleagues here. Um [clears throat] in part because it's just too darn bright. It's just jarring. but also in part in large part because of safety concerns. Uh one of the principles we learned when the lighting ordinance for the city was
crafted ages ago is that [clears throat] it's important to illuminate what you want to see. And in this instance, in many instances, it's the danger you want to illuminate. If I walk through there and there's a prowler or an attacker on the other side of one of those one of those globes, I can't see them. I can't avoid them. So, specifically for safety, I think it's important to tone those down and redirect the light and not have it direct in anybody's eyes. Um, meanwhile, in addition to those kind of kind of u subjective or or or observational considerations, my amateur reading of the current lighting ordinance is just those those fixtures are plain out of compliance with the lighting ordinance. So, that may be a place to start in terms of uh investigating retrofits. Thank you. Thank you very much. See nobody else. Um, yeah, the lights we've they've been covered. I agree. I was blinded last night, so I'm like, we got to do something. So, I agree. Thank you, Director Terulo, for bringing us a solution or working on a solution. But, I'd like to call on uh city engineer Ryan Gordon, if I may, quick to see if you could give us a quick update on the parking signs. I assume that goes to engineering. Yeah. Uh, good evening, council. Yeah, Ryan Gordon, city engineer. Yes. So, the the parking signs are in in my my purview. And so, um yeah, we're working to get those up. Um I think the suggestion of some short-term parking makes a lot of sense. I mean, I think our goal is is to have some amount of turnover. Um I I I think it the locations that they're they're talking about do make a lot of sense. Um I know we spoke to the gentleman who owns the bike shop as well, but expressing some interest in getting um some short-term parking that's kind of the Suilla side.
So, I think it's something that we can we can make work. Do you have some sort of a timeline when we can expect a sign? I don't. I I will reconvene um Monday morning with my crew and see what's going on and can't get something up relatively quickly here. Okay. Excellent. We are um lucky we don't have a ton of snow for putting signs in the ground. Um so, we can probably get that done sooner rather than later. Awesome. Thank you, Ryan. Gotcha. I hope this helps. I hope you kind of heard what you wanted to hear. Um I think we have some solution for for the area. Um, with that we'll move on to council announcements. [sighs] [clears throat] Mayor Prom Solinski. Um, so the airport, the KGWS municipal airport is having its annual meeting um the evening of January 22nd at Mortgage Commons and that will be at 5:30 p.m. And that is for members, but it's also open to the public. If you're interested party, want to become a member, it'd be a great place to come. And then I just want to invite all concerned residents of the city of Lon Springs to come to our first annual state of the city. Um that will be on January 31st at Morg Commons. Um that will be at also at 5:30 p.m. Um you can RSVP and if you go to the city website, the coods. You'll see it there. Would love to see as much interest on that as possible. Thank you. Anybody else? Any announcements? Let's see. Councelor Smith. Thank you. Uh, Historic Preservation Commission met last Monday on January 12th. U, they are beginning to develop a list of potential buildings of note. That that's an official building buildings of merit. Structures of merit. That's it. Structures of merit. as as kind of an interimm step toward um historic pres historic recognitions. Um there is [clears throat] a state conference about um historic preservation coming up in February and at least staff and a member or two of the
commission will attend. So we'll learn even more from other communities. Um the transportation commission met on January 6. They are continuing their preparation of what they mean what they meant in long ago recommendations here be before city invests in bike share networks be sure that the bicycling infrastructure is ready for it was basically what they recommended. they are now filling in the gaps, filling in [clears throat] back filling on that on what they need of a list of of particular gaps and and improvements that that they think will be needed to cross that threshold. They also just resolved to take up um a more deliberate and systematic discussion of trail safety policies including measures related to electric assist bicycles. uh as more increasing incidents but lots of complaints about variable speeds and weight and such of vehicles. So they're going to they're going to tackle that. I think they'll probably confer with parks and rec commission as well. Um but they're starting that off. So that was I thought thought that was a good initiative. Workforce housing advisory board met on January 13th. Um had [clears throat] a guest speaker from the housing coalition. uh West Mountain Housing Coalition. Um April [clears throat] Long was there and talked extensively about their initiatives um as a coalition and how the city's own programs in general on housing and workforce housing money in particular can tie in with that. uh overlapping with the visit with with Miss Long and as a continuing agenda item for that board, there was discussion of finding ways to trans transend transfer some of the workforce housing funding into a revolving loan fund. Uh there's
some kind of procedural fiscal difficulties with that, but one possible solution is running that money through a contractor that knows how to do that so the city doesn't have to track those loans. They're coming back with more thoughts on that, which again I think will be a creative help. Uh the rafter board met on June January 8th um and had kind of a summary of 2025 and anticipation of projects and potential budget adjustments in 2026. Uh a couple of highlights were raft ridership in general is trending down even though it made a recovery after everybody stayed off the bus during the plague is now trending down again even during the period of of free fair of October November. Um it's it's just a trend that persists and is is a bit troubling. um [clears throat] happily or otherwise uh the hogback is the exception to that. Hogback continues to be popular and attract riders uh and that brings a lot of workers to Glennwood Springs. So that seemed useful. Raft als raft board also directed its staff to undertake a trail safety analysis related in particular to [snorts] ebikes but other other multiple use uh interactions. So, I think there's going to be some overlap between what the city and RAFA do on that one, and I think that could be very productive. Um, we were alerted to at the RAFTA board meeting to a state an emerging statewide ballot initiative that would require all C. Colorado Department of Transportation funds that currently go to transit services be transferred to roads and roads construction and maintenance. Uh so it's something that may be on the ballot. Of course has rafta very concerned because they do some partnerships with seed dot and this some of that funding is important as does
as has the city. So it's something I would suggest that the city also keep on its uh legislative monitoring and its not legislature so much but uh issue monitoring. Um Garfield clean energy will meet board will meet tomorrow for its bimonthly meeting. general organization for the coming year and updates on grant application programs, including one um in which we're hoping to get some Glenwood Springs funding for solar retro solar electric retrofits on one of our buildings. So, we'll get an update on that grant application. Colorado Mountain College Civics's Initiative uh will launch on Monday, January 19th, three o'clock over at their place. uh this is this is their year-long emphasis on civic engagement and teaching people how to be active citizens and I think it's going to be neat partnership opportunity for the city and I hope some of us can attend to learn about what they have in mind. Um council members know this one but I want to be sure the world knows that our landfill got recognized. Uh the [clears throat] Columbus Springs landfill was recognized in the 2025's summary report called state of recycling and composting in Colorado as one of the outstanding success stories focused mainly on the yard waste diversion program that city council approved but also inherently recognizing the the really creative work that goes on out there at the landfill. Um finally, um there is sorry only for city staff but there is a city staff all staff appreciation uh lunchon coming up. Um, so that's not an invitation, but it's but it's a neat thing. And I'm particularly pleased that
uh Sarah and city administration and community center staff have been working real hard with a couple of contractors such that this is going to be a zerowaste event. There will be no trash. We are going to do a combination of recycling and composting for all the food and uh utensils and such. Uh it's a really nice initiative and and it's it's also happens to be in keeping with the climate action plan that we discovered earlier discussed earlier under action item WM1.4.1 uh we're now in the business of keeping the the the trash reduced for our own events. It's kind going to be kind of fun. Thanks. All right. Thank you, Councelor Smith. And we got Council Shack. Thank you. Just a quick update or amendment of what you pushed a button. I did. Yep. I don't know. A quick update of what uh councelor Smith just told us about workforce housing commission. Number one is no longer just the Workforce Housing Commission, albeit its title is the same. We remind the public we have merged it with housing. So, it's a broader scope than just workforce housing. and we could use some applicants. But also just a note on the regional housing coalition. We invested a fair amount of money in that without a guarantee that all the benefits would acrew to Glenwood Springs. It took a stretch and we have had um as of I think next week there will be 20 deed restricted placements for residents in the valley. 12 of which are Glennwood Springs address. um 10 of which are actually in city limits, two just slightly outside of city limits. So it has been working extremely well on our behalf for a diversity of housing and permanently deed restricted housing in a more affordable range forever. So thank you. Thanks
for that addition. Thank you for the info. Anybody else have announcements? No, we'll see none. Thank you. We will move on to the consent agenda and I'm entertaining a motion to move it forward. Mayor Prom Solinski, I move to approve the consent agenda as written. Thank you. We have a motion and councelor Wymer. All second. And a second. Any questions about the consent agenda? See none. Everybody in favor say I. I. I. Those opposed? We'll see none. Motion passes unanimously. I would just like to take a moment to thank um our two reapplicants. Uh for the arts and culture, we had Haley Harris and Nick Ward. And for tourism management, Kevin Kennedy appreciate you and your continued service to our city. And we also have somebody for the volunteer firefighter pension board. And the name just eluded me. So sorry. We're going to look it up and we're going to mention you as well for crying out loud. I know. before we head into make everything. It is Ledanne Gallagher. Excellent. Leslie and Galler, thank you very much. Thank you uh for mentioning that, Aaron. Uh moving on to our first actions and or presentations. And item seven tonight is a funding request from CARE. Nice.
Okay, great. Thanks. Hi everyone. Uh, thanks for having us here tonight. My name is Wes. I'm the executive director of care Colorado Animal Rescue. We're at 2801 County Road 114 outside of city limits, but serving Glenwood Springs. Um, I came and spoke with you all briefly in October. Um, just to let you know about this problem we're having with ongoing funding for the shelter. Um, so tonight we're here to ask you for $7,500 to fund the shelter in 2026. Um, this request comes after just uh not finding a solution that's working otherwise um having been a part of the financial advisory board grants in the past years and denied in 2025. So um just a little bit of information for you and some visuals to share. Um, first is a uh an image of a dog, Veronica, who uh arrived as a stray dog through the Glenwood PD to Red Hill in Carbondale and then uh relocated to care after two weeks of not being reclaimed there at Red Hill. Um, I stress this story because this is an example of how um our resources at the shelter really benefit the whole community and the animals in our care. So, Veronica needed medication for kennel stress. She needed behavior modification. um she needed to be vaccinated and microchipped before she went into a home. So she was adopted um and is living on Mentor A in Glenwood. So she did spend 66 days at the shelter after originally being dropped off at Red Hill. So um although the stray holding agreement with Red Hill serves us one purpose, a lot of those animals do end up back up at care. Um, just to briefly touch on the history of care, um, we were founded in 1992 as an allv volunteer organization and then worked to identify property and build a shelter that served Glenwood Springs and Garfield County. Um, for all of these years, um, we have served 30,000 animals. Um, and we've been proud
to say that we work for Glenwood. Um in 2022 that changed a little bit when um our ask from the police department budget was a little bit more uh than the chief was comfortable with. Um that mistake came from the fact that I was trying to fund all of the work we do for the city under one relationship with the police department. Um and that wasn't necessarily fair to them either. So um the per animal costs for a stray animal to arrive at the shelter through the PD are reasonable and affordable for the police department. Um, but the animals that we serve outside of that contract is a large amount. Um, so we'd love to say that we work for the Glen City of Glenwood Springs. Again, um, it's a huge part of our mission to be, um, essential to the community and a part of community health. Um, in this picture, we've got some Glenwood Springs elementary students. Um, we had over 20 school groups visit the shelter this year. Um, they hung out with Hermione and went for a walk. Um, again, just part of what it means to have this community shelter that's really doing so much. U, this cat pictured here is Tofu. Um, the police department doesn't usually work with cats. Cats all come to the shelter as citizen strays. Um, Tofu was found by by Glenwood Springs High School. Um, was with us for two weeks, received a dental cleaning, vaccines, and a microchip before going into a new home. So, the great thing is Tofu now has a microchip. we know who the owner is. When she sews up at the shelter, we get her back there next time. Um, this list of items that we do at the shelter uh are important to consider. Um, socially conscious sheltering is signed into Colorado law as of 2021. Um, an important part of that for the city to consider is that socially conscious sheltering includes serving the needs of the community. Um, so we don't say that we're no kill. we make decisions based on what's right for our community. Um, and that means
that we do euthanize some animals. Um, and that's something that's important for public safety. Um, and these animals that are adopted out into the community should be considered safe for that. Um, it is a very low number and we're very proud to say that that is very few animals every year. Um, but it's an important part of our work to help the community be safe. Uh, we also um are a PACFA certified kennel space. So Colorado has um licensing required through the state program to make sure that we are following all their guidelines. So we're clean enough, the animals are safe, they're also disease-free. Um we meet a number of standards and have an annual inspection. Um the other thing that's unique to care is that we still are an open intake shelter. So we are taking owner surrendered pets from the community. um we're able to keep a balance of the animals in our care so that somebody who's in crisis has a place to take their pet when their needs change. Um and that's important for public safety again because that's just going to become a stray animal if there's nowhere to take it. So if someone's displaced from housing, which is happening quite a bit right now, um and they can't find pet friendly housing in the community, that animal arrives at care. Um, if we weren't open to that, then it would probably become a stray animal or potentially a problem for the public. Um, I won't read through that whole list, but um, feel free to chime in with any questions on that. I do want to get through this quickly. Um, our community programs are all funded through our fundraising initiatives. So, the great part about participating in our shelter is that we do all this fundraising work and we create all of these programs that go above and beyond. So, we have a pet food bank. Um, we provide free microchips. We have lowcost vaccines. Um, we're doing work to help keep people keep their pets as often as possible. Um, little man here, um, was displaced after his owner committed suicide. He arrived with
a dog sibling at the shelter after originally been taken to Red Hill. Um, little man was with us for 152 days. Um, he had major allergy problems and was kind of a tough tough cat. um but did find a new home. Um Emy's pictured here. She's an example of an owner surrender. Um she was living near Glenwood Springs High School. Um the owner received numerous citations for her getting out out of the yard and was causing problems. She arrived as a relinquished pet. Um she's still waiting for a home after 56 days. Um I'd love to run through these stats real quickly just so you know. Um, the last time we spoke, um, you all asked that I specify exactly which animals arrived at the shelter from within city limits. So, all the animals listed here did arrive from within city limits. Um, 60 stray pets, that's 31 dogs, 28 cats, and a bird. Um, owner surrendered pets, which are most important two categories for us to talk about, 54 owner surrendered pets. Uh, 25 dogs, 23 cats, and six exotic pets. Um, we had 36 people from Glenwood participate in our own pet and low vaccine services and then we did transfer in the four animals from Red Hill that originally arrived there through the PD. So in total out of our 924 animals served this past year um 154 of those um had Glenwood Springs addresses. This guy is Sloan. He was a stray from Glenwood. He took quite a while to get adopted, 85 days. Um had arrived from a citizen and just never reclaimed. So um unfortunately that's the case for probably 50 to 60% of stray animals.
Uh tonight I really hope that we consider finding a way to fund the shelter long term um with the city. Um, I don't think it's fair for that burden to be entirely on the police department. Um, I also don't know that a granting program is the right place for our services. Um, we consider this to be an essential service to the community. Uh, as you can see by these numbers, there's a need for it. Um, residents of Glenwood Springs are going to have animals, whether they get them from us or somewhere else. Um, those animals are going to cause some problems at some point. Um, and we like to think that our work has really kept this a great city for pet owners and for animals who are displaced. So, there is always a safe place for them to land. As long as we're here, there's not going to be a problem with stray animals in Glendon Springs. We also ensure that there's not going to be feral cat colonies in Glenwood Springs. Um, or that unsafe animals are adopted out into homes. Um, also if there's a bite in the community, we are well versed in a 10-day bite quarantine. Um, we are well well versed in decision-m for youth in Asia if that needs to happen. So the tough things that work for the city are what happened at the animal shelter. Um, I'd love to be creative and find a solution for this. For right now, I'm asking for some funding for 2026 so that we can move forward with this work. Um, I'll show you quickly that our budget for the shelter is huge. Um, and we do a large amount of fundraising, about 55% of our budget is directly from donors. Um, another 10% from grants. Um, the county is still providing 25 27%. Um, that's a big drop from where we were in the past. When I started this job 10 years ago, the county was funding half of our operating budget. But to keep up with rising costs and now decreased funding from the county, um it's just important that we have participation from all the municipalities and that we keep this going is something that's just a sure thing. Um so I'd love to find a line
item that can stay a part of the city budget or an accommodation for the police department budget to include the animal shelter. Um that's it for our presentation. Um big thank you from everybody. Again, we're asking for $7,500 this year. We anticipate that about 150 15 animals served as strays and owner surreners would be covered under that amount of money. Um that dollar per pet is about $65 per animal that comes in through those two intakes. Happy to answer questions and uh available to work on this later or go into any topics needed. All right. Excellent. Well, thank you very much for the information. Um, we'll start with Council Shreter. Thank you. Um, I'll have questions of Steve too, but first question, thank you very much. We had an episode this week that involved you very favorably. I'll comment on that later because it's not a question, but one question I have is you have Garfield County listed. I don't see any neighboring towns listed besides ours. Could you explain or expand? Yes. Um, Newcastle is currently um providing animal sheltering through Journey Home and Rifle. Um, they currently don't have a budget to provide anything to care and they're identifying Journey Home as their their town shelter. Um, we do work closely with Carbondale. We've been trying to recruit the Carbondale PD to um start delivering strays to the shelter. Um, I'm also putting forth an additional ask for them to find funding for the citizen strays that come from Carbondale. that is a slightly smaller number. So, we hope that that's proportionate to the animals that are coming in. Um, but they have been providing some grant funding u between two and $4,000 the past few years. Um, and that's in the grant section of our budget. I didn't identify that that was from Carbondale. I'm sorry. Thank you. Um, and may I
ask Steve a question now at this point? Steve, should we um should we allocate funds to care either on a one-off right now or eventually more ongoing? Where would the where do you recommend the funds would come from? So, we have um we fund requests like this typically through uh grants in our ANI fund that are awarded through the financial advisory board. If you guys wanted to grant funds to care or any other organization like this, it would have to come from our general fund. And can it? Yeah, you guys could direct me to give them funds from the city manager discretionary fund. Thank you. Thank you, Councelor. I've been to your facility. I've made some donations up there. It's a great facility. The services you provide are extraordinary. Thank you. I'm I'm uh I'm concerned about budgets altogether going forward, ours, yours, and and others. What is your level of confidence that you're going to be able to continue to provide services if with our $7,500 contribution should we make it? Uh my confidence is high. Um, we have been diligently moving money into reserves for the past 10 years. Um, that grew from about $250,000 in our reserve accounts um to about a million dollars right now. With our current operating budget, if we went back to basic services, we can be funded for up to two years on our reserves alone. So, um, I hope that doesn't make us sound rich, but we're all prepared. Um, we hope that that gives us that that steady backing
to know that we're going to be able to keep doing this work and that's what that money is there for. Also, if there were ever a time that we needed to decrease services, um, the essential services that I talked about today, which are stray animal intake and owner surrendered pet housing, would be those that continue. If we had to decrease things, it would be some of the extra stuff that we fundra for, such as um lowcost vaccines or assistance with behavior. So, I'm I'm highly confident that we'd be able to keep those essential services going. And I was impressed that the the organization was started on a volunteer basis. How much of your staff now is still volunteer? We have uh 250 active volunteers in our database. Um, we just did our year-end calculations. Um, I didn't bring the exact number with me, but um, we counted every volunteer hour at a $20 an hour rate, and it was about $20,000 worth of volunteer time through the year. Um, 3,000 volunteer shifts that have been filled. Um, and we rely on those people for, um, helping with cleaning in the shelter, um, supporting animal transportation, um, and then hosting our events as well. Very good. Thank you. Uh, thank you, Councelor Townsley, please. Uh, question for you, Steve. If if instead of doing this on a grant basis every year and doing something like that, but make it count by an item, would that also come from general fund or is where would you do if we said we wanted to make this an ongoing contribution? So, I think we would see this as kind of a public safety um initiative and that is funded through our general fund. And then I would just say again I you know coming to us with something where it's already half over half funded by private donations and and working that part of it. I think that's really good. Also
you know I think you said 16% of your animals were from Glenwood Springs and 1% of the budget's what you're asking for. I think maybe your ask is not enough. I would I would I would lean that direction also. Um, our goal in our goal in 2022 when we were talking to the chief at that time was to try to get that dollar amount to closer to $20,000 a year. Um, again, that was too much for the per animal costs for what comes through the PD, but I think your service is excellent. Thanks. Thank you. Thank you, Council Sher. Please, Steve, refresh us on history. Was this a line item in our public safety budget at one time or has it all come through FAB in the past? what how is it? So, we've funded care in two ways in the past. One is through a financial advisory board grant that we have given them in the past and the other is through a service, right? So, we would take our animals that we found strays and stuff up to care. Uh we've since um chosen to use Red Hill and Carbondale um instead of care, which is um why that part of his funding has disappeared. Thank you. Any other questions? Um Councelor Townsler, what was the just from a historical perspective, what was the amount of money that was going in prior to the Red Hill decision and and do we spend with Red Hill now? We spend a little bit less now than we did before. I want to say that the line item that we put into the budget was, I think, $10,000. Okay. Uh that was a budget plug and I think that we paid as we went as we dropped uh pets off at the facility if I'm not mistaken. Okay. And that's similar to what we're paying now. Yeah, it's fairly similar. Yeah. Thanks. Thank you, Councelor Smith. Thank you. My physical questions already got asked and answered. So, thank you for all of that. Um, I have two curiosity questions. You spoke about voluntary surreners, I think is a
term you used. Do those tend to be temporary or people are giving them up for good? Permanently, usually. Um, there are some rare instances where someone's situation changes shortly after making that decision and they're able to reclaim their pet. Um, but I would say 95% of those are are a one-time surrender and at that point we seek a new home for the animal. Thank you. What does the shelter have a have advice or views on open roaming cats? Cats that do have homes but are let loose outdoors and and do you relay that advice whatever it is? We do. Um yes, we have a policy for our cats that are adopted from the shelter that they be indoor only. Um, our point of view is that that's the safest thing for the cat. Um, our concern is their well-being and community safety. So, um, a cat who's kept inside is going to be kept safe from any disease exposure. Um, also, um, will be safe from being killed by wildlife or ran over by a car. Um, so you would think that stray dogs are a big issue, but there are more stray cats running around um that people never find again. So, our advice is that every every cat adopted from the shelter stay indoor only. Thank you. Okay. Counselor Schmall, please. H how many of the stray dogs that are brought in? Are you able to identify an owner for? It's somewhere between 40 and 60% that are returned to their owner. Um, I think the number this year was 85 that were returned to the owner from Glenwood of the number that we took in. Might be off on the percentage. And that's that's from your end. From from our end, John, do we generally try even try to
identify an owner if if if the department is picking up a dog to deliver somewhere? Yes, we do. We use social media and we reach out to the both Red Hill and CARE to help facilitate re uh reunification. And are there are there charges that those owners incur due to their lack of responsible ownership? Yes, there are. And do those do those charges help offset his costs? Um for us, u so if we're receiving a stray animal right now, um it's not coming directly from the police department. is coming from a citizen. Um when we do identify the owner and they come to the shelter, um we charge a $30 per day fee. Um we are not exceptionally strict about that. So if someone can't afford that but they want their pet back, we try to make that happen because we don't want another homeless pet. Um but we do ask for a $30 a day boarding fee. Um, and that is part of the rationale behind asking the city to find some funding is that we'd hate to increase all of those costs for residents and pet owners um to try to cover our costs, which is would just be too much. Understand completely. Um, I always try to relay back the source of the of the cost to be the the payee, the bearer. Uh, and I hate I hate to see irresponsible pet owners cost the taxpayers money or or your operation to go out of business. Thank you, Council Shack. Thank you. Um, [clears throat] I'm trying to understand some pet circulation here. Do we have a rough idea on in general how many pets we send to Red Hill and how many Red Hill pets
end up at care? Do we know what happens there? I don't know the exact amount that went to Red Hill before arriving at care. Um, during our time with the police stray holding contract, that was between 10 and 15 dogs primarily a year. Um, so if that number were true, um, we took in four that arrived from Red Hill in 2025. So somewhere around 40% of 10, but I'm not sure if we have the current number. And is that roughly our count? 10 to 15 pets a year. John, so I'm just gonna make you lean over talking. It's your stats. Where's his mic? I don't know. It's okay. I have loud books, too. We're trying to tell you something. So, in 200 in 2024, we sent 46 uh animals up to Red Hill and 64 in 2025. And it sounds like four went to hair after not being able to uh find their owners. You said 64 this year, correct? The last four in 2025. Yes. And four to you? Yeah. Okay. Thank you. That's a much bigger number than I expected. We didn't see that number during our time with the contract, but I think they have changed. You good? Yeah. Thank you. Any other questions? Uh my my interest is why did we change to Red Hill? That was a business decision that was made two or three years ago and I'm not really familiar with all of the uh variables, but I think that um uh it had a little bit to do with cost. the travel was about as far. It's a little easier to get to in the winter because going up spring bounty is tough. Our officers have to leave cell phones coverage for a little while. So, there's a little bit of a a safety issue there. So, there were a number of of, you know, things that went into that decision, but it wasn't anything
against the service that Care provides or who they are. Okay. Thank you. I would add one more part of that was that in 2022 um on behalf of our board of directors I was trying to increase the amount that we were asking for but again we were really trying to compensate for the entirety of the work um and that wasn't necessarily just the animals coming through the police department. So right we'd love for that to be more reasonable for the PD to come straight to the shelter. Um, but to hit a number that works for us, we just needed we needed more. So, in that conversation, um, it did present as a lot for the police department to try to put in their budget. Okay. Excellent. Well, thank you for all your information. Any other questions? Councelor Tanley, a quick question. Do you think you're going to have any luck, and I'll get to why I'm asking this question a little bit. Do you think you'll have any luck with an ask from Carbondale? I do. I feel I feel like they've been generous in the grant that they've provided in the in the past. Um it's been a small amount, but I'd like to see an increase there. Um we did have some positive conversations with the police department. Um whether or not they choose to drive out of Carbondale to come up to the shelter is a big ask for them. Um so we may not be able to move the stray holding contract, but um I do think we'll find some grant funding from that and I will push for that. Um, Steve, you said uh discretionary fund, city manager discretionary fund. We have that every year. And I'm just curious, how did we do last year? Did we spend it all? Did we How does How do we spend that? Usually, we put uh $200,000 a year, I think, into that fund. And last year, uh, in 2025, I think we ended up spending about $50,000 of that. And it's and it's January, so it's got to be the coffers are full. Well played, Mr. Mayor, thank you. Uh, okay. Uh, one more. One more. Councelor Shack,
thank you. How how often do we look at or have competing um stray holding contracts? Uh, we will look at all of our business relationships every year, you know, as we go along. The last time that we really dug into it, I think, was probably in 2022. And have you submitted a bid since then? uh just this year at the um in not at the FAB but at to the city as a contract. Um I did share it with the police chief. Um I didn't we didn't get much traction on that communication. So I'm not sure how far that proposal went, but we did reduce that. Um and we do have the option to reduce that further if it makes it work. The perfect scenario is that all the animals arrive at the shelter and we can work from there. Um, I just I don't want to burden the police department with that entire ask for the financial part of it. Okay, enough questions. Thank you very much everyone. Thanks for being here. Appreciate it. Uh, anybody from the public have any input on care and our funding or possible funding? We'll see none. We'll bring it back to council. Uh, entertaining a motion. I think I'm going to see a motion to see whether we want to fund this or not. So, who's ready to do a motion? Councelor Tanley, you know, I want to get comment on this as well, but I'll go ahead and make the motion and so we can comment, right? I I think there should be a a line item budget that we do on a continual versus basis versus a one-time ask on here and continue to go through it. think it's a service that if I look at you know value for dollars it's what the community gets out of it not only from his graphs but also just personal knowledge and having worked up there and seen their operation I think we're getting a huge amount of benefit for a very small ask of money uh the other thing that I'd like to
do is is make move motion that we give them the 7500 they're asking for and we agree to increase that if Carbondale will match it up to 15,000 and just give our people up in Carbondale a little a little bump like that. Maybe see if we can raise some more money for them by hitting a competitive streak. All right, let me let me see if I heard this correctly. Your your mot your motion is to give them 7500 on an ongoing basis for the general fund. 7500 for the request right now, but then you want to also move this onto the budget. Correct. That's all part of the motion. And then you would like to increase it by 7,500 bucks if carbonale matches correct our our contribution. Okay, that's the motion. Everybody understands? I think we do. Can I get a second for that? Council Shack. For discussion purposes, I will second the motion. Okay. Thank you. Uh let's start the discussion. Dave, you're still on, but I think Yeah. Okay. Thank you, Councilor Shacker. Um, I appreciate this, Dave. I'm not sure I want to quite go like that without some caveats. I'm still not sure that we should be funding. I I'd like to see care. I I contribute to them. I had a great episode the other day where we had a stray unidentified. We took it up to care. They identified the chip. They gave the owner tag great experience. My point is I'm not sure how to proceed with your motion without annual contracts between Red Hill or Care. I'm not sure, you know, if it's coming out of our public safety budget or wherever Steve finds it. If
we have a if we have a bid from Red Hill more competitive than the bid from care, how do we rationalize that ongoing line item? I'd like to discuss that um and kind of go from that as far as discussion before I I'm supportive of care, but I'm not sure from a business point of view, how do we deal with two entities that are bidding for the same service? I think Can I go ahead and answer? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So, I think that Well, then you got to get kicked. Well, I got to find you. Where are you? There you are. There you go. As I understand it, and correct me if I'm wrong, but but Red Hill's providing a service. We're paying for that service. What the gentleman's told us is that he's still providing a service to us even though they don't have that contract with us that they're taking quite a few. They're they're really providing a great service for the people of Glenwood Springs. We're going in and saying that, "Wow, you guys are raising we're we're at 1% of their budget right now and which we didn't give them. their 16% of their cost is coming at least for 16% of their animals the services they're providing way in excess of that. So I I think that we're we should be stepping up to the plate and Steve maybe can say yeah there's a better way to do this and I'm not tied into doing it a certain way. I just wanted to get the motion out there. I just don't think that we're supporting I think we should be supporting them at least for their ask and maybe more of that and you know if we can thank if we can do something that maybe bumps one of our neighboring towns into helping too then that gets them more money for their services and so I'm open it changes in any any way of forming it but I appreciate that perspective and I was actually inclined to consider more than their ask anyway. I don't know how we would build into it that um or should we or it's separate that with this if we're doing this annual funding we also
ask care to also compete or submit annually for the stray dog contract as well. So we have both of them as well possibly bidding and still find a way to do the grant for the general public service. Councelor, um I I support all of your motion, David, except the ongoing funding. I think I think we can encourage Steve to try to figure out a way to make it an ongoing process, but for the purposes of the motion tonight, I think that I support it for this year with the encouragement to go on. Thank you, Mayor Protemer. Yeah, I was going to ask a question around that. Um, since the organization is outside of city limits, is that problematic for us to fund it as a budgetary item? No, not necessarily. I feel a little bit like I would like to agree with budget with the motion for tonight, but pull the ongoing um budget until we have a budget conversation for 2027. I think for 2026 we should fund it and then have a you know maybe another presentation or another conversation for 2027. Thank you, Council Wymer. So, I think I actually support the other half of the motion. Um, so, you know, I'm sitting here thinking, you know, it's it's the first meeting of 2026 and we've got, you know, a great applicant coming forward asking for for some money. And I think we're going to see this every meeting. and and I'm I'm trying to establish how I'm going to
think about these requests in 2026 when um there's no snow on the ground, we have no tourists, um we have one run open at sunlight, Aspen is 50% open, uh the federal, you know, the feds um clamping down on the state and Colorado state, Colorado local municipalities. I think it's going to be an incredibly difficult year u for us uh fiscally, financially. Um I hate saying that and I have I have four pets. Three of them were rescues, right? And I and I'm happy to go home tonight and write you a check personally, right? To not 7,500, but you know, but like come on, help with it, right? Like love to be able to. But um but like this isn't this isn't about how who I support or don't support. I think it I'm trying to establish my own mental uh philosophy uh for the year. Um and I think I'm going to be almost always a no on on these sorts of requests at least until I personally feel better about things. Um the the reason I support the other half is because I would love for us to figure out how in the budget um to create space for these services at actually like at a higher level like let's call it 25 grand or something like that like actually what the service is worth for us but it's got to be part of the fis of the annual budgeting planning process knowing that that 25 grand is going to come at [clears throat] the expense of something else. Right. and then we have to make that decision. So, so where I stand tonight is that is that I would I'm gonna I am going to vote no against the 7500 uh one-time thing, but you know, I would my mindset is that I would encourage for us to figure out how to how to get that number up to a something that makes
sense, 20, you know, 25 grand allow care to enter into the to the 2027 budgeting uh process. process um and hopefully end up serving them much more responsibly than than a than a 7500 onetime thing. Okay. Thank you, Mayor Prom Solinsky, please. Yeah. So, on the heels of that, I would like to offer a friendly amendment. I'd like to go back to just the the ask of 7500 um and then put it on for consideration for the 2027 budget. Would you would you entertain my friendly amendment? As long as we put it if we re look at it and I think we look at making this because it's just like Dave, give me the microphone, please. Would would you go to let's since we're since we're tickering, let's go to 10,000 because the dogs are going to show up there this year. They're not pulled off per year. In my head, I thought about that. So, I I could live with that if that's an amendment that's reasonable to the seconder. That would be and yeah, no more match. No. And then we look at and then we just look at funding council said of going let's let's participate in this issue on an ongoing budget basis. I think that's a great idea. I agree. Okay. Thank you. So let me just restate the motion. Y so so we're clear at this point. The motion is to fund $10,000 out of the city manager's discretionary fund with no nothing else. You guys don't want to try to put the needle to Carbonale just a little bit. What's that? Never [laughter] mind. Never mind. Okay. So, that's the motion. Will you amend your second? Council Shaker. Oh, I got to turn you there. You sure? Yes. Okay. We have discussions purposes. A new motion. A new motion and a
second. Councelor Shakar. I'm torn. He's not on. Yeah. Stop pushing the buttons. Well, you know, give me some senior respect. Um, I am torn because of my affection for care and pets. what councelor Wymer reminded me of and us of, we've been through this hoops and we said pretty adamantly that these oneoffs are going to be pretty hardnosed because we have the FAB process and the FAB process those apps are opening up what next month or this month. Um, so I am a bit torn um because it does put us in that dilemma. Which ones do we say yes to? Which ones do we say no to? Why did FAB turn them down? That's a whole different story. And we are entering a we'll have a new budget process that we could consider it for our 2027 budget once we know a little foresight as to what is happening in 2026, which we don't know. So I won't commit my vote at this point but I'm expressing my reservation in line of what Mitchell said and what we have set up here on the dis before about the whole FAB process. So it was a tough one. Thank you. Thank you councelor Smith. Thank you. Uh replaying from the tape uh comments from councelor Wymer and councelor Chapter. I agree. Okay. Mayor Pro Tim Silinski. Yeah. So, I'm I'm leaning into his history. We did not That's what the city manager's discretionary budget is for. Um we've used that judiciously in the past and I believe we will continue to do so. Um this did go before FAB and they chose not to fund it and so there is not
another recourse right now. And so I feel like for for the year of 2026, we don't have necessarily another vendor that would provide this service for our community. And I think we've all kind of expressed it as a high valued service. And so I feel like that's a good use of those funds at a level that I personally am comfortable with. Thank you. Any other comments? See none. Uh I'm fully in favor of funding care to almost any amount. I mean within reason, but I'm also in favor of putting it in discussion or on discussion or on on workshop when we when we do budget starting in July, I guess. Um I don't I don't know why it can't be a I mean public safety, police, how do we increase the police budget to make it fit? I mean, that might be an ignorant question, but there's got to be a way. Well, we have a line item for donations if we give something to another entity. So, I mean, conceivably we could put it there in a future budget period instead of taking out a general fund, which is always always the issue. But with the with the Yeah, I I think we should definitely look at where we could pull it from when the time comes. So, um, with that, I will call for the question. Is everybody clear on a motion? Restated, please. The motion is to fund care for $10,000 one time right now. And yeah, that's the motion. That's the motion. Manager discretionary fund from at this point the manager's discretionary fund. That is correct. With the understanding that we could look at that with the understanding that budget cycle comes around, we'll talk about what to do with I will call for the questioner. Yes, Councelor Townsley. Yes, Mayor Prom Zinsky. Yes, Mayor Dame. No,
Councelor Wymer. No, Councelor Schmall. No, Councelor Smith. Yes, Councelor Shakar. It passes 43. Right. Excellent. Thank you very much. Thank you for being here. Good luck with your operation. You You're providing a great service. Thank you. Okay. Item eight, healthy beverage presentation. That would be you. I can tee this up real quick. Mr. Mayor, Christine Dolan is here. She's the nutrition programs manager for Garfield County Public Health and she has been doing um sort of the council meeting circuit recently in the valley talking about um uh you know sugary drinks particularly for children and the dangers thereof. So we invited her in to give a brief presentation tonight. Okay. Thank you. I looked around each time you go down. Thank you very much. You're welcome. Good evening. Thanks for the introduction. Um I work as you mentioned Garfield County Public Health. Just to give you an overview of the work that I do, I'm the Wick's program director for the county and then I also work on maternal and child health. We have a produce to early childhood educator program so that we can um give them some money or some produce to share with the children in their care and teach them about um fruits and vegetables and the importance of that in their diet. work with the senior congregate meals. One of my staff does the menus for those programs. Cooking matters. So, it's a nutrition and cooking program for lowincome families cooking on a budget. Part of the mountain
coalition for food and nutrition security. And so that is like public health and DHS from Pitkin, Eagle, Garfield, Lift Up, uh Valley Meals and more. and we work on food access issues. And then the thing that I'm talking about tonight is the healthy beverage partnership. You should have gotten in an original packet like a a larger version of this um project. So if you have questions of who our partners are, but we are the only um we are the only rural partner and it is a lot of front range partners. So we are focusing on sugary beverages um to try to reduce consumption because just one sugary beverage a day increases your risk of heart disease by 33% diabetes by 25% too much weight for health by 55% and kidney stones by 23%. Okay. Um, so this is um some local data which is a little challenging to get, but it's part of the healthy kids survey. Um, and I just noticed where it says Roaring Fork High School, it should say high schools. So it's the Roaring Fork School District. And you can see from 2019 say to 2023, the rates of consumption of at least one soda um in a week's time has increased. And this is sports drinks and energy drinks. So you can see across the board it's a a higher rate of consumption and kids are shifting um into purchasing those kind of kind of items.
Chronic disease rates and dental carries by municipality. Lemwood's not doing too bad. um a little bit higher than the state average for obesity. Um and then the dental carries. And the thing about dental carries, there's not necessarily like a state average apples to apples, but the statistic is about 30% of kindergarters have some tooth decay. And these are these numbers here with that light blue line and a little above 30% would be um high school and middle schoolers. Okay. So, what to do? Um, part of the work I'm doing implement public awareness campaigns, like I said, working with child care providers. Um, different groups. We through the wick program and providing books about sugary beverages to kids and families and doing presentations, things like that. So, just trying to get the word out. And a few years ago, we did have some money and were able to uh purchase water bottle fillers for all the schools in the county. Um so they had at least one and so trying to make water more accessible. Um building on federal standards for um sugary drink restrictions like in schools the vending machines are locked during the day and then they unlock them at the end of the day. there is some movement around like in schools um like less sugary yogurts and so taking a look at some of the products. Um so just trying to build off of those things. Um as you probably know March 1 um if you receive food stamps you will not be able to buy sodas, soft drinks or sweetened drinks. And
honestly I could argue either side of that. Um but that's starting March 1st. Um and then restricting marketing and advertising of sugary drinks um to children, youth, and lowincome populations. Um I wrote it on a different piece of paper, but R.J. Reynolds owns like Hawaiian Punch, I think, and um Philip Morris owns like one of the other ones. Maybe it's Kool-Aid. But so essentially they use the same marketing template for tobacco and it's transferred to sugary beverages. I know it's been a while since we saw Fred Flintstone smoke a cigarette, but it's essentially the same thing using um characters kids are fond of to promote a product. So, another option is increasing the price of sugary drinks through either tax or fees. Um, what one of our partners are doing, well, a couple of our partners, one of our partners on the front range is Boulder and as you probably know, they have a sugary beverage tax. Um and then another of our partners is um trying to work through the process of applying a fee and then that money collected from the sugary beverage um fee decreases the consumption because people don't want to pay more and the money goes to um fund their food access work in their community. So for food banks and pantries and things like that we have been working on is um working with restaurants. It's called the healthy drinks and kids menus. Um and so if you go to a restaurant and they bundle a kids meal, it's hamburger, French fries, and a drink that the the option that automatically comes with the meal if they do bundle it is a healthy option. So milk,
water, like a a salsa, flavored salsa or something like that. so [clears throat] that when the weight staff comes to the table, they're not offering those things first off. Um, and so that's our goal is to get 100% compliance. I've looked at and visited a few of the restaurants in Glenwood Springs and most restaurants are very eager to either do the right thing or participate. So, we're hoping that once we get a better idea of where we stand in the community that potentially there'd be either a policy or some guidance with something behind it so that there's a kind of an institutionalization of that idea of um trying to do better by families because they typically people are eating out four to five times a week and if a soda or even a lemonade is offered that many times um you start run into problems. So, um, basically that's what I have. I'm curious about feedback. You have questions, thoughts about the taxation, fees, kind of level of of interest in um, what it would take to to change some of the habits and purchasing and consumption of sugars. Okay. Thank you very much. A lot of information. Back to council. Any questions? Councelor Smith. Thank you. Thank you, Christine. This is very helpful. Um, and I think you answered the first question I noted this afternoon. These Roaring Fork High School, Roaring Fork Middle School, that includes Cleo Springs. Yes. High School, Springs Middle School mixed in with all the others. Um, I think I remember correctly that eight or 10 years ago, our middle school and our
high school either removed soft drink machines or at least upped the healthiness of the mix in the machines. Is that do I remember that correctly? And is that a a technique that helps? So having options is helpful. Um but they are always are mixed you know op options in the machines. The machines are locked during the school day so the kids can't have them and they don't offer those things on what they call competitive food. So it's like kind of the alak cart part of of the lunchroom where you could potentially buy something. You just need one item. So you can't buy but you can buy things like um chocolate milk um and juices. I I'm honestly not sure if there's other things available, but my understanding is there would not. Okay. Thanks. Looking at these numbers with our schools mixed in and seeing that the trend is to drink more at least of the soda, uh the the other drinks are kind of off the charts for everybody. Um, is there a target other than zero sugary drinks per day? Well, um, so if you look at different communities that have taken this on, if a beverage has five grams or more or more than five grams of sugar in it, it's considered a sugary beverage. So something that's sweetened to a lesser extent would still clear the bar. Oh, so okay that's that's a different question which is helpful. Um so is your is your target measured in sugar total intake or is it measured in number of cans of pop? This chart say yeah this chart tells
what's going on. What would you rather see that chart show? So, I guess if I was saying ideally um that kids wouldn't drink sugary drinks, doesn't seem like there's a real upside. Um energy drinks, a lot of them are um sugarf free. Oh, but because the kids are going for the caffeine instead. Um so, let's see. I guess I would say yeah, on occasion, on a you know, a special occasion. So, I would say less than one a week would be a good goal. Um, but the problem is that it's available so readily and it's relatively cheap and you know kids are um the target and as we all know you know marketing is um a hard thing to resist. We all buy and do things that we don't intend to because of what we don't even think through but it's just some pressure from um you know rewarding ourselves or there's some image that comes with the product and you know there's lots of reasons besides I'm thirsty or I need some sugar or I want some sugar I guess. Thank you. I'm asking these questions because I'm learning from colleagues at um councelor Schmal at the head of the line to look for actions and results cost and and effect cost and benefit. Um if if we were to look at some of these options of taxation or price increases or other constraints seems that would be more tempting if we had a measure of success to look for. So the expectation
with like a fee or a tax is about a 30% drop in consumption. Um the challenge in some place so say Glenwood went ahead and did something that people would just go outside of Glenwood city limits and purchase whatever. It's, you know, very similar to purchasing cigarettes. So really, it's probably best instituted if there was something going to happen in a regional level. Okay. Thanks. In addition, last question. in addition to the the remedies or the or the temperings that you suggest. What what about that question of access? Uh and I'm asking specifically for the city. Best I can tell our our community center is the one spot where we have sugary drinks open and available in a facility that serves a lot of young people. And it's right. It's right across from the the entry. It's right next door to the daycare. Should we take that out? Should we change the the the content? Is that something the city could do? I think these little kids probably hardly could reach to put their money in a machine like that, but every day they come out of child care and there it is. And that is just part of their reality after a while that you know these labels they recognize them they want them you know the big kids are getting them so I think yeah putting them someplace else would be a great step. Thank you. Thank you Mayor Prom Solinski please. So in your measure, do you differentiate between like beverages that have natural sugar like a fruit juice? So in this work and in the healthy
beverage partnership like in if we were doing a project or a program with the restaurants, we're saying don't offer juice. However, there is a difference. I mean there's a few vitamins, minerals, there's some things that are um at least healthier. However, you metabolize like a thing of juice and a thing of soda in the same way and the problems become you know a large dose of sugar in the form of a drink um that your body turns the excess into fat and particularly around your abdomen which is what leads to diabetes. So I I I do understand that. I'm just I'm curious if you're proposing in a perfect world if you were able to put your tax or fee or whatever on would would fruit juice No. So this would just be like a So it's basically like an added sugar. So not a naturally occurring sugar. Got it. And would that um Okay. So now we have beverages that are, you know, like a you've got vitamin water that's, you know, marketed as a sports drink, but really it's pretty sugar bomb with a few electrolytes and vitamins in it. But then you've got, you know, recharge, which is like the natural ger version of that. Do those get regulated the same? I don't know. What I do know is so the five gram level um and so most of those would have that and would have to be added sugar. So if it's five well if it's juice, it's not going to count towards the the glucose or the sugar load in that beverage. Okay. This seems like very complex. Um and you know also I is Glenn Springs are we the only open campus school? because I know that's they just walk. I have an office in Rifle too and um I see them come down the hill and city market and
my my office is right on the corner so I see what they buy and back. So to councelor Smith's point, I don't think the vending machines are an issue. They're not buying it at school. So, do you have other areas that have adopted this sort of a structure for like reference to see if it really truly has changed behavior or if it has had any unintended consequences amongst the greater community? So, um you know, I can pull data on like Boulder and um the other county that um I will not name because they haven't moved ahead with anything yet. Um to just see what they've come up with. The statistic that I'm familiar with is about a 30% drop. Um, you know, I've read in like various nations and things that it's less it's less of a drop, but they are happy with the income generated from the fee because then they can use it for like medical conditions like dialysis or whatever medical things that people end up needing. So, thank you Any other questions? I guess this is a presentation, so it can be comments or questions because there's no action really needed, I don't think, in this item. So, I think, well, maybe let's do this quick. Let's uh have the public um give input if anybody's here for that item. I'll see none. We'll move on and then bring it back to us for comments or ways forward or however you guys want to structure this. It's fine with me. Mayor Pro Tim Stalinski, I'm sorry. I have one more question that you may have covered and I've just glossed over it, but alternative to a fee or an additional cost because, you know, we have just had our own public
improvement sales tax that went on and then now there's childcare tax and so I think we have fee fatigue, tax fatigue. I'm don't know that I could be in supportive of adding that on at least at this time. Is there any other alternative outreach education, anything in the interim that is being done that can start to move this needle a little bit? Yeah. And I'm honestly not proposing attacks. I'm trying to get a sense in the community. So, you're my last municipality tonight and honestly, this is the best discussion as far as how that might work. Um, most of the time it's like, yeah, we're not doing that. And I'm just trying to get a sense like do we kind of push ahead on some of this work. The Mountain Coalition for Food Nutrition Security is you know it's lift up it's Valley Meals it's organizations always in dire need of funding and as the federal funds are diminished and state funding and even local you don't like where do you look right? So in that case I'm sorry tell me again the rest of your question. No, I just I was just curious because like I said, I don't know that I can support adding any additional cost to especially a family's food budget, you know, and all other things aside, you know, whether that's my job as a, you know, community leader to dictate what people eat. I think that just on that basis alone, I don't know that I could support like adding a fee, but I would be in full support of supporting some sort of community outreach or education or, you know, initiatives. I don't know, like something that you could do in the school, you know, trying to encourage healthy habits and, you know, that's work that we're doing um like with child care providers. the schools, it's a little bit off limits just because they kind of have their hands full and they
do have rules. Yeah. Um but for us, I think the restaurants are probably and and that's where I've been putting most of my energy and in talking to um town and city councils really just trying to get like a sense of what to do. It's obviously an issue. Yeah. Um, I don't know that just doing education is going to solve anything, but I was thinking about, okay, so, you know, trying to get people to ride their bike to work or whatever, you know, and then you have like, you know, raffles or things like that where they can, you know, I remember when I was a kid, you know, reading so many books over summer break got me some at the library or, you know, like I'm just I'm thinking of like things like that that can be done to kind of create, you know, I think a little bit more of awareness, but also an the call to action. Thank you. Any other comments or questions? We'll see none. Well, thank you very much for being here. I just want to add Oh, sorry. We have a couple besides Big Fins. The um dental alliance um does a lot of work for us. So, they are in the schools and when they're doing their dental exams, they're talking about this and they we have stickers and magnets, some swag for the kids. So, um, and then district 16's family resource center because in our looking at things that was a higher consumption area. Okay. Thank you. I somewhat hesitate to throw this out there, but you know, because I'm I think I'm follow through where everybody else would as far as taxing people on something or raising a fee on it. I don't think I like that idea, but you know, maybe encouraging our politicians at a higher level to quit subsidizing corn syrup would be a great place to start and then you're going to be against the drug companies that like the results of subsidizing corn syrup. So, to me, that would be a great place to start, but I'm sure that may be out of our discussion tonight.
The most recent um thing was to drink Coke with cane sugar. that was proposed instead of corn syrup which wouldn't help anyone to cover the cost of corn syrup. It's probably a right a great place to Okay, thank you counselor Rhymer. I like how that man thinks. Yep. Uh Hawaiian Hunch is owned by Kurig Dr. Pepper. Kool-Aid is owned by Craft Hind. So I think if you go because I've just looked this up this week up the chain Those are parent those are parent companies. They are. Yes. So whatever [clears throat] I saw this week because I did look that up. Um it was RJ Reynolds and Philip Morris owned like Tang was one of them. I don't know if you want to Google that one. The power of the internet right here. Factchecking in the outside. All right. Well while you look any other comments [laughter] or questions? We'll see none. Well, again, thank you very much for being here. It was very informative. Raised some awareness, I think, at least in my end. So, we're hoping sometimes this spring the MCIN, the Mountain Coalition Security, will have some kind of meeting like a community meeting and I'll send an invite if anyone's interested. Sounds great. Trying to figure out some sustainability for food access. Awesome. Thank you very much. Does that mean I have to drink water out of him? If you don't, everyone's going to know. That's why. Give it to Pete, Christine. Thank you. Thank you very much. I'll pass. Thank you. Save it for Thank you. I got We got We We are all hooked up, but thank you for bringing them.
didn't mean to be didn't want to be impolite, but now that I have permission, thank you. I have [laughter] I choose water. It's kind of cute. It really is. So, all right. Excellent. No. All right. Well, thanks again. Um, moving into item nine, amendment to the Glenwood Downtown and professional service agreement. And it looks like Lee is going to inform us. Yes, you need help, please. That's right. Yeah. There you go. Okay. Wait for We're here. Okay. Are you here? Hi. Excellent. Mr. Mayor, members of council, Lee Barger, uh, transportation engineer, here to give you an update on our 2025 pilot program, uh, Ride Glenwood on Demand and to explain our amendment that we are uh, proposing to the contract for next year's service. So, just to get into wrership, um started off back in May and uh we're averaging close to 7,000 rides a day. Um or sorry, per month. Uh we hit 8,300 back in
October. Um we're seeing 43% shared rides and uh average weight time of 23 minutes. Can I interrupt you quick? Sure. How does this stack up to what you did you have any expectations? Did you have any We really weren't sure going in. We're just kind of comparing to what uh Carbondale and Basalt have been doing. Um and I believe Carbondale is around 8,000. So we're we're approaching where they're at. Uh Basalt's more like four to 5,000 a month. Okay. Uh so this is uh throughout the month of December. Uh you can see the last day of the year we had our second highest day of ridership. uh 2nd to June 21st of of strawberry days. Uh this bottom part shows our average weight times. Um this is something with that has is why we're asking for the amendment. So from May uh through August, we had three vehicles in service at all times and we had a a spare vehicle. Um, after that we decided our wait times are up around 30 minutes plus, you know, which is longer than our fixed route that runs through town. So, we added uh the fourth vehicle and put it in play uh for the peak times of the day. That added about $10,000 per month to the contract. This is our heat zone uh or heat map showing, you know, prominent pickup areas. You can see downtown. You can see uh hot springs, Iron Mountain hot springs in the tram. Uh I like to see these, you know, that are further away from the mainline or people south Glenwood. Um up here in uh north or west Glenwood, these are people that, you know, were probably walking aways to the bus,
if that. Um and now they're taking this service. Uh, also see I guess in the yeah in the drop offs you see a pretty good you know amount of people down here um in the neighborhood off Midland which you know had to walk half a mile or more to get to the courthouse to get to BRT or something like that. So those are good good highlights. Um so destination tracking on the left here you see this is City Market. This is our number one spot. And when you push that button right there, [laughter] that's what shows up. So for the month of uh December, we had um 6 95 trips total to and from City Market. You see here um pickup and drop off locations. Our top five, four of the five are shopping, you know, Walmart, Target, Marshalls. Um and then we have 27th Street Station is a big hitter, too. So that's good. Um seeing this interface between uh the microtransit and rafta see 12% of all trips um are going to bus stops not just 27th street station but all the ones around town um and 2% of the trips are uh origin or destination is the Amtrak station what you're probably most interested in is uh the cost for the project um we had startup costs of about 46 $6,000. Um May to August, as I said, we had we spent $83,000 a month uh for the service. We had some additional service with Strawberry Days in July uh in there, July 4th, where we just ran that fourth van for that time. Uh September through December, there's that $10,000 increase per month. And then uh so the total program cost for the eight months was 757 $755,000.
And that equates to with the $1 fee or with the $1 per ride, um, equates to about 12 to$13 that we're paying for the ride. Um, and next year's program cost is is approaching 1.1 million. And that is again, that's for all 12 months of service. So, does that include the fourth van? And that includes Yes. the constant fourth van. The constant fourth van. Okay. that they take out of service in the middle of the day when it's quieter um so they can get service on that vehicle if they need to. These vehicles do need service from time to time. Um funding sources. So last year uh we had a $400,000 grant from RAFTA that the city matched out of the bus tax fund. Um and that uh and then last year's fair revenue was uh about $50,000. Uh this year we upped our grant with RAFTA and got an extra $123,000 which we will match. Um and with if we keep this $1 re uh fair um will be around $85,000 uh in fair revenue for the year. So that pays for roughly a month of service. Um so and these are two areas where we can find funding. We have some other ideas as well that I'll get to. Uh good news here. Testimonials that I found. Um these are on the Ride Roaring Fork app um in the app store. You know, you're seeing uh use the app in Glenwood Springs. It was a great way to get around with kids and our mom who can't walk as much. Drivers were friendly. Corey and Thomas are my favorite drivers. I always feel comfortable and safe riding with them. Um, so good good reviews um that we're getting. Uh, and the neat thing is we can into the app we can program in either a survey after the people get
off. Um, we can have them rate the ride after they get off. How many of you have ridden it? Great. Just me? Okay. Okay. Did you have shared rides? Did you have people on board? Were you by yourself? Definitely shared. Okay. So, a little both and that's kind of what that's what we're seeing. Um, so yeah, the [clears throat] plan ahead is to continue gathering data. Um, we're going to revisit this $1 fair. Um, that could be higher. I don't think it would change wrership if that were $2, maybe $3. Three might be, but $2 I think people would be fine with it, but we're going to look into that. Um, possibly through a rider uh survey in April and May. Uh we're looking at partnering with some of these local businesses. So I'm going to be going to the tourism board next month and uh talking with a lot of them about, you know, can we get some sponsorships? Perhaps if we end up getting some new vans or a new van for next year, we'll put some sponsorships on the side. Um probably continue with the, you know, the this color scheme we have here because it's very eye-catching and people like seeing that around town. Um comments, questions from you. Thank you, Lee. Um, let's start with questions from Councelor Townsley. Um, couple quick questions for you. You know, I've seen that they got the small vans and then the bigger van. Yes. Do we ever really, you know, since most of the time when I see people in them, it's, you know, a couple together or a couple of family. Is there I assume the bigger van is more expensive to run, would we be better served by having more smaller vans than a bigger van or does that actually used in a particular case. I think the next van we' we'd get would be just like the Sienna, the Toyota Sienna minivan. Um, but I would run that by the Downtowner folks because they can give me a lot more of,
you know, how many times are we actually filling up these vans or more than six riders, you know, whatever the minivan will hold five, I think. So, that's right. I kind of that that same question made me wonder because when I I looked at I just did a figure as far as the cost per ride. I mean, kind of like a cab. If I put two people in the cab versus three people in the cab, it's still cost per ride as the car is getting from here to there. So, our cost per ride is actually higher even though we're moving maybe more people. But the other question I've got is how is the money usually paid? Do we have we track how many people use a card, Apple Pay, cash? Yeah. Uh the reason for asking is if we up the if we up the fee. So, it's Yeah. how the um ride is created. So through the rider app, it's uh we 88% of the rides are created through the app. So that means you're you're logged in and your credit cards attached to that. Um so there's not a lot of people paying. 11% call in and they're probably the ones paying and then 1% flag them down. Oh, you can flag them down. Say that again. You can flag them down. You can. Yeah. If you see him nearby. Well, that changes again. [laughter] That changes the cavity. Oh yeah, did not know. But have a dollar. Rude if I didn't have a dollar ready or let them know you're there. Yeah, just wave the dollar and do most them down to use your app. Well, they use the app. The driver just puts it in. So, but yeah, you you probably could. I don't know if that would just order another ride. So, well, last question. Do the do the drivers get tipped? They're not supposed to. Okay. Now, they probably get tips from time to time and I hear about it. Um, but that's not part of their compensation. They can't solicit tips. There's no Venmo me up here kind of thing. Um, okay. Which they
haven't asked and that's where I've heard about it. So, and they're not supposed to do it there. Thank you. Um, Mayor Prom Sinsky. Oh, thank you. Um, so in looking at weight times, do you if we had the higher capacity since more shared rides, would that does that ever correlate to shorter weight times or is it would it need to be an additional vehicle that would Well, once we put this other the fourth vehicle in service, we saw those weight times drop a little bit. So, in the middle of the summer before we did that, it was up above 30 and now we're back to like 27, 23, 25. Um, I was checking it during work session and it went anywhere from today from 23 minutes for me to get from here to 27th Street Station to 4 minutes to 32 minutes. So, it it really fluctuated and kind of just depends on when you get in the queue. Um, ideally, I'd love to see like average weight time closer to 15 minutes. I think that would be something that people could, you know, like plan around. Yeah. Um, so I don't know what that looks like, but I'd be curious to see, you know, once you have a little bit more analytics available. And then is this in any way starting to frame how we look at our trunk like regular ride Glenwood routes? Absolutely. Yeah, we're um I've been monitoring the Meadows traffic. So everything that goes over the Meadows and yeah, December we had like almost a thousand trips on this ridewood on demand going to the Meadows. you know, I'm thinking that's a lot of shopping that went on in December. Um, the other months were like around seven and 800. So, it's a lot of trips that were not, you know, we may not need our loot out there. And then I totally apologize. Um, I don't know the ride Glennwood route enough,
but is there a regular ride Glenwood bus that would go by like kind of the medical area? So, like Valley View, GMA like Yeah. not um we had that as an ondemand stop where you would have to call in an hour uh a day before um if you wanted to go to the hospital on Glenn with the fixed route service and it would divert off of Grand and we did away with that because we have this now, right? Um we had about three other stops around town that were that way. the the one um over by the Volkswagen dealership. There was one down there that you know you you would just have to know a day before that you were going there, right? And make the call. So, and even know that that was an option because I don't I would never know that. Yeah. So, I'm just curious if this is like, you know, would does it ever make sense to have like more regular routes to take pressure off on demand or is that not We have I mean there's three rafter routes that come through town. There's the BRT, the Hogback, and the Local Valley. And that's what I'm feeling like they must have uh capacity on there to handle our little bit of ride Glennwood that loops around over there. Um so that might you know cheapen that service for us a little bit which we're trying to do because that service costs about 1.7 1.8 million this year. I just I'm so interested in in trying to provide a a enhanced local service rather than just, you know, really leaning into that commuter service, which I think they're both great, but I would like to see a little bit more of a shift. And so, if we can start to get some data that, you know, helps frame that conversation. I I'm really excited to see that. I think another thing we're looking at is the local valley could go that way and go across the bridge. It never used to go across the Grand Avenue bridge because it used to get hit
when the bridge was 9 foot lanes. And so Rafta didn't send their buses that way, but we did um with Ride Glenwood. And so that could be a a change up where we have the local valley continue on and serve Highway 6 and 24 and we shorten Ride Glenwood altogether or or maybe do away with it. So, on that same vein, um, with the app, do you get like I the few times that I've used it to try and navigate to go someplace up Valley, it would give me my different options. Does it do that with the local? So, if I go to do the on demand, does it show me a fixed route bus that could also do that and the timing of that? There is capability. We haven't gotten there yet. Okay. But we just got the map loaded and I think we're going to get they have trackers on the buses and that we're going to get those associated with it so that you can look and see where your bus is. You can also do this on the transit app. Um you can find where the buses are or my rafts tracker. Yep. Um but that's something we want to get built into the app. Um so it's it's on its way. So then you just like pull it up in your phone and you're like, "Okay, I need to get there and here's my three different options to get there." Yeah. I mean, it's like a trip planner kind of thing. Okay, that's I think that's a great And they also have um the direction like if a bus can take you on that same trip. Yes. They will tell you that in the app when you order up if it's too long, they say you could also take this. So that is that's capability that we're Awesome. I think that'll I think all those are great great options. I think we're heading in the right direction. So, thank you. Hi, Lee. Hey. Um, remind me I was the original goal of this service to provide the final leg
from from the the bus service to the home service or to the city market service. Wasn't that the what we were trying to accomplish to begin? Funded through that first last mile mobility grant. And so that that's really part of it. Um but also we had areas of town that didn't have any service at all. South Glenwood, Glennwood Park, um North and West Glennwood areas. So that's the other bit of it was it was to serve the unserved areas of town with any kind of uh transit. So, so I didn't I'm sorry I didn't bring all of my notes, but it it didn't look like South Glennwood was a particularly hot spot for pickup or drop off. It looked like it had a lot of activity, but not Yeah, I mean, it's, you know, it's very um it's not as dense housing is what I'd say. It's all single family homes over there. There's there are few town homes and such, but um you know, you're going to see a much more hits in denser spots. And that's what that's what I was seeing is if I if I was discerning the map properly, it was almost always the near the multifamily uh housing complexes where the the most usage came from. Yeah. I mean, six canyons over here by Donigan, y is about a mile from a bus stop. And that's seeing a lot of sp a lot of uh riders. So, and what I what I saw from the remember seeing from the numbers is that really only about 14% of the rides on from this service were actually bus stop to to home basically. So, So really what it's a taxi
service is what we're providing at a dollar a ride instead of $14 a ride which is what it costs us or 12 to 14 whatever whatever your average came up. So, I'd like to see you gather more information to be sure you're accomplishing the goal you set out to accomplish instead of just a taxi service that that a commercial operator might operate on their own. Sure. Yeah. Yeah. And I think that's in the long term that's how RAFTA is planning on um divvying up the funding for the towns is to base it on your your percentage of rides that are going to bus stops. Pre preface all of your thinking on RFA not having any more funding and us not having any more funding because because when the trickle down from from the federal government gets to us, it's it's going to affect all of us. So, and this grant program through RAFTA is only good for three years. Basalt's in their fourth year of it. They actually extended it for them. I know RAFTA is trying to find a way to fill this uh fund back up and keep it lasting. Um, but all the communities are dealing with that. We're we have another two years to really figure it all out. Maybe. Maybe another two years. Yeah. Council Shack. No, thank you, Lee. I just want to expand a little on Ray and get some information. So, the grant is the matching grants are available 26 and 27 to our knowledge right now. And we're
funding our portion from our bus staffs. Correct. And that's also funding ride Glennwood. Correct. And that's a couple million dollars a year roughly but rounding thereabouts. Okay. So, it's is it fair to assume as councelor Schmall said that hopefully not sooner but no later than 2027 um we may be on our own and by that time you'll have enough hopefully data to say we expand we contract we change our routes based on the information we have that be yeah I think the objectives we set up it's going to be evolving over the next two years and and as I said yeah in May we're really going to take our first year yearly look at it and then see what what else we can do we could have dynamic pricing where it cost you more to get all the way across town than just into town or something how how much control do we locally have over the ride Glenwood routes all 100% 100% on ride Glenwood on ride Glenwood yes we can have to to you know change it. Okay. So we could send that wherever we choose. We could depending on costs and um the cost of bus stops. I mean that's basically and one of and I' I've been a joyful rider. I mean, sometimes I've been charged for riding a take, but um but I also appreciate the fact if I'm coming from up valley down here, that BRT becomes local at that point. So, I don't need I don't need our our van service um for my for my purposes. Others may, but I don't know. Again, that ties into ride and the local and maybe
there's too much overlap between raft to local and something over the bridge would be good. Something else you just mentioned, did you say Six Canyon was how far from a bus stop? It's about a mile from um Trevor Trail and then there's the Elks bus stop over there, which is maybe not a mile, but it's only a one directional. It'll get you going that way. Yeah. Back around and go back. I guess that would be something I'd be looking at when we have a high density apartment like that and they did not have to do inclusionary did they or did they have to do a parking adjustment? Usually we made those that they were near I thought it was a quarter mile or less from a transit stop. So my question would be what happened? Um I don't expect an answer right now but that was one of our rationale. Well, and we're we're working on a solution for that because the Elks, as I said, is only a one-directional stop. We want to bring that to Canyon Vista, the new uh approved. So, that'll bring that closer to So, that's changed the whole area. Okay. Yeah. And then we could get a a westbound uh eastbound bus stop in that same area. The only other thought I had is on the fees maybe I don't know how you do it but maybe we should not be asking the people that ride but the people that don't ride and I don't know how you do that what what keeps you from riding and is there a price point that keeps you from riding as well as you know raising the fair to those who do ride but how do we find out why people aren't using it and what what rate effects might have on them. I don't know how to do that, but that we're talking about a bigger population than those that use it. So, I'm wondering how we assess that. Yeah, could be something we ask at the state of the city. You
know, maybe we have a little bit of that going on there. Don't mention that to Brianna this week. Go ahead. Thank you. But I don't question. Thank you, councelor Wymer. Thank you, Lee. Uh, so I can um I mean just one data point sort of attest that people are using this as a as a a government supported taxi. Uh my father-in-law worked for one of the taxi companies in town and their business is way down. businesses down and it almost significantly significantly and and it conc uh uh coincided pretty cleanly with us ramping up uh the the right so so why wouldn't you right so so Lee I think you know we've we've touched on a little bit about the good work so so so far um staying true to our original goals right which was to understand where the need is so that we can then start to uh make some design decisions around the Ride Glenwood bus system. Um knowing that there's that there's overlap between the other uh the other buses when they especially they're in town, they're local, they're free, right? Like there's there's that overlap. Um and and there's places that that we're not yet serving. And then I would be remiss every time we talk about this subject of not complaining that um the Ride Glenwood bus looks like every other dang bus uh that's out there. And I lived in town for two years before I realized that that was a before I knew that that was a free bus because there's nothing on it. Right. Right. And and every every
time we talk about this, it's got to say, you know, it's got to say free, not just around town and downtown, but that it's free. And it's it's almost a hop on, hop off. And it and and for for all of our tourists, and then for for dummies like me who just don't pay attention until it well, until you're on council, uh frankly, um you just don't know that it's a free bus, right? you see bus, I'm like, "Oh, I don't have like the New Yorker in me comes out. I don't have I don't have exact change. I'm not taking the bus." Right? Because I'm not going to stand there and get yelled at by a bus full of New Yorkers and like Yes, that is a story. But does Yeah. Right. So, yeah. And and so and so we've gota at at our next opportunity to reskin those things or whatever, man. like those buses have got to be special and unique and really call out the value proposition which is free which is that it's free and and um and and easy and all of those all of those things. So another grant I'm working on, we have a bus shelter replacement project that includes replacing all the shelters for Ride Glenwood Springs. We're going to update the signs um so they look more like the buses and have the same color scheme and they're going to say free grat gratus so it'll all be out there um and put it on the bus too. Yep. The bus looks like every other bus. Great point. Thank you. Thank you, Mayor Prom Solinski. Yeah, I just wanted to reiterate that the the grant is the first last mile. Um, and I was on a steering committee that kind of looked at that and and crafted um a ramping out, you know, kind of like how do you exit plan that? And it was going to go back to the the raft of funding was going to um be
commensurate with the number of stops that went to the transit hub with the recognition. When we as a city council sat down and talked about this, it was to assess our local transportation needs and how to better utilize ride club for that. And so we are actually ahead of the curve by even charging a dollar. The other municipalities have not done anything. And so they're trying a lot harder. I think we are doing a really good job of utilizing this opportunity to our greatest benefit in serving the community. So, I just wanted to uh kind of reiterate that because I don't I think maybe you all weren't on console yet when we first started have that having that conversation, but it was kind of the the highest priority for us at the time. And then, you know, this is fully funded. The money is in the grant in the wrapped budget. So, there's like at least through that, you know, the next two years, we've got it. Thank you. Uh, councelor Small. Um, so Lee, you already know the result of no fee to $1 fee, right? You've got the data for that. So why would you wait to do another wait until you do another survey to raise the fee again? I I understand your what you may have concerns about the integrity of the data, but I think you've already gotten the information to warrant raising the fee now and seeing what the result is in the I wouldn't argue that. No, I wouldn't argue that at all. Yeah. I mean, I I think we could do it um and we can do it just in a day's notice. You just let them know and they'll change it. Um, and we could see how it affects writership, but we would have to message that. Um, you know, give two weeks or or more notice. We like to give really a month when we're changing service in any way, reducing a stop or
No, sure. And you'd want to do it in a way that makes sense. For sure. I'm just asking why wait to kind of see what a whole year's worth of data does and wrership and where it goes. Another thing to a point that was made earlier was we didn't see any drop and ridership on on the fixed route during this time. So we're actually seeing 30,000 trips around town on the two services. We get about 22,000 on Ride Glenwood fixed route every every month. Amazing, right? It's crazy. So and then we get, you know, the BRT local in the hogback are transporting also. So you could add another couple thousand there probably. Did I hear right? There's no drop. I get I get confused because it's all ride Glennwood to me. It's all labelled route on demand, but fixed route it dropped a little bit in November. It did drop some just a little bit in November, but it kicked right back up to normal um in December. I'm not really sure what that was in November. Um lack of snow a big thing. you know, there aren't all those people going up to ski coat um November, December this year because there wasn't much other stress. Yeah. Well, good. Councelor Smith, thank you. Thank you, Lee, for for having all these details to answer questions. Um I have a handful of questions in two basic categories. Um and and happily I can be pretty concise because I most of them build on questions already asked by colleagues. Uh I really appreciate the way the collective group is thinking. Um one category is first principles um intended purpose for this program. Another is vehicle choice.
Um, in that first category, can are you able to break down in your in your green and brown chart, bar chart, where you've got number of rides per month compared to number of passengers per month? How can you break down those multiple passenger rides into people who just or two people who called in together uh versus versus an actual efficiency enhancement of picking up two different I mean we just we we get the metric of shared rides per month and that was 46% of the rides in December were shared shared in the sense that two people were at the two people one person was at each of two stops Well, just that when you got on the van, there was somebody already on there or when you or they got on when you were on the part. So, that's a good thing. I think so. I mean, that that that's a reduction of a car on the road. I think you could call it that. Um, I'll just I'll just chime in again that that my sense of the purpose of this program originally was just as was described eloquently by by several uh and in more detail by councelor Wymer and council Zinski. Um [clears throat] and that is this was to help inform us in improving ride limited service and it was to encourage transit use for longer distance travel and it overall was yet another our general measure of transportation demand management trying to reduce total traffic. Those three things I think are really important to hang on to. On the on the first one, I was surprised and a bit disappointed to hear you describe. Yeah. We're going to use data from from the dialer rides to
inform our fixed route services. You described the opportunity to drop some of the fixed drive services. I was looking at the other way around. Maybe that was just my incorrect assumption that that ultimately I want to get rid of this service and make the bus system work. But are you looking at it the opposite? No, we're we're looking at any and all of the above. Um so we're seeing what works best, what maybe can replace the fixed route and shorten that or make it more efficient. It doesn't run on time very often. That's probably because we have a lot of traffic in town during those peak hours and nobody gets on time. Uh but yeah, I'd say everything's on the table. Um so when we see the price of the rafts, um the fixed route service go up yearly and now it's almost 1.8 million next year um this year. That's something to consider that we could maybe pair that back um and maybe go more into this if we're getting more better service out of this on I'm skeptical of that direction but I'll just leave that in the mix for the conversation but thank you for keeping things keeping the range in mind. Um, I also chime in on the on the concern about is this is the raft city match one to one or do we pay a lower percentage on the grant? It's a 50/50. But if so, if half of our funding is coming from a bus agency that wants us to get people to the big bus, uh, and we're only at 12 to 14% depending on how you get out, I'm disappointed. But my question is, do you see a trend? Has that has that trend gotten better since
May of last year? It's been really the same all the way through. Um, so it really hasn't changed much. I'd say, um, Carbondale, I believe, is like 20% split into their park and rides. They don't have quite the, um, tourist population that we do that rides the train up and then they take that to go out to dinner or go shopping, things like that. Um, so that's the differences between our communities and hopefully we can achieve 15 or 20% to the raft stations. But all the shopping trips that we're seeing, it's amazing. I mean, shopping trip. Yeah, that's another data point I got today is the number of um rides that were ordered on the um Spanish language app, so they can see who's tapped in. It's 5050 basically. So I thought that was really positive. Thank you. Um on the on the improving overall transportation demand um and traffic reduction which is what what your hope whole transit program is about. Um are the comments made earlier correct that this is essentially a subsidized taxi Uber lift operation? Well, I mean it's it's we are paying for it. Um we are getting people around town. Our businesses are thriving um because of the tourist, you know, that are using it. And um Oh, I think I think the people are putting it to good advantage. Yeah. And it and the merchants and the pool are probably benefiting. But maybe maybe a different way to ask a question. In terms of vehicle total vehicle miles traveled, in terms of of energy efficiency,
in terms of net traffic reduction, are we better or worse than just letting people use a taxi, Uber, lift? Yeah, it's it's tough to quantify that in terms of, you know, we're really looking at traffic volumes and ridership. Um but it's very yeah the the often when you open up some room for people to drive on the road more people will get back in that weren't driving in the first place say you know so there's that that latent demand concept that they would be going but they're not going to go during the peak hour now that traffic's eliminated out there because of this great bus system they're going to just go back to their old ways. Um that happens. We see that um as have studied traffic going in and out of Aspen over the years. That's that's basically sad but the sad truth, but we're trying to chip away at it. Thank you. Uh my last question is in that second category of a vehicle choice. I I expressed my disappointment when this contract first came up for consideration that the contractor was going to use gasoline vehicles. uh when our climate action plan at action T2.14 and T2.13 explicitly say transition ride Glenwood to electric vehicles. Um and and and in our report this afternoon, we're finding that even the beginning of that consideration has now been postponed into a second year supposed to start in 2025. We're not even going to start considering it till 2027. Now, I hear talk of buying a or asking the contractor to bring in a fifth bus, which presumably will again be fossil fuel. Um, just we're we're not being consistent in in the two two separate but very closely related portions
of city policy. So, um, as as this contract ends and if this service continues, well, between now and then and especi but especially at that point, I I'll continue harping on this. It's time to get the buses off off of fossil fuels. Thank you very much. Thank you. Thank you. Anybody else? Anything else? No. See none. Anybody from the public like to comment on the downtowner? Think about it for a second. If I see nobody, um, what do you need from us? Do we need to move this forward actually or or is this since it's not quite May yet, is this just an informationational deal or is this this is for the 2026 contract renewal with the downtowner and we're we put the amendment in to uh raise the original amount per month by that $10,000 to get this serviced the way it is today. And the bus count. Say that again. and the bus count. We're raising the bus count, too. Okay. All right. Y Okay. Excellent. Then I will entertain a motion to move forward and councelor Shaker, we'll start with you. Yeah, Mr. Mayor, I had move um that we approve the amendment to the Glenwood Downtown or professional services agreement um to include the additional pricing as stated in our staff reports. Thank you. And mayor promi second. Motion a second. Any more discussion on this? Councelor Townsley? Just just rough numbers. U it looked like we were in for 400 and Raft was in for 400 last year and there was 50 in in writers fees. So that's 850 and the cost was 750. Is there 100,000 that's available to go into this year or did that where the other 100? there was a little bit left in the grant um between us and RAFTA, but um we spent you know 45 46,000 on the setup. Um so
that was for the wraps on the vehicles and to get the leases and the insurance and all that kind of stuff. So there's not not much and I don't believe their grant can roll over but that question hasn't been answered by RAFY yet. Okay. I just it seemed like we're there might be some extra funds we could use for that. And then then the other question was prompted by councelor Smith is is if we're going to bring another vehicle on, is there any reason not to bring on an electric vehicle? Is that more expensive? Is it is there a reason why we can't do that? Yeah. So, the the electric vehicles won't last the full day um on a charge. Um so, we would need to have two of them and they are more expensive. Um we did look at this. We we definitely looked at it and asked them for it. The Sienna is a hybrid, so that's the only one on the fleet that um is partially there. Um but the the Transit vans, they just um they're experimenting with vans in Aspen uh right now, the BW IBUZ. So, we'll see how that works out. I know it's been a pretty warm winter, but if they can last through the winter up there, um then we'll start considering that as maybe the next vehicle or some other type of electric vehicle. Doesn't have to be VW bus even though I love buses. All good. Thank you. Okay. Excellent. Any more discussion? None. Now I'll call for the question. Yes, Councelor Townsley. Yes, Mayor Prom Zinsky. Yes, Mayor Dame. Yes, Councelor Wymer. No, Councelor Schmall. No, Councelor Smith. Yes, Councelor Shakar. It passes 52. Excellent. Thank you, Ryan. Thanks everybody. Lee, thank you very much for the info. Um, should we take
a five minute recess? Let's do that. Five minute recess. Reconvene in five minutes.
Yep. At 8:43 and um you guys are here for the wood fire. All right, let's let's jump to item 13. Sorry, Ryan. Um just so we can actually accommodate. We should have done this like an hour ago. I'm so sorry. What are you here for? We're really expecting some samples. That's okay. Motion denied. So, Trent, let's get this Let's get this done. You need help, Trent? I think we got it. I just did the share of here, right? Yeah. Or what it is. So you're going to move through it and then they're all just going to end up right here. [clears throat] I know. Sorry for even further delays. It's okay. We'll get it up there. You're right. I'm just perplexed that we do this every two weeks and somehow it never works ever. Well, you know, not in the first try at least. 54 states.
I know it is be good. Maybe this wasn't such a good idea. You still be the same. Sorry. There you go. I I was just going to say I think we all read it. So if you we can do it we can just do it conventionally. Yeah, that's very good. That's okay. Okay, we uh not too much to project here, but um in in an effort and and in respect of your time, I am going to lump a presentation together for both ordinance one as well as ordinance two. Um this is in Oh, I'm sorry. This is Trent Hyatt for the record. Good evening to to all of you. Um, ordinance one and number two, this is in regards to building permit inspection fees as well as woodf fired pizza ovens here in the city. Um, in terms of the fees, uh, the intent with this amendment is to better align our fee structure, um, with some reinspections that are occurring in our jurisdiction. Uh, and this is specific to certain contractors
um that are requesting inspections before the the work is adequately completed. uh which results in in wasted staff time, increased operational costs, um increased greenhouse gases as it relates to our climate action plan previously. Um but as well as delays to the specific project and delays in the views of of other projects that are in the queue um and and ultimately cost burdens to the city. Um in 2025, just to give you an idea, um the building department um conducted approximately 1,500 total permit inspections. That's not including things like business licenses, enforcement cases, and inspections related to planning files, but approximately 8.33% of those were reinspections. Uh we applied fees to those those reinspections um in 33 instances. So, what I'm trying to point out here is that we're not really trying to be punitive um to maybe a a mom and pop or to a a homeowner contractor in that, you know, sometimes there is a need for a reinspection and when that um education kind of is done through our inspectors, you know, we go back out and usually the the issues have been addressed. Um staff also and clears intends to provide clear guidance to contractors in terms of the expectations for future inspections. I did include a redline version of table 1A um which is uh in title 60 of our code uh which outlines our fees. I think one thing that I did fail or or did not hit the mark on here was in regards to um item number three and that's the reinspection fees. Currently we charge $100 for those reinspections. But really what our intent would be is that if we're going back out for third or second, third, fourth reinspections for the same specific issue or our related building uh requirement, that's where we want to increase those fees. And again, not to be punitive, not to um you know,
use this as a revenue generating source, but use it as a time-saving source. So whereas it's currently at $100 for a second reinspection or a third reinspection, you know, similar to the fire alarm fees that you heard approximately a month and a half ago, we would like to propose that we have an increased fee for reinspections for the same reason. So, you know, if it's a second fee and it's $200, if it's a third fee, it's $500. And you could get um you know, as as uh creative with that as you want. Um with the fire alarm fees, you went pretty high there. But you know that would be a proposal that we and and again this is to eliminate um staff delays um and and reviews of projects and and other service to other customers. Um second part of this is in regard to woodf fired ovens. This is actually title 100 of our code. Currently we identify um solid fuel burning devices as basically open hearth or or fireplaces. Um we don't currently have an exception or definition or a code for what we want to talk about tonight and that's woodf fired pizzas. Um you know we would currently interpret the the definition that we have and that was outlined in our staff report to include woodf fired pizza ovens. However, we all kind of know that they're they're different instance, right? Um our current regulations to ban the the installation of new wood um you know burning devices in the city um comes from you know past historic air quality issues that we've had uh in in our valley. Um thanks to the efforts by this community as well as other communities. We've really pretty much eliminated those concerns to date. Uh we do not allow the installation of new woodf fire pizza ovens and we also require the replacement of existing um wood stoves or fireplaces with EPA phase 3 certified devices that
reduce those emissions a lot. But um as you can um speculate, you know, smoke in the air has many harmful um materials in it in terms of particulate matters, hydrocarbons, carbon monoxide and and nitro nitrogen oxides. Those relate to human health impacts, right? Things such as asthma, emphyma, bronchitis, and we know ain't nobody got time for that. Um but anyways, staff would uh um we've received some inquiries from businesses and residents that we would like to allow for these a kind of a you know, a different um type of a wood burning um oven. Um and again, these are used for the preparation of food. They're not intended of a primary heating source um like like wood stoves and typical fireplaces are. Um, in respect to those those human health impacts being eliminated in the community, we don't really see this as being a huge impact, right? Um, it would allow for kind of the encouragement of culinary diversity in the city as well as some economic development. To what extent, we don't exactly know. Uh, but it would maintain the in those prior efforts to to limit health and and and human impacts. Um, some things, you know, in in a dense environment, woodf fired pizza ovens can be of a concern, right? We're not talking Glenwood Springs, we're talking New York City, we're talking Milan, places where this is occurring at very, very dense and high numbers. Um, there are, you know, devices out there that you can spend a ton of money on to to regulate the emissions from these types of stoves. We just don't see that as being uh appropriate at this time. We think that the common best practices can address this matter and that's things as simple as using fully seasoned hardwood, right? That helps reduce the smoke that's emitted from these. Um, also most of these stoves that you're seeing today use a
combination of electric and gas in combination with a wood to season the food. Um, that again, startup is where you'll see a lot of those emissions and it helps reduce those. Um and and I think most of those insulations today are these hybrid type food our woodf fire ovens that you see. Um also things like optimizing the exhaust um or or precision precision design help to to reduce our emissions. Uh and again we're basically try to do this by adding an exemption to title 100 of the code um that outlines you know woodf fire pizza oven it's being exempt from that definition for a solid of a solid fuel burning device. Uh, and then just defining what that is. [clears throat] Two ordinances at once. Excellent. Questions to Trent. Councilor Shack. Trent with the woodfired pizzas. We're talking about allowing them both commercial and residential. Yeah, I I don't think that we really regulate them um residentially at this point in time. I don't think anyone's out out to to view those, but we would assume that, you know, kind of similar to a barbecue that this is occurring and and permitted. Thank you. Thank you, Councelor Smith. I had the same question, so I'll offer a variation. Thank you. Um, we don't regulate wood pizzas in backyards at homes, but we do regulate their fireplace indoors. Correct. What in the terms of the ordinance, how do you make that distinction? Well, to be honest, I don't think we have the opportunity to regulate those out of doors because we're not reviewing them via building permit or a business license. Okay. Thanks. Why would
fired pizza? What's the benefit? What's the point? What's the What's the improvement product? Yeah. Taste. Um really? Yes. and the preference of of you know folks for certain types of woodf fired food. You can actually taste the difference. Oh god. Yes. [laughter] Of course. Okay. Thank you. That shocked me. I guess that's subjective, but I would say yes. I'm all excited. you mentioned uh in the context of mitigation or otherwise or the actual smoke um hybrid systems that use gas or electric or both with the wood. Um and you also separately mentioned particulate matter and other pollutions that are have an acute human health effect. Um Do we know which combination has a better or worse climate effect in terms of greenhouse production? If you if you're burning gas, is the wood that much more or that much less? Can you burn less gas, which is a which is a a greenhouse pollutant? The wood maybe is less. So, I I guess that would probably depend on the on the device. Um and and I I don't think that um you know a gas you know burning device you know just in terms of of what I've researched you you know when we made that change in the valley in 80 85 and 93 or 87 95 you know some of the numbers that were thrown around is like you know a a gas fired furnace you know generates approximately five you the the difference in the emissions is like one to 500 in terms of
smoke for similar variables, you know, whether that's ozone or or nitro or nitrogen oxides or um particulate matter. Thank you. Um one last question and then a bit of a comment. Um the pollution controls that you mentioned you you said in passing are very expensive. Correct. Um you know some of these devices range from you know5 to $20,000 depending on the the installation and the of I guess you know the the product the food that's being prepared. Sorry, there is one more question. Um the you're not concerned about this becoming New York City or Milan. How do we avoid that? If this becomes trendy, why aren't there going to be six on one block? Well, I maybe it maybe it could. Um but I I think that we have avenues to address it if it does become an issue in the future. Okay, that's maybe that's a better question. How would we address it if it does become overwhelming? Well, we could prohibit them in the future. Um, that means that any that existed would just be able to lawfully continue moving forward. Uh, but we could also add mitigation features to those to those to reduce the emissions from. Thank you, Council Schmall. I want to go to the the reinspection fee idea and ask a couple of questions.
Do you have any sense of how much of the reinspection work is for the mom and pops or the individual home builder who would be otherwise exempted from having a general contractor's license? of of the reinspections I would say you know approximately 20% of those mom and pops and the actual instances where we applied a fee it would probably be closer to zero of those because you know we do use our discretion and and you know we we try to help folks along the way. So someone that's not a professional is going to get a little bit of leeway in terms of that fee being applied to begin with first time, second time or third time. I appreciate that and I think that's probably the way we should be approaching our customers. uh then if if it's still a problem after that approach to the problem, I have to suspect as I was impressed in my council orientation that we don't have enough inspectors. So the the tendency of a contractor is going to be to schedule because he's I presume you got to schedule a couple of days or a week in advance to get your inspection. No, usually only 24 hours. Well, that's that's not what I hear out on the street. If if if our two inspectors are covering everything within 24-hour notice, then then I guess I don't really have any further questions because I assumed that contractors were scheduling an inspection and not making their schedule of what they thought they
would have done when the inspector got there. That's that's not been my experience. Now, there are certain instances where, you know, let's say it's a business license. Let's say it's a short-term rental renewal inspection. Those do take, you know, take play second fiddle to an active building permit inspection. So that there may be some delays related to some of those, but active building permits generally we schedule all of those within 24 hours. Wow. Well, uh, beyond that, I would only recommend that the fee be be commenurate with the cost. If you have to reinspect for an unreasonable reinspection, then it ought to be probably more than what you're charging. On to the woodfire uh, grills. [clears throat] I have I I think it's a great idea to allow woodfire pizza ovens in in downtown although I would suggest that it be done in some manner other than with respect to the English language rather than codifying a wood burning device to not be a wood burning device. Thank you. Thank you, Council Townsler. Uh, my questions are on the on the inspection fees, too. One of the questions I had on there was was how long how long does a typical inspection last? Because, you know, if we're if we're charging a minimum of two hours on some of the fees, is there if if it's really taking us 20 minutes to go out there and relook at something and we're charging for two hours of work, is that is that reasonable? And does that happen very often or does that just not happen? Uh, I would say that the ones that are are two hours are generally those that would be outside of
normal business hours. So, it's just it's kind of because we're providing an extra service. Generally, um, you know, it it really depends on the type of inspection. If you're talking about a final inspection for a building, that's multiple hours, right? By by default, of a multif family building or a commercial building. If it's a drywall inspection for a home, that could be 30 minutes to an hour. And we would still charge them for if we're upping it to $100 and $200 to come out and do a drywall inspection. No, not not uh not by default, only for reinspection. Inspection. Yeah. Okay. Yeah. The the general first inspection is included as part of the the the fees that are paid with the building permit application. And then how often are we doing them outside of business hours? Oh, it's a that's a special case. So, that's not happening very not very often. Okay. Yeah, that those those are not applied very often. I'd say one um two and four I'm sorry, five one, two, and five in the in the table are are not very often that we use those. The others are comments and I'll save those for comments. We are going to handle these separately when it comes to Absolutely. Yes, please. Thank you. Prom Solinski, I'm curious. Is there any like significant difference in emissions between a smoker and a wood burning pizza oven? I would I would assume yes. Um and that would likely also depend on the type of fuel that's being used. My charcoal smoker emits a lot. Um pellet burning smokers, not as much. Okay. Um, I would say that because most of these devices, like we mentioned previously, are hybrid in that they're using they're really utilizing the smoke more for just the the addition
of taste as opposed to heating of the unit ice. I was just curious because, you know, downtown right now I smell smoke times and I just figured it's already there. Doesn't seem to be any barrier to allowing the wood burning pizza ovens. Thank you, Council Wymer. Hey, Trent. Question on the the fees thing. I'm looking at um exhibit A, right? And so I'm looking for double under underlined text and strikethrough text and I don't see anything in down until we get to other inspections and fees number one. Right. And it just so that one talks about it's a correction from 50 to 100 an hour but that is that talks about outside normal business hours. Uh and then the other change is additional plan review and then the use of outside consultants. Yep. And that's where I was saying uh Mitchell that I I failed and that really we wanted to include in the intent of item number three. Yeah, that's where we would add that you know a second reinspection or in a third reinspection that we would increase those fees to maybe potentially second reinspection $200. If it's a third reinspection for the same same is that per hour or flat rate? Surely it would be a minimum of one hour because three because three is an hourly thing. Minimum one hour, right? An hour. Minimum one hour. Are you looking for us to amend this in our motion? Please, if you're willing and we can read that or andor if you wanted to amend it in the motion to have it brought back that way on second reading. Yeah, this will this is a two. Sorry. This this
is an ordinance um for both of these part of the municipal code. Got it. Little different than many of the rest of our fees which are resolutions. Yeah. They're not to by you via a resolution. This is these fees are actually outlined in the the building code. And then I guess quick table one a total valuation. That's valuation of the project in question. Correct. Materials and fees. Right. So, if it's a new uh water heater versus a new apartment building, that's driving costs. It could still be the same inspection. I'm I'm inspecting the roof, but yeah, it would it would be um inclusive of of whatever work was outlined in the in the application. In the whole application. Yeah. Okay. Thanks. Thank you, Councelor Smith. Thank you. Um, thank you again for your clarification on the uh the pollution and pollution controls. Um, I was reminded of a variation by council Zinksky's question. You mention other techniques that you generally see in use. Seasoned wood, dual system, dual dual fuel systems as a as a reason not to require precipitators or catalytic converters and such. But if I'm reading right, the proposed ordinance change, the code change doesn't require seasoned wood or multifuel startups or any of that. We have we have not ident identified that in the language that we that we proposed. No. Thank you. Okay. Any other questions? No. Excellent. Well, anybody from the public care to come forward comment on well
either ordinance 20261 ordinance 20262 building permit inspection fees or woodfired pizza ovens. They go there. No, right there. Yeah. Please state your name and whether you live in city limits or not. Okay. Uh my name is Paul Goodman. Uh I go by Pablo. I do live in downtown Glenwood. Thank you. Uh I just was going to say one first off, thanks for taking the time to review some of the stuff as a person that uh with the woodfired pizza ovens. uh you know one you know one thing I just wanted to say with that was you know bringing a little bit of diversity in the culinary world as Trent had kind of said to uh Glennwood opportunity there uh there are differences definitely in how they cook and and the food they produce are substantially different um not alone with just flavor but uh with the styles and just the textures and the different kinds of things like that what they can produce and how they can produce them. So um that's really I guess all I have. I was just gonna throw in a little bit there because they are the diversity is where I see like a huge um possibility for community and stuff like that. Okay. Excellent. Thank you very much. Anybody else? Okay, good. We're done. Nobody on the uh permit inspections. No, see none. Close the public portion. I'll bring it back uh to council and we're going to have to do two separate actions in here. So, I'm entertaining a motion in ordinance 202601 building permanent fee, building permit fee, sorry, building permanent inspection fees. And as we heard, um the fees are set forth in the second during the second reading. Uh so staff has time to Well, what I was saying is that if you want to propose reinspection fee numbers, that's what Trump was saying and we will incorporate it into the ordinance on secondary. Should we state those here? Yeah. How did we do it with the uh emergency fees? Did didn't you guys put set forth what what
we should think? Yeah. Okay. So, if you guys want to have us do that, happy to do that. If you guys want to just get this through on I think I would prefer that if you guys are okay with that. Yeah. No, that's that's totally fine. And you guys bring it to us. Yeah. We It won't be on consent then it'll be on the regular. That's fine. I think that's fine. Fair enough. Uh Mayor Prom Solinsky, please. So, I'd like to make a motion to approve ordinance 2025- or 2026-01, the building permit inspection fees with the suggested fee amendments to be included in the packet on second before second reading. Okay, thank you. We have a motion to approve. Do I get a second? Councelor Shaker, I'll second the motion. Sounds great. Any more discussion on the permit fees? Councelor Townsley. on the on the permit fees. We had mentioned that, you know, we've got a little rough on maybe some of the uh fees for sending people out for fire alarms and whatnot. I think personally, you know, and not having a long history with the building department or whatnot, with the police department, I had no qualms whatsoever of of what they were telling us was was happening was happening. I'm a little nervous about the housing and the building department and this is from before your time here, but when I ran for the office and just in talking to a lot of people getting on here, probably the biggest complaint I got was the building inspectors. I mean, just flat out, maybe not 10 to1, 5 to one of people wanting to talk about stuff. And so I'm a little nervous about going, okay, we've got these guys saying that they're being overworked and this and that and we're going to up fees and we're going to do some things. I just don't have the confidence in the quality of product that we're putting out that I think I'm ready to want to up fees for
for them at this point. So more of a comment, but I you know, we we've all talked about this. We've we've said, "Okay, let's take a look and see if we can get a better product out there." But I think I would rather I'd rather get to a point where I'm hearing from people that the building department's really easy to work with. Not that we're not, you know, doing our jobs, but I I would like a little more positive feedback before I get to a point where I say, "Let's up fees." And, you know, I really like the fact that you said we're not taking out on on mom and pop things and and going, "Okay, you know, you've got me out here a second time." But I'm I don't have the confidence from just the feedback that [clears throat] I've gotten from the community that we're at that point yet. Okay. Thank you, councelor Small. Yeah, there the I think the fees that we try to set should be commensurate with our cost, but I do also recognize that there seems to be a disconnect between the the word from the field versus the opinion from staff that ought to be looked at. And I tell you, I'm still surprised that two building inspectors cover all the work that needs to be done. I don't I don't know how that works really. The the workload seems to me that either it's being abbreviated because of only two people trying to do more work than they're than they're really effective at doing. Something doesn't seem right to me. Okay. Thank you. Any any more comments or discussion on this item? The motion is here to approve with a second by second reading. Yes. So if I don't see any more discussion, I'll call for the question.
No. Councelor Townsley. Yes, Mayor Prom Zalinsky. Yes, Mayor Dame. Yes, Councelor Wymer. Yes, Councelor Schmall. Yes, Councelor Smith. Yes, Councelor Shakar. It passes 61. Thank you, Ryan. Uh moving on to ordinance 2026. Do you want to make a comment? Councelor Shakar. Um since this is going to be an agenda item on the second uh second reading, um perhaps without we we've talked about this. We talked about a change in culture that's pending and in process. And maybe Trent, it might be constructive to address a couple of the concerns you heard in terms of number of inspections, time on inspection feedback you've received since a year ago or since last April might help. Yeah, happy to right now. Um, not right now. Okay, let's do second reading. Thank you. Thank you, Trent. Thanks for your willingness. I can retract [laughter] that comment. Love it. Okay, great. All right, moving on. Ordinance 20262, woodfired pizza ovens. Entertaining a motion. Mayor Prom Solinski, I move the approval of ordinance 2026-02 to um approve the use of woodf fired pizza ovens for commercial use in citizens. Thank you. We have a motion to approve. Councelor Townsley, I enthusiastically second that. Awesome. And a second uh to approve. Any discussion on the pizza ovens? Councelor Smith. Yes, it's an ordinance. Your [clears throat] flavor palletability comments are impressive. I remain concerned about the pollution concerns. I I I thought that the staff memo compellingly listed kind of the concerns for
wood burning over this over the decades. Um I it includes the notion that we have dealt with that through previous initiatives. Um I agree um ordinances from the city um legislation from Congress, a robust state health department has indeed cleared much of that kind of pollution. So I'm reluctant to start codifying a back what feels like a backtrack on that success. Um, I would [clears throat] feel better if we had the actual mitigation measures or if we at least had the u a companion requirement to do the best practices that you you described. So without those, I'm reluctant to support it. Thanks. Thank you. Yeah. Right. Of course he [clears throat] will. Um, any more discussion on the ordinance? I see none. I'll call for the question. Yes, councelor Townsley. Yes, Mayor Prom Zlinsky. Yes, Mayor Dame. Yes, Councelor Wymer. Yes, Councelor Schmall. No, Councelor Smith. Yes, Councelor Shakar. It passes 61. Thank you, Ryan. Thank you very much for your patience. Um, good luck. Yes. Moving on to project update. Back to item 10 for tonight. Ryan Gordon, please. Not again. I sent this to you that reported this. We got some stuff going on. That's fine. This will go just as fast. Hey, Brian. I sent this to Matt. Matt's gonna pull it up. And I was
gonna say all these animations and these transitions if he's gonna pull it up. I don't have any of that. I was gonna give you a big a big aisle. It's just the movie effect. Yeah. I had a great a great thing [laughter] CGI. I had dinosaurs. All right. No dinosaurs. No, nothing like that. All right, everybody. Hello. Uh Ryan Gordon, city engineer, here to give an update in a kind more of a preview. We did a preview last time. This is what we're going to be doing this calendar year. Um you controlling it. Go to the next slide. Um I'm sticking with the theme of the city map. Um I'm going to go pretty quick since we're here late. We can go backwards if we want. Uh blue are things in design. Um pretty standard. We have the three big neighborhoods that we're still kind of taking a look at. Um we're wrapping up the roundabout design at Wolson in West Midland. One other thing new on this one is um we're starting to look at the two creek crossings on Mitchell Creek on Center and then on Donigan. Something to look to address some flooding and and some um relieve some flood insurance issues. We'll get to those later. Those are just kind of the things we're kind of cooking in design. Before we go to the next slide, a few things I don't have um on follow-up slides. So, you know, last year we tried to get the uh railroad crossings fixed. We got the seventh street done, which was ours. The 23rd and then River side are both RFTAs, part of the rail corridor. We are going to try to do them ourselves. There was one little hiccup is since they are railroad owned or rafta owned, they have to go in front of the PUC. Seems like a pretty elementary thing, but we're likely going to do that on our own as opposed to try to do as part of the raft thing. RAFTA is not going to be removing rail this year. Not going to work. Didn't didn't work out. It was
a funding thing. They thought the rail salvage was going to pay for the project. It didn't even come close and so that shelved till another time. Um I think that's the only one to to um on that list. Matt, if you want to progress the slide. Um first project design projects or construction projects, excuse me. So highway 6 and 20 shared use path. So this is between Donigan Road and essentially Lynen. Um here's I got two photos, Matt. Kind of go to the next photo. Um existing conditions. These are as of yesterday, right? So you can kind of see dilapidated asphalt trail. Um not great. Drainage is terrible. Go one more slide, Matt. The details of what we're trying to do here. I guess I can go go here too on mine. So I can look here. Here's what here's what we're doing. So it's a multiaceted project. So, we're installing um 1500 linear feet of of 12-in water line. We have some high velocities in the water. This is really going to help to distribution. Includes four fire hydrants along this stretch that currently have none. Um we are going to be installing that that whole stretch as I mentioned. So, 3850 linear feet of 10 foot wide concrete shared use path, multi-use path. That's going to take the place of that dilapidated asphalt path. Um lots of curbon gutter, the same linear footage basically. So that north side of Highway 6 and 24 will have curb and gutter help with some drainage protection of the the path for pedestrians and bike users. Um then we're doing some drainage improvements. So we have three new additional storm water inlets. Um 180 linear feet of storm water pipe and then we're going to reline the existing storm pipes that are there. Instead of digging them up or replacing them, we're going to go in there and reline them as is as a way of of of of extending the life of those. The other thing is we're going to underground um all the overhead electric lines and telecommunication lines. As part of that, we are going to install new overhead lights. Um I heard loud and clear about lights with North
Landing. So, we will take a very detailed look at the lighting here. Little bit different since it's not quite in a park, but but same thing. Uh new bus shelter at at Traver Trail. Lee mentioned about the grant. And so, we're looking at that and kind of rejiggering how that looks and a little crossing to get over to Devo. Um and and so this project is currently out to bid. We are getting bids back next week. Um we may start construction in um quite soon and if it's the weather like it has been, we might as well be doing work instead of sitting on our heels and and plowing gravel. So you'll likely see this on consent agenda or on the agenda next week for approval of a contract. Um so we'll see how that goes. Um next project is Coach Miller Drive behind the high school. Um, this is a picture of what it looks like now. So, people walking on the street. Why are they walking on the street? Because there are no sidewalks. Um, next photo, Matt, shows the entrance as you come around the corner, and this is looking up 14th Street. Pickkins off to the left. This is the high school parking lot on the right. So, we've been working really closely with the high school. Um Um, next slide, Matt. So, here's some of the details of what we're doing. This project has a bunch of facets. as well as well. So, uh, we're installing some 8 in water line. Right now, the water line cuts through the campus, so it doesn't make it very opportune if there's a break to get in there. So, we're putting the water line in the road. It comes with um only one water service, and that is actually for future expansion or future reasons at the high school. They want to utilize their athletic fields a little bit better. One idea is a bathroom facility, uh, not a food court, but a a food stand. It's got to be a better name for it at at an athletic event. Essentially, they don't have any abilities to do that. So, we're going to provide them a um a water service. Um we're installing concrete sidewalk. So, two different stretches. So,
from where the parking lot connecting to the Rio Grand Trail is currently, we're going to have one that be on the west side that loops along. There's already an existing stairway that goes up and down to the Rio Grand Trail. So, we're connecting that piece. Then we're going to have a sidewalk on the other side wrapping around the high school. So this would be on the east side then around sort of the curve on Coach Miller as it turns into 14th Street. Again, no current sidewalk facilities at all. Really kind of addresses the need as you can see some from those photos. Um curbon gutter, there's no curb gutter. There's no drainage facilities out there whatsoever. So again, we are um creating a a a better system to collect the water. Plus, there's a parking problem during events that people park off the side and then walk to sporting events or whatever else. It's causing a public safety hazard. It's a narrow road anyway. This really helps alleviate and fixes that problem as well. Um, we're going to be fully um milling and redoing all of Coach Miller Drive. The road surface is is is quite frankly atrocious. Um needs to be fully done. So, we're going to rip out all that all that asphalt, put brand new asphalt down. Um, at Pikkin when transitions from Coach Miller to 14th, we're going to mill an overlay up to basically Grand Avenue. The last 50 feet of of 14th Street before you get to Grand Avenue, we're going to pave with concrete. Long-term maintenance is much much better. Um, you have those heavy buses that push that asphalt around causing ruting and potholeing. This will really solve um, a lot of those issues. The other big part of that is we're going to reconfigure the entrance to the high school. As of right now, that entrance is is a skew from where Pickin Avenue is. What we're going to do is push that entrance in. So, you basically have a four-way stop. So, you pick instead of turning right on Coach Miller and then immediate left in the high school, you're going to go straight into the high school. Now you're doing it. Now we're doing it. Better late than never. Now we're doing it. Yep. Go. This project
we we just received bids as of yesterday. This project will be built in the summertime when schools school is out. So, graduation's done, kids are out. We told the contractor, you have from basically June 4th to September 1st. I'm not sure when school starts, but they have a couple months to get to get cooking. So, um that's that project. That's going to be a really good project. Um next project, Matt, you that that's the most important thing that you Oh, that is a very good point. So we um project came in significantly under budget. So we we budgeted about 2.7 bids came in a lot less than that. So we're looking pretty good positive and a four-way stop and and a four improve approves a lot of things. We're also doing bulb belts at Pikkin Avenue just for your information too. Create a little bit better space for people to mle around. Okay, next school project we're doing over at Soccerfield Road. So, this is at the Glen Springs Middle School. Um, this is looking down from the high school down to to uh uh highway 6 and 24. Um, the next photo is kind of looking the opposite direction. Um, theme of the day, there's no sidewalk. No sidewalk on the right hand side of this picture, which is the east side of the road. Um, kids have to sort of muddy their way through curb and gutter and weeds and whatnot, right? So, we said, you know what we're do? We're going to come here and and fix this, too. So, what we're going to end up doing, next slide, Matt, is construct a 8 foot wide concrete sidewalk again from the middle school down to Highway 6 and 24. We do know talking to the school that kids use that to get to um one of the bus stations down there. Um a little bit of curb and gutter reconfigure it, right? That's pretty wide road, so we're going to suck in the road when we put the curb and gutter um and the sidewalk, excuse me, with curb and gutter. A little bit of drainage improvements. it it functions well,
but if we add that sidewalk, we're going to need to reconfigure a drainage ditch that abuts the the middle school to the south. Um, and then adjacent to uh uh Soccer Fields Road on the um west side, there is a a a drainage ditch. Um we're going to fill that in and bring it up to up up to up to grade, put some inlets in and and pipe it. It's just easier maintenance for our parks and Rex group. Um makes it a little bit cleaner out there. Uh the other thing depending on when costs come in, what what numbers we get, we may mill and overlay I let me take that back. That first stretch of road that I mentioned, Highway 6 and 24 to the middle school, we're going to fully repave that whole road. Um last year we did a paser study which tells us the quality of the roads. That section um was a was in the poor category. Totally redo that road. Depending where we are, um, we're likely going to mill and overlay the rest of the road, soccerfield road, from that portion all the way up to Donigan. Make a much more cleaner cleaner road alto together. Okay, next slide. We're looking at doing 19th Street. So, this is basically from Valley View Hospital down to Grand Avenue. Um, we had this program last year, but didn't really have enough money. So, this will be a a um Go to the next slide, Matt. I I'll talk about 19th Street in a second. Um, we're also looking to do Ninth Street. These are lumped together because these are generally much easier. So, Ninth Street from essentially from Blake up to Garfield is in pretty poor condition and and needs to be resurfaced. It's something that our streets department has had to fill in potholes on a pretty regular basis. So, it's again looking at Paser study, what roads are bad. This is one that floated to the top um that that needed to be done. Um, next slide over, Matt. This is kind of the details of what we're doing back to 19th Street. Um so we're going to probably rip out all that asphalt and repave it. Um 620 ft. There are some failing sections of both curb and gutter
and sidewalk. Sidewalk has been heaving over the years. We're probably going to, you know, fix all that to make so you don't have trip hazards and um you know, gaps in the in the concrete. Um and and some other minor minor improvements, some valley pans um and and whatnot. On on 19th, um I'll go to 9th first. As I sort of mentioned, it's going to be a mill and overlay or it could be full depth. Some of those roads as you get further up the hill have just a couple inches of asphalt on nothing. So, we're going to go take a look and actually build them up to city standards so they last longer than they have been. Um, 9inth Street will have some drainage improvements at the intersections. There's there's limited valley pan so the water just, you know, runs where it wants to run. So, we're going to create a little more coherent plan up there. Um, I kind of lumped all these in because and again, MTON Avenue is on here, which wasn't on my pictures, but again, last year we did Selena Street, little little side street up there. So, we're going to do the rest of Mter from from 7th to 8th. That'll be a Millan overlay that'll kind of connect that portion. And again, one of the reasons we determined this area is Mter is in terrible condition. So, again, as it floated to the top of roads we needed to do, this was an opportunity for us to to kind of knock those out. And so one thing that you've seen um here is we're not doing Blake this following year for a couple reasons. One is we thought, hey, look, there's some other priorities along the city that we should tackle before we spend all our monies in one spot and and kind of give the neighborhood a break and then pick it up as we follow in next year. So that is the quick and dirty update of major projects for next year. Um caveat this is we had great news on coach Miller. We haven't got bids back for 6 and 24. Those are our two big projects. if they come in under budget, we're going to come in and probably do more milling overlays and concrete work next this this um construction season. So, um we'll have to play with that. So, this map may
change a little bit as we move forward, but that's where we stand as of today. Questions? Thank you, Ryan. Council Small U Coach Miller Drive. When it first came up, we mentioned adding a water tap to get water down to the dog park. Is that not in there? We do not have that in there. One thing we do have in there is providing a sleeve for raw water to bring to the high school. The high school has some water rights and we've been talking to them about, you know, maybe getting a pump in there and some screening. So they can water their ball fields with with irrigation water. So two things that we were going to add to the project as it kind of moves forward. One is yes, we forgot about the the water service to the dog park. We'll add one off, put a curb stop, get it ready to go kind of thing. And the second one is I would like a 8 inch tap coming towards the water line that comes down Riverside, the dead end by the property we just bought so that we could loop that thing back up. So there are two small things we do need to add to the project, but they're pretty minor and they'll fit in the contingency was built into the project. So yes, as as you do the raw water, that that would be great for the dog park for irrigation, too. So we also just bought a property that has a 10 gallon per minute well on it and may be able to utilize that also for dog water. So a couple of options will be floated into that before we finally finalize the whole design or construction. I'm sorry. And any idea what we're going after grant for $200,000 for that project. It looks pretty positive. Also, my question Um the bus shelter at Traver Trail, have you worked with Lee on that? Does that get used very much? I mean, it it does get used some. It's not it's not a huge use, but again, depending on where we go with the transportation network overall, right,
that is kind of a hub for Iron Mountain, for um um the caverns. So, there could be a potential for that to being used, but that is still part of our system. So we we are going to improve that. And have you have you made any uh estimate as to why the bids were surprised you at being so much lower? I mean I would I would say it's springtime contractors are trying to get their work for the summer and they're bidding cheap now until they get loaded up. But I I mean if I had to I had to guess there there's a couple reasons. One is our consultant who helped us develop the cost estimate was a little overconervative. not not a bad thing. I think you're right. I think us having these bids come out in early the these were actually, you know, bid out um the end of 25. Um again, allowed contractors to get aggressive and I do think we're seeing a slight softening in the market. Um we we have seen some folks from um outside the region that are interested. So, I do think we see some let's say competition pressures that are helping out. I would just caution that you're not getting uh overly excited because you're getting bids with mistakes in them. Sure. We're we're evaluating those and we'll be looking at those versus the unit costs that we know of and yeah, we be taking a look at those. And I want to say between all four bids because we got four bids in, they were within 10% of each other. So, I wouldn't assume too many mistakes with them, but we'll go line by line and make sure nothing was missing. Yeah. Oh, yeah. Great. Thank you, council. Thank you, Ryan. I just had a email request from a constituent. Can you give any preview down the road? I know we're weighing feasibility of North Glenwood and feasibility of Glenwood Park. Both challenging, both multi-year projects. Any projection as to how and when either or both of those are going to enter construction or or begin work? And what is there a priority
set yet? you know, we don't have a priority set on either of those. And then the third neighborhood that you didn't mention is eighth eighth is 8th and Midland intersection, Cen neighborhood coming over 7th Street, you know, kind of this whole whole area, right? So, those three ones are ones that we did have comprehensive surveys done and we have those um we're still waiting for the survey in North Glennwood um to come in house and do a little bit of the conceptual design. Both of those all three of those are are major components. Um, we do have money set aside this year in the budget for design. We haven't quite figured out which ones will be will be first. Eventually, they'll all get done. Yeah, that's correct. Yeah, they will. Yeah. And again, what we're going to be doing with those is is is fairly extensive public meetings. Um, we really want to get idea from the from the neighbors, what does your neighborhood want to look like? So, we're we're starting to develop those as we're sort of transitioning from end of last year construction season to now. Um, right now is the time when we're really slowly digging into that. Thank you, Councelor Smith. Thank you. May we get a copy of this helpful slideshow? Sure. Thank you. Um, it's a little late to to ask too many design details on on Coach Miller because we're in business. Congratulations on the bid. Um, can you remind me one more time the extent of the west side new sidewalk? Yeah, so the west side there's an existing stair that goes down to the Rio Grand Trail which is right across from um the the kind of the culde-sac at the high school. So from that point, the the sidewalk will be on the edge of the road and then we'll go from there and then we'll go to the existing parking lot that essentially feeds you can park down there and walk down to the dog park area. Uh and then we'll connect into the existing sidewalk that then goes towards uh Park Avenue
Park. If you want to walk along [clears throat] Coach Miller Drive and 14th, your full continuity is going to be on the east side. Yes. Yes, that's right. Thanks. Y is there any feature to improve bicycle access from Coach Miller Drive onto the river trail? Uh, as of now there is not. Our thoughts are you would ride from if you're riding from Pikin trying to get to the Rio Grand Shell, you would just ride along Coach Miller until you got to the dog park entrance essentially to get down which is which is a potholed gravel truck driveway and an obscure kind of curvy sidewalk. Sorry, I [clears throat] didn't bring this up months ago, but what's pothole? I'm confused. The the snow truck driveway. The snow truck driveway. Oh, it goes down to snow storage, which we're not using this year. So, that that entrance will be cleaned up and paved. Oh, I I I apologize that that's I I went too fast. Other details, the parking lot that's currently pothole, that's going to be paved and and and brought up to to code. And then that little entrance as you're going down into the snow storage, that little area will be fixed. You probably said that. Thank you. Sorry, I did not say that before, but I I apologize for overlooking. Um, as soccerfield road, an excellent notion putting a sidewalk, which essentially extends the sidewalk that's already there on the east side from Donington to the stool. Is that that's correct? That about the crossing at Soccer Field and 6 and 24, the pedestrian crossing, the crosswalk. any improvements to that? Yeah, I mean that that's something that is that we're looking at because you're absolutely correct. One of the stop bus stops is across the road. So, yeah, we need to look at that um as well. So,
that's something that we are that Lee and I and and the engineering team is looking at as one of those vague colored concrete things that is not very visible to drivers. So, yeah. Um, as you do these big projects, which is very rambunctious and and exciting, um, I assume that there going to be some other uh, smaller knitting things going on. Um, what about progress on the the network of flashing beacons for pedestrian crossings that you've cooked up? Any any plans for particular locations on that this year? Yeah, certainly. I mean, one of the big target areas is around the 27th Street roundabout. Um, the challenge that we're finding is where do we put the beacons where they don't get hit? Um, um, I'm putting words in Matt's mouth, but Matt was out there a while ago taking a look, and there are tire tracks all over every place that we'd want to put one of these beacons. So, we are coming up with some ideas, but we do think it's vitally important that they are there. Um, so we got we got to figure out how do we put these in so they don't get hit the first day. Do they sell armored beacons? [laughter] We we we are going to come up with some creative solutions. More concrete, more more right there. Can you hang them from the top of the ski lift chair? That that could be a very viable option. Uh thank you. That that was the top one on my list. Uh public works went out and miraculously redid the crosswalks themselves at that western roundabout. Uh, and that's been a big help. Yeah. Since the since the Benedict got finished and and um the underpass at Grand Avenue got finished, the flow of things is much better, but these flashers will be a big help. Thank you. Uh, with the postponement of construction work at Blake Avenue, will there be more design work going on this year on Blake Avenue? No, I mean, we we essentially have that design finalized. Now,
I say that in in my opinion, we can change a design until the contractor walks off a project. So, um, if there are opportunities on Blake to make things better, change it, we we certainly will. We know we we're we're constantly fine-tuning and changing things on Blake. But, um, um, I would say it's 95 99% designed as is. Okay. with fingers crossed that that 99% design will address the dysfunctional southbound bike lane along the edge of Ser Park. And knowing that that's the complicated section that might not get done for two years or three years, is this the year to do something about the paint striping on that portion of Blake to fix it just with paint in the meantime? Um, yeah. Yeah, I mean that's certainly something that we've talked about and we'll look at doing the battle there is is the on street parking and the width. So we may have to, you know, split the dog, so to speak, there, but we'll we'll take a look at that. Good. Thank you. That's not nice. Uh, Council Townsley. Uh, two quick things on Coach Miller Drive. At first I was wondering why you were doing a sidewalk on the on the side where you four feet from a walking path, but if it's going to help us keep cars off there, that makes sense. Are you going to do anything that will keep people from just pulling up their trucks on the side of the sidewalk as well? Well, so they'll be vertical. The curb will be vertical, right? So you're going to have to jump up there and then we're going to have it's much easier for our code enforcement folks to to to give tickets if they're parking on a sidewalk. Okay. because I was guessing maybe they they would go ahead and pull up on the sidewalks on there anyway, but if it's easier to enforce. Then the other thing, last thing is on the uh on the north landing that those those crosswalks coming across from the hotels there. Are we getting any closer to having those done before springtime? Yeah, we are. And I I had a note actually to talk about that. So, thanks thanks Councelor Townsley for
reminding me. Um, part of the North Landing or the 63 project that did not happen was extending the raw water line from just past the Hotel Colorado to the raw water line that we installed as part of Sixth Street. Um, we were always going to do that inhouse and just the way Sixth Street kind of worked out that kind of didn't happen. So, our our internal um you know, water guys are going to be doing that and part of that is ripping out those crosswalks. Um and we are going to put those back with um concrete and not pavers. So, that that is plan. And um just today, uh Hot Springs School reached out about looking to do some modifications to their side. So, I think there's going to be kind of a joint project that we can do to kind of work out and clean up that whole area. Thank you, Councelor Small. Um, nothing on South Bridge. Well, I think a South Bridge is a more detailed conversation than than what's going on. There are there are some stuff going on Southbridge, but um but but I don't have that as part of this presentation. So, let me just ask. I remember that the plans are 100% complete from the consultant. Yes. And how about contract documents? So, so the drawings and the specs are all done. What we're doing is we're finalizing the environmental documents right now. There is is is part of that was a sound study and then a discussion in a vote for a sound wall which is currently happening right now. Um and then and then that portion along with the utility clearances but then and then the rightway acquisition are the last pieces before we basically have a full set package ready to be approved by both Sedat and FHWA. Um, by contract documents, I was referring to the documents that
contractors will bid on. Yeah. So, we have those those are done, drawings, and specs. There be no special conditions? Well, the special conditions are part of the the specifications, the seed the seed dot specials, but those have been prepared. Are they available? I'd like to read them. They they are available. I I would Carl Steve any issues with providing those those Let me let me think about that. I my my concern is um as you know bidding projects with federal funding, they are super uptight about how that goes. I would hate for that set of plans to get out there um until C DOT's ready for them to be released. Um I think happy to come in and look at a rolled up set of plans in the in city offices, but I'm I'm uncomfortable sending [clears throat] them home with anybody or sending out an electronic copy to anybody um just because it's a $80 million project and somebody's going to complain about bidding and I just worry about that. That's my only concern. So, Cedot does uh typically does uh a plan and spec review inhouse where they go through not just the standard specifications but all the special provisions which I suspect there are going to be a lot of on this job. Has that been done? Yeah, I mean we've gone through one two three major plan inspec reviews over the last year with SDOT. So CEO has reviewed those right. So the you know the bridge department has reviewed them you know traffic all all the departments in SE dot has has been part of the the review of the south bridge drawings and the special conditions and specs.
I don't even need all of them but I would like to read the special provisions and and like I was saying I I think I'm comfortable if you want to come in and sit down and go through them. I just am really uncomfortable sending out. CD dot has been very um you know they're very tight about these things. It's a federal project and so I just want to be super careful. I I don't mean to be difficult but I just don't want to send them out into the ether if you will. Um understand. I'll uh I'll sign a I'll sign an affidavit after. [laughter] All right. Great. Any other questions? Anybody from the public? Did I do that already? No. Okay. Nobody here. Excellent. And if we don't have any Oh, all these projects are all street fund. Yeah. Yeah. Then there's a portion from street fund then, you know, water and wastewater those enterprise funds, right? Right. That whole their monies. Yeah. As Matt mentioned, we're going after a dollar grant for Coach Miller. Um we're going to look at maybe a maybe FMLD grant. We tried that for Coach Miller but got denied. We may look at doing that for 6 and 24 um and and maybe some other funding sources but as of right now um yeah street funding the 6 and 24 um does have an MMO grant through C dot multimodal OS of o grant that that we got approved and we got Yep. That's that's a $750,000 grant that we have. That was my next question. How much how much grant funding did we secure for these projects? And you just said it. So fantastic. Uh, okay. Good. Thank you. Thank you very much. Thanks, Ryan. Yeah. And then another update. Water supply. Just say we have enough and you know
we do. That's Yeah, I know. Matt, please. Second. I'm skipping that thing. I'm just doing it on my own. Everybody got right there. Oh, I'm not even broke. I was wondering if you're going to have this graph. I hate this graph. I love this graph. You hate [laughter] this graph. I literally live off of this graph. That's all. I might have got a little haywire with the update. Okay, so 2022 who everyone was here, we kind of did a quick water update. Sorry. All right, Melang Horse, public works director. Good evening, council. Thank you. Um, in 2022, we did kind of water update. It was seven pages long. What I did was I wanted to kind of just there's some new counselors, so I just updated that again and threw it in there. Added a little more information. We can fly around and look at whatever anybody wants to though. There's there's not a map associated with that update. Um, there could be one. I try not to put maps out there of Total Systems all at one time if it can possibly not do that, but we can make that happen. Going back a step, Steve was like, "Hey, can you just show them how much water we have right now, where the trends are projecting?" And then I went haywire and created that seven-page letter for you to review. So, we can talk about all of it or none of it. Um, whatever you guys want to do. Right now, it's hard to see, but there's a little black line that's at the very bottom of all the color up there. That's how much water we have right now. Um, I look at the Bison Lake Snowtel site. Um, snowtel sites are notoriously not super accurate, but they're notoriously inaccurate consistently. So, if you know in 2018 that you had a Snowtel site and it was following a trend, then you can basically say, okay, 2018 was my worst water year that we've ever seen. As long as I trend along with the worst water year that I've ever seen,
generally speaking, we have water. So, Bison Lake is right up where our water and our snow basically falls. So that's a good one to w to work with. And right now we are on the very bottom of the trend. The pink shaded area is basically the lowest water totals across all 20 years that they give you to look at. That's the worst. And we've trended here before. That's not surprising to me to be honest with you. Um the little pink dotted line is 10%. If we get 10% of the lowest totals, it'll keep trending that way. The next line up is 50%. If we just get 50% basically of the median, that's where that line will go. And that's generally we end up somewhere between the 10 and the 50% if you kind of look at it year-over-year. So in essence, in the Bison Lake area, we'll have just as much water as we did in 2018, which is my bottom year that we look at. Now, if you go all the way back to the gauge that was started in 1976 at the Grizzly Creek Reservoir outlet, the worst year ever was 1977, which is when I was born. Um, and it is about half of that line. And if you look at the yield analysis out of the Grizzly Creek Basin, which is 24,000 acres, half of that line right there was still more than enough water to supply for this city for the entire year. Sorry. Half of which line? the worst case pink line. The pink one way on the bottom. Okay, got it. Basically, the the that one basin yielded about 4,500 acre feet and we use about 2400 acre feet. And that isn't even considering that we don't pull water out of Grizzly until we need to because the 12,000 uh acres that makes up no name is all we pull until we need to pull something out of Grizzly. So, last year we didn't even turn uh Grizzly on, and that's sort of a lie. We turned it on just to flush it to make sure everything was functioning. We had a leak on it. We didn't need the water. The year be
a before that we didn't need to turn it on either, which was a pretty bad snow year also. So, I guess the answer is at this moment, I feel really comfortable that we have enough water for the city of Glenn Springs through even the 10% worst case kind of scenario line right there because we know how much the basins actually produce. Uh we have a gauge back up there. We start we reinitiated that gauge I think three years ago as on Grizzly so we could watch how much water is coming out um and see how that trends towards the 1977 trends that we have available to us to make sure that if we need to turn grizzly on we can most of our water comes out of noon whi which is bison lake area which is bison lake is kind of in the middle of that whole entire thing it's just giving us a snow total of what's basically falling within the watersheds that we have available it's the closest one that we have and it's worked for us so far since I've been here. I've just watched this one and I just you're estimating but you're estimating 77 being worse still. As long as we kind of keep on the bottom of the pink line, we're we're good. We also still have 500 acre feet sitting in Rudy if we need it released. Um, and since we put in the new pumps, the new VFDs, and the new line, we can pull water out of Grizzly and Noame anytime we want to. And if I want Runai to release 3 CFS to supplement that a little bit, they can release 3CFS and we can actually pump it up there if we need to from 8 Street. From 8 Street, right? So, and we can run now that we put VFDs in because it used to be $1,000 a day to run those pumps because they were either on or they were off. Now we can run about 500,000 gallons a day if we want to kind of minimum just a little bit the head pressure all the way up to five million if we want to in a day from the pump station. Five million gallons. Wow. So if I if I need about seven seven and a half CFS if I can only get five for some reason out of
Grizzly Creek and Noame we can always supplement from two out of Rudy and a 500 acre feet is about a quarter of the year of use anyhow. One/5if to a quarter depending on how busy a year it is. So, we have a lot of water resources and we can also do a water exchange. Division 5 has been very nice to us about that if we don't even want to deal with those over there. We can just pump if we want to and they'll exchange our water rights from the base of those two tributaries basically and just say, "Hey, it's going to go downstream. You're the closest thing from the Royan Fork to the Colorado anyhow." They let us water exchange it to the pump. So if we had a really really really dry year, but we wanted uh the water still to flow down Noame and Grizzly Creek for aquatic life, we could just pump in exchange from that location to this for a temporary time. They've been very flexible with us and very good to work. Who is this? Five um water division 5 engineer who um we are in Colorado River is water division 5. So the division engineer has the authority to do administrative exchanges and because of the way we're set up with our water system. Um we we can do that. Um and division 5 has been very easy to work with around that. So like during the fires and we couldn't deliver. Um we did on an emergency basis we did an administrative exchange to move that water over and up um so that we you know it's on paper that we're moving it over and up but so that we could pump um without tapping our root eye reservoir water um because we're really using water that is being equated to what's coming out of grizzly no it also is super helpful to us if we have sedimentation issues or other fire things like that that we just can't can't deal with that water at the moment for whatever ever reason is a super flex. They're they've been super flexible in they existed. Very interesting, I have to say. Yeah. Yeah. Thank you. So, I guess it is almost
10:00 and I just kind of want to see what all of you wanted to know, have conversations about, answer questions. Okay, let's bring it back. I mean, if it gets worse, I'll keep watching this trend. Obviously, I pull it up once a week. We take a look at it on Fridays usually, make sure we're trending at least where we feel comfortable. And if something came up, we would come in front of you and tell you how we're going to mitigate that if it becomes a problem. Funny fact is is out of Rudy or out of Noame and Grizzly, we've been getting more water out of those two waterheds since the fires. Yeah. Don't ask me why. Vegetation drinking it. Yeah, I guess. All right, Counc. Um, Matt, remind me remind us or me quickly because this really does look like 7677 at this point having been here. You weren't, but I I was not. What um how did we [clears throat] do in 77 for our needs and how would that flow met our needs today? You said something about that, sir. So in 1977, if you look at the gauging station and what the water shed just out of Grizzly would did release because we have the actual flows going by the gauge, it released 4500 acre feet of water. This last year we used 2400 acre feet of water. Well, it's approximately double and that once again is not in concluding including no name which is half the size of Grizzly but produces most of the water that we need and two years back to back we'd be 76 and 77 were both bad years. Thank you. And then we got a crazy snow and I think 78 or 79. Uh 78. Thanks councelor Smith. Thank you. Matt, there's mentioned in your me in your very thorough and and nice kind of basic tutorial memo gives me what I need to know. Mention of a Grizzly Creek reservoir is would that be just an enhancement
in the Grizzly to no name transfer operation or is that for some other purpose? So in 1960 we how do you say that res how do you describe the reservoir right that we have? Um um yeah, now it's 10 o'clock at night and um so essentially we have um a right that can be developed um we have to uh when we applied for when it was applied for back in the late 50s um it's about 20 I can't remember how many feet it is 3,890 3,890 rounded um uh as a conditional water right. What that means is that every six years we have to apply um to the water court uh with an application for due diligence saying we're making reasonable steps towards developing that water right. Um I will be honest with you from the period of 1960 to 19 or probably 2010 um the water court um didn't you know the division engineer and the water court didn't look as closely. they weren't as focused on uh the changing climactic conditions that we have and so the expectation on what you're doing to diligently um implement that water right is a little bit higher now Matt over the last couple of cycles um has done a number of studies to examine that res reservoir site um I can't remember the last time we updated council around it was one council ago probably 22 I think 22 um so getting closer are looking at some options on where we either at current location or moving a moving the location a little bit further down the the stream. So that's been kind of since Matt has come on board, one of our priorities is trying to determine whether or not um that storage is feasible and
what it's going to cost. Um as we know there's probably 25% less water in the Colorado River Basin than there was at the time the compact was signed. And so projects like this are kind of critical. Um we continue to look at that and I think this year we might be looking at some grant funding around that. Yeah, the bureau wreck has a small storage fund grant that this is kind of the last year that they have funding for. There may be more in the future. Um we may actually apply for it with just a small feasibility study that's required in February. If they accept us, then we would have to do a larger analysis by I think April or something to that effect. And they're willing to pay 25% up to 25 million I think. So something to that effect. Um a large cost. Yeah. Um couple of the trips out to DC we've met with Bureau of Recre to um talk about that. Um so I mean we feel like it's a feasible project. Um and definitely something we want to keep alive as we sort through this. And it's um like I said a lot of lot of kudos to Matt and his team um for really digging in on it. um because that you know reservoir projects are not easy. Thank you for that procedural review. Sounds familiar and that's very helpful. Um [clears throat] my companion question is for what purpose is it? The obvious basics that you would have an a catchment for wet years that could then bridge into no name and into the water supply during dry years. Um, yes. So, once again, it's like if we have a fairly low snow year, that snow year would most likely yield enough water to fill the reservoir and then we would be able to meter it out because some years you get a quick release, some years you get a slow release, some years you get a late snowfall that releases again. You want to be able to control it a little bit. You still want the
flush so that the aquatic life and the the system still functions the way it should, but you want to be able to hold what you would like to be able to meter to yourself later, which is the whole point of a reservoir. Uh using [clears throat] your existing water ice. Thank you. Um small smaller much smaller thing. Couple years ago, the the city implemented a landscaping conversion incentive program, turf replacement. Has that had an impact on your demand that you can measure? It is so hard to measure the impact of 1,000 square feet and 1,000 square feet and 2,000 square feet. We know that there are many studies out there that say that one square foot of blueg grass will suck up.9 gallons to 1.5 gallons of water per square foot per week. So you can make calculations saying if I just removed a th00and square feet on the low end this is how much water savings was occurring at that location and then you have that for the remainder of the life of that property unless they put grass back kind of thing. So, we can calculate how much we're saving. But in a year where it may or may not rain, um, like last year it was pretty hot. We hit 800 million gallons of water used last year. The year before that was 780. The year before that was 750. The year before that was 790. You can kind of watch the rain years and say it rained more. People didn't water as much. So, it's a great program. CWCB has been promoting that program. We have grants to help supply for that fund, but we would have to have a very large system removed to probably see a major impact, but all the small impacts accumulate over time and they're good for the system. Good. Could I
tell you exactly? Not year by year because of the changing temperature. Got it. Thank you, Councelor Small. Matt, any idea how the city used a million billion? A billion 657 million gallons in 1982. Crazy, isn't it? [laughter] We have records from a long, long time ago. And that's why I put those in there so everybody kind of looks at our peak at one time was 9.1 million gallons of water a day. That's crazy. We peaked at about 4.7 this year or whatever it was. So back then we didn't have meters and I have stories from everybody back then of people just leaving the sprinklers on. Automotive shops flushing their drains continuously. It was a flat rate associated with the water bills back in the day. So people just used whatever they wanted to use. They probably didn't have as good metering technology back then at the plant. So there might be a little variable in that. There might have been some more infiltration that we didn't know about then. But that's how much water basically the plant put out was 1.69 billion gallons of water which is more than double than we used last year. Incredible. It is unbelievable. You start reading those old reports, you're like this is insane. The plant isn't even allowed to operate at 9 one 9.1 million gallons of water. It's 86. So, a couple a couple of things in there that that really surprise me when we rely on experts. There's a lot of things in that's why I put it in there. I want everybody to just kind of know what we have. If you want the reports, happy to share. It's why I always encourage everybody to not rely on experts and to think through what they're telling you. Yeah. Uh population forecast and
water usage was also way off. Way off. And it was a scientific forecast. I'm sure the reports are great. You read them, they're thought through. Yeah. They're just not right. Um so if we don't do the reservoir, do we need to do more tanks? Yeah, I I think we're um they address two separate issues. like you would never be able to put in enough or big enough tanks really to address the the seasonal um uh timing issues that a reservoir gives you. Um and really this is very much looking into the the future 30 years from now, 40 years from now as opposed to today if we continue to see um you know we're seeing drought cycles that are closer together and more frequent. Um, so in the absence of the reservoir, we there's, you know, you could roll the dice a little bit and say you probably would be okay. Um, we could look more heavily to to try to obtain more storage in brood eye. Um, we could look for other reservoir sites. We could go in um and potentially um utilize um, you know, with the river district and some of their storage. So, there are a number of of those different options. I think something that and I I don't want to put words in Matt's mouth, but Matt has always been looking for kind of local solutions to some of these problems that we have control over, whether that's on the electric side or the water side or whatever it is. So, I think from our standpoint, um if we could afford to do 4,000ish acre feet of storage that was ours to control, that would be the best system for us. There are some other options that we could certainly look at um as far as that that amount of storage. and the plant doesn't care anymore whether the water is coming from the roaring fork
or from no name or grizzly creek. I thought there was a big difference in the treatment required for the water out of the fork. So water out of the fork depending on what time of day, what rain event and how it is is is harder to treat. But the plant as we changed it due to the Grizzly Creek fires has the ability to handle that sediment load much more easily. So you can tell the difference, at least some people can. If we pump, if we pump and use roaring fork water, people can tell there's a taste difference associated with it versus the Grizzly, but there's no difference of quality of water when it comes back out of the plant. If it's a heavy sediment day because it rained in marble 12 hours before and we have to pump because that's the decisions we make is is this water better than that water sometimes? um then the plant would use a few more chemicals to get that sediment to drop faster so that we can remove it with a vax. So the plant doesn't really care. We just have to change how the plant operates slightly based on the sediment loading of the particular water we're using. During the Grizzly Creek fires, you may have not known this, but we would change water supply sometimes five or six times a day. It would come out of no-name and then we would stop because no name would have a problem. So we would pump and then we would stop pumping and then we would go back to I mean we would switch back and forth which was very stressful on the plant operators because of that exact same situation. All of a sudden I've got 3,000 ft of pipe that which which water is in there. You have to watch it as it's coming in and make changes to the plant. Nowadays it's they've got it down to a science literally. But yes, roaring fork is harder to treat sometimes. I would not want to do Colorado River water. [laughter] Maybe one day. Um, and my comment about a about a map. It just makes it easier to try to visualize
all of the information you're giving in here. I know. And last time we did this, it was a work session and I think it was an hour and a half or two hours and we literally flew around in Google Earth and said, "This is where this is. This is where this is. This is how it transfers through." Um, if you try to do it in one map, you can't really decipher what I'm trying to tell you. So, it's a little easier to blow it up. But, I'm happy to try to put one together based off that if you would like to see. Even if even if it was a cartoon kind of sketch, too. Sure. Yeah. I could have Ben work on that. He loves GIS maps. Thanks. I could ask. Great. Any other questions? I just wanted to say that the 1977 season was the Broncos first Super Bowl appearance. So that speaks well to this season. Thanks Ryan. Speaks well for this season. All right. Well, thank you, Matt. Yeah. Thank you very much. Okay, I think we're through. So, council comments, council towns, councelor Small, Mayor Prom Solinski, Councelor Smith. Thank you. uh had some exciting what I consider to be exciting conversations with city staff, with the housing board, and with planning and zoning about clarifying any differences and eliminating differences, if there are between building code requirements for multifamily housing, whether that's intended for for sale or for rent. I'm I'm on I'm on kind of a hopeful mission to eliminate any differences so that housing units like those can be flexible. Having got some great updated information, we kind of be focusing down on a few particular details. More to come from all of those advisors. Um a few weeks ago or last year, um the council learned uh some confidential
information about the South Bridge project uh in the context of permitting procedures and um legal situations. Um there were there was kind of some wait, we'll go see what happens next things in that session. So, without being specific, not being in such a session, when and how will we learn more on those? Um, potentially at the next council meeting, we may have an exact session on where we're at. Thank you. Um, as we anticipate, at least as we hear hear rumors of some potential significant redevelopment at Midtown, um, I am watching for ways that we should prepare for what we want that Midtown section to look like. City Market, Citter Drug, High School, that whole collaboration of odd, dangerous movements now and what new development might do to that. Um, so I'm hoping that we can be really creative and start to think early. Uh, one of the kind of startling ideas that I've come across is the potential for a municipal ordinance or code change, whichever it is, uh, to prohibit the permitting of additional gas filling stations following in the radical example, radical heels of places like Lafayette, Lakewood, Littleton, Lewisville. Um, I'd like us to look at that possibility. I've mentioned it to staff and I want to see all the ramifications that might have including the hopeful ramification that it would simplify traffic patterns there and not make them worse. Uh and finally, there's no snow on the ground that I can see around town. Uh on the forested uplands, um there's essentially no snow
except for a few pockets on the north facing sides. Do we feel that the fairly new city emergency response and evacuation plan is is ready for a summer like we think we're going to have. Fire chief's not here, but yeah, I can't answer. I'm sorry. Well, yeah, I was just having the same thought. I don't know why not, but I I mean, I'd have to look into it a little bit more. I mean, I think that's a fair question. I don't know why we wouldn't be just fine. I assume it was made for for some very bad Yeah. scenarios if whatever you call worst case, but we're in one of those. I think it'd be good to know how we're doing in that regard. Thanks. Thank you very much. Thank you, Steve. Council Shack. Council Mr. Excellent. And my uh question was asked about the South Bridge. I'm hoping to have an executive session on February 5th. So, um, city manager Steve, what do you got? Nothing. Thanks. Okay. City attorney Carl. Uh, 45 minute presentation now. Absolutely. At least two. At least two. Two different subjects. Each one 45 minutes. No, I'm good. Thanks. You good? Uh, Ryan, any correspondence? Nope. Excellent. I want to go back to my comment. I want to point out that next meeting we're meeting at 8:30 at 7:30 in the morning uh at the Hotel Colorado for whatever Steve has uh prepared for us. So yeah, just a quick reminder uh social event announcement. I'm going to scratch that off the agenda because it's too late to have any fun tonight. Um so I'm enjoy uh entertaining a motion to adjourn. Oh wait, hang on. Councelor Small, sorry, Steve. I I really was looking forward to the update on the air quality monitor downtown.
Um yeah, sorry. I thought that emailed that to you, but I may have emailed that. I would give a quick update on that. Yeah, we got a group together. Um CMC is going to put um a unit on their roof. Uh we're going to start with that one. We'll probably put others in town. U we're coordinating with the county right now as well. So, we'll know a little bit more, but I think that they said they'd get that one up by the end of next week. Who want Thank you. entertaining. We'll have access to it. Entertaining a motion to journ. So moved.
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