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Mayor and Council Meeting

VIDEO Mayor and Council Sep 29, 2025 at 07:00 PM Processed: Sep 30, 2025 at 11:03 AM

Video Transcript

Duration: 232 minutes

Speakers: 41

00:00
Speaker 1

Five. This is the fifth Monday, which means it's open mic night. I'm mayor Kurt Wilson, and I'd like to introduce my colleagues and council members present, beginning with council member Sarah Beeson,

00:12
Speaker 1

council member Christine Hall,

00:15
Speaker 1

council member Anne Pro Tem Lee Hills,

00:18
Speaker 1

council member David Johnson,

00:21
Speaker 1

council member William Mortland,

00:23
Speaker 1

and council member Alan Sells.

00:26
Speaker 1

I'll now turn the meeting over to our chief chief administrative

00:30
Speaker 1

officer and city administrator, mister Randy Knighton, to explain how the meeting is run. Mister Knighton. Thank you, Mayor Wilson, and good evening, everyone.

00:39
Speaker 2

Thank you for joining us tonight.

00:41
Speaker 2

This is a public forum meeting

00:44
Speaker 2

and a dedicated space for Roswell residents to speak directly to the mayor and council

00:49
Speaker 2

on any matter of interest. We certainly welcome your engagement and appreciate your participation this evening. To ensure a fair, respectful, and orderly meeting, we will follow a structured format this evening. If you would like to speak tonight, we ask that you fill out a comment card and hand it to one of the staff members.

01:07
Speaker 2

At the back, we have Julie, Kara, and

01:10
Speaker 2

Laurie. Yes. Julie,

01:12
Speaker 2

Cara, and Laurie in the back. If you all could raise your hands just so everybody could see you in the back there. And if you have not received a comment or have not obtained a comment card and filled that out and you would like to speak tonight, we ask that you do so at this time.

01:27
Speaker 2

Each speaker will be given up to five minutes to speak, and that time may not be transferred or donated to

01:33
Speaker 2

another speaker. Everyone wishing to speak must do so during their own allotted time, and those,

01:40
Speaker 2

comment cards and names will be called by our city clerk, Nancy Long.

01:44
Speaker 2

Again, please direct all your comments to the mayor and council. And in two and to ensure a respectful and productive environment, we ask that everyone, you know, in, speak directly to the council, refrain from any back and forth dialogue interruptions,

01:58
Speaker 2

or anything of that nature. And, of course, members of the audience, of course, will direct their attention to the person speaking.

02:05
Speaker 2

And we ask that anyone who needs to have an independent conversation that you exit the rear doors to the vestibule area

02:13
Speaker 2

and that you silence any electronic devices

02:17
Speaker 2

at this time.

02:19
Speaker 2

The mayor, of course, is the presiding officer and will ensure the orderly exchange of questions, comments,

02:26
Speaker 2

and,

02:27
Speaker 2

any other interaction,

02:29
Speaker 2

this evening. We encourage everyone in attendance and the viewing audience to visit the city website for meetings, events, and departmental information,

02:36
Speaker 2

and to review and to participate in the various activities and offerings here in the city of Roswell, and visit roswell365.com

02:43
Speaker 2

for a calendar of events.

02:45
Speaker 2

We also encourage you to visit roswellresults.com

02:48
Speaker 2

for updates on key projects and track how the city is turning,

02:52
Speaker 2

bold goals into real results for

02:55
Speaker 1

this community. So thank you again for being here tonight. We look forward to hearing your comments. Yes. Mayor Wilson. Thank you, mister Knighton. Appreciate that so much. Christine, that's a lot of candy that you have in front of you tonight. I don't know what you would do with all that.

03:08
Speaker 1

I have the great privilege at this time,

03:10
Speaker 1

to ask the Executive Religious Director,

03:13
Speaker 1

Imam Abdullah Jabbar from the Ras al Majid

03:16
Speaker 1

to the front for our invocation of moment silence. Welcome,

03:26
Speaker 3

I ask you to join me in prayer.

03:30
Speaker 1

In the name of god,

03:32
Speaker 3

the most compassionate, the most merciful,

03:35
Speaker 3

our sustainer,

03:37
Speaker 3

our guide,

03:39
Speaker 3

the one who has never once turned away from us.

03:41
Speaker 3

We ask you to send peace and salutations upon

03:44
Speaker 3

the prophet Mohammed,

03:46
Speaker 3

Jesus, Moses, Abraham, and all of the noble men and women you have sent to uplift us, enlighten us.

03:53
Speaker 3

We stand here entrusted with the care of this city,

03:56
Speaker 3

and we very well know our limits. We don't know

04:00
Speaker 3

everything, and we don't see everything.

04:02
Speaker 3

So we ask you to fill the gaps in our vision,

04:06
Speaker 3

strengthen us where we are weak, and bless us where we are strong and decisive.

04:11
Speaker 3

Guide the deliberations of this council.

04:13
Speaker 3

Let not pettiness

04:15
Speaker 3

distract us,

04:17
Speaker 3

no pride divide us, and no fear silence what is right.

04:21
Speaker 3

Make us careful with the vulnerable, courageous with the truth and steady

04:26
Speaker 3

in our duty to all who call

04:28
Speaker 3

Roswell home.

04:30
Speaker 3

And grant us the humility

04:32
Speaker 3

to question, to question ourselves before we question others,

04:36
Speaker 3

to weigh our conscience before we cast our

04:39
Speaker 3

vote, to see our own assumptions,

04:41
Speaker 3

and to confront our own prejudice and bias.

04:44
Speaker 3

Let this chamber be a place where truth is not hidden, where conscience is not silenced, and where justice is not delayed.

04:52
Speaker 3

And dear God, we ask you to bless our elders who have sacrificed and toiled

04:58
Speaker 3

to build a city

04:59
Speaker 3

which we call home.

05:01
Speaker 3

We ask you to bless our children, the future of our community bright and full of promise.

05:06
Speaker 3

Bless the families who labor each day to make a living,

05:10
Speaker 3

to make ends meet.

05:12
Speaker 3

Bless the clergy, the teachers, the mentors

05:15
Speaker 3

who shape our minds and our hearts.

05:18
Speaker 3

Bless the first responders who put their lives on the line to keep us safe.

05:22
Speaker 3

Bless the workers who keep our streets safe and our home standing.

05:26
Speaker 3

Bless the newcomers who bring fresh hope and perspective,

05:30
Speaker 3

and bless those rooted here for generations.

05:34
Speaker 3

And may we show each each of them the respect and the honor they deserve.

05:39
Speaker 3

Do not let indifference

05:41
Speaker 3

dull our conscience,

05:42
Speaker 3

nor division unravel our community.

05:45
Speaker 3

Give us hands that serve,

05:47
Speaker 3

hearts that

05:49
Speaker 3

unite,

05:50
Speaker 3

and a will to labor for the common good of all.

05:54
Speaker 3

And we make this council

05:56
Speaker 3

a beacon

05:57
Speaker 3

that every neighbor may know dignity,

06:00
Speaker 3

every street may know peace,

06:03
Speaker 3

and the future of this city may be filled with hope.

06:06
Speaker 3

Amen.

06:07
Speaker 3

Amen.

06:08
Speaker 3

And now let us take a brief moment of silence together

06:11
Speaker 3

to hold these word, this prayer,

06:14
Speaker 3

to search our own hearts and to remember

06:17
Speaker 3

the charge we carry for one another.

06:32
Speaker 1

Thank you.

06:34
Speaker 1

Thank you so much, Imam

06:36
Speaker 1

Abdullah Jabbar from the Rasheed.

06:39
Speaker 1

It was a beautiful prayer. Thank you.

06:42
Speaker 1

This time, I have the great privilege of asking United States Army e force specialist,

06:47
Speaker 1

Richard Hennigan, to please come forward and lead us in the pledge of allegiance.

07:02
Speaker 1

Allegiance to the flag

07:04
Speaker 1

of The United States Of America

07:06
Speaker 1

and to the republic for which it stands,

07:09
Speaker 1

one nation

07:10
Speaker 1

under God,

07:12
Speaker 1

indivisible,

07:13
Speaker 1

with liberty and justice for all.

07:15
Speaker 1

Thank you so much, specialist Hennigan. I'm gonna ask you to please stay up there as I ask the council to come down for me on the first item under the mayor's report, which is a reading of the esteemed veteran of Roswell award.

08:01
Speaker 1

Proclamation,

08:02
Speaker 1

office of the mayor,

08:04
Speaker 1

specialist Richard Hennigan, esteemed veteran of Roswell.

08:08
Speaker 1

Whereas the city of Roswell, Georgia

08:10
Speaker 1

is proud to honor and recognize the extraordinary

08:13
Speaker 1

service

08:14
Speaker 1

and enduring legacy of the brave men and women who have served in the armed forces United States.

08:20
Speaker 1

And whereas Richard Hennigan

08:22
Speaker 1

answered the call to serve his country by enlisting in the United States Army in May

08:27
Speaker 1

1968,

08:28
Speaker 1

shortly after his nineteenth birthday,

08:31
Speaker 1

and faithfully serving until 1971,

08:34
Speaker 1

attaining the rank of e four specialist.

08:37
Speaker 1

Whereas Richard Hennigan

08:39
Speaker 1

completed his basic training at Fort Dix, New Jersey and went on to serve two combat tours in Vietnam

08:45
Speaker 1

as part of the seventy third Engineers construction support, nineteenth Engineer Battalion,

08:50
Speaker 1

United States Army Corps of Engineers.

08:53
Speaker 1

And whereas during his first tour

08:55
Speaker 1

from December 1968 to December

08:57
Speaker 1

1969,

08:59
Speaker 1

Specialist Hennigan was stationed at Landing Zone Lowboy,

09:03
Speaker 1

serving in equipment maintenance and logistical operations

09:06
Speaker 1

while participating in perimeter defense,

09:09
Speaker 1

listening post,

09:10
Speaker 1

and minesweep security.

09:12
Speaker 1

And whereas specialist Hennigan

09:14
Speaker 1

contributed directly to the vital mission of upgrading Highway QL Dash 1, Vietnam's critical coast highway,

09:22
Speaker 1

supporting a major infrastructure project that earned several presidential unit citations

09:28
Speaker 1

and remains in use more than five decades later.

09:31
Speaker 1

Whereas

09:32
Speaker 1

his service included participation in numerous campaigns,

09:37
Speaker 1

including the tent counter offensive,

09:40
Speaker 1

multiple phases of the Vietnam counter offensive,

09:44
Speaker 1

and the winter spring nineteen seventy campaign,

09:47
Speaker 1

earning him distinguished honors,

09:49
Speaker 1

including

09:50
Speaker 1

the Army Commendation Medal,

09:52
Speaker 1

the National Defense Service Medal,

09:54
Speaker 1

the Vietnam Service Medal with two stars,

09:57
Speaker 1

and the Vietnam Campaign Medal.

10:00
Speaker 1

And whereas following his military service, Richard Hennigan pursued higher education,

10:05
Speaker 1

earning an associate of applied science degree with high honors and a bachelor of science in management science with honors from Rutgers University.

10:14
Speaker 1

And whereas Richard Hennigan continues to serve others in the Roswell community through meaningful volunteerism,

10:20
Speaker 1

including as a fishing guide with Veterans Fly Fishing, an instructor and board member with Seniors Enriched Learning,

10:27
Speaker 1

and as a dedicated elder,

10:29
Speaker 1

Stephen's minister,

10:31
Speaker 1

and committee member at Roswell Presbyterian Church.

10:35
Speaker 1

And whereas Richard Hennigan

10:37
Speaker 1

exemplifies

10:38
Speaker 1

the spirit of civic duty,

10:40
Speaker 1

leadership,

10:41
Speaker 1

and compassion

10:42
Speaker 1

through both his military service

10:44
Speaker 1

and his unwavering commitment to the well-being

10:47
Speaker 1

and enrichment of others.

10:50
Speaker 1

Now, therefore, I, Curtin Wilson,

10:52
Speaker 1

mayor of the city of Roswell, Georgia,

10:55
Speaker 1

do hereby name e four specialist Richard Hennigan,

10:58
Speaker 1

an esteemed veteran of Roswell,

11:00
Speaker 1

and call upon all our citizens to recognize his outstanding service to our country and to our community, and that there is no higher calling than those who serve the United States Armed Forces. Congratulations, sir.

11:34
Speaker 5

Thank you very much and, just a few words. It's, it's been quite a month, quite a year and and,

11:40
Speaker 5

quite a life. I've been in Roswell now almost twenty years and it's it's the best place I've ever lived. So I hope you all feel that way.

11:49
Speaker 5

So thank you Mayor Wilson. I appreciate it. Thank you Roswell City Council.

11:54
Speaker 5

Thank you Roswellens,

11:56
Speaker 5

family, friends and, for being here this evening. I appreciate it very much.

12:01
Speaker 5

I'm thankful for many things.

12:04
Speaker 5

One is being here, of course, and another is being asked to recite the Pledge of Allegiance.

12:09
Speaker 5

I was really afraid that I was gonna be asked to,

12:12
Speaker 5

sing the Star Spangled Banner

12:15
Speaker 5

and and I'm thankful

12:17
Speaker 5

later. And yeah, after a few beers or something.

12:20
Speaker 5

And,

12:22
Speaker 5

and my thanks is also for you. I'm sure you're thankful for that as well and as you well should be.

12:28
Speaker 5

In April,

12:30
Speaker 5

I was invited to participate in the Roswell Rotary Honors Air

12:35
Speaker 5

program. We flew to Washington DC. We had a quick tour of Annapolis and we spent a lot of time,

12:41
Speaker 5

in the city itself.

12:44
Speaker 5

While on that flight and I walked out to get on the plane with my brother Doug was my escort

12:49
Speaker 5

and,

12:50
Speaker 5

Doctor. Sherrill was there to send us off and there he is back there. And

12:55
Speaker 5

I walked up onto the bus and there was a friend of mine from five year friend, John Malden, Doctor. John Malden.

13:02
Speaker 5

And, he said, What are you doing here? I said, Well, same thing you are. We're going to, we're going to D. C.

13:08
Speaker 5

We spent a lot of time together and we've, we've fished together many times.

13:14
Speaker 5

Quite a lot more fish than I did, but

13:16
Speaker 5

you knew that.

13:19
Speaker 5

We spent a lot of time, and walked along the base of the wall and had a lot of conversations and talked about some of the people we knew up there and

13:28
Speaker 5

and shared, a lot of a lot of thought.

13:31
Speaker 5

And I would have to say that, that was a real memorable

13:35
Speaker 5

day because that was the day for me that the great angst kinda was lifted and I felt,

13:43
Speaker 5

felt fine. Good. You did too, by the way.

13:47
Speaker 5

Two weeks ago I was preparing,

13:49
Speaker 5

for a course I'm teaching at, Roswell Presbyterian Church,

13:53
Speaker 5

about retirement and getting ready for retirement and planning how you're gonna spend the fourth quarter of your life. The last years,

14:02
Speaker 5

who of you are in that class, I think?

14:05
Speaker 5

No?

14:07
Speaker 5

Or you will be.

14:09
Speaker 5

And

14:11
Speaker 5

I was preparing a slide

14:13
Speaker 5

that would demonstrate

14:15
Speaker 5

or show

14:16
Speaker 5

what are the qualities of a good person or what are the good qualities of a person, However that should be,

14:24
Speaker 5

phrased.

14:24
Speaker 5

And while I was putting that slide together I got notice that Doctor. John had passed away.

14:30
Speaker 5

He's,

14:31
Speaker 5

he was 77.

14:33
Speaker 5

He was,

14:35
Speaker 5

Vietnam veteran.

14:37
Speaker 5

He was,

14:40
Speaker 5

a patrol leader with a lot of infantry,

14:44
Speaker 5

training and skills and he was combat veteran,

14:47
Speaker 5

amputee,

14:49
Speaker 5

lost a good part of his left leg in Vietnam on that tour,

14:53
Speaker 5

and,

14:54
Speaker 5

purple heart.

14:56
Speaker 5

When he got back from Vietnam,

14:58
Speaker 5

he did the same thing I did. He got serious about school.

15:01
Speaker 5

He had a B. A, M. A, and PhD.

15:04
Speaker 5

He was a therapist.

15:05
Speaker 5

He worked with troubled boys and I talked to him about that a little bit and he says, well, never gonna run out of work.

15:12
Speaker 5

For sure.

15:14
Speaker 5

With that, he had a prosthetic device on his on his leg. He became a martial arts,

15:21
Speaker 5

performer

15:22
Speaker 5

with awards.

15:23
Speaker 5

He became a tennis player. He golfed. He water skied and then he found fly fishing and fly fishing. He said this is a lot easier, I can tie flies sitting down and and, and all that. He was excellent.

15:36
Speaker 5

He was an organizer. I give him credit for Saving Veterans Fly Fishing Organization,

15:42
Speaker 5

a life of a

15:44
Speaker 5

author.

15:45
Speaker 5

He wrote

15:47
Speaker 5

fiction. He wrote

15:49
Speaker 5

manuals for psychologists, etcetera. He was a friend, a teacher.

15:53
Speaker 5

He died September 3.

15:56
Speaker 5

That's what he did with his life.

15:58
Speaker 5

But while I was preparing this slide it's about what is a good person

16:03
Speaker 5

and he was humble, honest,

16:05
Speaker 5

generous,

16:06
Speaker 5

especially with his time, responsible,

16:08
Speaker 5

empathetic,

16:11
Speaker 5

kind, moral.

16:13
Speaker 5

He was he was awesome.

16:15
Speaker 5

I think he was a model for living and a model for,

16:19
Speaker 5

finishing strong.

16:21
Speaker 5

So I'm gonna ask you guys and it's Veterans

16:23
Speaker 5

the Honors

16:25
Speaker 5

Air Program

16:26
Speaker 5

is having some financial difficulties and we're not sure

16:30
Speaker 5

if it's going to continue.

16:33
Speaker 5

So I'm asking for the

16:35
Speaker 5

the leadership of the Rotary to look at at, some strategic opportunities, maybe joining with another city, another town, another group that maybe has has got a diminishing population.

16:47
Speaker 5

And I'm also asking you guys to make a contribution to this.

16:52
Speaker 5

Rotary,

16:53
Speaker 5

Roswell Rotary,

16:55
Speaker 5

honors air program.

16:56
Speaker 5

I'm also asking if you would, and his and his honor is to make a a veteran,

17:02
Speaker 5

discount to veterans fly fishing, veteransflyfishing.org,

17:06
Speaker 5

and they'll be able to,

17:08
Speaker 5

or

17:09
Speaker 5

anything you wanna do.

17:11
Speaker 5

So that's what I that's what I have to say today.

17:14
Speaker 5

So thank you.

17:17
Speaker 5

An honor. Thank you.

17:29
Speaker 1

So just to repeat, you want you want people to donate to veteransflyfishing.org?

17:34
Speaker 5

That's right. .Org, veteransflyfishing.org,

17:37
Speaker 1

and reach out to Roswell Rotary for the honors the honors flight program. Right. Right? And people can donate to both of those. A A lot of great people, a lot of great Rotary members reach out to one of them and explain about how to make how to contribute to the Roswell

17:50
Speaker 1

Rotary Honors Flight Program and veteranflyfishing.org.

17:53
Speaker 5

Right. That's an awesome program.

17:56
Speaker 5

Hope it,

17:57
Speaker 1

continues going for years to come. There's more veterans in the pipeline. And you guys probably noticed like a lot of people, a lot of veterans, he didn't talk about himself. He talked about somebody else. Alright. Let's get a picture with you.

21:26
Speaker 1

Thank you, specialist Richard Hannigan, and family and friends for being with us. That was awesome.

21:32
Speaker 1

I think mister Knighton has one additional comment he wants to make from his original opening monologue.

21:38
Speaker 2

Yes. Thank you again. And and it's obviously a great honor for,

21:42
Speaker 2

the veteran this evening. One item I wanted to ensure I mentioned,

21:46
Speaker 2

before,

21:47
Speaker 2

speakers come to the podium

21:49
Speaker 2

is that we do have staff members who will be taking notes, this evening and and questions as well.

21:55
Speaker 2

And so once each speaker completes their five minute period,

22:00
Speaker 2

the mayor may ask,

22:02
Speaker 2

the,

22:03
Speaker 2

appropriate staff person to then come to the podium to respond or to,

22:08
Speaker 2

answer that question. So we'll give everybody their full five minutes.

22:12
Speaker 2

And once,

22:13
Speaker 2

each individual speaker's five minutes is completed,

22:16
Speaker 2

then we'll be able to appropriately respond to any questions,

22:20
Speaker 1

raised. So thank you again.

22:22
Speaker 1

Thanks, mister Knighton. Welcome everybody to open mic night. We're glad you're here. I'll now open the meeting for Roswell residents to speak. City clerk Nancy Long, how many speakers do we have for public comment this evening? Mayor, we have 19 speakers. Outstanding. Thank you. Would you please call the first speaker, Nancy? Yes. Brandon Newton. Thank you so much. Welcome, Brandon.

22:52
Speaker 8

Evening. Good evening. I was not prepared to go first here.

22:55
Speaker 8

My name is Brandon Newton. I live in Waverly Hall.

22:59
Speaker 8

I would like to talk about the Bowen Road in '92,

23:03
Speaker 8

project that this week it was released,

23:07
Speaker 8

that there is a letter of intent to sell that property.

23:12
Speaker 8

I have two,

23:15
Speaker 8

two things.

23:16
Speaker 8

The first one is we went through this,

23:19
Speaker 8

five, six, seven years ago when the church originally

23:22
Speaker 8

was trying to sell it to a, development group.

23:25
Speaker 8

It was also a grocery store based,

23:30
Speaker 8

business park type deal.

23:33
Speaker 8

So my first question would be what has changed in that intersection there that they discovered

23:39
Speaker 8

during the due diligence of that project

23:41
Speaker 8

that it would not work very well. What has changed in that intersection over the last five to seven years?

23:47
Speaker 8

And the second thing is

23:51
Speaker 8

when the city bought that property, we were told that it was gonna be turned into a park

23:56
Speaker 8

and added to the parks and rec department.

24:01
Speaker 8

I don't know how to phrase this question, but that doesn't sound like what's happening at this point.

24:08
Speaker 8

And I'm willing to wait to see what the plans are for that property. I don't know any of the details of this new project.

24:16
Speaker 8

But I would like to say that the park kind of washed a lot of,

24:21
Speaker 8

of the opposition to it when the city bought it.

24:26
Speaker 8

And now it sounds like it's not gonna be in part of the parks and rec department anymore. So I'd like to hear some comments on that.

24:36
Speaker 1

Brandon, thank you. Thank you so much.

24:39
Speaker 1

Mister Leatherman, would you like to address that, sir?

24:56
Speaker 10

Just a a couple of quick comments. Again, Jeff Leatherman.

24:59
Speaker 10

I

25:00
Speaker 10

serve over our economic development, community development, and also recreation and parks team, as a senior vice president, deputy city administrator.

25:08
Speaker 10

As the speaker had mentioned, we are so early in the process, so we have not seen or have not finalized any of the site plan,

25:14
Speaker 10

work that

25:15
Speaker 10

we would look at to understand the transportation related

25:19
Speaker 10

impacts associated

25:20
Speaker 10

with this project. And so that will come as part of the due diligence and design process.

25:25
Speaker 10

As it relates to

25:27
Speaker 10

the remaining uses of the property, we are reserving two and a half acres of that property for a fire station,

25:33
Speaker 10

that we've talked about on occasion

25:36
Speaker 10

as we've needed to expand our fire service. And of course, we can talk more about kind of that in the future. As it relates to the remainder of the property uses, we all also have had some things change since we acquired the property.

25:49
Speaker 10

Two acquisitions

25:50
Speaker 10

in particular,

25:51
Speaker 10

one is the Crabapple Middle School property adjacent to Roswell Area Park, and then we also acquired the additional 25 acres along the Spruill property. And so as we start to evaluate park land and park property and our needs into the future, that also plays into

26:05
Speaker 10

our overall evaluation

26:06
Speaker 10

of property

26:08
Speaker 10

and how we can put it to its highest and best use.

26:11
Speaker 10

And so that is why we brought the recommendation forward to allow the RDA to start negotiations

26:17
Speaker 10

over this next phase of the property, again, while retaining two and a half acres for the purposes of a fire station.

26:24
Speaker 1

Jeff, is the RDA announced is there anything been announced at this juncture? At this point, they've accepted the letter of intent,

26:31
Speaker 10

from a prospective buyer of that property.

26:33
Speaker 10

We'll be working with the RDA.

26:35
Speaker 10

The next step for us is to formulate an intergovernmental agreement between the city and the RDA that would formulate that would formalize our negotiation process, and we would expect that to be done in October. Has there been any

26:47
Speaker 1

pricing announced or is that still

26:50
Speaker 11

the LOI did indicate that the acquisition would be a $5,000,000 acquisition in the LOI, which is more than one

26:57
Speaker 10

property for. And again, we are retaining two and a half acres of that property. So we're selling less property for more, than what the city purchased.

27:06
Speaker 1

Thank you, Jeff.

27:07
Speaker 1

Thank you, Brandon.

27:12
Speaker 1

Nancy.

27:14
Speaker 1

Next, next speaker, please, ma'am.

27:16
Speaker 7

Kathleen

27:17
Speaker 7

Reeder.

27:23
Speaker 7

Kathleen

27:24
Speaker 7

Reiter?

27:29
Speaker 1

Well, we'll come back to Kathleen after and just go to the next speaker. We'll come back to her.

27:35
Speaker 7

Janet

27:36
Speaker 7

Russell. Welcome, Janet.

27:50
Speaker 12

Me.

27:51
Speaker 12

My name is Janet Russell. I live in Roswell, Georgia.

27:55
Speaker 12

I have a few things. One, first of all, I wanna say thank you to Brenda Orlins who

28:01
Speaker 12

created the Day of Hope a long, long time ago.

28:04
Speaker 12

If you didn't stop by the Day of Hope this past weekend, you missed an amazing event.

28:10
Speaker 12

People from all over Roswell came to get food, haircuts,

28:14
Speaker 12

eye exams, ear exams, be entertained, and have fun.

28:19
Speaker 12

It's what a community does. It takes care of everyone.

28:23
Speaker 12

So Brenda,

28:24
Speaker 12

I saw you briefly. She's a working dog over there all the time. She's not a little miss Prissy in the corner,

28:30
Speaker 12

and she doesn't know I'm thanking her, but I remember when she started it, so thanks.

28:35
Speaker 12

Secondly, the Roswell Farmers Market is exploding with success, finally.

28:41
Speaker 12

It was here for years, and then it got kicked out by the previous mayor, and it went to the church, which was nice, but it was dead. Thanks to Christine Hall, who pushed for it, who's

28:52
Speaker 12

loves farmers markets, and Christina de Victor, who owns Fellowes, who's taken it over as a volunteer because it is just the place to be on Saturday mornings. It's so much fun.

29:02
Speaker 12

If you think there's a birth problem in America, you won't know that at the farmers market because everybody's got a kid.

29:09
Speaker 12

I'd also like to thank you for honoring Hispanic Heritage Month,

29:13
Speaker 12

except that you didn't,

29:14
Speaker 12

so I can't.

29:17
Speaker 12

You didn't say one word about Hispanic Heritage Month at all in this city.

29:23
Speaker 12

As a Hispanic myself,

29:26
Speaker 12

I take exception to that.

29:29
Speaker 12

We had three programs

29:30
Speaker 12

on a weekend at the Cultural Arts Center that were ticketed events, but there has been nothing to appeal to families to discover Hispanic heritage, culture

29:40
Speaker 12

at all.

29:42
Speaker 12

They make up 18 to 20% of our population in Roswell,

29:46
Speaker 12

and they need to be recognized.

29:48
Speaker 12

We have Hispanic Heritage employees in this city.

29:51
Speaker 12

They need to be recognized.

29:53
Speaker 12

I recommended that last year. It was not taken. My family name is Hidalgo from the eighth century in Spain. I meant to bring my coat of arms tonight, but I forgot.

30:04
Speaker 12

It's funny when you don't look Hispanic, but you learn what people really think about them.

30:09
Speaker 12

And I have heard lots of comments,

30:11
Speaker 12

and I want you to know that I would really love to be able to thank you next year for honoring Hispanic Heritage Month because you seem to have forgotten two years in a row.

30:22
Speaker 12

Thirdly, I went to the commission meeting on Tuesday night, and you talked about slow down Roswell.

30:28
Speaker 12

It's a new idea in town, and I love it.

30:32
Speaker 12

However, the man who did the transportation put up a list of 12 areas where we want people to slow down, and the print was pretty small and I couldn't see it. But I did notice that they were always

30:42
Speaker 12

named

30:43
Speaker 12

subdivisions

30:45
Speaker 12

or country clubs where people are speeding.

30:49
Speaker 12

They forgot about the part of town that's here that was invented before country clubs.

30:54
Speaker 12

We don't have HOAs. We don't have anybody to be our speaker

31:00
Speaker 12

or cry into a bullhorn that we need attention for slowing down. And if you want a good example, right here is Norcross Street.

31:07
Speaker 12

From Highway 9 all the way to Holcomb Bridge, there are hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of residences,

31:13
Speaker 12

and no one pays attention to them. Nobody. There's only one sidewalk on one side, and it's pitiful.

31:20
Speaker 12

So here's my idea because, you know, I think outside the box.

31:23
Speaker 12

In Europe, there are now cities where all two lane roads are designated as 30 kilometers.

31:29
Speaker 12

That's 18 miles an hour.

31:31
Speaker 12

I think Roswell should designate all two lane roads, all two lane roads,

31:36
Speaker 12

no more than 20 miles an hour. And we don't give a damn if you like it or not. 20 miles an hour, whether it's a subdivision

31:43
Speaker 12

or Norcross Street.

31:45
Speaker 12

Pretty easy to enforce. You're on a two lane road. It's 20 miles an hour.

31:50
Speaker 12

20 is plenty, and I think that should be the logo.

31:53
Speaker 12

Slow down and smell the roses.

31:56
Speaker 12

And there's more to life than picking up speed in Roswell.

31:59
Speaker 12

Slow down. You don't need an engineer. You don't need a commission. You don't need a consultant,

32:04
Speaker 12

and you don't need to spend $450,000

32:07
Speaker 12

implementing things.

32:09
Speaker 12

As an aside on King Street, the people that live on King Street have been asking for slowdown barriers for years, and they were told if they wanted them, they had to pay for them themselves. But now the city's willing to pay for them everywhere else. So I think you need to start in the middle and go out. If you choose to live in a subdivision that has 700 houses, you're gonna have at least 1,400

32:30
Speaker 12

cars.

32:31
Speaker 12

You can't complain. Because remember, you are not sitting in the traffic. You are the traffic.

32:36
Speaker 12

Thank you.

32:37
Speaker 1

Thank you, Janet.

32:39
Speaker 1

Greg, are you here?

32:41
Speaker 1

You wanna did you wanna address the

32:44
Speaker 1

the, question on

32:47
Speaker 1

slowdown in Roswell?

32:54
Speaker 13

Yeah. Good evening. Welcome, Greg. Yeah. So as we described in the committee meeting last week,

33:00
Speaker 13

we are taking a phased approach. So phase one is looking at specific neighborhoods.

33:05
Speaker 13

And then as part of,

33:06
Speaker 13

so phase two, we'll be looking at roads, like miss Russell mentioned, like Norcross Street,

33:12
Speaker 13

Thompson Place, those types of roads as well. And so we'll be developing a matrix for that next year.

33:17
Speaker 1

What was the 10 that were you can you,

33:20
Speaker 1

share with why the 10 were chosen or the why they were chosen?

33:25
Speaker 13

Yeah. So the 10,

33:27
Speaker 13

were basically

33:28
Speaker 13

chosen out of a matrix that was developed,

33:30
Speaker 13

looking at,

33:32
Speaker 13

five different factors,

33:33
Speaker 13

speeding,

33:35
Speaker 13

traffic,

33:36
Speaker 13

proximity to, shopping shopping areas,

33:40
Speaker 13

sidewalks, and then, the poverty rate.

33:43
Speaker 13

So all the data and everything that was collected and analyzed,

33:46
Speaker 13

created, like, a weighted score that resulted in,

33:50
Speaker 13

these top 10 neighborhoods

33:51
Speaker 1

or top 11. Thanks, Craig. Can you address the speed limit on roads?

33:58
Speaker 13

So dropping the speed limit

34:00
Speaker 13

or changing the speed limit would

34:03
Speaker 13

make our enforcement

34:05
Speaker 13

invalid.

34:06
Speaker 13

Our our,

34:08
Speaker 13

the speed limits have to go through GDOT for approval,

34:11
Speaker 13

so there's not much we can do with that. And GDOT is who?

34:16
Speaker 1

Georgia Department of Transportation. So the state of Georgia

34:18
Speaker 1

does what in terms of speed in relation to the city of Roswell or other municipalities?

34:23
Speaker 13

They have ultimate authority on us to,

34:26
Speaker 1

enforce speeds on our roads. And that is you're not talking about state roads. You're talking about local roads. All roads. Yep. Thank you, Craig. Yep. Thanks so much.

34:36
Speaker 1

Nancy?

34:38
Speaker 1

Next speaker, please, ma'am.

34:41
Speaker 7

David Woodrow.

34:43
Speaker 1

David Woodrow. Welcome,

34:49
Speaker 1

David. Welcome, sir.

34:51
Speaker 1

Thank you.

34:53
Speaker 1

Microphone work? Yes, sir. Great.

35:00
Speaker 1

Yes, sir. I think David have to I think though Randy's gonna if you turn that way, David's gonna tell you, Randy's gonna tell you to come back this way. If you if you would, sir, please please address the mayor and council in Yeah. In what you described. Comments. In what you described.

35:13
Speaker 2

If could you address the mayor and council directly, not the audience?

35:17
Speaker 2

Yes.

35:22
Speaker 1

You probably David, honestly, it probably works gonna work better in the middle because the camera I think, Sonia, if you go over there, you'll lose the camera.

35:30
Speaker 9

Right here, good enough? Perfect. Perfect.

35:34
Speaker 9

I would,

35:35
Speaker 9

I'd like to talk about one

35:38
Speaker 9

one of the greatest achievements

35:40
Speaker 9

that has happened in my thirty one years here in Roswell.

35:44
Speaker 9

I have seen four mayors,

35:47
Speaker 9

and this is the first mayor,

35:50
Speaker 9

the first council

35:51
Speaker 9

that had the political will

35:54
Speaker 9

to bring forth a bond referendum

35:56
Speaker 9

to invest in our city.

35:59
Speaker 9

I go around to a lot of other sister cities.

36:02
Speaker 9

And when I moved here, Roswell was the crown jewel

36:06
Speaker 9

of North Fulton County.

36:08
Speaker 9

Our parks were first rate.

36:11
Speaker 9

And over time, with no investment,

36:14
Speaker 9

the parks and the city stagnated.

36:17
Speaker 9

This administration

36:19
Speaker 9

had the willpower

36:20
Speaker 9

to bring forth to the voters that bond issue which passed overwhelmingly.

36:25
Speaker 9

We now have first class pay for our,

36:29
Speaker 9

our public safety officers.

36:32
Speaker 9

We have a full time fire department,

36:36
Speaker 9

and we have money now to invest in our parks and recreation.

36:41
Speaker 9

I hope that this is not the last investment

36:45
Speaker 9

that we have

36:46
Speaker 9

in our public safety, in our fire department,

36:49
Speaker 9

and in our parks and recreation.

36:54
Speaker 9

I think that that has all been

36:57
Speaker 9

a result of stagnation

37:00
Speaker 9

over twenty seven years.

37:02
Speaker 9

I've heard people talk about neglect

37:04
Speaker 9

on the East Side of our city.

37:07
Speaker 9

That didn't happen in the last four years. That happened over twenty seven years

37:13
Speaker 9

of neglect,

37:16
Speaker 9

and it's time that it is addressed.

37:18
Speaker 9

I was in attendance at the candidate forum the other evening,

37:23
Speaker 9

and,

37:24
Speaker 9

one candidate

37:25
Speaker 9

one candidate spoke

37:28
Speaker 9

about the greatest need that Roswell had, and that is to impact in a positive way the East Side of our city.

37:35
Speaker 9

And I applaud our mayor for doing that.

37:40
Speaker 9

There have been missteps.

37:41
Speaker 9

I would be the first to

37:43
Speaker 9

admit that.

37:45
Speaker 9

We all don't agree on everything,

37:48
Speaker 9

but,

37:49
Speaker 9

I think that, hopefully, there are lessons learned

37:52
Speaker 9

in that respect.

37:55
Speaker 9

The other thing

37:57
Speaker 9

that really upsets me and concerns me

38:00
Speaker 9

is political theater.

38:03
Speaker 9

I saw a political theater within the city of Roswell,

38:06
Speaker 9

people

38:07
Speaker 9

haranguing

38:08
Speaker 9

from a street corner.

38:10
Speaker 9

I I heard innuendo.

38:13
Speaker 9

I heard inference,

38:14
Speaker 9

frankly,

38:15
Speaker 9

of financial

38:18
Speaker 9

misbehavior,

38:19
Speaker 9

perhaps,

38:20
Speaker 9

on the part of the city of Roswell.

38:23
Speaker 9

Any of those

38:24
Speaker 9

formally elected or, in some cases, unelected

38:28
Speaker 9

officials

38:29
Speaker 9

would know that that is not possible.

38:32
Speaker 9

We are audited by the state of Georgia, and we are audited by the federal government.

38:38
Speaker 9

Here's what I wanna know. I am on the Roswell

38:42
Speaker 9

Employee Benefits

38:43
Speaker 9

Pension Committee.

38:45
Speaker 9

When I went to my first meeting,

38:47
Speaker 9

I was shocked

38:49
Speaker 9

to find out

38:50
Speaker 9

that fifteen years ago,

38:52
Speaker 9

the city

38:53
Speaker 9

capped the pension fund. A good idea.

38:57
Speaker 9

New employees went into a defined

39:00
Speaker 9

benefit plan. Good idea.

39:02
Speaker 9

The next thing that I found

39:04
Speaker 9

is that there was either

39:06
Speaker 9

total neglect,

39:07
Speaker 9

a lack of financial sophistication,

39:11
Speaker 9

or kick the can down the road.

39:13
Speaker 9

The city of Roswell today,

39:15
Speaker 9

which I suspect most citizens do not know this,

39:19
Speaker 9

and I encourage you to find out about it. Today, the city of Roswell has a $25,000,000

39:26
Speaker 9

underfunded

39:27
Speaker 9

pension plan.

39:28
Speaker 9

That didn't happen

39:30
Speaker 9

in the last four years, the last three and a half years.

39:33
Speaker 9

That happened under two previous administrations.

39:37
Speaker 9

I personally would like to know what in the world they were thinking.

39:41
Speaker 9

And if I am a employee

39:44
Speaker 9

of the city of Roswell,

39:46
Speaker 9

I feel a lot better with this mayor and council

39:49
Speaker 9

looking into that. A fix is in place.

39:53
Speaker 9

And what I'd like to know people ask, well, gee, where's the money going here in Roswell,

39:59
Speaker 9

with the bond money and so on? What I wanna know is where did the $25,000,000

40:05
Speaker 9

go in the two previous administrations?

40:09
Speaker 9

Mayor and council, thank you very much. And again,

40:12
Speaker 9

I encourage all the citizens to learn a little bit more about that and put a little less trust in former officials.

40:20
Speaker 1

Thank you. Thank you, Dave. Thank you so much.

40:27
Speaker 1

Bill Gottschell, CFO, would you like to address the,

40:32
Speaker 1

the,

40:33
Speaker 1

$27,000,000

40:34
Speaker 1

current

40:36
Speaker 1

pension

40:37
Speaker 1

issue and how that was discovered and what the plan is and how it's currently being addressed?

40:43
Speaker 4

Yes, mister mayor. Thank you. Appreciate the opportunity to address this question.

40:49
Speaker 4

In 2011,

40:50
Speaker 4

the pension plan was frozen to new participants

40:54
Speaker 4

and the existing participants were allowed to continue to accrue service and benefits in the pension plan. So their formula allowed them to continue to work towards a fully funded retirement

41:03
Speaker 4

if they stayed long enough to earn the credits necessary.

41:07
Speaker 4

At that time, when the year on the pension plan was frozen,

41:11
Speaker 4

the, unfunded liability was 10,100,000

41:15
Speaker 4

As way of background, I probably audited over 200 pension plans before my career here at D'Citi as an audit partner with a prestigious local firm.

41:24
Speaker 4

Of those, probably 50 are defined benefit plan. So it's not unusual to have an unfunded liability of some form. Dollars 10,100,000.0

41:31
Speaker 4

relative to value this plan seem reasonable.

41:34
Speaker 4

However,

41:35
Speaker 4

by 2024,

41:36
Speaker 4

as our commenter mentioned,

41:38
Speaker 4

net debt liability had grown to $25,700,000

41:42
Speaker 4

At the same time,

41:44
Speaker 4

the payment in 2011

41:46
Speaker 4

was $3,600,000

41:48
Speaker 4

and by 2024 had risen to $5,700,000

41:52
Speaker 4

So even though we were paying more money into the plan,

41:55
Speaker 4

the liability was still increasing.

41:57
Speaker 4

This is not usually something you see unless you have something really strange going on in your population.

42:03
Speaker 4

I don't have an answer to why that has happened,

42:07
Speaker 4

but generally,

42:08
Speaker 4

what I've seen is a lack of

42:12
Speaker 4

understanding how pension plans work, how assumptions increase the liability,

42:17
Speaker 4

how required payments are maybe not being met to the full extent they should be met.

42:21
Speaker 4

But to grow to the level that it's grown is unusual.

42:25
Speaker 4

Some steps that we have taken, if you're interested,

42:28
Speaker 4

as you know, this council identified this problem,

42:32
Speaker 4

sometime in '23.

42:33
Speaker 4

And in '24,

42:35
Speaker 4

moved the management of the plan from GMEBS, which is part of the Georgia Municipal Association,

42:40
Speaker 4

to self directed. In other words, as mister Woodrow referred to, we have a benefits committee

42:46
Speaker 4

comprised of staff elected officials,

42:49
Speaker 4

or elected officials designation.

42:51
Speaker 4

And that group works to manage a plan, oversee the actuaries, and work hand in hand with me and the auditors

42:58
Speaker 4

to review all of the assumptions that

43:01
Speaker 4

result in the accretion of the liability

43:03
Speaker 4

as well as the determination of the payment that needs to be made.

43:07
Speaker 4

From this work, we've come up with a plan

43:10
Speaker 4

that eventually will get to in about two years, we'll start working toward a fifteen year plan at three point one to $3,400,000

43:17
Speaker 4

a year to work that liability down to zero.

43:21
Speaker 4

Just this year, we paid 25 points, 5,600,000.0

43:25
Speaker 4

into the plan to try to reduce the liability.

43:28
Speaker 4

In 2026, we've already reduced that number by 600,000

43:32
Speaker 4

to 5,000,000.

43:33
Speaker 4

And we expect to continue to see that progress so that in somewhere in about sixteen years, we've unwound that liability.

43:39
Speaker 1

Bill's mister mister Gautja, let me ask you a couple questions. Was the city of Roswell subsidizing other pension plans?

43:48
Speaker 4

Again, hard to answer definitively without doing a a detailed review of of their plan, which we never really had access to.

43:55
Speaker 4

But there were 300 cities participating

43:58
Speaker 4

in the GMEPS plan, many of those cities much smaller than Roswell at a much different profile.

44:04
Speaker 4

So the assumptions that might have worked for them

44:07
Speaker 4

were harmful to us and that it created a higher liability.

44:12
Speaker 4

What we had seen prior to our withdrawals that I believe we were the largest city left in the GMA plan and the GMEBS plan.

44:19
Speaker 4

So we were,

44:21
Speaker 4

in essence, subsidizing

44:23
Speaker 4

through the use of their assumptions

44:25
Speaker 4

and their projected payouts and so forth. And,

44:29
Speaker 1

by the way, just FYI, so just that any employee or past employee knows who has a pension,

44:35
Speaker 1

the fund is protected

44:37
Speaker 4

and the pensions will be paid out. Correct? Yes, sir. The fund is protected by a federal program,

44:43
Speaker 1

and we are still paying we're paying all benefits timely and in their full amount, and we expect to do so through the end of the plan. So the good news is everybody's safe that has a pension. Yes, sir. Let me ask you, as somebody who's as a professional auditor who has audited over 200 types of these kind of funds before, why was it this discovered between 2011

45:02
Speaker 1

and 02/2023?

45:04
Speaker 4

I can only speculate to the answer, but my experience is a combination of two things.

45:10
Speaker 4

Being your financial management

45:12
Speaker 4

was not reviewing the plan assumptions,

45:14
Speaker 4

so we have an actuary.

45:16
Speaker 4

Let me make sure I can foster and foster.

45:19
Speaker 4

And they prepare these reports. They do all the actual analysis,

45:23
Speaker 4

but it's still management's responsibility

45:25
Speaker 4

to make sure the assumptions that they picked and by management, I mean myself and my predecessors,

45:30
Speaker 4

that they've picked the proper assumptions, they've applied them properly, and there are no obvious arithmetic

45:35
Speaker 4

or other types of of mistakes in the calculation.

45:38
Speaker 4

And then the audit firm is supposed to come back behind

45:42
Speaker 4

and challenge both the actuary

45:44
Speaker 4

and financial management of the organization.

45:47
Speaker 4

I believe these challenges at each of these steps did not happen,

45:51
Speaker 4

not sufficiently to catch this problem. And I will say,

45:55
Speaker 4

our auditor this year

45:57
Speaker 4

basically held our feet to the fire to explain all the assumptions,

46:01
Speaker 4

and we were able to get through that review process,

46:04
Speaker 4

and they agreed that we should be lowering our payment based on the actuarial study.

46:09
Speaker 1

And as a line item on a budget on an annual budget being paid this is being paid to the general fund. Correct? Yes, sir. So it's approved by the elected officials. Correct? Yes, sir. So the general the elected elected officials should be familiar with what the line item is? Yes, sir. And so that is that that number stayed correspondingly

46:26
Speaker 1

the same over the years?

46:28
Speaker 4

It has actually increased over the years until it hit to 5,600,000

46:32
Speaker 4

in 2024.

46:33
Speaker 1

It stayed 5.6 in '25, and we're bringing it down to 5,000,000 in '26. Thank you, mister Gottschall. Appreciate your time. Counseling here, thoughts, comments, or questions on this matter of customer sales?

46:42
Speaker 14

Thank you, mister Gottschall. I don't wanna put you on the spot. So if you wanna say I'll get back to you on this question, that's fine.

46:48
Speaker 14

But,

46:49
Speaker 14

it has been my experience that when a plan like that is switched from defined benefit to defined contribution, there are strategies

46:57
Speaker 14

that can be

46:59
Speaker 14

implemented

46:59
Speaker 14

specifically to capitalize as it were

47:02
Speaker 14

that that particular

47:04
Speaker 14

value at that time and avoid the growth.

47:07
Speaker 14

Have you are you familiar with those kinds of strategies? And do you have any idea why those wouldn't have been used at that time? I am familiar with those strategies.

47:14
Speaker 4

You can use annuities. You can use secured borrowings.

47:18
Speaker 4

You can use structured payouts. There's a lot of financial engineering you can do around that

47:22
Speaker 4

that preserves the participants'

47:24
Speaker 4

benefits that they were promised when the plan was put in shape in place.

47:28
Speaker 4

I cannot answer why they didn't do that. Thank

47:32
Speaker 1

you. Thank you, mister Sells. Any other thoughts, comments, or questions from counsel? Thank you, mister Sells. I appreciate your time. Thank you, mister Woodrow, for your comments, sir. Nancy, next speaker, please, ma'am.

47:42
Speaker 7

Claire Barnes.

47:44
Speaker 1

Welcome, Claire.

47:56
Speaker 15

Good evening.

47:58
Speaker 15

I'm a read this.

48:00
Speaker 15

Mayor and council has held numerous meetings throughout Roswell to gain consensus at the polls to pass bond referendums worth millions of dollars.

48:07
Speaker 15

Mayor and council have announced plans for an entertainment district that is described as larger than the Battery

48:13
Speaker 15

Complex that is currently home to Atlanta Braves. One of the targeted locations would be the current location of Kimberly Clark headquarters, the Georgia 400 off Holcomb Bridge Road in Roswell.

48:24
Speaker 15

To to date, there has been zero public meetings anywhere in Roswell to discuss the targeted intent and scope of this project.

48:31
Speaker 15

In fact, all the meetings to date have been behind closed doors.

48:35
Speaker 15

Is it appropriate for mayor and council to take any further actions at this point without public input be in meetings similar to the public's,

48:42
Speaker 15

solicitations of the for the board the bond scope?

48:46
Speaker 15

What actions should be taken now and after the election by the any candidate seeking election or reelection to mayor and council?

48:55
Speaker 15

And then this council, unlike,

48:58
Speaker 15

councilman

48:59
Speaker 15

Zapata, does not have our backs.

49:01
Speaker 15

You have forgotten that you represent us, not the mayor or vice mayor. There are several recent blatant examples. All of you have played word games when asked direct questions.

49:11
Speaker 15

This is a new election cycle. The incumbents are asking for the vote. The candidates are asking for our vote. All of you need to give us a reason why.

49:19
Speaker 15

Mister mayor, please stop using the word trust. It pegs the cringe of megar. Trust is earned, not given.

49:25
Speaker 15

Thank you.

49:26
Speaker 15

Thank you, Claire.

49:29
Speaker 1

Jeff, do you wanna address any of the comments around,

49:32
Speaker 1

yes, sir, customer sales? Yes, sir.

49:39
Speaker 14

So I would like to say a couple of things about this.

49:42
Speaker 14

The first is that

49:44
Speaker 14

for as long as I've lived in Roswell,

49:47
Speaker 14

we have, as a city, waited to see what showed up at Com Dev. By the time it gets there,

49:54
Speaker 14

the buyer of the property that is commercial is already got his plan, and they are asking us for some kind of change to the zoning,

50:02
Speaker 14

some kind of new use of the property, or they're not talking to us at all because they've already made this choice.

50:07
Speaker 14

What we have done is gone to landowners and

50:12
Speaker 14

and found out what their status is, what their plans are. We're talking with that group all the time as a city,

50:18
Speaker 14

city, and we're also talking to developers. There are many of those that will never

50:23
Speaker 14

reach fruition for any number of reasons.

50:26
Speaker 14

So we are talking to potential

50:28
Speaker 14

investors in Roswell, and we're talking to those who have property in Roswell.

50:33
Speaker 14

And there are lots of conversations that never

50:35
Speaker 14

come to fruition.

50:37
Speaker 14

But this is quite a different way to do economic development than what we did in the past. Quite a different way. And what that means is we can be much more deliberate and specific about trying to find things that

50:49
Speaker 14

maximize

50:51
Speaker 14

speaking to the bow in a '92,

50:53
Speaker 14

we have a very, very small and limited amount of commercial property in Rossell that's even eligible for commercial use.

51:00
Speaker 14

And so when those opportunities present themselves,

51:03
Speaker 14

I personally

51:04
Speaker 14

ran on

51:06
Speaker 14

not having more vape shops, not having more stand alone apartments, not standing

51:11
Speaker 14

not having more tattoo parlors. Those are all

51:14
Speaker 14

those are all great businesses in existing facilities, perhaps,

51:18
Speaker 14

but they don't create new jobs. And so what we have done is taken that process.

51:24
Speaker 14

So there is nothing to tell. It would just as it did in the past when it came to a decision about a particular land use and a particular plan,

51:34
Speaker 14

which has now made its way through conversations and it looks like it may come to fruition,

51:40
Speaker 14

then we in the due course of the process that always happened in Roswell, it comes before the public.

51:47
Speaker 14

K? So what

51:49
Speaker 14

what what you are what what people are believing is some behind the door

51:56
Speaker 14

discussion to create these opportunities is trying to match these up. And when they reach a certain level, then there's something to talk about. But in many of these cases, we're under NDAs while that particular,

52:07
Speaker 14

developer discusses and plays with their plans and figures out what will work. And so that's the difference in my view. Back to you, mayor.

52:14
Speaker 1

Thank you, mister Sales. Council member Sales, mister Leatherman.

52:18
Speaker 10

I think just a couple of additional points,

52:21
Speaker 10

in some of the challenge. And we've talked about this in our quarterly,

52:24
Speaker 10

report backs as it relates to economic development, which, the next quarterly report back will be at the October,

52:30
Speaker 10

as we've gone through those cycles.

52:32
Speaker 10

The other challenge that council member Sells, I think, was referencing

52:35
Speaker 10

is the challenge of landowners who may not,

52:39
Speaker 10

be in a position to want to sell at this point in time or not necessarily see the vision around their property.

52:45
Speaker 10

We've got a number of challenges where,

52:47
Speaker 10

properties have been owned, outright for twenty, thirty, and forty years. And in some cases, when you look to redevelop those parcels, whether it's

52:55
Speaker 10

two acres, three acres, ten, forty acres, got a tremendous amount of infrastructure challenges,

53:01
Speaker 10

for the private marketplace. And that includes transportation loads, that includes

53:04
Speaker 10

stormwater infrastructure that have to be brought up to code. And when you start to look at the cash flow that that property is bringing in now today versus through a redevelopment process when it would potentially go offline from a revenue perspective for two to three years through the development process, it makes it very, very challenging for existing land owners who may own the property debt free to engage in that redevelopment

53:26
Speaker 10

process. And so that is part of the negotiation that we are in when various,

53:31
Speaker 10

land becomes available or

53:33
Speaker 10

negotiations become initiative

53:35
Speaker 10

initiated by the city is is trying to find the right blend of opportunity for the landowner, opportunity for the commercial,

53:43
Speaker 10

reinvestment,

53:44
Speaker 10

as well as ways that the city can help support projects. Hill Street right next door is a great example of that where we're creating opportunity with a land exchange agreement,

53:53
Speaker 10

also through parking and parking arrangements and other ways that we are facilitating and helping to support that project that started out as a very small one acre project and has blossomed into a six acre mixed use development. And that has truly taken a number of years, taken us the last two and a half years really to facilitate that conversation to the point where we are now getting ready to finalize the paperwork,

54:15
Speaker 10

finalize the development agreement, and launch into the construction of that project.

54:19
Speaker 10

And so while they are complicated, we do have other opportunities, the Bowen and ninety two,

54:24
Speaker 10

property. I will say this is the second time that we've taken a a run at a redevelopment project. About a year ago, we authorized the RDA to negotiate on this property, and those negotiations fell through. To council member sales point, sometimes we find the right matrix,

54:38
Speaker 10

in the commercial corridors, in the commercial areas where we can find reinvestment.

54:42
Speaker 10

And sometime we don't, and we had to go back through the drawing board. And so the Bowen And 92 property is yet another good example of that ongoing effort

54:50
Speaker 10

in our redevelopment.

54:51
Speaker 10

I would just add one other, point is we are working for the first time right now, and there are members, behind me here that I recognize that came to our first comprehensive plan, our growth plan update, focused a lot of time and energy in the last two cycles on our residential

55:07
Speaker 10

neighborhoods.

55:08
Speaker 10

We've got really, really good policies in place protecting our residential neighborhoods now, and now we're working on that 18% of our community. The commercial corridors are on Highway 9, Holcomb Bridge Road, the East side of town,

55:20
Speaker 10

to push together both our economic development strategy and our growth strategy for the first time in one planning document that will help inform our transportation investments,

55:30
Speaker 10

stormwater investments,

55:31
Speaker 10

and other policies in our UDC around economic development. So a tremendous amount of work happening as it relates to economic development in our community right now.

55:40
Speaker 14

Thank you. Thank you, mister Locust. Yes. Council member Sales. Just one more. I'm gonna I'm gonna take what you just said, Jeff, and turn it into an example, if I could. I'm gonna try not to say too much because this is private business, but we have a particular piece of property that everybody in this room would be very excited to see redeveloped

55:55
Speaker 14

that we have been talking to that land owner. The land owner has no debt on the property. They own it freehold.

56:01
Speaker 14

It produces multiple millions of dollars a year

56:04
Speaker 14

to if that land is disturbed, if when when they do anything to redevelop it, and we've been talking to that that landowner,

56:12
Speaker 14

there is, as I believe that the estimate we have here in the city is it's $8,000,000

56:17
Speaker 14

in stormwater

56:18
Speaker 14

remediation

56:19
Speaker 14

for that one piece of property.

56:21
Speaker 14

So this particular this particular landowner would give up cash flow, free cash flow, no debt of multiple millions of dollars,

56:29
Speaker 14

have to spend $8,000,000

56:31
Speaker 14

to start from scratch.

56:33
Speaker 14

And so

56:34
Speaker 14

our challenge

56:35
Speaker 14

is to find

56:37
Speaker 14

an opportunity

56:38
Speaker 14

that can make that

56:41
Speaker 14

sufficiently large enough new opportunity where you can cover what that particular landowner needs for his property as well as this the stormwater remediation. And that's the trick. That's the challenge, and that's what we're doing.

56:55
Speaker 1

Thank you, council member Sells. Nancy, next speaker, please.

57:00
Speaker 7

Emily

57:01
Speaker 7

Smith.

57:05
Speaker 1

Welcome, Emily.

57:16
Speaker 1

Welcome.

57:17
Speaker 16

I'm Emily Smith.

57:19
Speaker 16

I am also a resident of the neighborhood with Waverly Hall and in the back, Habersham Downs.

57:25
Speaker 16

So, again, we're,

57:28
Speaker 16

I arrived here today because I'm also curious to learn more about this development at 92 And Bowen.

57:34
Speaker 16

I think,

57:35
Speaker 16

my concern as somebody who lives there

57:38
Speaker 16

is just envisioning

57:40
Speaker 16

what that traffic

57:41
Speaker 16

flow is going to look like on 92 And Bowen.

57:45
Speaker 16

My understanding of this property

57:48
Speaker 16

is that

57:50
Speaker 16

there would

57:51
Speaker 16

be minimal road access from Bowen Road,

57:55
Speaker 16

into this property,

57:56
Speaker 16

and then

57:57
Speaker 16

92 would be the main brunt in and out.

58:01
Speaker 16

From there,

58:02
Speaker 16

if anyone were to need to travel westward, it would be impossible

58:06
Speaker 16

until unless one

58:08
Speaker 16

went east and then cut back.

58:11
Speaker 16

So it would sound like another turnaround

58:13
Speaker 16

would need to be cut in

58:17
Speaker 16

to alleviate that sort of issue.

58:19
Speaker 16

So

58:20
Speaker 16

just curiosity on how that is supposed how that would work,

58:24
Speaker 16

and how the letter of intent

58:26
Speaker 16

what what kind of

58:29
Speaker 16

details all get

58:30
Speaker 16

brought into that?

58:32
Speaker 16

Understanding also, so retaining 2.5 acres for the fire station. Great.

58:38
Speaker 16

Originally, I know we're we're all here because we were excited about a park. I understand the conversation about

58:47
Speaker 16

best use for the for the city's property, and possibly that's not the most

58:53
Speaker 16

efficient

58:54
Speaker 16

use. $500,000

58:55
Speaker 16

is what was being touted that the city was making a profit now or had

59:01
Speaker 16

gained from their initial investment.

59:04
Speaker 16

So just curiosity,

59:06
Speaker 16

what happens to that $500,000?

59:08
Speaker 16

Does it now become the cut out the cut through or the turnaround for on '92?

59:12
Speaker 16

Just curious about what would happen to the $500,000.

59:17
Speaker 16

And,

59:18
Speaker 1

I think that might be it. So thank you. Thanks, Emily. Thank you. Would you like an answer to any of those questions?

59:24
Speaker 16

If you have them, that'd be fabulous. Absolutely.

59:28
Speaker 1

You wanna address the financial question first,

59:31
Speaker 1

Bill?

59:38
Speaker 4

Bill, on the face of it, it yeah. Yes. We are making a nominal $500,000

59:44
Speaker 4

so called profit,

59:46
Speaker 4

but we are also carving out two plus acres for our fire station.

59:50
Speaker 4

So if you were to start to do the math, you would allocate some cost basis to the fire station. I think the more important point is we

59:58
Speaker 4

acquired this property through general fund, cash from the general fund

01:00:02
Speaker 4

of $5,000,000.

01:00:03
Speaker 4

We're retaining two and a half acres, and we're getting five if everything closes and like

01:00:09
Speaker 4

council member sales said, you know, there's not a 100% possibility that this matures. But if it does, then we will receive $5,500,000

01:00:18
Speaker 4

of cash in.

01:00:19
Speaker 4

So we don't have a basis to repay.

01:00:22
Speaker 1

We have a basis to replenish. That's right. So, actually, the purchase was 4 and a half and the sale is 5, but the $5,000,000 will go back in the general fund. 4 and a half came out of the general fund. $5,000,000 goes back in the general fund. And then as you point, you also cost allocate

01:00:37
Speaker 1

that you're taking two and a half acres two to two and a half acres of the six and a half, seven acres of property and allocating that cost towards the towards the deal. Right. As a as a business owner, you would have to do that to report for tax gains and all that kind of stuff. As a city,

01:00:51
Speaker 4

we're looking at what was our original investment

01:00:54
Speaker 4

and what's the cash return on that investment, and we're getting all of our cash back plus 500,000.

01:00:59
Speaker 1

And it goes back into general fund, which offsets obviously

01:01:03
Speaker 1

tax liability.

01:01:04
Speaker 1

Yes, sir.

01:01:05
Speaker 1

And then there was another question, I think, that was related around traffic.

01:01:11
Speaker 1

Hope that's Greg

01:01:13
Speaker 1

or Jeff?

01:01:15
Speaker 1

Aaron?

01:01:16
Speaker 10

Yeah. And I can have my, traffic and transportation associates follow me up on this. The the site plan, as I mentioned earlier, is not complete. So that will be the next step,

01:01:25
Speaker 10

and all of our departments, including the transportation department, our stormwater department, water, others, will review the site plan as it relates to our code.

01:01:33
Speaker 10

They will provide comment feedback on that. And, depending on the existing zoning and what's required,

01:01:39
Speaker 10

that may become they may, depending,

01:01:41
Speaker 10

come back before this body for review as well as an, developments would, in our normal process. Emily mentioned several things. I just heard where can you respond to any of those things that she was mentioning? Yeah. In some cases, it's too early to tell right now on exactly where ingress, egress would happen, how it would take place, what the traffic impacts are. That those are elements that our traffic department and our transportation department would look at as part of their normal plan review.

01:02:05
Speaker 1

The developer will be responsible for providing information like trips traveled. Do you know any of those things? We don't. So you don't know any of that at this juncture. Not at this juncture. Does anybody in the city know that at this juncture? No. We don't. Okay. So just we can't comment on it because we truly don't know. That's true. Fair enough. Thanks. Thanks, Jeff.

01:02:21
Speaker 1

Thank you, sir.

01:02:23
Speaker 1

Nancy, next next speaker, please, ma'am. Roy Rauber Shaw.

01:02:28
Speaker 1

Welcome, Roy.

01:02:35
Speaker 1

Hello, sir.

01:02:40
Speaker 17

Tonight,

01:02:41
Speaker 17

I was talking with some neighbors, and they have begged me to put aside the city stuff for tonight. So I'm gonna bring up a rather parochial issue, for our neighborhood. First off, thank you for putting together a grant for the US Department of Transportation

01:02:56
Speaker 17

to bring three major projects to our city. And,

01:03:00
Speaker 17

since one of them is in my neighborhood on my street, it is a very welcome thing.

01:03:06
Speaker 17

I and they have read all of the internal forums and everything about it, and we understand it's too early to have done any scientific,

01:03:13
Speaker 17

engineering studies and that sort of thing. But they're reaching for trying to understand

01:03:18
Speaker 17

what was actually in the grant that went to the federal government. What sort of options were laid out in terms of,

01:03:27
Speaker 17

right away and that sort of thing. And they're trying to even speculate at where their right of ways,

01:03:33
Speaker 17

are gonna fall and those sorts of things. So if we can just understand

01:03:37
Speaker 17

from the grant,

01:03:39
Speaker 17

what was included in the grant and the options for laying the sidewalk out in the in our neighborhood in the grant.

01:03:47
Speaker 1

Thank thank you, Roy. Yes, sir.

01:03:52
Speaker 1

Yeah. David, you wanna address it first? Yes, sir. Councilman Johnson. Since I live eight houses from mister Riversall,

01:03:58
Speaker 18

and we this sidewalk is

01:04:01
Speaker 18

affecting my street as well where I live. We will stay in the right away. So sidewalk will be in the right away. David,

01:04:08
Speaker 1

were you involved in this grant?

01:04:11
Speaker 1

Slightly. Can you address it at all?

01:04:13
Speaker 18

No. I mean, this is,

01:04:15
Speaker 18

this is why I ran. You know, that's why I'm sitting here in this seat is because I wanna protect the citizens of this, city.

01:04:23
Speaker 18

Roxburgh Drive is one of the most dangerous neighborhood roads in Roswell,

01:04:27
Speaker 18

out outside of maybe Oak Haven.

01:04:30
Speaker 18

And,

01:04:31
Speaker 18

you know, we

01:04:32
Speaker 18

actually, I've gotta give a lot of credit to you, mister,

01:04:35
Speaker 18

Mayor Wilson, because

01:04:37
Speaker 18

originally, I think we were looking at $400,000

01:04:40
Speaker 18

for

01:04:41
Speaker 18

$2,000,000

01:04:42
Speaker 18

in grant and we bumped it up to a million to get to or 2,000,000 to get, $8,000,000

01:04:48
Speaker 18

in grant money, which will provide sidewalks for one of the most dangerous roads in Roswell to protect its citizens.

01:04:53
Speaker 18

And it's through this safe streets for all grant. If you look on the city's website, you can find the Safe Streets for All program

01:05:00
Speaker 18

and Roxborough Drive was number seven on the list.

01:05:03
Speaker 18

A lot of the roads that were on the list like Pine Grove Road, we're already attacking with t splash three funds,

01:05:09
Speaker 18

or sorry, t splashed two funds and t splashed one funds.

01:05:13
Speaker 18

And, I mean, we are

01:05:15
Speaker 18

actively trying to build the infrastructure for the city that was neglected

01:05:20
Speaker 18

for years to protect the pedestrians

01:05:23
Speaker 18

and the cyclists and the motorists of our city. Because I don't believe someone should ever die in a car wreck or be hit by a car in our city ever again. And that is my ultimate goal and

01:05:34
Speaker 18

that's why we applied for this grant.

01:05:36
Speaker 1

Thank you, David.

01:05:38
Speaker 1

Little can we a little more technical. I think Rory asked a couple of technical questions on the grant.

01:05:43
Speaker 1

No. No. Yeah. Craig, can you answer those please, sir?

01:05:47
Speaker 13

Yeah. So as far as the Safe Streets for All grant,

01:05:50
Speaker 13

right now we are still planning to hear back hopefully by December,

01:05:54
Speaker 13

whether we are selected. And those were for,

01:05:57
Speaker 13

like, basically traffic calming on Mimosa, Wave Tree, and then Roxburgh.

01:06:04
Speaker 13

As far as the design, we have not started in design yet at this point. Once once we get notification if we do win the grant, then we'd start the design process and and really get into the technical aspects of of the overall design. Great great point. I think Rory asked a couple of technical questions. So would the design process have public input? Would there be a public input process? There would be public input because especially if we do get the federal funds, that'll be a required component

01:06:28
Speaker 18

of that. So then the public will be able to weigh in on the design? Yep. Outstanding. Thank you, Greg. Yeah. Thank you. Thank you, Roy. Yes, sir. Councilman Johnson. And I will go door to door on everyone who lives on Roxborough Drive where this sidewalk could go to make sure I get their input. What about Milosin and Wave Tree? Maybe those are a lot more houses, but probably, I can do that from

01:06:49
Speaker 18

definitely, Wavetree. But Mimosa might get a little tough. So

01:06:53
Speaker 1

Yeah. Nancy, next speaker, please, ma'am.

01:06:56
Speaker 7

Roman Percak.

01:06:58
Speaker 1

Roman, welcome, sir. I know you're leaving tomorrow.

01:07:01
Speaker 1

I owe you some time.

01:07:06
Speaker 1

Or Wednesday. Sorry.

01:07:09
Speaker 1

Yes, sir. You're leaving Wednesday.

01:07:12
Speaker 19

I'm on Friday. Friday. Okay.

01:07:14
Speaker 1

Sorry.

01:07:16
Speaker 1

No. It's okay.

01:07:22
Speaker 19

I'm here to talk about

01:07:29
Speaker 19

safety,

01:07:30
Speaker 19

safety action.

01:07:33
Speaker 19

You're canceled.

01:07:34
Speaker 19

You did excellent job

01:07:37
Speaker 19

to improve the fire department

01:07:41
Speaker 19

and improve

01:07:42
Speaker 19

the police department.

01:07:45
Speaker 19

And now

01:07:46
Speaker 19

in five minutes,

01:07:48
Speaker 19

somewhere there's an accident

01:07:50
Speaker 19

of fire,

01:07:51
Speaker 19

they are there.

01:07:53
Speaker 19

They're working for emergency,

01:07:57
Speaker 19

not

01:07:59
Speaker 19

for improvement of public

01:08:01
Speaker 19

safety.

01:08:05
Speaker 19

And they need to respond for emergency

01:08:09
Speaker 19

only. And my police is doing police have some

01:08:12
Speaker 19

no other parts for investigation

01:08:15
Speaker 19

and so on.

01:08:19
Speaker 19

To improve

01:08:21
Speaker 19

the safety,

01:08:23
Speaker 19

you have a project.

01:08:32
Speaker 1

Would you all help Roman put that up for me, please, sir?

01:08:37
Speaker 1

Definitely not Bill.

01:08:51
Speaker 19

Okay. You have a project

01:08:53
Speaker 19

who cost million of dollars

01:08:55
Speaker 19

and safety action plan.

01:08:58
Speaker 19

Save streets.

01:09:01
Speaker 19

I can open you can everyone can get it from the

01:09:11
Speaker 19

All the accidents

01:09:13
Speaker 19

that happened on the street.

01:09:32
Speaker 2

Use a microphone, please. Thank you, sir. Sorry. So

01:09:37
Speaker 19

Roswell,

01:09:38
Speaker 19

and it's we have plenty

01:09:40
Speaker 19

of black stuff. Everything what's happened here around the city.

01:09:48
Speaker 19

Investment money, but it doesn't help to say,

01:09:53
Speaker 19

maintain what we have today.

01:09:58
Speaker 19

Not what we'll have in the future because

01:10:00
Speaker 19

you're not maintaining

01:10:02
Speaker 19

the streets,

01:10:03
Speaker 19

design streets, the traffic streets.

01:10:08
Speaker 19

I have some

01:10:09
Speaker 19

show and tell

01:10:11
Speaker 19

To give you some examples,

01:10:15
Speaker 19

I took pictures.

01:10:20
Speaker 2

Can we, can you show me those pictures, please? Are those city streets that you're showing?

01:10:26
Speaker 19

I will show also cities.

01:10:27
Speaker 2

Okay. Alright.

01:10:29
Speaker 19

Just just on the street when it was paved because I put the tape to show there is a turn.

01:10:38
Speaker 19

Here

01:10:39
Speaker 19

we

01:10:39
Speaker 19

have other picture.

01:10:44
Speaker 19

Tape still exists.

01:10:46
Speaker 19

That is

01:10:55
Speaker 19

Sorry. So we can see here the street is still the same sign, but it's not the same place. Here is just here,

01:11:02
Speaker 19

this side of the street so everyone can go and see.

01:11:07
Speaker 19

The same place

01:11:09
Speaker 19

oh, it's here.

01:11:12
Speaker 19

We have

01:11:14
Speaker 19

a junction here

01:11:17
Speaker 19

coming from

01:11:18
Speaker 19

Atlanta Street

01:11:19
Speaker 19

going back to Alfredo Street.

01:11:22
Speaker 19

There's no sign here

01:11:24
Speaker 19

that is a junction.

01:11:27
Speaker 19

Not to left, not to right to the street.

01:11:29
Speaker 19

Nobody's coming here. It's very difficult to see

01:11:33
Speaker 19

there's something going on here.

01:11:36
Speaker 19

Some signs need to be there. There are plenty in the city. Here's another

01:11:41
Speaker 19

picture.

01:11:43
Speaker 19

Also here,

01:11:44
Speaker 19

there

01:11:45
Speaker 19

there's a junction here,

01:11:47
Speaker 19

but there's no any signs here on the street that there's a junction.

01:11:52
Speaker 19

Basic. And of junk of this junction accident happened.

01:11:57
Speaker 19

You cannot see it from here. There's any junction where even because there's no sign even.

01:12:06
Speaker 19

Here's another picture.

01:12:07
Speaker 19

You're probably familiar with that.

01:12:10
Speaker 19

When you're coming

01:12:11
Speaker 19

from the South on Atlanta Street

01:12:14
Speaker 19

and turning here, there's no any sign

01:12:18
Speaker 19

which indicated where the traffic is. Now I know because I'm living here, but the tourists homecoming or people who buying the car and not familiar with the city, there's no signs.

01:12:34
Speaker 19

Now we're going further.

01:12:38
Speaker 19

Here we show we see and you know everyone know what it is.

01:12:41
Speaker 19

We see sunshine

01:12:43
Speaker 19

after we pass everything, the signs.

01:12:47
Speaker 19

Give you instruction, whatever you need to do.

01:12:54
Speaker 19

Coming closer again, we have now

01:12:57
Speaker 19

traffic signs that no traffic signs that pedestrian will go inside, but basically

01:13:04
Speaker 19

in the city don't exist.

01:13:06
Speaker 1

Roman, thank you so much for your time. I really appreciate it. Thank you, sir. And I just want to show you one picture. Okay?

01:13:14
Speaker 19

Those are the signs

01:13:17
Speaker 6

that

01:13:19
Speaker 19

there's traffic light Yes, sir. That is on the tree. Nobody can see it. Yes, sir. They do not block, but it's the bus

01:13:28
Speaker 19

stop here.

01:13:30
Speaker 19

This is all over the city.

01:13:34
Speaker 19

And I'm sorry, but

01:13:36
Speaker 19

you don't maintain Thank you, Roman. This stuff in to invest so much money Thank thank you, Roman. Thank you.

01:13:43
Speaker 1

Greg or Sharon, do you wish to address

01:13:45
Speaker 1

the sign and,

01:13:47
Speaker 1

some of the issues that Roman's brought up? Thank you, Roman. Thank you so much for your time.

01:13:54
Speaker 1

Thank you, sir.

01:13:59
Speaker 1

Sharon, anything from your end as well or you guys will see no.

01:14:04
Speaker 1

Welcome, Greg.

01:14:06
Speaker 13

Yeah. So as far as the signs, I think he was alluding to some of the intersection ahead signs. We do not have a lot of those signs.

01:14:13
Speaker 13

They are not required signs, and we we try to reduce the sign clutter as much as we can and only have the required

01:14:22
Speaker 13

signs in the right way.

01:14:23
Speaker 13

From a maintenance perspective, I mean, I'll be happy to talk to Roman. If there's anywhere

01:14:28
Speaker 13

or any signs that,

01:14:30
Speaker 13

need attention, we'll be happy to take care of those.

01:14:33
Speaker 1

Clean it up. Right? Yeah. If there's tough things to be cleaned up, clean it up? Yeah. Thank you very much. Thank you, Roman. Thank you for bringing it to our attention. Thank you, sir.

01:14:42
Speaker 1

Nancy, next speaker, please, ma'am. Martha Powell.

01:14:46
Speaker 1

Welcome, Martha.

01:14:51
Speaker 2

Before the next speaker comes up, I wanna make make mention of one item. I think we require or at least we are asking people to provide us with any any item for display

01:15:01
Speaker 2

to our city clerk prior to the meeting.

01:15:04
Speaker 2

Now I did recognize that that was a city document, and I asked about city streets. And so, obviously, those are within the public domain.

01:15:12
Speaker 2

So we we allowed,

01:15:14
Speaker 2

the latitude for those to be displayed.

01:15:17
Speaker 2

But we have put in place a requirement that any items for display

01:15:21
Speaker 2

be provided to our city clerk in advance of the meeting. So thank you very much.

01:15:26
Speaker 2

Welcome.

01:15:28
Speaker 20

My name is Martha Powell.

01:15:30
Speaker 20

I live in Roswell for 40,

01:15:34
Speaker 20

and I live in Waverly Hall. So there's several of us that are here speaking about the surprise that

01:15:40
Speaker 20

we

01:15:41
Speaker 20

saw, that I felt when I saw the post on social media about

01:15:45
Speaker 20

the change of property

01:15:47
Speaker 20

in,

01:15:48
Speaker 20

92 In Bowen Road. So like others have said, that the last

01:15:53
Speaker 20

we heard about it,

01:15:55
Speaker 20

sort of had our expectations,

01:15:57
Speaker 21

that it was in the park system.

01:15:59
Speaker 20

And so to see the change was a surprise,

01:16:02
Speaker 20

and also to see the way it was headlined was,

01:16:06
Speaker 20

I just would call it a PR fail

01:16:08
Speaker 20

that,

01:16:12
Speaker 20

the city's gonna do this and to boot

01:16:14
Speaker 20

getting all this money.

01:16:16
Speaker 20

And then just last week, we found out, you know, the changes with our millage and

01:16:21
Speaker 20

the

01:16:22
Speaker 20

tax structure,

01:16:24
Speaker 20

that we will pay more taxes even though the rate's not changing, but property rates. So it feels like wham, wham, wham.

01:16:31
Speaker 20

But

01:16:32
Speaker 20

listening to the other comments, and I know you've heard them,

01:16:36
Speaker 20

the last project, the concerns were the road, In N Out on Bowen Road. Y'all know these roads? They're not very long.

01:16:43
Speaker 20

From

01:16:44
Speaker 20

the Corner of 92,

01:16:46
Speaker 20

there's an,

01:16:48
Speaker 20

entrance and exit for CVS

01:16:50
Speaker 20

right across the road.

01:16:52
Speaker 20

Down the road, there's a Japanese church. There are homes, homes, homes, and that abuts to another residential property. So the space is not long

01:17:01
Speaker 20

and there is,

01:17:02
Speaker 20

a yield

01:17:05
Speaker 20

section.

01:17:06
Speaker 20

So just thinking how any traffic will get in and out,

01:17:11
Speaker 20

one thing. And then the second part of that is

01:17:14
Speaker 20

not knowing

01:17:16
Speaker 20

the ideas for design of

01:17:19
Speaker 20

retail space and a fire department, which part of the property will each will each be on. And just imagining, if I live in Waverly Hall and the closest fire department to me is on Bowen or right there in Bowen Road in 92, but they've gotta go that way to come around to go this way back to our neighborhood

01:17:37
Speaker 20

or to a large section that is served by the Jones Road Firehouse.

01:17:41
Speaker 20

That just seems

01:17:43
Speaker 20

impossible.

01:17:46
Speaker 20

So the same things that were concerns,

01:17:50
Speaker 20

and this came up before about retail space

01:17:53
Speaker 20

or,

01:17:54
Speaker 20

office space,

01:17:56
Speaker 20

is just the space to get in and out. There's not a left turn

01:18:00
Speaker 20

coming from that property onto 92.

01:18:03
Speaker 20

Can't really turn left coming onto Bowen Road from that space.

01:18:08
Speaker 20

So it's a big circle and then the u turns right there at 92,

01:18:13
Speaker 20

which we see regularly.

01:18:15
Speaker 20

So

01:18:16
Speaker 20

those are concerns.

01:18:18
Speaker 20

Those things have not changed since the last,

01:18:21
Speaker 20

project was presented.

01:18:23
Speaker 20

Another question so you're aware of that. And I think it is a surprise

01:18:28
Speaker 20

to those of us that live near there

01:18:31
Speaker 20

that we're looking at the same situation,

01:18:34
Speaker 20

but things haven't changed and it was not approved last time. So what has changed

01:18:39
Speaker 20

in this time?

01:18:42
Speaker 20

Something that I've thought about.

01:18:45
Speaker 20

What about zoning?

01:18:46
Speaker 20

Now I can see that a fire department

01:18:50
Speaker 20

and a park system,

01:18:52
Speaker 20

they're civic connected.

01:18:54
Speaker 20

What is that zoning piece?

01:18:57
Speaker 20

Before, if it was for parks, that really doesn't seem to match retail.

01:19:01
Speaker 20

So I'm curious about that.

01:19:06
Speaker 22

I think

01:19:08
Speaker 20

those those are the general things. I do appreciate

01:19:12
Speaker 20

hearing the comments from staff and from council

01:19:15
Speaker 20

about some of the ways conversations are held regarding

01:19:19
Speaker 20

acquiring

01:19:23
Speaker 20

commercial space.

01:19:24
Speaker 20

I appreciate hearing that. I've learned learned things from it, but it

01:19:28
Speaker 20

raised a little flag for me that

01:19:33
Speaker 20

as a resident in that area, what was gonna be park space is now being pursued as commercial space.

01:19:41
Speaker 20

It's just

01:19:43
Speaker 20

processing and things at how it is received

01:19:46
Speaker 20

as a resident right there.

01:19:51
Speaker 20

Again, I appreciate the comments from others. I've learned a lot from people that have spoken to answer questions

01:19:57
Speaker 20

and the comments that have come from council on how some things are done. But I'm gonna leave with the same thing that here's a project. The space has not changed. It was voted down before,

01:20:08
Speaker 20

what are the changes now that seem to

01:20:11
Speaker 20

be the possibility that it could float?

01:20:14
Speaker 20

Thanks.

01:20:15
Speaker 1

Martha, thank you.

01:20:17
Speaker 1

Before you answer the question, Ellen,

01:20:19
Speaker 1

I'm gonna should I put this in your hands as a city attorney or should I put it in Com Dev's hands? Jeff, we keep calling on you. You

01:20:26
Speaker 1

wanna talk about what this current zoning is for this property? Jackie or Jeff? Jackie, you wanna answer the current zoning question?

01:20:42
Speaker 1

Jackie, let everybody know who you are.

01:20:45
Speaker 1

You're the unsung hero, so

01:20:47
Speaker 23

I'm Sam.

01:20:49
Speaker 1

Oh, this. We don't want her to be empty. Jackie Deibel, deputy director of community development.

01:20:54
Speaker 24

The park the property at Bowinn in 92 is zoned Parkway Village.

01:20:58
Speaker 24

It was rezoned to that a couple years ago.

01:21:01
Speaker 24

It when it was rezoned,

01:21:04
Speaker 24

there were conditions placed on it,

01:21:07
Speaker 24

related to the right and, the

01:21:10
Speaker 24

property or the portion on Bowen Road, which ended up indicating where the the project that was in play for rezoning

01:21:18
Speaker 24

left based on the fact that, I think it was right in, right out only allowed on Bowen, which ended up, where the applicant

01:21:26
Speaker 1

could not do the project. And, but the the zoning is currently Parkway Village? Correct.

01:21:32
Speaker 1

Thank you, Jackie. Which is commercial? Yes. It's commercial zoning. Commercial zoning. Thank you, Jackie, so much. Alec, customer of sales.

01:21:39
Speaker 14

Miss Powell, I may have misspoken or I left the wrong impression.

01:21:43
Speaker 14

We're not really acquiring property per se. We're more matchmaking property with opportunity.

01:21:49
Speaker 14

In this particular case, we did buy the property.

01:21:53
Speaker 14

But in general, it's not so much it's not that we're acquiring property to flip it. And

01:22:00
Speaker 14

I was actually on your side of the dais when that

01:22:03
Speaker 14

was brought the last time.

01:22:05
Speaker 14

It was approved and the developer left the project.

01:22:11
Speaker 14

The developer turned down the developer left the project. It was approved, I think, with conditions.

01:22:20
Speaker 14

Well, okay. So but in any event, it was the developer's choice to leave. It wasn't that it was turned down per se.

01:22:27
Speaker 14

Thank you very much.

01:22:30
Speaker 14

That does matter.

01:22:31
Speaker 14

I was on your side of the table and I was in that whole conversation

01:22:34
Speaker 14

and it was approved by the council with conditions.

01:22:38
Speaker 14

The developer

01:22:40
Speaker 14

abandoned the project because of the conditions perhaps.

01:22:44
Speaker 1

Thank you very much.

01:22:46
Speaker 1

Yes.

01:22:48
Speaker 1

Nancy, next speaker, please, ma'am.

01:22:50
Speaker 7

Sally McKenzie.

01:22:59
Speaker 1

And, Sally, before you come up here,

01:23:01
Speaker 1

friends from Waverly will be happy to meet with you additionally. So I know you have a lot of questions

01:23:07
Speaker 1

and I think there's a lot to be on still unfolded.

01:23:12
Speaker 1

David, is it in the hands of the RDA right now? Yes.

01:23:15
Speaker 25

Currently, it's being negotiated

01:23:18
Speaker 25

by the Roswell Development Authority, not by the city. Sorry, Sally.

01:23:22
Speaker 1

So as we as we learn information,

01:23:25
Speaker 1

what transpires?

01:23:28
Speaker 25

If something does come forward that's acceptable to the RDA from an economic development and job creation perspective,

01:23:35
Speaker 25

then they can present it back to the city

01:23:38
Speaker 25

to see if the city is willing to accept it.

01:23:41
Speaker 25

If there are some changes to the current zoning that would be required, that will obviously come. There'll be public hearings, and you'll be able to speak at that time. But at Waverly Hall Friends, we're happy to come see you and meet with you separately as well as a group.

01:23:55
Speaker 1

Yes, ma'am. So sorry, Sally. Forgive me.

01:24:02
Speaker 26

I have things that,

01:24:05
Speaker 26

documents that are in the public domain, I. E.

01:24:11
Speaker 26

Am I allowed to use the overhead?

01:24:15
Speaker 7

Mike.

01:24:21
Speaker 2

So we had we had put in a,

01:24:25
Speaker 2

stipulation

01:24:25
Speaker 2

that anything that would be displayed or presented

01:24:29
Speaker 2

in this forum or or a public forum

01:24:32
Speaker 2

would be provided to a city park in advance. And that's that's done for several reasons.

01:24:37
Speaker 2

That that's done for several reasons.

01:24:40
Speaker 2

Obviously,

01:24:41
Speaker 2

that is to and and, ultimately, the city is the one responsible for this meeting tonight. And so we wanna make sure that anything that is seen,

01:24:50
Speaker 2

has has undergone some level of review.

01:24:53
Speaker 26

I understand that.

01:24:57
Speaker 1

Mhmm.

01:25:04
Speaker 26

Have the right to kick me out. If I play audio that is

01:25:09
Speaker 26

a

01:25:10
Speaker 26

have the right to kick me out. It's all it's just priceless.

01:25:15
Speaker 26

Okay. So well, that wasn't why I'm here to talk. But anyway,

01:25:23
Speaker 1

Sure.

01:25:37
Speaker 3

Just

01:25:49
Speaker 26

Welcome, Sally. Hi. My name is Sally McKenzie, and,

01:25:54
Speaker 26

I wanted to

01:25:56
Speaker 26

speak tonight regarding

01:25:57
Speaker 26

a couple, or four things,

01:26:00
Speaker 26

that are hanging out there,

01:26:03
Speaker 26

regarding

01:26:04
Speaker 26

Mimosa and the conversation

01:26:06
Speaker 26

and information surrounding it.

01:26:09
Speaker 26

Four four points of misinformation.

01:26:12
Speaker 26

The first one is regarding the State Historic Preservation Organization and their

01:26:17
Speaker 26

involvement in this process.

01:26:20
Speaker 26

Mayor and council

01:26:22
Speaker 26

and several city officials have

01:26:25
Speaker 26

continually,

01:26:26
Speaker 26

stated that the State Historic Preservation

01:26:30
Speaker 26

Organization

01:26:31
Speaker 26

was involved in this process.

01:26:32
Speaker 26

They were

01:26:34
Speaker 26

not.

01:26:35
Speaker 26

They were not

01:26:37
Speaker 26

involved in this process.

01:26:38
Speaker 26

You will see I can't show everybody else, but you all will see,

01:26:42
Speaker 26

an email communication from Stacy Reiche

01:26:45
Speaker 26

of the,

01:26:47
Speaker 26

Department of Community Affairs.

01:26:50
Speaker 26

So that is number one. That is not true. That is misinformation

01:26:55
Speaker 26

being perpetuated by several members of the city council and,

01:26:59
Speaker 26

staff. Number two, the tree permitting.

01:27:03
Speaker 26

It was stated that it was handled appropriately and that way the,

01:27:09
Speaker 26

it was handled correctly. The tree permit

01:27:12
Speaker 26

was not signed.

01:27:14
Speaker 26

The tree permit that is on file, that is not signed, is dated

01:27:18
Speaker 26

06/20

01:27:18
Speaker 26

06/04/2024,

01:27:21
Speaker 26

and it expired in six months. So number one, it was not signed, and number two, it had expired. By by the time they started to do do demolition on

01:27:30
Speaker 26

Mimosa Hall. So that's

01:27:32
Speaker 26

misinformation

01:27:33
Speaker 26

number two,

01:27:37
Speaker 26

and it's being perpetuated.

01:27:39
Speaker 26

So when it's perpetuated, when people double down, it goes from being misinformation

01:27:43
Speaker 26

to

01:27:44
Speaker 26

lies.

01:27:46
Speaker 26

Number three, HPC was not a part of the process,

01:27:50
Speaker 26

as legally required.

01:27:53
Speaker 26

Several members of council

01:27:55
Speaker 26

staff are saying that HPC was

01:27:58
Speaker 26

a part of the process.

01:28:02
Speaker 26

Again, I can't put this, even though this is in the public domain, on

01:28:07
Speaker 26

in June

01:28:09
Speaker 26

when,

01:28:10
Speaker 26

at actually, the last open mic night,

01:28:13
Speaker 26

I believe it was mister Malone who presented

01:28:15
Speaker 26

at our open mic night and stated that,

01:28:21
Speaker 26

the city presented

01:28:23
Speaker 26

the Founders Hall plan Founders Park plan to the HBC on September 12.

01:28:29
Speaker 26

The law and they said that they it was, according to

01:28:33
Speaker 26

that they followed the,

01:28:36
Speaker 26

process.

01:28:37
Speaker 26

The law

01:28:39
Speaker 26

that we are that we are what's in our charter,

01:28:42
Speaker 26

states that we are the city is supposed to submit,

01:28:47
Speaker 26

any proposed

01:28:48
Speaker 26

changes. There's a difference between presenting and submitting. Submitting,

01:28:52
Speaker 26

means that something is gonna be considered or reviewed.

01:28:56
Speaker 26

This did not happen. The HPC was never told they had forty five days to respond and that their

01:29:04
Speaker 26

word was final.

01:29:06
Speaker 26

This is the one law, the only law

01:29:09
Speaker 26

in our charter, in our code

01:29:11
Speaker 26

that protects city owned historic assets. So that is the third,

01:29:16
Speaker 26

bit of misinformation that is being perpetuated.

01:29:20
Speaker 26

It is not true. The HPC did not participate

01:29:23
Speaker 26

in the process

01:29:25
Speaker 26

per the requirements. And to back that up, when I met, and along with other several concerned residents with the mayor,

01:29:31
Speaker 26

Steve Malone, Jeff Leatherman,

01:29:34
Speaker 26

Lee Hills, David Davidson,

01:29:36
Speaker 26

and I'm not sure who else was in the room, it was very made very clear

01:29:40
Speaker 26

that

01:29:41
Speaker 26

at that point,

01:29:43
Speaker 26

city staff was not aware that this requirement even

01:29:47
Speaker 26

existed.

01:29:49
Speaker 26

But once they became aware, they still doubled down on it. So that's number three. Number four is that stakeholders

01:29:55
Speaker 26

stakeholders

01:29:56
Speaker 26

were involved in this process.

01:29:58
Speaker 26

That is not true.

01:29:59
Speaker 26

There was one charrette held in March

01:30:02
Speaker 26

2024,

01:30:03
Speaker 26

I believe,

01:30:05
Speaker 26

in which the president of Friends of Mimosa and Friends of Bullock and one or two other

01:30:12
Speaker 26

folks were invited.

01:30:15
Speaker 26

Legally,

01:30:17
Speaker 26

stakeholders in a public asset

01:30:19
Speaker 26

are are the public, everybody.

01:30:23
Speaker 26

If you wanna

01:30:24
Speaker 26

get a little more refined,

01:30:26
Speaker 26

stakeholders would be would be,

01:30:28
Speaker 26

people who live in this historic district.

01:30:31
Speaker 26

But truly, it's a public asset. It belongs to everybody.

01:30:35
Speaker 26

So to say that stakeholders were involved

01:30:38
Speaker 26

is not true,

01:30:39
Speaker 26

and it's very it's frustrating to

01:30:43
Speaker 26

hear the city and our elected officials continuing to double down. And, again, when you double down on something you know is not true,

01:30:50
Speaker 26

it's a lie. Thank you very much.

01:30:58
Speaker 1

Thank you, Sally.

01:31:00
Speaker 1

Customer Johnson?

01:31:01
Speaker 18

Yeah. I have a, some correspondence

01:31:04
Speaker 18

from Stacy I wanna mispronounce her name. Reich,

01:31:08
Speaker 18

if I remember Hold on. Hold on. She'll sadly sit down. Oh, okay.

01:31:12
Speaker 18

So this corresponds between Stacy Reich, environmental review and preservation planning program manager, Georgia Department of Community Affairs.

01:31:21
Speaker 18

Terry Gillette, who is

01:31:24
Speaker 18

director of museum services, senior architectural historian of New South Associates, a woman owned business

01:31:30
Speaker 18

a woman owned small business in Stone Mountain, Georgia.

01:31:33
Speaker 18

And Dina Bush, who is a city employee, who is

01:31:37
Speaker 18

and director Malone, please correct me if I say anything,

01:31:40
Speaker 18

wrong. But I'd just like to read these correspondents,

01:31:44
Speaker 18

to the public.

01:31:45
Speaker 18

09/27/2024

01:31:48
Speaker 18

from Stacy Reek to Terry Gillet.

01:31:51
Speaker 18

Good morning, Terry. I hope this email finds you safe and well after last night's storm. Have a question about the ARPA project submitted to the ER new projects queue is and this is sorry. This is about section one zero six review for Founders Park phase one project. Is there any other federal agency, other than treasury, involved in this project? EPA maybe through CW or DWSRF,

01:32:12
Speaker 18

USACE

01:32:13
Speaker 18

through permitting, LWCF

01:32:14
Speaker 18

funding through NPS or something different,

01:32:17
Speaker 18

or is it an ARPA grant that's being administered by the Governor's Office of Planning and Budget? Thanks, Stacy.

01:32:23
Speaker 18

And then

01:32:25
Speaker 18

sorry. It's printed over two page. Miss Gillette responded, hey, Stacy. We didn't have any damage from the storm. I hope you didn't either. City of Roswell had the following response to your question. This is a state and local fiscal recovery funds based on the revenue replacement on the American Rescue Plan Act of of 2021.

01:32:40
Speaker 18

Other than Treasury, there is no other federal or state agency funding involved in this funding.

01:32:45
Speaker 18

Then it goes on,

01:32:47
Speaker 18

to Terry from Stacy. Thanks for the update, Terry. I'm glad to hear everything is well with you. Since that's the case, there's no other federal agency involved in this project through funding, permitting, licensing,

01:32:59
Speaker 18

etcetera.

01:32:59
Speaker 18

There is no federal trigger for a section one zero six review by our office under the National Historic Preservation Act. For more information on which ARPA projects trigger

01:33:09
Speaker 18

an s one zero six review and which do not, please visit the advisory council on historic preservation's

01:33:15
Speaker 18

ACHP website at it says a link that's 500 words long that I'm not gonna read. I'm copying Roger Orgis here because he coordinates the ARPA projects for the OPB so that he'll be aware as well as this one. Thank you, Stacy.

01:33:29
Speaker 18

Then it comes back,

01:33:32
Speaker 18

and it says,

01:33:34
Speaker 18

from Terry to Stacy. Thanks, Stacy. So just to clarify, Roswell is free to move forward without its project, without Shippo con consultation.

01:33:44
Speaker 18

Hey, Terry. There is no trigger for review by our office in 106.

01:33:48
Speaker 18

I've deleted the project materials

01:33:52
Speaker 18

from our project tracking system.

01:33:55
Speaker 18

Thanks, Stacy.

01:33:58
Speaker 1

This is Say that again, please. Yeah.

01:34:01
Speaker 18

There's no trigger for review by our office under section one zero six. I've deleted the project materials from our project tracking system. So if I'm correct, director Malone,

01:34:11
Speaker 18

we submitted

01:34:13
Speaker 18

materials for this project

01:34:15
Speaker 18

to the to the state of Georgia, Shippo,

01:34:18
Speaker 18

and they've deleted it out of their system because they do not need to review this project. It does not hit any trigger.

01:34:26
Speaker 18

So

01:34:27
Speaker 18

from

01:34:28
Speaker 18

Dina to Terry,

01:34:31
Speaker 18

Thanks, Terry. Good news. Is there anything else we need to be aware of from a culture size by following our own local regulation?

01:34:37
Speaker 18

And there's other stuff that's not important to this. Hey, Dina. Yes. It is good news. From what Stacy said, it seems this project requires no interaction with Shippo,

01:34:46
Speaker 18

and I cannot think of anything else you would need from a cultural resource perspective

01:34:50
Speaker 18

besides adhere to local regulations that you said.

01:34:54
Speaker 1

That's it. And if miss McKenzie would like these correspondents, they'll be more than willing for her to have them. Okay. Thanks, Thanks, council member Johnson. Council member sales, did you were you saying so? No. Thanks. I just wanna make sure that,

01:35:05
Speaker 1

I just wanna make sure that people listen to the responses. That's all. To which responses? To his to his response. Oh, thanks, council member sales.

01:35:14
Speaker 1

Steve? Or yeah. Director Malone of the Parks and Rec.

01:35:21
Speaker 6

Yes. Good evening. Thank you, mayor and council.

01:35:23
Speaker 6

Yes. Council member Johnson, you were exactly right. So as we began the design process with barge contractors,

01:35:31
Speaker 6

we actually had in our scope of work in our signed contract with barge design,

01:35:36
Speaker 6

a piece of historic cultural representation

01:35:39
Speaker 6

that was actually our representative, Terry, who was actually acting as the third party representative

01:35:45
Speaker 6

as part of the scope of work in the design process

01:35:48
Speaker 6

that was there to help guide and take that design delivery

01:35:53
Speaker 6

to SHPO

01:35:54
Speaker 6

for review to determine if section one zero six was triggered. So all of what you read was those correspondence

01:36:00
Speaker 6

that went back and forth between

01:36:02
Speaker 6

our third party consultant

01:36:04
Speaker 6

within the design framework that we were working. That was their sole function as they went through this design and the scope of work and what we were working through. Steven, can I ask you some direct questions? Yes, sir. Kind of you and I haven't talked about this publicly, and I'm having to ask you these questions pointedly.

01:36:20
Speaker 1

So, obviously, this is about some significant trees being cut down on the property.

01:36:24
Speaker 1

Did you know trees are gonna be cut down? Yes, sir. Did the team know trees were gonna be cut down? Yes, sir. Was that communicated?

01:36:32
Speaker 6

Yes. That was communicated. The total number of trees should have been communicated better to this mayor and council. No. That's right. But was it communicated in your mind perhaps was it fantastically communicated?

01:36:43
Speaker 6

Probably could have done better always, but I believe that was part of the design scope. Can I ask you personally? So did you have a historic preservationist

01:36:53
Speaker 1

look at this project? Yes. And who was that? That was our consultant, Terry, through, New South. And also because somebody else that looked at this as a historic preservationist on staff. Correct? You, our historic assets manager, who's on staff with us, was part of the process. And what was her perspective on this project?

01:37:09
Speaker 6

As we stated earlier, when we went through the presentation specifically as it related to the parking lot design, we did go through a revision and a rework of that design specifically based on some of those

01:37:21
Speaker 6

comments and questions that were brought up by our third party and our staff. Were you happy that the trees were cut down?

01:37:28
Speaker 1

No, sir. And do you have

01:37:31
Speaker 1

do you have

01:37:33
Speaker 1

do you have,

01:37:35
Speaker 1

do you have

01:37:36
Speaker 6

a rendering of what this project is gonna look like? Yes, sir. Has that been presented to the city? It has not gone out to the public yet, but, for those that wanna see it, it'll be uploaded on the roswellconnections.com

01:37:47
Speaker 1

site as well as it'll be displayed on-site. Have you guys done anything in terms of informing the public in terms of what's been done at past at Mimosa or Bullock in terms of kinds of projects or scope over the last hundred years?

01:37:58
Speaker 6

Any project that we would have done would have come before the public and specifically this

01:38:02
Speaker 6

mayor

01:38:03
Speaker 1

and council before we move forward. Have you informed the public of projects that might have been in the nineteen forties done at Bullock or Mimosa?

01:38:09
Speaker 6

Not that I'm aware of,

01:38:10
Speaker 6

sir.

01:38:11
Speaker 1

Thank you, Steven. I appreciate your time very much, sir. I appreciate you.

01:38:15
Speaker 1

Council member Johnson?

01:38:17
Speaker 18

Can you,

01:38:18
Speaker 6

tell us Terry's qualifications again? Just so the public knows. In fact, if it's okay, I think I'd then bike Dina Bush up. She probably has a better knowledge and can actually Can you tell her about who Dina Bush is? Sure. Dina Bush is our historic assets manager. Been with the city for just over four years now, Dina. What are Dina's credentials? Yes. I know she's a historic assets manager, but can you what is what are Dina's credentials? So let me let Dina kinda tell for you. But Dina is the lead of our historic assets group, so she has an extensive knowledge background in that area. Can we, let me make a side comment. Dina, I'm a put a little pressure on you.

01:38:52
Speaker 1

Dina catches a lot of flack from elected officials

01:38:55
Speaker 1

and others because she takes a strong position on preservation in the city of Roswell.

01:39:01
Speaker 6

Go ahead, Dina. Sorry. It is always a very delicate balance, sir.

01:39:08
Speaker 23

Good evening, mayor and council. I appreciate the opportunity to be here. Dina Bush, historic assets manager. I have a little over twenty years experience

01:39:17
Speaker 23

in the museum field with museum operations, interpretation,

01:39:20
Speaker 23

historic preservation.

01:39:21
Speaker 23

Been here for six years,

01:39:23
Speaker 23

master's in, public history,

01:39:26
Speaker 23

which is a broad

01:39:27
Speaker 23

overall,

01:39:28
Speaker 23

training

01:39:29
Speaker 23

in the practice of history outside of academia.

01:39:32
Speaker 23

In terms of to your first question, and Terry Gillet, with New South, this was a sub, worked with,

01:39:40
Speaker 23

our contractor, Barge, to do the design process. It was important for us to bring in that third party consultant

01:39:46
Speaker 23

that could focus on this and specifically address the issue

01:39:50
Speaker 23

of compliance, federal compliance regarding one zero six, but also just making sure that we are doing the right thing in terms of the design process. Her background is in museum studies. It's in historic preservation.

01:40:02
Speaker 23

That is purely what she has done throughout her career.

01:40:07
Speaker 1

Sorry, Dina. May I come back to you? So David, as the chief as the chief legal officer for the city and the city attorney,

01:40:14
Speaker 1

did we violate process or laws related to the charter or any ordinances related to anything in relation to this process? Or did we even come close? Were we kind of were we were we,

01:40:26
Speaker 1

were we nilly willy with the process?

01:40:29
Speaker 25

No, sir.

01:40:30
Speaker 25

Miss McKenzie

01:40:32
Speaker 25

brings up the, HPC.

01:40:35
Speaker 25

There's nothing in the charter that says we have to send anything to the HPC. It's in the code. It's not in the charter. There's nothing in the charter.

01:40:42
Speaker 25

There's nothing in the charter about us sending stuff to the HPC

01:40:46
Speaker 25

for for comment

01:40:48
Speaker 25

is what it says. You submit for comment. They are not the final say. In this city, the mayor and council are always the final say.

01:40:59
Speaker 25

I don't know what the time frame was, but

01:41:02
Speaker 25

there was forty five days between the hearing and the time hearing council approved according to mister Malone. Thank you. Thank you, David. Alright. Gina, thank you. Steven, any other things?

01:41:13
Speaker 1

Anything else? Appreciate it very much. Counsel, thank you, Sally. And I know

01:41:19
Speaker 1

thank you, Sally. I appreciate you bringing this up. I imagine there'll be some other speakers. And my question would be,

01:41:25
Speaker 1

to the other speakers, and I know this is a hot topic. Steven, I don't need you. Oh, I do. Oh, you do? I do. I do. Oh, Alan, go ahead, sir. Sorry. Council yes, sir. Yes, sir. Councilman Sales. I don't get enough time to talk to you anyway. So,

01:41:38
Speaker 14

a couple of things. The word that was used that that we began the demolition of Mimosa,

01:41:43
Speaker 14

that was the words that were used. I wanna I wanna dispel some some,

01:41:47
Speaker 14

bad, bad information, some misinformation

01:41:50
Speaker 14

right now.

01:41:52
Speaker 14

Would you speak briefly to the amount of,

01:41:56
Speaker 14

spending that this mayor and council has done on Mimosa

01:41:59
Speaker 14

in particular,

01:42:00
Speaker 14

and talk about what we had to do in the attic, what we had to do in the Second Floor, what we had to do in the restoration. Would you talk briefly about that? Yes. Definitely. So we have done an analysis over the last four years.

01:42:12
Speaker 6

And throughout that period of time, there's been more investment and spending that's gone into this specific site than any of our other historic assets

01:42:21
Speaker 6

with my time here at the city, which is twenty five years almost.

01:42:26
Speaker 6

With that being said, there were several projects that we've kicked off on this site specifically.

01:42:30
Speaker 6

The first ensuring that the roof does not collapse. We went in and did a lot of,

01:42:35
Speaker 6

engineering aspects so that we can convert that facility into a facility that can host several hundreds of people in it, which required floor joists being redone,

01:42:45
Speaker 6

attic joists being refitted,

01:42:47
Speaker 6

and and going throughout and just touching up the whole space. Additionally, we've done the driveway project that now allows for,

01:42:54
Speaker 6

safety personnel

01:42:56
Speaker 6

access to the rear of the facility, which it didn't before. We've gone into the Second Floor, gotten the certificate of occupancy for the Second Floor, which required a lot of work,

01:43:05
Speaker 6

based on the historic nature of that,

01:43:08
Speaker 6

home. We wanted to make sure to be mindful of that as well. And then recently, this post, recent project, a significant,

01:43:16
Speaker 6

infrastructure

01:43:17
Speaker 6

impact with regards to the stormwater that's actually on-site. That's a huge component,

01:43:23
Speaker 6

within that area as well as now the special event lawn space.

01:43:27
Speaker 14

So

01:43:28
Speaker 14

other than buying the property in 2017,

01:43:30
Speaker 14

was any money spent by the city on that property that you're aware of

01:43:35
Speaker 14

other than buying the property between

01:43:37
Speaker 14

the time it was bought and the time this mayor and council got involved in actually rescuing the property? Significant

01:43:43
Speaker 6

dollars were spent and resources spent to Since when? Since that facility well, we bought in 2017.

01:43:51
Speaker 6

We began these initiatives in twenty twenty two

01:43:55
Speaker 6

ish. I'd have to go back and look at my notes, but Do you have a dollar amount?

01:43:59
Speaker 6

I I can get it for you before the night's end. That's okay.

01:44:03
Speaker 14

And second question sorry. Did you

01:44:07
Speaker 14

yeah, please.

01:44:08
Speaker 21

I I would also note that as soon as this Castro Hills. I mean I'm sorry. You know about the floor? Yes. I'm sorry. Castro Hills. I I got that from California for sale. I know. So sorry.

01:44:17
Speaker 21

We which this administration also paid off the the balance of the loan,

01:44:21
Speaker 21

the debt that was owed on the most of the first year we were in office. I just wanted to bring that up in the financial report. Thank you, Lee. The second thing, the other piece of misinformation that, I would like you to dispel is,

01:44:32
Speaker 14

is it is it fair to say is it true to say that not a single spade of dirt was turned in the

01:44:39
Speaker 14

extant

01:44:40
Speaker 14

Reed Gardens?

01:44:42
Speaker 14

That we did nothing to disturb any of the Reed Gardens except the the water

01:44:46
Speaker 14

facility or the water trough. I suppose that may be part of the Reed Gardens. I'm not sure. But talk about that. It's a great question. There were,

01:44:53
Speaker 6

several good Neil Reed Gardens that were identified on property.

01:44:58
Speaker 6

A significant amount of those gardens were already disrupted prior

01:45:02
Speaker 6

to taking ownership.

01:45:03
Speaker 6

Prime example is on the event lawn space. That's actually a Neil Reed garden, probably one of the most prominent that you'll see throughout the historic

01:45:11
Speaker 6

history of Neil Reed being on property. That was actually an in ground pool when the city took ownership of it. So that garden no longer existed in the capacity in which the Neil Reed era would have been there. We have not significantly

01:45:23
Speaker 6

changed any of the gardens that were in place when we purchased that property as they sit now.

01:45:29
Speaker 14

Right. And,

01:45:30
Speaker 14

we also did work,

01:45:32
Speaker 14

at a number of junctures about the, historic, like, ground disturbance and things like that. Would you speak to that other piece of misinformation, please? Correct. So we've went we've gone through several aspects of what we call

01:45:43
Speaker 6

archeological

01:45:44
Speaker 6

surveys.

01:45:45
Speaker 6

There's phase one and phase two, and you can go through those. And it has everything to do with the probability of there being artifacts on-site.

01:45:54
Speaker 6

As it's part of the,

01:45:56
Speaker 6

comp plan that city has in community development,

01:45:59
Speaker 6

this site is actually labeled as a low probability

01:46:03
Speaker 6

site for artifacts.

01:46:04
Speaker 6

Because of that, we weren't required to go through all the layers of survey work

01:46:12
Speaker 6

that we did, but we did because of our due diligence wanted to do that. And that would have been the phase two archeological surveys that were conducted

01:46:16
Speaker 6

in 2019,

01:46:18
Speaker 6

I believe. Don't quote me off topic.

01:46:20
Speaker 14

And and I believe you answered many of these questions

01:46:24
Speaker 14

at the open mic that the group

01:46:27
Speaker 14

stood up and walked out in mass. You answered most of these questions at that time as well. Tried to answer all the questions that came from the public that night. Thanks, sir.

01:46:36
Speaker 1

Steven, let me ask a separate question just as an aside. Have you met,

01:46:41
Speaker 1

or have you attempted to meet with some of the folks that are upset? I mean, I know there's a there are a lot of people upset about this.

01:46:47
Speaker 6

And and how have you tried to meet with them? The times that we've had communications have been generally been in a more formal setting such as your officer where we sat down and met with a group of individuals.

01:46:58
Speaker 6

But, no, since the project has kicked off, we have not had a formal meeting with any members of the public. Don't mean to run the bus over you. Would you be willing to meet with people at this juncture? Absolutely. I think one of our biggest challenges that we always wanna make sure that we provide all the information we can. We recognize that that's not going to necessarily

01:47:16
Speaker 6

align with everyone's goals and expectations, but we wanna make sure everyone has the accurate information.

01:47:22
Speaker 1

Thank you, Steven.

01:47:24
Speaker 1

Any thoughts? Thank you, sir. Appreciate it. Nancy thank you, Sally. Next speaker, Nancy.

01:47:30
Speaker 7

Thank you, mayor. Before calling the next speaker, I would like to ask if there are any other residents who want to share visuals or documents to please hand them to staff in the back of the room before it is their time to speak.

01:47:39
Speaker 7

Staff in the back of the room before it is their time to speak.

01:47:43
Speaker 1

Thank you, Nancy.

01:47:45
Speaker 7

Next speaker is Kelly Cowan.

01:47:47
Speaker 1

Welcome, Kelly.

01:47:59
Speaker 28

Good evening, mayor and council. Kelly Cowan. 350 Wynn Park Court. You guys probably know my address better than I do now.

01:48:08
Speaker 28

This is not how I wanted to start,

01:48:10
Speaker 28

but since,

01:48:12
Speaker 28

Sally left a few things that were discussed

01:48:14
Speaker 28

afterward,

01:48:16
Speaker 28

I do wanna point out David Davidson. I'm happy to read,

01:48:20
Speaker 28

section nine point one point two, and I think it is definitely worth reading out loud.

01:48:26
Speaker 28

I know we have at least one person from HPC in the room this evening, and I'm sure that he can confirm.

01:48:32
Speaker 28

And I'm happy to give you all this copy as well.

01:48:35
Speaker 28

So section nine point one point two

01:48:38
Speaker 28

says

01:48:39
Speaker 28

submission

01:48:40
Speaker 28

to historic preservation commission,

01:48:43
Speaker 28

not presentation,

01:48:44
Speaker 28

but submission to historic preservation commission

01:48:47
Speaker 28

required

01:48:49
Speaker 28

for structural change or major modification.

01:48:52
Speaker 28

Prior to undertaking any changes to any historical property that would otherwise require certificate appropriateness, the city shall notify

01:49:00
Speaker 28

the Historic Preservation Committee of the proposed changes and allow the commission forty five days to comment.

01:49:07
Speaker 28

I can go on. It's just another sentence. But once again, it is submission.

01:49:11
Speaker 28

This is actually,

01:49:13
Speaker 28

from one of Stephen Malone's slides from our June meeting, and it says 09/12/2024.

01:49:19
Speaker 28

The project was presented

01:49:21
Speaker 28

to the friends of Mimosa and Bullock at a high level.

01:49:25
Speaker 28

I'm assuming he would say the same thing for HPC because they were shown exactly the same thing. It does not say submit.

01:49:33
Speaker 28

So, if there's something else we need to do to change that or make a internal modification to section nine point one point two, but that's how it reads as of today.

01:49:44
Speaker 28

I just wanna go back quickly because this is not at all what I intended to speak about tonight. But, councilman Johnson,

01:49:50
Speaker 28

thank you so much for reading,

01:49:52
Speaker 28

those emails back and forth from Terry to Stacy Reiche.

01:49:56
Speaker 28

You'll notice that,

01:49:58
Speaker 28

Sally put in the packets that she shared with you also from Stacy Reiche,

01:50:03
Speaker 28

which was June 10 to our own volunteers that were trying to figure out what the heck had happened.

01:50:09
Speaker 28

And we've highlighted it for you. Stacy says, as I mentioned previously,

01:50:14
Speaker 28

if there's no federal or state agency involvement in the project,

01:50:18
Speaker 28

my team, the environmental review, will not review the project under either section one zero six or GEPA. It is further highlighted in your packet,

01:50:28
Speaker 28

protections for historic properties

01:50:30
Speaker 28

really only exist at the local level. The city of Roswell does have a historic preservation ordinance, and she's she calls it out in a historic preservation committee

01:50:40
Speaker 28

commission. That was the only

01:50:43
Speaker 28

place that we had a fall safe in all the things that we have in Roswell. And what we're saying is

01:50:49
Speaker 28

that fell apart. So, David, if you're saying

01:50:52
Speaker 28

that there's a reason, a legal reason why that fell apart, then we definitely all need to work together so that doesn't happen again in the future. And

01:51:02
Speaker 28

and I'm happy to give those. So, going back to councilman John Johnson and others who are bringing it

01:51:07
Speaker 28

forth in, their conversations,

01:51:11
Speaker 28

leading up to November 4.

01:51:13
Speaker 28

Again,

01:51:15
Speaker 28

Shippen never had the opportunity

01:51:17
Speaker 28

to approve or look at any of the plans because of the as they have said multiple times and out of your own mouth out of the, emails,

01:51:25
Speaker 28

they couldn't. It was not under their jurisdiction.

01:51:28
Speaker 28

So they never approved anything. They couldn't even look at it. So, that's it for me tonight for that portion, but I wanted to quickly,

01:51:36
Speaker 28

go through,

01:51:38
Speaker 28

if you'll indulge me, the tragedy of Mimosa in numbers.

01:51:42
Speaker 28

Two US presidents, Theodore Roosevelt and Jimmy Carter had personal connections with Mimosa, visiting and walking the historic grounds, admiring the beauty of Mimosa.

01:51:52
Speaker 28

Four

01:51:53
Speaker 28

acres clear cut and most covered in concrete for

01:51:57
Speaker 28

for a parking lot and commercial facility.

01:51:59
Speaker 28

For those that may not be aware,

01:52:01
Speaker 28

Mimosa Hall is only nine acres,

01:52:04
Speaker 28

which almost all of the clear cutting was on.

01:52:08
Speaker 28

Seven sets of historic Neil Reed steps removed to be replaced with concrete. So,

01:52:14
Speaker 28

councilman Sells, while you can say that the gardens weren't disturbed,

01:52:19
Speaker 28

both the

01:52:21
Speaker 28

the the water reflection garden and the steps were actual physical pieces that we had a choice whether or not we were gonna remove those.

01:52:30
Speaker 28

15 articles, seven television news highlights, one podcast, and countless social media

01:52:36
Speaker 28

discussions regarding the tragedy at Mimosa,

01:52:39
Speaker 28

and it's not going away.

01:52:41
Speaker 28

21 formally elected Roswell officials speaking in unison, many decades decades of governing experience among them voicing the need for change and transparency

01:52:50
Speaker 28

regarding Mimosa and many other city projects.

01:52:54
Speaker 28

35 spit specimen trees, many over a 150

01:52:58
Speaker 28

years old, and trunks over three feet wide destroyed.

01:53:04
Speaker 28

49 feet of synthetic turf to be installed where lawn once was Thank you, Kelly. Thank you for your time. Thirty six days until November 4. Roswell citizens can make a positive

01:53:25
Speaker 1

Thank you, Kelly.

01:53:28
Speaker 1

You addressed the Yeah.

01:53:31
Speaker 25

Again, exactly what I said before, there is nothing in the city charter that requires anything to the HPC.

01:53:38
Speaker 25

What you read is the city code. That's not the charter.

01:53:42
Speaker 25

It was given to HPC. And if you read the last part of what you read,

01:53:47
Speaker 25

if you read the last part of what you said, they are allowed to comment. They were given forty five days according to mister Malone

01:53:54
Speaker 25

for comment.

01:53:56
Speaker 25

They don't get the final say. It's not for approval. It's for comment.

01:54:02
Speaker 1

Nets, thank you very much. Kelly, thank you so much for your time. Nancy, next speaker, please.

01:54:09
Speaker 7

Michelle King.

01:54:15
Speaker 1

Welcome, Michelle.

01:54:21
Speaker 29

Thank you for having me. Michelle King. I live in East Roswell in Horseshoe Bend.

01:54:27
Speaker 29

At the last open mic, I don't recall who it was, but someone in the city administration made a statement

01:54:33
Speaker 29

that the possible gross revenue for,

01:54:38
Speaker 29

the destruction

01:54:39
Speaker 29

of many acres of

01:54:42
Speaker 29

old growth forest trees

01:54:43
Speaker 29

on Mimosa Hall to create a wedding venue would create somewhere around 800,000

01:54:48
Speaker 29

plus.

01:54:49
Speaker 29

And I would like to know specifically where that figure comes from, who it came from, how they came to derive that that would be the estimated cost.

01:54:58
Speaker 29

I've tried to research what The Mill And Azalea Park make for the city in terms of wedding venues,

01:55:06
Speaker 29

if that was taken into account at all as part of

01:55:09
Speaker 29

the fee.

01:55:10
Speaker 29

And then, mister Johnson, I have just a quick question for you. I know that you you often give out your phone number, which does come across as being very open and willing

01:55:20
Speaker 29

to engage with the citizens further and beyond.

01:55:23
Speaker 29

And so I've taken you up on that many times. And in your defense, you don't say that you will text people back.

01:55:30
Speaker 29

But I do wonder why you give your number out to engage with people when you I can personally attest to the fact that you you do not text back. So

01:55:40
Speaker 29

I think it should be fair to say to people,

01:55:43
Speaker 29

you can have my phone number, and you can vent and text and give me information, but I'm not gonna engage with you. Is that the case, or

01:55:51
Speaker 29

do you just pick and choose who you want to text back? So those are my two questions. Where did they come up with this $800,000

01:55:58
Speaker 29

revenue number? And, mister Johnson,

01:56:01
Speaker 29

what is the reason for giving out your phone number if you're not going to engage with the citizens?

01:56:06
Speaker 1

David, I'll let you answer the first question.

01:56:11
Speaker 1

Sorry. I was trying to find the text message. I tell you, take your time while I answer the first question. You answer the second question. Oh. Yes, ma'am. We'll answer yes, ma'am. We'll answer your first question.

01:56:20
Speaker 1

This so the first thing I can tell you is on Wednesday, there'll be a budget workshop,

01:56:24
Speaker 1

which you'll see a number of matters,

01:56:27
Speaker 1

unveiled,

01:56:28
Speaker 1

presented

01:56:29
Speaker 1

to the city,

01:56:30
Speaker 1

in terms of the proposed budget from the, city

01:56:35
Speaker 1

to the elected officials.

01:56:36
Speaker 1

And in that I don't know, Jeff, you wanna come up here?

01:56:40
Speaker 1

On that is so Jeff is kind of, kind of Jeff, the visionary behind the historic plan for the historic assets in the city. I'll repeat it just for, edification.

01:56:51
Speaker 1

So in 2022,

01:56:53
Speaker 1

when I was a new mayor with a new council,

01:56:55
Speaker 1

I looked at the historic assets

01:56:58
Speaker 1

and looked at how many we had

01:57:00
Speaker 1

and looked how they were performing.

01:57:02
Speaker 1

And I looked at how much money we'd spent, about $17,000,000

01:57:05
Speaker 1

basically at the time, and we had what I call an OPEX.

01:57:08
Speaker 1

So the city, the taxpayers were spending about a million dollars a year to support the historic properties in the city.

01:57:16
Speaker 1

And so I said to my colleagues,

01:57:19
Speaker 1

you're in the historic asset business without a plan,

01:57:22
Speaker 1

and it's costing taxpayers about a million dollars. You've invested a significant amount of money. There's never been a plan for these historic assets. You have a diminishing audience that's visiting them. One home had as little as 346

01:57:35
Speaker 1

people in one year visiting. I said, that's not actually that's not the public enjoying a historic asset.

01:57:41
Speaker 1

So I said, I'm gonna ask you counsel to make a decision.

01:57:45
Speaker 1

Do you wanna be in the historic asset business, or do you wanna be out of the historic asset business? It's time to make that decision because you have a million dollar opex liability every

01:57:54
Speaker 1

year. And the council said overwhelmingly,

01:57:56
Speaker 1

well, we wanna be in the historic asset business. And I said, well, great. Then if you wanna be in the historic asset business, then there has to be a long term plan on how to make these historic profit

01:58:07
Speaker 1

historic assets

01:58:08
Speaker 1

relevant

01:58:09
Speaker 1

to all the people in the city of Roswell, not just today, but five years, ten years, fifteen, and twenty years from now. And so that's gonna require a plan. And out of that plan came several things. One was immediately the need to go ahead and acquire Holly Hill to complete kinda like the top five historic homes in the city. So that that decision was made by the council, I think, wisely,

01:58:29
Speaker 1

and it was well done in terms of the negotiations from the city's perspective.

01:58:33
Speaker 1

The second part of that was to say, hey, Jeff.

01:58:36
Speaker 1

We gotta come up with a plan inside or out. Outside, you gotta come up with a plan or inside. Jeff came up with a great plan.

01:58:43
Speaker 1

And Jeff's only problem with Jeff's plan was it's gonna cost Sydney another $17,000,000

01:58:47
Speaker 1

of which we've already uncovered $10,000,000

01:58:50
Speaker 1

You say, why would we do this?

01:58:52
Speaker 1

Because our interest is because we deeply care about Roswell's history and because we deeply want deeply care about saying, like, if Mimosa, Bullock, Barrington,

01:59:01
Speaker 1

Smith,

01:59:02
Speaker 1

Holly are gonna be known to people,

01:59:05
Speaker 1

to your children and your grandchildren,

01:59:07
Speaker 1

then they have to become relevant

01:59:10
Speaker 1

because the course of of attendance to those homes was on a descending scale.

01:59:15
Speaker 1

Whether you like it or not, that's the facts. The facts were less people were attending to them, and we didn't have a plan, and we were spending a million dollars a year on your money. And today, guess what? We're still spending a million dollars a year of your money to keep those plant to keep those homes open.

01:59:31
Speaker 1

Not with any great return, just some very interest like like, hey. I care about those homes too. But the reality is is they belong to all 94,000

01:59:39
Speaker 1

people, and we have a responsibility

01:59:41
Speaker 1

to make sure that they find a way to pay for themselves.

01:59:45
Speaker 1

That's the plan.

01:59:46
Speaker 1

And so Jeff came up with a plan and said, look, if we invest the right kind of the right kind of vehicles, like we start using for wedding events, we start using for corporate events, catering events, and we start using them for community events like Christkindl, which was the first launch.

02:00:02
Speaker 1

And Christkindl

02:00:04
Speaker 1

improved attendance at Bullock Hall by 300%,

02:00:08
Speaker 1

not including the attendance during Christkindl.

02:00:11
Speaker 1

First activation of actually trying this plan.

02:00:14
Speaker 1

So Jeff's plan is a vision, and Jeff's plan is like because Jeff cares about Mimosa as much as anybody in this room, whether you like that or not.

02:00:23
Speaker 1

And and

02:00:24
Speaker 1

Steve Malone and Dina Bush care about Mimosa as much as anybody in this room. Is you like that or not? That's the truth.

02:00:30
Speaker 1

And they care desperately about these homes, and they want them to be valuable and relevant

02:00:35
Speaker 1

to the the generation ten year to twenty years from now and forty years from now. But just leaving them on their current course was not gonna get it done. And so we said we gotta invest money. And so the mimosa plan,

02:00:48
Speaker 1

look, was fully vetted. I am sorry people are mad about it, and people are gonna be mad about it. And I may lose my job as a consequence of it, but it was the right thing to do. It's the right thing to do for this city today, tomorrow, and the future

02:01:02
Speaker 1

because it's investing and it's caring about Roswell's history and making Roswell's history relevant to kids and grandchildren that are grandchildren that are not even born yet. And Roswell's history matters because Roswell has a great history to tell. And it's a big history to tell. Same reason we did Doc's Cafe,

02:01:17
Speaker 1

because we believe in the great history of this great city.

02:01:20
Speaker 1

But left to its own devices,

02:01:22
Speaker 1

they were dying, guys.

02:01:24
Speaker 1

They were dying.

02:01:25
Speaker 1

And so I said, Jeff, Jeff came together with a plan.

02:01:30
Speaker 1

And so that's what Mimosa's about. Mimosa's about the fulfillment of finding a way to get people to come start come to see her.

02:01:37
Speaker 1

That's really what it's about. And for a way to start deriving revenue so that you, the taxpayer, don't pay a million dollars a year to subsidize the existence of these homes. That's it. Bottom line. I forgot where I was.

02:01:50
Speaker 1

Jeff, thanks. I don't need you. Sure. Oh, no. First

02:01:53
Speaker 1

Yeah. What? What?

02:01:55
Speaker 1

What?

02:01:56
Speaker 1

What, Jeff? Mayor mayor Wilson. Are you gonna hear from you? Okay.

02:01:59
Speaker 10

Yes, sir. Are you gonna say something? No. I I think you pretty much covered it. What was the question?

02:02:04
Speaker 1

Oh, the income specific projections. Oh, I'm so sorry. So in the budget, you're gonna see a plan. Sorry, Michelle. You're gonna see a clear plan. I think, Jeff, are you presenting this on Thursday Wednesday?

02:02:14
Speaker 1

Yep. You're gonna see the four year plan, fiscal year '26, '27, '28, and '29. By '29, we are projecting that we get to net revenue zero

02:02:23
Speaker 1

through the revenue that we generate from the historic assets

02:02:27
Speaker 1

to offset

02:02:28
Speaker 1

how much they cost. Won't Won't happen in '26, won't happen in '27, won't happen in '28, you'll see '29. But Jeff will show you the scale of where the revenue's gonna come from at the workshop, how the revenue's derived, and then when we think we get the net zero on the revenue to offset so the taxpayers don't have to pay million dollars in a year. Council member Johnson. Miss King, I deeply apologize. I went through,

02:02:49
Speaker 18

the last six months of tax very quickly,

02:02:52
Speaker 18

and I did not get a tax from you.

02:02:55
Speaker 18

And maybe,

02:02:57
Speaker 18

you know, I don't know where that come from, but my number is (678)

02:03:01
Speaker 18

571-5112.

02:03:03
Speaker 18

Please call me, and we'll have this discussion. It's that simple. I will say, David's defense.

02:03:09
Speaker 1

He calls me way too much. I think he'll if you get if you start getting aligned with him, you won't get rid of him. Do you wanna talk about how Wait. Wait. Wait. You like him or not, you're not gonna get rid of him. Alright.

02:03:19
Speaker 1

Yeah. You're exactly. Alright, Sarah? You're not gonna get rid of this guy.

02:03:23
Speaker 14

Alright. Nancy, next speaker, please, ma'am. Yeah. Councilorcel. Sorry. I wanna respond to a couple of things. One is,

02:03:29
Speaker 14

Jeff and I and,

02:03:31
Speaker 14

Malone, we we've walked the property

02:03:33
Speaker 14

just not too terribly long ago. I personally looked at the reflecting pool that is still there and undisturbed

02:03:40
Speaker 14

personally.

02:03:41
Speaker 14

I

02:03:42
Speaker 14

don't know if you've been back there, but it's still there.

02:03:45
Speaker 14

Now the steps have been taken out for ADA reasons. We've talked about that a number of times and they're,

02:03:52
Speaker 14

preserved and will be used again. Is that correct?

02:03:55
Speaker 14

And the reflecting pool,

02:03:57
Speaker 14

the work that's gonna be done on that is because there is no drain in it. It is simply

02:04:02
Speaker 14

a hole with cement.

02:04:04
Speaker 14

And so it's constantly stagnant.

02:04:06
Speaker 14

There will be work done on it. They will make it an actual functional pool, so it will be preserved.

02:04:12
Speaker 14

And the last thing I'd say is, I too have reached out to

02:04:15
Speaker 14

people,

02:04:16
Speaker 14

at least three times came to one demonstration, stayed three and a half hours,

02:04:21
Speaker 14

talked to everybody who would talk to me and stayed the entire time, my lovely bride and I.

02:04:27
Speaker 14

And

02:04:28
Speaker 14

so I'm pretty available.

02:04:30
Speaker 14

If you pick up phone call me, I always take your call. You know that. And the last thing I'd like to say is of the 350

02:04:38
Speaker 14

visitors, was it three forty six? Three hundred forty six. At least 40 of those are the lovely and talented missus Sells and her social studies class.

02:04:47
Speaker 14

So these are not

02:04:49
Speaker 14

high

02:04:50
Speaker 14

traffic areas, and we need to do something about them. And I'm 100 still a 100% behind this plan.

02:04:56
Speaker 1

Thank you. Nancy, next speaker, please, ma'am.

02:05:00
Speaker 7

Jason Yao.

02:05:03
Speaker 1

Welcome, mister Yao. As always, Jason.

02:05:08
Speaker 1

Hi.

02:05:19
Speaker 30

Alright. Alright.

02:05:23
Speaker 30

I'm I'm not happy, and I've got a whole litany of of complaints, and five minutes is just not enough time

02:05:31
Speaker 30

to get into it.

02:05:32
Speaker 30

First,

02:05:34
Speaker 30

one of the things that I believe you campaigned on was to bring back the, the extended speaking times that existed prior to,

02:05:43
Speaker 30

Laurie Henry, and that didn't happen. In fact, it's

02:05:48
Speaker 30

continued to be

02:05:50
Speaker 30

more and more restrictive.

02:05:53
Speaker 30

The

02:05:56
Speaker 30

one of the things that really upset me,

02:05:59
Speaker 30

with,

02:06:02
Speaker 30

among your campaign promises was the creation of the Transportation Commission.

02:06:07
Speaker 30

You did create it, but then you

02:06:10
Speaker 30

undermined it by telling everybody, I don't look at what you do. I don't care. I'm not interested. It all goes in the trash to the point that

02:06:19
Speaker 30

everybody resigned

02:06:20
Speaker 30

except for me. But with one person, we couldn't hold a meeting.

02:06:26
Speaker 30

What struck me,

02:06:29
Speaker 30

in, in the course of that was

02:06:33
Speaker 30

the absolute

02:06:34
Speaker 30

refusal to understand

02:06:37
Speaker 30

how to design

02:06:39
Speaker 30

a road effectively, and the road that that I'm talking about is,

02:06:45
Speaker 30

Riverside Road.

02:06:47
Speaker 30

Bad design by the consultants,

02:06:50
Speaker 30

made worse by,

02:06:52
Speaker 30

staff,

02:06:53
Speaker 30

and

02:06:55
Speaker 30

way more expensive than what we had recommended.

02:06:59
Speaker 30

I've got experience actually doing this.

02:07:02
Speaker 30

Nobody in this city has used their own money or their own personal guarantees

02:07:07
Speaker 30

to do the kind of design work or road projects that I've done.

02:07:12
Speaker 30

And when

02:07:14
Speaker 30

you ask Dave Cox

02:07:16
Speaker 30

whose plan costs more, theirs or or or yours, and he said, oh, theirs costs more.

02:07:21
Speaker 30

Oh my god. Dave Cox. Yeah.

02:07:24
Speaker 30

The guy who was part of the team that took

02:07:27
Speaker 30

Oxbow from $6,000,000

02:07:29
Speaker 30

project to an 18,000,000

02:07:32
Speaker 30

At that point, I felt, well,

02:07:35
Speaker 30

I couldn't support the bond issue because

02:07:38
Speaker 30

the T Sploss money clearly

02:07:41
Speaker 30

was not being spent well. You still have T Sploss One funds that haven't been spent.

02:07:46
Speaker 30

And my feeling was you gotta learn to walk before you run. And until you could spend the T Sploss One

02:07:53
Speaker 30

all the T Sploss money effectively,

02:07:56
Speaker 30

you were ready for a bond issue.

02:07:58
Speaker 30

And so the things that you've been buying, like

02:08:02
Speaker 30

Crabapple Middle,

02:08:04
Speaker 30

you didn't have to buy it for 6 and a half million dollars.

02:08:08
Speaker 30

That's what they asked. That's what you paid. But guess what? When all the other new cities were created in North Fulton,

02:08:16
Speaker 30

Fulton County wanted to sell them the parks, wanted to sell them the the,

02:08:21
Speaker 30

the fire stations. And all those local governing authorities said, no.

02:08:26
Speaker 30

We've already paid for these,

02:08:28
Speaker 30

and they ended up selling them for a dollar a piece.

02:08:32
Speaker 30

Now I don't see why we bought

02:08:35
Speaker 30

a building and property that we have paid for many times over with our property taxes.

02:08:42
Speaker 30

Should have been bought for a dollar.

02:08:44
Speaker 30

We're the only possible buyers of record because nobody else could get it rezoned

02:08:50
Speaker 30

for a third party use, and nobody would have standing

02:08:55
Speaker 30

to litigate the zoning

02:08:57
Speaker 30

because it was owned by a public entity for a public use.

02:09:02
Speaker 30

You could have just said, when you're ready to get rid of it, we'll take it off your hands, but you didn't do that. You

02:09:08
Speaker 30

you paid them.

02:09:10
Speaker 30

You could've just said,

02:09:12
Speaker 30

we'll wait you out. When you're tired of maintaining it and carrying it, fine. Your your consultant, Jacobs,

02:09:18
Speaker 30

said that it's gonna cost $58,000,000

02:09:21
Speaker 30

to renovate that building.

02:09:23
Speaker 30

Why do you want the building? Why do you wanna pay 6 and a half million dollars for it? Well, you should have been getting it for free. You should have been having these conversations.

02:09:33
Speaker 30

And then, oh my god, the parking deck.

02:09:37
Speaker 30

As far as you could possibly put it from the core demand

02:09:41
Speaker 30

in on Canton Street, across the street from a parking deck most recently built, you're going into into business to compete with

02:09:50
Speaker 30

a company that put a big parking deck across the street. That's like saying, come to Roswell. We'll compete with you.

02:09:57
Speaker 30

Not a very friendly way to attract money. And the same thing, doing a a special event facility at Mimosa.

02:10:07
Speaker 30

What about the people who already have these facilities? Besides the fact, the city's got permanent facilities

02:10:13
Speaker 30

behind Smith's Plantation,

02:10:15
Speaker 30

which is much better than the tent. They've there's a timber peg framed,

02:10:20
Speaker 30

gazebo. Same thing, next to Bullock Hall. And you're spending $5,000,000

02:10:25
Speaker 30

to build a tent over astroturf.

02:10:29
Speaker 30

Nothing

02:10:30
Speaker 1

says great design like astroturf for a floor in a Thank you. Area. Thanks so much.

02:10:37
Speaker 1

Appreciate it, Jason. Thank you.

02:10:40
Speaker 1

I'll just address crab apple because it's old news.

02:10:44
Speaker 1

I don't think anybody

02:10:45
Speaker 1

I probably get dressed crab apple as well as anybody.

02:10:48
Speaker 1

I can remember,

02:10:50
Speaker 1

when we first when we first thought about Crabapple Middle School, it was almost impossible to buy, just the opposite.

02:10:56
Speaker 1

And the starting number was $15,000,000,

02:10:59
Speaker 1

not 6 and a half.

02:11:01
Speaker 1

And it was a long and arduous negotiation, and I can remember we never thought we were gonna be able to buy it. One of the reasons other properties came into play because we're dealing with Fulton County school system,

02:11:11
Speaker 1

who's historically slow. Slow. With respect to zoning, you couldn't be more wrong, Jason. Actually, a private developer could buy that property. Matter of fact, that's probably what was going to happen. It would have been redeveloped,

02:11:23
Speaker 1

and we saw it as a great opportunity for civic use for this city because we were busting at the seams at the Roswell Area Park. We couldn't believe we had the good fortune actually to come down from 15,000,000

02:11:34
Speaker 1

to 6 and a half million to buy that property. It, again, was an excellent job by the city in terms of purchasing and holding out in negotiations.

02:11:42
Speaker 1

You couldn't be more wrong about the dollar piece. Has no applicability in this case. They could have the property could have been brought by a private source, and,

02:11:50
Speaker 1

we were fortunate to get it. The city is super fortunate to get that piece of property. It was an amazing just just another thing that really fell in our God's hands. I mean, God's providence. It was amazing.

02:12:01
Speaker 1

With respect to the Roswell Transportation Committee,

02:12:04
Speaker 1

well, let me address the first thing.

02:12:06
Speaker 1

I will say this thing. I'm always surprised when people tell me things that I said in my campaign that I'm always like, where'd that come from? Because I can tell you, I never said anything in my campaign about extending

02:12:17
Speaker 1

public times at to public sessions because it's fairly

02:12:21
Speaker 1

it wouldn't be logical. That's not a not even a comment that would come out of my mouth. So that's that's just not true.

02:12:28
Speaker 1

With respect to the Roswell Transportation Committee, yes. It was one of our promises. Yes. We did it. You were behind that. As a matter of fact, you acted as a guide

02:12:38
Speaker 1

and as an information source for myself and other candidates.

02:12:41
Speaker 1

When we got into office, we discovered that there were other perspectives.

02:12:45
Speaker 1

And I believe that one of the jobs of elected officials as well as most adults in our society, we need more of it, is to be rational actors. That is to take in information

02:12:54
Speaker 1

and consider more information to be informed

02:12:57
Speaker 1

and make decisions upon your based how you get more informed. And quite frankly, with the Roswell Transportation Commission, we asked one thing very simply. It wasn't just the mayor, it was the entire council.

02:13:08
Speaker 1

Please help us on the master transportation plan. Please help us guide us on the master transportation, please. We need your help. As informed residents, please help us on the master transportation plan. It's a big deal to the city. We know you guys some insight have some perspectives. We'd really like you to weigh in on it. The Roswell Transportation Committee, as a group, with the exception of a couple of people, and ask the guy who ran the thing how difficult that was, he'll tell you,

02:13:34
Speaker 1

is that agendas

02:13:35
Speaker 1

about what the Roswell Yard TAC wanted to do were much different than what the mayor and council wanted. And what the mayor and council wanted was help on the master transportation plan. It was the most critical thing. And what we kept getting was, let us weigh in on Gateway. So we said, guys, Gateway is a project that's been in in it's been in

02:13:54
Speaker 1

incubated since 1992, and the city of Roswell does not have the power to stop Gateway.

02:13:59
Speaker 1

So as much as we wanna raise Cain about it and throw stones at it and get mad, the city of Roswell is not stopping Gateway. It's not happening. No matter what you say, it's not happening. Gateway's not being stopped.

02:14:13
Speaker 1

And so and the RTAC kept weighing in, like, about Gateway. And you know what we did? You know what this elected body did with along with mister Knight and the team? We went down to the state of Georgia and said, look.

02:14:24
Speaker 1

This whole thing with design, we really wanna have real impact on design. And for example, one of the things that this council and this team has gotten done, we got the sound wall removed off of Highway 9 at the apartment complex on the Gateway Project.

02:14:37
Speaker 1

We've added several pedestrian crossings. We have gotten the median in the middle of the road widened, I. E. To to to,

02:14:46
Speaker 1

narrow the road from more than what it was. And we're continuing to work on it so that we can have influence on the Gateway project.

02:14:52
Speaker 1

But one of the things the RTEC would say, You gotta stop the project. We don't have the power to stop the project.

02:14:58
Speaker 1

And so when we're talking to people who won't listen to us, it's like, Well, you surely you can do something about it. Well, we're trying to influence the project. It's a perfect example. So the RTAC folks got frustrated and said, well, you're not gonna stop we can't stop the project. It's a state project.

02:15:13
Speaker 1

So Jason's we could go on and on. This may be my last open mic. God bless you. You're a good man, but you're just wrong way too much of the time.

02:15:22
Speaker 1

Nancy, next speaker, please.

02:15:26
Speaker 7

Ashley Glass.

02:15:30
Speaker 1

Welcome, Ashley.

02:15:46
Speaker 31

Ashley Glass, Wavertree Drive,

02:15:49
Speaker 31

twenty seven year resident.

02:15:51
Speaker 31

First of all, I want to be clear, chief Pavel Trosh was not leading the department when these failures occurred.

02:15:59
Speaker 31

As I am confident

02:16:01
Speaker 31

in chief Trosh and his knowledge

02:16:04
Speaker 31

of the importance

02:16:05
Speaker 31

of certain

02:16:06
Speaker 31

vehicles for the fire department.

02:16:09
Speaker 31

A heavy rescue is not just another fire truck. It is a specialized life saving apparatus designed for confined space rescues,

02:16:19
Speaker 31

trench collapses,

02:16:21
Speaker 31

hazardous material incidents,

02:16:23
Speaker 31

high angle rope rescues,

02:16:25
Speaker 31

building entrapments,

02:16:26
Speaker 31

and major vehicle

02:16:28
Speaker 31

extractions.

02:16:29
Speaker 31

In the most complex

02:16:31
Speaker 31

and dangerous emergencies,

02:16:33
Speaker 31

this is the truck that makes the difference between life and death

02:16:38
Speaker 31

for both firemen

02:16:40
Speaker 31

and citizens.

02:16:43
Speaker 31

In 2019,

02:16:45
Speaker 31

our city purchased a heavy rescue

02:16:48
Speaker 31

for $1,180,000.

02:16:52
Speaker 31

In 2021,

02:16:53
Speaker 31

most of you joined council.

02:16:56
Speaker 31

In 2022,

02:16:58
Speaker 31

the city paid more than $100,000

02:17:03
Speaker 31

to CPSM,

02:17:06
Speaker 31

the Center for Public Safety Management to conduct a professional gap analysis.

02:17:12
Speaker 31

Their findings were crystal

02:17:14
Speaker 31

clear and the city of a 100,000 residents,

02:17:18
Speaker 31

a heavy rescue must be operational.

02:17:21
Speaker 31

Instead,

02:17:22
Speaker 31

it continues

02:17:24
Speaker 31

to sit idle every single day

02:17:27
Speaker 31

while money is being funneled into consultants and even a city owned wedding venue.

02:17:34
Speaker 31

This is an election year, and I hear the mayor and several members of council say

02:17:39
Speaker 31

over and over

02:17:41
Speaker 31

and over again, including tonight,

02:17:45
Speaker 31

that public safety is their top priority.

02:17:48
Speaker 31

But your actions

02:17:50
Speaker 31

and inaction

02:17:52
Speaker 31

tell a very different story.

02:17:55
Speaker 31

We were told

02:17:57
Speaker 31

that there are 75 people on the fire department. CPSM's

02:18:00
Speaker 31

analysis stated that when we have 34

02:18:04
Speaker 31

firefighters on duty, this apparatus would need to be in service.

02:18:08
Speaker 31

So why isn't it?

02:18:10
Speaker 31

Why did the city pay outside experts with decades

02:18:14
Speaker 31

of experience

02:18:15
Speaker 31

only to be completely

02:18:17
Speaker 31

ignored

02:18:19
Speaker 31

and completely ignore their recommendations?

02:18:21
Speaker 31

Do any of you have that level of expertise in public safety?

02:18:26
Speaker 31

I highly doubt it. This is not just about numbers and equipment. My husband is a fireman.

02:18:32
Speaker 31

He was burned on fifteen percent

02:18:34
Speaker 31

of his body and nearly died.

02:18:36
Speaker 31

If a fireman in our city

02:18:39
Speaker 31

or a citizen is trapped in Roswell for sixteen minutes like he was, they would not survive.

02:18:46
Speaker 31

The nearest heavy rescue would come from Dekalb,

02:18:49
Speaker 31

Cobb,

02:18:50
Speaker 31

Gwinnett.

02:18:52
Speaker 31

That delay cost lives.

02:18:54
Speaker 31

My husband is alive today because of a heavy rescue.

02:18:58
Speaker 31

It was available and there was a large crew on the scene. So let's not forget, the citizens of Roswell already told you

02:19:07
Speaker 31

what we value.

02:19:08
Speaker 31

In a bond referendum,

02:19:10
Speaker 31

we said

02:19:11
Speaker 31

we wanted public safety.

02:19:14
Speaker 31

That is what we asked for, and you are still failing to deliver,

02:19:19
Speaker 31

even after a consultant told you what to do.

02:19:22
Speaker 31

So my question is, why do you believe your personal opinions

02:19:26
Speaker 31

outweigh the recommendations

02:19:28
Speaker 31

of an expert

02:19:30
Speaker 31

consultant? You hired

02:19:32
Speaker 31

consultant with decades of experience

02:19:34
Speaker 31

when the safety of our citizens and firemen

02:19:37
Speaker 31

are at risk,

02:19:40
Speaker 31

and I'm not done.

02:19:42
Speaker 31

In reference to Mimosa,

02:19:44
Speaker 31

museum preservation

02:19:46
Speaker 31

is very different than archeological

02:19:49
Speaker 31

digs. I know many museum preservationists

02:19:52
Speaker 31

and curators that have never been to an archaeological

02:19:55
Speaker 31

dig ever. I'm actually the one that did the original

02:20:00
Speaker 31

appraisal at Mimosa. I've been on that property many times. So I would like to ask you, where is all the property that was in that house, all the historic artifacts?

02:20:09
Speaker 31

I would also like to know, did Terry Gillet come to the property?

02:20:15
Speaker 31

And regarding Kimberly Clark, it's interesting how you don't wanna discuss large projects with a citizen.

02:20:22
Speaker 31

However, you put out a newspaper article and publicly mentioned the soccer deal and pitch

02:20:28
Speaker 31

on 03/25/2024.

02:20:31
Speaker 31

On that date, the city council unanimously

02:20:34
Speaker 31

approved a letter of intent to begin an exclusive

02:20:38
Speaker 31

nine month negotiation period with

02:20:41
Speaker 31

United Soccer League. It seems to be what is good for you is not good for the citizens.

02:20:48
Speaker 31

I also want to ask why you used ARPA funds for Momosa College. Thank you.

02:20:53
Speaker 1

Thank you so much. Appreciate those comments. Appreciate you. Thank you.

02:20:58
Speaker 1

Nancy, next speaker, please. So I would like answers to all this Nancy, thank you. Thank you, Nancy. Next speaker. Multiple questions.

02:21:05
Speaker 1

Blair Snedeker. Hold on a second. Multiple questions. Excuse me. Thank you. You've had your time. You've had your time. Thank you.

02:21:12
Speaker 1

Pavel, Joe, would you guys like to address the the,

02:21:18
Speaker 1

allegations there from miss Glass?

02:21:23
Speaker 1

They are allegations.

02:21:28
Speaker 32

Air counsel,

02:21:30
Speaker 32

appreciate it.

02:21:31
Speaker 32

So the mention of the heavy rescue and the staffing of the heavy rescue, I'm gonna I'm gonna start back a little bit because it's a little bit more comprehensive. Just mentioning the heavy rescue

02:21:40
Speaker 32

of which I'm very

02:21:43
Speaker 32

fond of.

02:21:44
Speaker 32

So when we approved the five year strategic plan, it addressed

02:21:48
Speaker 32

all the staffing woes that we know are present in the city.

02:21:52
Speaker 32

The staffing

02:21:53
Speaker 32

plan that is currently in place as we speak continues to enhance every year as we go along with the strategic plan that you approved.

02:22:02
Speaker 32

Let's talk about what that looks like.

02:22:05
Speaker 32

Currently, we're at 64

02:22:06
Speaker 32

full time operations members.

02:22:09
Speaker 32

Before,

02:22:10
Speaker 32

we had two. We're at 64.

02:22:12
Speaker 32

October 27, and I asked the community please join us on October 27, we'll be squaring in

02:22:19
Speaker 32

an additional

02:22:20
Speaker 32

15.

02:22:21
Speaker 32

We're gonna be raising our total staffing number to 79 at that time.

02:22:26
Speaker 32

This is the only city in North,

02:22:30
Speaker 32

Fulton with two battalion chiefs. There's two commanders on the scene

02:22:35
Speaker 32

to be able to ensure that our firefighters and that incident is being handled safely.

02:22:41
Speaker 32

We have seven of our members in paramedic school. We just took two possessions of two new engines, one new ladder truck.

02:22:48
Speaker 32

We've spoken about Fire Station twenty seven.

02:22:51
Speaker 32

We have traffic preemption being put in place.

02:22:54
Speaker 32

We are deploying the Quake technology,

02:22:57
Speaker 32

which will revolutionize

02:22:59
Speaker 32

the way that we

02:23:00
Speaker 32

keep this community safe and each other safe.

02:23:06
Speaker 32

Last year, at this time, we were thirty four

02:23:10
Speaker 32

seconds lower to respond than we are today.

02:23:13
Speaker 32

We increased our

02:23:15
Speaker 32

we reduced our response times by thirty four seconds to last year.

02:23:19
Speaker 32

It's a long way to saying

02:23:21
Speaker 32

the strategic plan is absolutely going into place. The heavy rescue is a priority.

02:23:27
Speaker 32

The current use of the heavy rescue, I will agree, it is not the most efficient. We're being effective because we have to prioritize

02:23:34
Speaker 32

where we put our staffing

02:23:36
Speaker 32

as this plan comes into

02:23:39
Speaker 32

fruition, the five year plan.

02:23:41
Speaker 32

So

02:23:42
Speaker 1

Pavel, let me ask you a question. Sure. What was it like when you had a full fully part time fire department?

02:23:49
Speaker 32

A lot of peaks and valleys. It was

02:23:52
Speaker 32

we could not staff,

02:23:53
Speaker 32

not just not the heavy rescue. There was times where we're not even staffing the rescue units and the ladder trucks. So we know that staffing has been

02:24:01
Speaker 32

a tremendous,

02:24:02
Speaker 32

tremendous,

02:24:03
Speaker 1

hurdle for us now, today. So the problem was worse? No. With the part time fire with the part time versus a full time, we're worse worse than The problem has alleviated

02:24:13
Speaker 32

significantly. So what we're doing now is we're seeing

02:24:16
Speaker 32

more consistent staffing.

02:24:19
Speaker 32

The heavy rescue does get staffed. It's not optimally staffed. But again, the strategic plan supports the staffing. We didn't get all the staffing in one year. It's a five year plan. So we're working towards that and we have to establish priorities

02:24:32
Speaker 32

as to where the staffing goes.

02:24:36
Speaker 1

Thank you.

02:24:37
Speaker 1

Joe?

02:24:40
Speaker 33

Yeah.

02:24:41
Speaker 33

Couple of things. The CPSM study is something that was in the budget when I arrived as fire chief.

02:24:48
Speaker 33

And that is something that the previous mayor and council had talked about,

02:24:52
Speaker 33

that during COVID,

02:24:54
Speaker 33

we experienced some significant staffing issues because all the full time departments where we got our staffing from were recalling their members

02:25:01
Speaker 33

and talking about whether or not they would allow them to work part time at another fire department for fear of bringing back COVID or whatever.

02:25:09
Speaker 33

We didn't know what was going on. These are conversations that are happening all across the nation.

02:25:13
Speaker 33

But at the time, it caused a lot of concern for the then city, administrator and mayor and council rightfully so. So it really spawned that, like, we we really should study this and see if this is the right

02:25:26
Speaker 33

model moving forward. So we went forward with that CPSM study. It wasn't over a 100,000. It was I believe it was $62,000,

02:25:34
Speaker 33

for the study.

02:25:36
Speaker 33

They went around and talked to the firefighters at the fire stations and then helped us put together that five year strategic plan.

02:25:42
Speaker 33

And to give credit where credit's due, when this mayor and council came into office, I think chief Trosh and I sat down and met, I believe it was council member Hills and, you mayor at

02:25:53
Speaker 33

headquarters and said, here's the issues that we see with this model. We we really think you need to be aware of it.

02:25:59
Speaker 33

There's there's some significant concern here when we can't staff

02:26:03
Speaker 33

firehouses.

02:26:06
Speaker 33

And in short order, there was a five year plan of how we go from part time to a full fully staffed full time,

02:26:14
Speaker 33

organization.

02:26:16
Speaker 33

I will pair it with chief Troche said. We are the only city in North Fulton that has two on duty battalion chiefs. And what that means is that you have a dedicated safety officer on scene at every structure fire to make sure that the safety of our fire our firefighters

02:26:29
Speaker 33

are being tended to.

02:26:31
Speaker 33

That's commitment to safety of our firefighters.

02:26:34
Speaker 33

And while the heavy rescue might not be in service every day,

02:26:38
Speaker 33

we have several truck companies within,

02:26:41
Speaker 33

the city of Roswell that have some of the same tools and the same training,

02:26:46
Speaker 33

and the same talent on them, full time talent dedicated to the city of Roswell. So if our firefighters get into trouble, there's someone there to get them out.

02:26:56
Speaker 33

I'll also say when it comes to firefighter safety, not only are we, as chief Trosh said, partnering with Quake Technologies,

02:27:05
Speaker 33

on a device that significantly,

02:27:09
Speaker 33

improves the safety of our firefighters within low visibility and IDH,

02:27:14
Speaker 33

immediately dangerous to life and health environments.

02:27:17
Speaker 33

But we also, as you know, last year won a national award,

02:27:21
Speaker 33

the senator Paul Sarbanes award for firefighter health and safety,

02:27:25
Speaker 33

where we, flew up to Washington and accepted that award on behalf of the Roswell Fire Department for the innovative work that chief Trosh and his staff is doing supported by this mayor and council on the forty eight ninety six work schedule and the scientific study that is being done to not only improve the health and safety of our firefighters,

02:27:44
Speaker 33

but also improve the health and safety of the firefighters

02:27:47
Speaker 33

across the nation, including like that of, miss Glass' husband as well. Hopefully, we can make that that impact all around the nation. So doctor Panino and chief Troche,

02:27:59
Speaker 1

as fire service experts,

02:28:01
Speaker 1

is there a higher public safety because I've I've just heard an allegation that this we don't care about public safety. So is there a higher public safety priority with reference to fire service than going from part time

02:28:13
Speaker 1

to full time? Is there a higher priority than that?

02:28:16
Speaker 13

I think

02:28:20
Speaker 33

I think that is enough

02:28:23
Speaker 33

for where we are as a department.

02:28:25
Speaker 33

But on top of that, the continued investment of this mayor and council

02:28:28
Speaker 33

for new fire stations, I think we just took delivery of two brand new fire engines and a brand new ladder truck.

02:28:36
Speaker 33

The the 4896,

02:28:38
Speaker 33

the the funding that keeps getting put into the fire department to make it not only up to par with our surrounding

02:28:45
Speaker 33

jurisdictions,

02:28:46
Speaker 1

but leaders in the nation. And you're building two and redoing three.

02:28:51
Speaker 1

Thank you, gentlemen. I appreciate your great service to our city. Appreciate

02:28:55
Speaker 1

Yes, sir. How you represent the city of Roswell.

02:29:05
Speaker 1

Nancy, next speaker, please. What's your that's my

02:29:09
Speaker 1

Claire Snedeker. Claire. Welcome, Claire.

02:29:15
Speaker 27

Thank you, mayor and council.

02:29:17
Speaker 27

Good evening.

02:29:19
Speaker 27

I see the for a forum like this as a key time to voice,

02:29:24
Speaker 27

what,

02:29:25
Speaker 27

we would like to see continue being done in the city,

02:29:29
Speaker 27

and,

02:29:30
Speaker 27

wanna speak specifically to your collective commitment to continue the following

02:29:35
Speaker 27

areas that require focus

02:29:37
Speaker 27

and political will and skill sets by the city,

02:29:41
Speaker 27

staff.

02:29:44
Speaker 27

The park investing is delivering a living legacy.

02:29:48
Speaker 27

It's not unlike those who those elders of ours who came decades before us,

02:29:54
Speaker 27

who dedicated themselves to bringing us

02:29:58
Speaker 27

the Roswell area park swimming pool complex

02:30:02
Speaker 27

and other things that they did to vision our city

02:30:06
Speaker 27

into its current

02:30:08
Speaker 27

benefits and crown jewels.

02:30:11
Speaker 27

You've been renovating

02:30:12
Speaker 27

the Big Creek Greenway,

02:30:15
Speaker 27

which is a significant

02:30:18
Speaker 27

item that you've added to the park investing. It includes even

02:30:23
Speaker 27

a personal investment that former, council member, Marcela Zapata,

02:30:28
Speaker 27

did with another group to install a free little library there, but you've been working on the Big Creek Greenway renovation.

02:30:36
Speaker 27

You've been launching the River Parks master plan,

02:30:39
Speaker 27

which,

02:30:40
Speaker 27

sounds like something that might be nebulous, but we need to not forget that it stabilizes

02:30:46
Speaker 27

the riverbank.

02:30:47
Speaker 27

We are

02:30:48
Speaker 27

in this,

02:30:49
Speaker 27

geography lottery that we won. We have the river, but we had to stabilize the riverbank,

02:30:55
Speaker 27

restore the wetlands,

02:30:57
Speaker 27

and also to,

02:31:00
Speaker 27

protect acres and acres of forest.

02:31:03
Speaker 27

So I applaud the those items and,

02:31:07
Speaker 27

well, I just wanna make a make a high voice for that.

02:31:12
Speaker 27

We also have been,

02:31:14
Speaker 27

you know, in the in the strategic the the outreach to residents for the strategic planning for the city,

02:31:21
Speaker 27

there was long

02:31:22
Speaker 27

discussion and input

02:31:24
Speaker 27

about building a vibrant, walkable community,

02:31:29
Speaker 27

that was also,

02:31:31
Speaker 27

economically

02:31:32
Speaker 27

viable, not just,

02:31:34
Speaker 27

well, that ripple through the local economy.

02:31:37
Speaker 27

And it took something it took this focus,

02:31:41
Speaker 27

that you all have been adding

02:31:44
Speaker 27

to, just commit connect and commit to, mixed family, family friendly

02:31:50
Speaker 27

destinations

02:31:51
Speaker 27

that give our residents

02:31:53
Speaker 27

and all of us the,

02:31:56
Speaker 27

the restaurants,

02:31:57
Speaker 27

the businesses, the services that we need.

02:32:01
Speaker 27

So,

02:32:02
Speaker 27

it it's the corporate headquarters seems to be a new component

02:32:06
Speaker 27

that's so key to bring these high paying jobs,

02:32:10
Speaker 27

and and then the support services that they need,

02:32:14
Speaker 27

to then ripple through the economy. So recruiting the,

02:32:18
Speaker 27

the corporate headquarters

02:32:20
Speaker 27

is is key.

02:32:21
Speaker 27

And lastly, I just wanna say,

02:32:24
Speaker 27

keeping up the hard work on offloading the traffic on Holcomb Bridge Road. You've got the Big Creek Parkway, which you got a commitment from us, the voters, to T Splosh

02:32:35
Speaker 27

to do a flyover bridge between Holcomb Bridge Road and Mansell.

02:32:39
Speaker 27

And then you also have the East West Expressway

02:32:42
Speaker 27

connection that's gonna come

02:32:44
Speaker 27

south of Holcomb Bridge Road. So with those two infrastructure

02:32:47
Speaker 27

projects,

02:32:48
Speaker 27

you're you're harnessing another river that flows through us, and it's called Georgia 400.

02:32:54
Speaker 27

And that's what I see as catalytic

02:32:57
Speaker 27

for what's needed to then deliver on the vision that the residents put forth when they strategically

02:33:03
Speaker 27

planned and helped vision the city. So I appreciate,

02:33:07
Speaker 27

all the work that you're doing on those things. And I just wanted to say,

02:33:11
Speaker 27

that we appreciate you continuing the hard work on those items. Thank you. Thank you, Claire. Thank you so much.

02:33:21
Speaker 1

Nancy, next speaker, please, ma'am.

02:33:24
Speaker 7

Jacqueline Bass.

02:33:30
Speaker 1

Welcome, Jacqueline.

02:33:46
Speaker 22

Hi. Thanks. Thank you. I live in Willow Springs. I'm David's neighbor.

02:33:53
Speaker 22

So I am here to talk about Mimosa,

02:33:56
Speaker 22

and I will start by saying that I do have also I am a historic preservation planner with thirty years of professional experience.

02:34:05
Speaker 22

And

02:34:07
Speaker 22

while

02:34:08
Speaker 22

well,

02:34:09
Speaker 22

I'll just yeah. So

02:34:11
Speaker 22

I have concerns

02:34:13
Speaker 22

about the absence of historic preservation standards exercised in the Mimosa Hall project.

02:34:20
Speaker 22

At the June 30 open mic meeting and in subsequent speeches,

02:34:24
Speaker 22

members of city staff and council have mentioned and I'm sorry this has been touched on, but there's a point why I'm repeating it. Have meant maintained that they obtained approval for this project from the State Historic Preservation Office, the SHPO.

02:34:38
Speaker 22

And that an independent consultant

02:34:40
Speaker 22

ensured that the project was in compliance.

02:34:43
Speaker 22

However, what happened was the consultant was told by the SHPO that due to the project being funded with ARPA funds, a special provision of in the federal law rendered these projects not subject to SHPO review under section one zero six of the National Historic Preservation Act.

02:34:58
Speaker 22

Therefore, there was no state,

02:35:00
Speaker 22

quote, approval of this design as the city who would have many believed through carefully crafted statements

02:35:07
Speaker 22

would have you otherwise believe.

02:35:09
Speaker 22

The state simply did not have the jurisdiction to review the project

02:35:13
Speaker 22

due to the restrictions placed on ARPA funding.

02:35:16
Speaker 22

I bring this up because as a historic preservation design professional, I find the historic preservation protections and considerations in this project to be gravely lacking.

02:35:25
Speaker 22

It's my opinion that had the SHPO had the authority to review this project, they would have noted the lack of historic preservation standards in the project specifications,

02:35:33
Speaker 22

including protection and reuse of the Neil Reed stairs.

02:35:37
Speaker 22

The ADA comment does not hold.

02:35:41
Speaker 22

There was as far as I understand, there was no independent structural analysis or architectural analysis of these stairs. And as a preservation consultant who does projects like this for the federal government across the country,

02:35:51
Speaker 22

there are many ways to reuse stairs like that. They needed handrails,

02:35:58
Speaker 22

but I digress,

02:36:01
Speaker 22

including the stairs and also any provisions for avoiding

02:36:04
Speaker 22

and protecting known archeological

02:36:06
Speaker 22

resources that had been previously identified in the 02/2017,

02:36:10
Speaker 22

02/2018, and 2021 archaeological reports prepared for the city.

02:36:15
Speaker 22

Further, the city's own UDC under section twelve point eight point three indicates that when a project will affect a documented archaeological site,

02:36:25
Speaker 22

a report shall be prepared that, quote,

02:36:28
Speaker 22

contains sufficient information about the location and character of the archaeological site.

02:36:34
Speaker 22

It shall also provide recommendations for preserving the archaeological site or describing and or describe methods for mitigating damage to the archaeological site in light of the proposed development.

02:36:45
Speaker 22

The report shall be required to be submitted

02:36:48
Speaker 22

with an application for the certificate of appropriateness as required by this section, end quote.

02:36:54
Speaker 22

In this case, the known archaeological site has been recorded as 9 F U 819 in the Georgia site file, and it does not appear that any additional reports were prepared to meet this requirement nor was any applicable language included in prepared to meet this requirement nor was any applicable language included in the construction documents, which I have

02:37:09
Speaker 22

read over.

02:37:11
Speaker 22

These CDs were never reviewed by the St. Friends Group or the HPC as it was explained that they were only reviewed in the as, quote, in the high level rendering of the project in both,

02:37:21
Speaker 22

let's see, September

02:37:23
Speaker 22

for the first time, September 2024, then the HPC looked at them in October 2024, and then the friends group again got to see it again in May 2024

02:37:33
Speaker 22

2025.

02:37:34
Speaker 22

Excuse me. And each time, they only saw the high level rendering, not the not the final construction documents.

02:37:43
Speaker 22

These documents,

02:37:44
Speaker 22

which presented

02:37:46
Speaker 22

a vastly different project than what was detailed and realized through the construction documents

02:37:51
Speaker 22

are not the same.

02:37:53
Speaker 22

These documents went through community the final construction documents went through community development review in June 2025, and it does not appear that any provisions were made to ensure that the project complied with twelve point eight point three of the unified code.

02:38:06
Speaker 22

I spoke today with the SHPO about this project, and they explained that in the absent of state jurisdiction to review and approve construction projects,

02:38:14
Speaker 22

it is the local UDC that must be followed.

02:38:20
Speaker 22

As stewards of this highly significant historic resource and as a city that prides itself on its history and cultural assets, as I've heard say spoken tonight, I am dismayed at the lack of concern to adequately protect property through the re this reuse project.

02:38:36
Speaker 22

Further, the efforts to defend the missteps taken throughout the project, even when presented with facts and about pro protecting the cultural landscape, illustrates an alarming lack of concern for public and experienced

02:38:47
Speaker 22

professional opinion.

02:38:49
Speaker 22

I am hardly against reusing historic assets. It is what I do for a profession.

02:38:55
Speaker 1

Thank you, Jack. Am I done? Yes, ma'am. Okay. Is there would you like are there questions that you would like us to respond to based upon your your commentary?

02:39:04
Speaker 1

Yeah. Why was the UDC not followed? Okay. Fair enough. Thank you. Thank you very much.

02:39:22
Speaker 1

Thank you, Jacqueline too. Thank you.

02:39:42
Speaker 34

Good evening.

02:39:43
Speaker 34

Jason, I'm

02:39:45
Speaker 1

gonna ask you to let Jacqueline hear the answer to the question, sir.

02:39:48
Speaker 1

Thank you.

02:39:51
Speaker 34

Oh. Sorry. So I'm Michelle Alexander. I'm the director of community development.

02:39:57
Speaker 34

The UDC is when we reviewed the whole case,

02:40:02
Speaker 34

was followed. The

02:40:03
Speaker 34

language about,

02:40:05
Speaker 34

the requirement

02:40:07
Speaker 34

to

02:40:08
Speaker 34

review by HPC

02:40:09
Speaker 34

for comment was followed.

02:40:13
Speaker 34

HPC does not look at construction

02:40:16
Speaker 34

documents

02:40:16
Speaker 34

typically.

02:40:18
Speaker 34

We bring to the HPC

02:40:21
Speaker 34

a presentation

02:40:22
Speaker 34

or information and submit it at the meetings to show them concepts

02:40:27
Speaker 34

and,

02:40:29
Speaker 34

aspects of the different arch archaeological and architectural features that they're reviewing.

02:40:34
Speaker 34

The, and then the question about the survey. So the HBC requires,

02:40:38
Speaker 34

the specific survey, and I'm gonna defer because I didn't review it my I didn't review it for the project. I reviewed it after the fact, but we did accept it as meeting and being in compliance with the UDC intent.

02:40:53
Speaker 6

I'll also add as we went through the permitting process,

02:40:56
Speaker 6

while this property was labeled as a low probability,

02:41:01
Speaker 6

site for artifacts, we went above and beyond the due diligence with that to go through

02:41:07
Speaker 6

our phased approach of archeological

02:41:10
Speaker 6

surveys that were done on-site.

02:41:12
Speaker 6

That was actually

02:41:13
Speaker 6

a piece that we did in act in addition that wasn't necessarily required

02:41:18
Speaker 6

as part of the low probability

02:41:21
Speaker 6

code associated with this site specifically.

02:41:25
Speaker 1

Thank you. Yes, sir. Hold on, David. I got a I got a question for counsel.

02:41:29
Speaker 1

Lee,

02:41:30
Speaker 1

Helen, David,

02:41:32
Speaker 1

Sarah,

02:41:33
Speaker 1

Will, and Christine. I have a question for you six. So I keep hearing loggerheads.

02:41:39
Speaker 1

Right? So I hear a group that says, Hey, you guys didn't follow the process. You keep doubling down on the information.

02:41:46
Speaker 1

And then I keep hearing us presenting information,

02:41:48
Speaker 1

and it doesn't seem to be it's like, this is just dismissed. Like, well, obviously, you're lying. You're not telling the truth. I'm curious. Like, what is transpiring in your minds on this subject?

02:41:59
Speaker 1

Because

02:42:00
Speaker 1

you all are affected by this. You're the the elected officials

02:42:04
Speaker 1

you're the elected representatives of the city representing 94,000

02:42:07
Speaker 1

people.

02:42:08
Speaker 1

And I'm curious why this continues to be, like, at loggerheads

02:42:12
Speaker 1

because it's always seems to be some technical distinction.

02:42:16
Speaker 1

Feels like, well, its staff keeps doubling down. The word lie has been used. Lie been I I don't know if any I don't I don't think anybody's lying,

02:42:23
Speaker 1

but it feels like there's a loggerhead. I'm just curious what you guys' perspective on this is. Because I think we're gonna keep going down this cycle,

02:42:30
Speaker 1

right, for months and months and months and until the Mimosa project is done. And I I believe a year from now, people will be delighted. I know they don't believe it, but they're gonna be delighted with Mimosa.

02:42:40
Speaker 1

But I know that's not how anybody feels right now.

02:42:42
Speaker 1

But I'm just curious at this cycle. Like, I don't know what the city can do. I don't know what the staff can do. Like, what is it that we do that solves this equation?

02:42:52
Speaker 1

Because or people are gonna keep keep saying, well, you didn't do this, you didn't do that, you didn't do this.

02:42:57
Speaker 1

And then we said, well, we did do this, and we did do that. It doesn't seem to matter. I'm just curious what you guys' thoughts on that are.

02:43:07
Speaker 1

Yes, ma'am. Christine.

02:43:10
Speaker 35

Well, this is a project that's been in the works for a couple of years. I mean, the plan for Founders Park, and that's not the name,

02:43:19
Speaker 35

that's that's what we're calling it because there's gonna be suggestions for other names for a 24 acre park to connect the properties

02:43:27
Speaker 35

to make them viable and

02:43:29
Speaker 35

make the entire area. We've already seen the resurgence of the Roswell Square when that was,

02:43:35
Speaker 35

basically upgraded and the coming of the new restaurants and its expansion

02:43:40
Speaker 35

of the restaurants.

02:43:41
Speaker 35

It's gonna make this a viable opportunity.

02:43:44
Speaker 35

So the original plan was presented

02:43:47
Speaker 35

for Mimosa Hall, the conversion and transformation of Mimosa

02:43:52
Speaker 35

Hall

02:43:53
Speaker 35

a couple of years ago.

02:43:54
Speaker 35

I think,

02:43:57
Speaker 35

and the city did did not break any laws.

02:44:00
Speaker 35

We wouldn't. I mean, we have attorneys. We have, consultants that we hire that comply with laws.

02:44:06
Speaker 35

I think it's just very shocking when people saw the trees go down and that and the

02:44:12
Speaker 35

city did a poor,

02:44:14
Speaker 35

communication plan to let folks know that this was coming. And this is what I think is happening with a a lot of projects. We'll announce a project,

02:44:24
Speaker 35

and two years go by and people don't see what's going on. But, really, what's going on is there's

02:44:31
Speaker 35

all this engineering and all this planning and all this design, and then we're at 40% design and 60% design and 80% design, and and then it has to go to a construction plan. So it takes a long time, and the city has to get better of filling that that gap,

02:44:49
Speaker 35

from when all the excitement and the the plans are announced and pretty pictures and concept pictures

02:44:56
Speaker 35

and when it finally gets done because that's hard for

02:45:01
Speaker 35

the general public in in my opinion.

02:45:04
Speaker 35

And I,

02:45:05
Speaker 35

I mean, I I was out there. I mean, I got a call from

02:45:09
Speaker 35

from some folks, you know, when the trees were going down, and and

02:45:13
Speaker 35

I was actually a little bit surprised myself.

02:45:17
Speaker 35

I knew it was coming,

02:45:18
Speaker 35

but we should have done a better job communicating. But it's not something the city didn't break any laws. The consultants didn't break laws. The experts didn't make break any laws. I mean, this is

02:45:31
Speaker 35

this these are the facts. That's the truth.

02:45:34
Speaker 1

Thanks, Christine.

02:45:36
Speaker 1

Willie,

02:45:37
Speaker 1

you you always got things to say behind the scenes.

02:45:43
Speaker 36

The,

02:45:44
Speaker 36

the big takeaway here, and and this is as I was putting my thoughts together in my head when when asked this question, I can't agree more. The communication needed to be better because these are projects that come forth,

02:45:56
Speaker 36

take a lot of time, take a lot of design, on and on and on. And then when it actually does become an executable project,

02:46:03
Speaker 36

things change at that moment. And, you know, when when the MOSA project did take place,

02:46:11
Speaker 36

it was it was months, if not almost a year after we had

02:46:16
Speaker 36

heard about this project here in at at city hall. So when it actually did take place, you know, I was I was surprised as well. Communication absolutely has to improve on that. The,

02:46:27
Speaker 36

the the topics that we've talked about here, there are a lot of good takeaways that that we need to vet

02:46:33
Speaker 36

going forward

02:46:35
Speaker 36

in in the way that we we look at all future projects.

02:46:39
Speaker 36

There is, at this point right now, some of the things that we've learned from this is any future capital project that we're doing to any of our assets, whether it be historic or nonhistoric,

02:46:51
Speaker 36

we all need to understand the

02:46:53
Speaker 36

the green space impacts of that, including trees, and that is a report that is being delivered to us through,

02:47:00
Speaker 36

through the department manager of of wherever that project is is scheduled. But,

02:47:05
Speaker 36

you know, this is this is difficult.

02:47:07
Speaker 36

I understand

02:47:08
Speaker 36

I understand the vision around why this was done. I understand

02:47:12
Speaker 36

the the,

02:47:14
Speaker 36

feelings on the the opposite side of this. I get it. I I understand all of that. So

02:47:20
Speaker 36

the one thing that I can commit to is absolutely the communication will improve because there is no option. We have to improve the communication on on something like this. Lesson learned. Thanks, Willie. Sarah?

02:47:34
Speaker 11

I'm gonna phrase this in a way that when I'm inevitably hit by somebody's car in the parking lot after this meeting, you won't know who did it because everyone in this room will be probably slightly annoyed with me.

02:47:47
Speaker 11

So I will go ahead and, we'll go through the timeline of this. So to council member Morathland's point and council member Hall's point, this was approved at the end of last year as we were head about this time last year as we're heading into,

02:48:00
Speaker 11

the final phase of the budget process. It was presented to us by, Rec and Parks with the understanding that it was the last and possible final use of ARPA funds. At the time, I said that I did not like the project. It is not the best and highest use of

02:48:15
Speaker 11

of our ARPA funds. Is there anywhere else that we could possibly use these funds? And I will freeze this in a way that everyone will highly disagree with, but ARPA, American Resource or American Recovery Act plans,

02:48:23
Speaker 11

it's free money. And by what I mean by that is it's money that's already been stipulated by the federal government to be used to the municipal level. It was use it or lose it. And staff very

02:48:35
Speaker 11

adamantly

02:48:36
Speaker 11

stuck to the fact that that was the only way that we could use it at the time, because we had already bid it out, and it was the only way that we could actually use the funds at that point in time. It was the only project that it would be applicable to. That said, I was fully capable of voting against that project, and I chose not to because I realized that this was a way that we could try to improve on one of our historical sites. We could try to get people to actually go there. While I thought that there were other ways that we could possibly use it, if we could not allocate those funds at that time, I'm definitely not going to turn down federal dollars coming into our city for improvements.

02:49:08
Speaker 11

That being said, I will also own as well, when it was presented to us in terms of the plans, it's the exact same plans that HPC

02:49:16
Speaker 11

reviewed

02:49:17
Speaker 11

reviewed, looked at, admired, stared at. Whatever words you would like to use at this point in time for them to comment, not vote on, eyeball.

02:49:26
Speaker 11

Again, at this point, tomato tomato. We had HPC look at it. HPC provided comments. There are recordings of said comments,

02:49:35
Speaker 11

as well as friends of Mimosa who on a Zoom provided comments.

02:49:41
Speaker 11

In terms of whether or not that was reviewed by those groups for a binding

02:49:46
Speaker 11

comment,

02:49:47
Speaker 11

that is up for debate. But according to the interpretation of this code, as I hear from the city attorney, it's nonbinding anyways. At the end of the day, it comes to us, a mayor and council, and we have to own that vote.

02:49:59
Speaker 11

I will take responsibility

02:50:00
Speaker 11

for not asking how many trees were going to be impacted. You are right. As a historic property with a lot of large,

02:50:07
Speaker 11

very historic trees on that property. I am somebody who works in the environmental space. I am

02:50:13
Speaker 11

five minutes away from my PhD in city planning, which is in our School of Historic Preservation, University of Georgia. I should have asked about the trees.

02:50:22
Speaker 11

To the rest of the council members points thus far as well in terms of how it's communicated,

02:50:26
Speaker 11

it was not communicated well to the public. I don't know that it was necessarily communicated as well to the elected officials. It came from a directive of we are trying to improve this park space. Staff took those marching orders and went with it. Those were the directives that they were given. I don't know that anyone ever actually met in the middle of

02:50:42
Speaker 11

because you asked for this, these will be the impacts.

02:50:46
Speaker 11

And unfortunately, this was the outcome.

02:50:48
Speaker 11

I hear you. You are frustrated. You are mad about those trees. You are sad about those trees. I feel you on those trees. But at this point in time, I do not know how we as elected officials can better,

02:51:01
Speaker 11

translate to mea culpa for the rest of you or how we can own that other than doing better moving forward, how we can better communicate with y'all moving forward.

02:51:10
Speaker 11

And I will say as well as of

02:51:14
Speaker 11

three months ago, I was made,

02:51:16
Speaker 11

the liaison where we changed our liaison roles and no longer, public safety liaison, but I'm communications liaison. So if there's a way that you have feedback on how we can better improve our communications or the way that we communicate our projects or how we communicate our bond projects,

02:51:30
Speaker 11

holler at your girl,sbason@roswellgov.com.

02:51:33
Speaker 11

I appreciate that David gives out his cell phone. I will not do that. However, you can email me on public record. It will be entered on public record, and I'd be more than happy to reply

02:51:44
Speaker 1

to you. Thank you. Well, you three are gonna be hard to beat. I don't I don't think they're gonna do as good a job on this side.

02:51:48
Speaker 1

But Wednesday, when

02:51:51
Speaker 1

Wednesday Wednesday, eight to four,

02:51:53
Speaker 1

public workshop on the budget.

02:51:55
Speaker 1

Details.

02:51:56
Speaker 1

Great details.

02:51:58
Speaker 1

The budget will be presented to the electeds,

02:52:00
Speaker 1

the mayor and council on Wednesday, and there'll be tremendous granularity on the budget, including,

02:52:06
Speaker 1

I believe,

02:52:07
Speaker 1

Sharon, still here, will be doing I don't know. Will you be doing something on the in the workshop about the bonds and all that? Will you be presenting that and showing the like, hey. Here's a percentage of completion of the budget. Here's dollars spent. Here's what completion means. Will you be going through that on Wednesday? Thank you.

02:52:23
Speaker 1

Council member of Hills, Pro Tem Hills. Any thoughts?

02:52:27
Speaker 21

You got saved.

02:52:29
Speaker 21

Yes. I do have a couple of thoughts. And I

02:52:32
Speaker 21

whether folks believe it or not, I I am conscious of what goes on with removal of trees and I understand and and

02:52:40
Speaker 21

feel some, not all of the pain over the removal of the trees at Mimosa.

02:52:45
Speaker 21

I will say that in the twenty three years I've lived here, I have felt like some of our properties look like jungles. They are not kept well. They haven't they're not easy to navigate. Now the front yard of Mimosa is a little more open, but a lot of it is not. I mean, they're open for park space if they're not being used for a private event. So it's difficult to navigate some of our properties, not all.

02:53:08
Speaker 21

I was in favor of this project from from the beginning,

02:53:11
Speaker 21

as far as some of the comments that have been made tonight, not as specifically tonight, but on social media and other meetings

02:53:18
Speaker 21

about why the city would take away business from other special event,

02:53:23
Speaker 21

venues in the area. I have over twenty year experience in historic assets in North Carolina

02:53:30
Speaker 21

event planning. And I will tell you, when you look up one and find one, you look to see if there are other ones. And it typically inspires more business in the other venues. So I can only

02:53:40
Speaker 21

believe and have lived that this will promote more business at the other historic assets. I've also found that it becomes sort of like when we instill best in class pay for our police department, all of our surrounding cities upped their game. And I have seen that happen in North Carolina and in Georgia and in Alabama, the three states where I've worked in special events, where there becomes a competition level of improving your event space. If this one has a stage, that one wants one. If this one's redone the drywall, that one does.

02:54:10
Speaker 21

And it's just part of keeping up the old sisters, as I call them, the old, special event venues that are historic homes. So I think that will actually have a positive,

02:54:20
Speaker 21

benefit.

02:54:21
Speaker 21

The parking on

02:54:23
Speaker 21

Bullock Avenue is

02:54:25
Speaker 21

abysmal. I mean, it's tough. I've seen people pull up on the grass. I've seen people pull up in private properties and try to park. And people want to be there. Us removing the fees to visit our historic assets was the best thing we ever did. I will say I was a little trepidatious about that. And, I mean, I forget the how many,

02:54:43
Speaker 21

you know, times over people started visiting, but,

02:54:47
Speaker 21

there were some friends of mine here earlier this evening that told me they were so excited about that when we did it two and a half years ago. It might have been our third our first year in. But, that they were able to take people

02:54:58
Speaker 21

to different, historic homes here because then they didn't have to pay. So they would bring different people every time they'd have visitors in town that hadn't been here before. So I think there's a huge benefit to that, and people do wanna see these properties.

02:55:10
Speaker 21

I want to also point out about the ARPA funds.

02:55:13
Speaker 21

I've had a couple of people challenge me on that. Why did we start with the renovation of the Second Floor if you can't even go in there? And again, back to my background,

02:55:22
Speaker 21

there is some savoir faire to how you sell events in the future, especially if they're not finished off and ready to go. So, doing this while it's sitting still right now,

02:55:33
Speaker 21

it allowed us to do visual videography

02:55:36
Speaker 21

and virtual tours through those spaces so that brides,

02:55:41
Speaker 21

folks hosting

02:55:43
Speaker 21

smaller

02:55:44
Speaker 21

bar mitzvahs or bat mitzvahs, nei mitzvahs,

02:55:47
Speaker 21

and then, of course, corporate events could take a peek at what facilities we have there without,

02:55:54
Speaker 21

you know, without

02:55:55
Speaker 21

being able to get in there. They would they can look online and go, oh my gosh. I really like that. So they're able to look at that and we also have discounted rates right now before the venue is actually open. So there there are a lot of benefits to that.

02:56:08
Speaker 21

Back to my original comment

02:56:11
Speaker 21

comparing

02:56:11
Speaker 21

some of our properties to jungles, I think we'll be very surprised how quickly

02:56:16
Speaker 21

a landscaped

02:56:18
Speaker 21

intentional plan will fill in. It won't be overnight. It's not going to be, but it will fill back in. And I think it will be much more approachable,

02:56:27
Speaker 21

much more pleasing.

02:56:29
Speaker 21

And the stairs, I believe, we're repurposing those stones that, that were dismantled from the historic stairs, which was three stairs. It wasn't a whole flight. Four? Seven? Okay. I don't wanna misquote. Forgive me. Seven. I've walked down them, but it's been a little while. So, anyway, we will keep those those stones and those pieces on the property. But,

02:56:49
Speaker 21

anyway, I'm I'm looking forward to the project. I think it'll be enjoyed by people for many, many decades following,

02:56:55
Speaker 21

its completion.

02:56:56
Speaker 1

Thanks, Lee. Alan, any thoughts?

02:56:59
Speaker 14

I kinda like the question that I posed. No. I appreciate it. Yeah. It that's a tough one. You know, obviously,

02:57:06
Speaker 14

governments do many things poorly. Communication is almost always one of those. So that is something we could we could always do better at. No question about that.

02:57:15
Speaker 14

Even among ourselves and the and the stuff that we know and the and the things that we hear.

02:57:20
Speaker 14

You know,

02:57:22
Speaker 14

my experience

02:57:23
Speaker 14

is on boards,

02:57:24
Speaker 14

and I have always used that analogy for my role here. I'm a board member.

02:57:30
Speaker 14

And when I hear,

02:57:33
Speaker 14

we aren't breaking laws, we are following oil,

02:57:36
Speaker 14

we have you know, we need to, to manage this as a collection of assets and

02:57:42
Speaker 14

I've been surprised. I've been really surprised how people refuse to consider this as a part of a larger park.

02:57:49
Speaker 14

For whatever reason, they only want to talk about it as a mimosa by itself and not how these

02:57:55
Speaker 14

assets work together as Lee points out to create vibrancy, which is what we're trying to do here. And so,

02:58:03
Speaker 14

you know,

02:58:05
Speaker 14

as a board member and by the way, as a resident, you know, I mean, I live here. I pay the taxes as well.

02:58:11
Speaker 14

It's not like we came from Mars and we're just doing this to people. This is this is part of our legacy as well, and we think very hard about this. We have lots of conversations, lots of conversations about this stuff.

02:58:22
Speaker 14

But we

02:58:25
Speaker 14

the the top priority for us is to be good stewards, and that's not simply of the historic assets, which I truly believe

02:58:32
Speaker 14

we are being good steward of this of this historic asset.

02:58:36
Speaker 14

Truly believe that. It's going to have more value long term

02:58:40
Speaker 14

because of what we're doing and the way we are going to see it work together with these others. I have no doubt about that. And I think the pond is going to be, quite frankly, a feature. The people are gonna walk around and enjoy like they do at Roswell Area Park.

02:58:54
Speaker 14

So so, you know,

02:58:56
Speaker 14

I think of it as a as a collection and we are stewards of that collection and we're trying to make them all valuable and useful to all the citizens, not just well, I'll come to that last part in a moment. But we're also stewards of the city's money, and I'm talking specifically of taxpayers money.

02:59:13
Speaker 14

And and this was an opportunity

02:59:16
Speaker 14

to to actually make a difference in historic asset when we've already spent $17,000,000 on this thing on these things, and we could use the ARPA money. That was good stewardship.

02:59:25
Speaker 14

And we owe that to the other residents who pay the taxes. And quite frankly, if they don't happen to live right next door to it, they probably don't get as much money as they

02:59:37
Speaker 14

stewardship for

02:59:38
Speaker 14

the city as a whole.

02:59:41
Speaker 14

And I guess the the most breathtaking conversation I've had about this,

02:59:45
Speaker 14

and and you guys know that I stay my wife and I stood there for three and a half hours. I came to,

02:59:52
Speaker 14

alive looking for the tent, and you weren't there.

02:59:56
Speaker 14

So I'm I'm more than happy to engage on this one on one anytime, and I think people know that. They've been because I've been I've had conversations with me about it. But the most stunning conversation I had

03:00:09
Speaker 14

was someone who is not on any of the,

03:00:13
Speaker 14

property boards that I'm aware of. Perhaps they'd given money to it, whatever the may the case may be, but that they're not on any of the board, so they're not active in these things.

03:00:22
Speaker 14

And,

03:00:24
Speaker 14

when

03:00:26
Speaker 14

making basically, this person was making some specific accusations and I said, well, the fact is we did not disturb the Reed Gardens. Stairs, a different matter, but that we did not disturb the Reed Gardens.

03:00:38
Speaker 14

Okay. We'll just sort of move that aside. And then then you start on the the next thing. And, you know, well, you didn't follow well, actually, we were told we did. We have experts in the city that said we did.

03:00:47
Speaker 14

But I said and by the way, we talked to the boards, we presented to the HPC, we did the things that have been discussed tonight.

03:00:55
Speaker 14

And the comment that this person made was, well,

03:00:59
Speaker 14

you didn't talk to the right people.

03:01:02
Speaker 14

That was just breathtaking.

03:01:05
Speaker 14

Okay? What this person meant was you didn't talk to those of us who matter in this town. Well, guess what? Those of us who pay the taxes in the entire town, we matter too. And as a matter matter of stewardship,

03:01:19
Speaker 14

that was our responsibility as well. So I I just was I mean, I really gashed when when you didn't talk to the right people.

03:01:28
Speaker 14

Well, you know, be on these boards, be a part of the conversation. No. No. No. I just wanna be the right person at the appropriate time. I I sort of reject that, mayor. And I I think I appreciate you guys being here and making your comments known.

03:01:40
Speaker 14

I think we have I think we have, as a body, acted in the best of stewardship and with the best of intentions.

03:01:49
Speaker 14

The communications issues,

03:01:52
Speaker 14

no doubt, no question we can do that better. But I this has been a this has been a great board to work with, and I I personally have have enjoyed the fact that we can talk about these things among ourselves,

03:02:02
Speaker 14

and we can argue about them, but it's not the food fight that past councils have been.

03:02:07
Speaker 14

We get along with each other, we get stuff done, and that is what we did here.

03:02:15
Speaker 4

Thank you, Alan. David?

03:02:19
Speaker 18

I will tell you this much. I am far from a perfect councilman. I am very far from a perfect husband. I'm very far from a perfect father and a perfect human being.

03:02:29
Speaker 18

There's no doubt we could have done a better job to y'all.

03:02:32
Speaker 18

Alright. Communicating this,

03:02:36
Speaker 18

letting the public know about the plan better,

03:02:39
Speaker 18

you know, take responsibility for that.

03:02:42
Speaker 18

What I do know though is that we are trying to build a 22 acre park

03:02:46
Speaker 18

that's walkable from Canton Street, that people will enjoy for years.

03:02:50
Speaker 18

Because if people do not go to these historic homes,

03:02:54
Speaker 18

my generation is not gonna care about them.

03:02:56
Speaker 18

Which means that my kids

03:03:00
Speaker 18

are not gonna care about them, which means they're gonna fall in disrepair.

03:03:03
Speaker 18

If people don't visit these homes and don't fall in love with them, they are going to fall into disrepair. And we've already saw that with most of between 2017

03:03:13
Speaker 18

and 2022 with almost no money being spent on it. It was falling disrepair,

03:03:17
Speaker 18

which is why we this mayor and council,

03:03:20
Speaker 18

before really, before I was on this elected body,

03:03:24
Speaker 18

you know, the, previous council had spent lots of money fixing this home.

03:03:29
Speaker 18

I cannot wait for the day that maybe one day my daughter gets married in Roswell, and gets married at this beautiful home.

03:03:36
Speaker 18

And I hope,

03:03:38
Speaker 18

you know, it's fifty, sixty, seventy years from now, and

03:03:43
Speaker 18

I'm in a wheelchair, and I can access the home, and can go into it.

03:03:47
Speaker 18

And so,

03:03:48
Speaker 18

I say all this to say,

03:03:51
Speaker 18

my

03:03:52
Speaker 18

what Alan was saying is, we have invested a lot of tax sparing money into the into these homes.

03:03:58
Speaker 18

And if we do not activate the spaces,

03:04:01
Speaker 18

we they will fall apart and they will go away.

03:04:05
Speaker 18

We've seen it with Bullock. I mean, the Christkindl market was a I'll be honest with you, I was like,

03:04:12
Speaker 18

first time I went, my wife wanted to go. I didn't wanna go. Three kids, hot chocolate all over my now,

03:04:19
Speaker 18

eight year old. It's kind of a terrible

03:04:22
Speaker 18

experience. Lots of crying from me and the kids.

03:04:26
Speaker 18

And, you know,

03:04:28
Speaker 18

300%

03:04:29
Speaker 18

increase

03:04:31
Speaker 18

of visitors in two years. 300%

03:04:34
Speaker 18

increase at Bullock Hall. Then Magnolia Bald, the charity for Bullock

03:04:38
Speaker 18

Hall, 200 plus thousand dollars raised.

03:04:41
Speaker 18

And you can talk to Bob Hagen and,

03:04:45
Speaker 18

I forgot Karen's last name Off the top in the head. But Swaddlers. Thank you.

03:04:52
Speaker 18

You could talk to them. They would say there was people at the Magnolia ball that they've never seen before. And these people came because they came to the Christkindl market and they fell in love with the home.

03:05:01
Speaker 18

So activating this space, creating a 22 acre downtown park that's walkable from Canton Street, City Hall, Hill Street,

03:05:09
Speaker 18

redoing the town it helps you know, we've already seen what redoing the town square is. By the way, if you have not been to Tipsy Tiger, it's one of the best restaurants in Roswell, I highly recommend it.

03:05:20
Speaker 18

You already see restaurants coming back into our town square. And when we finally get a hotel

03:05:25
Speaker 18

in Downtown Roswell,

03:05:27
Speaker 18

the this wedding event this wedding industry is going to take off, and it's going to be

03:05:33
Speaker 18

incredible for the taxpayers of Roswell. And I think ten, fifteen, twenty, thirty years from now, everyone's gonna be amazed what a beautiful park we have that no other city has. Alpharetta won't have it. Johns Creek won't have it. You know, no other city in Norfolk will have what we have, and it will just be an incredible asset. And I'll once again say, we can always do a better job. My number one goal in life every single day is become a better human being than what it was the the day before. And, you know, I fail at that 364

03:06:03
Speaker 18

days a year. So

03:06:05
Speaker 18

the

03:06:06
Speaker 18

we can always be better as your elected officials. This is also why everyone here has my phone number. Feel free to call me. Let's have a conversation about it. You know? I would prefer people have a conversation with me before going on social media, but that's the world we live in. And I think I'm I'm really excited for the future of this, this park.

03:06:25
Speaker 1

Thank you, David. Nancy, next speaker, please.

03:06:29
Speaker 7

Courtney Rozier.

03:06:41
Speaker 1

Welcome, Courtney.

03:07:01
Speaker 37

So tonight, I'd like to talk about two different things. I'd like to talk about a book club,

03:07:06
Speaker 37

and I'd like to also ask a couple of questions in regards to Bowen Road, if I have enough time. We'll see.

03:07:13
Speaker 37

But first, really, because it's on my heart, is the book club.

03:07:19
Speaker 37

You may not know, but the Drake House has started a book club. It's, on a book. I brought it this evening.

03:07:26
Speaker 37

There's No Place for Us.

03:07:28
Speaker 37

It focuses on

03:07:32
Speaker 37

the issue of homelessness

03:07:34
Speaker 37

here in the Metro Atlanta area. It follows different folks who are experiencing the metro area.

03:07:43
Speaker 37

I've been able to start the book,

03:07:45
Speaker 37

and I will be honest with you, it is kind of a hard

03:07:48
Speaker 37

read. But I think it's an important read.

03:07:52
Speaker 37

I encourage everyone to go out to the Drake House. They've

03:07:56
Speaker 37

released a statement in regards to the

03:08:00
Speaker 37

Economy Hotel and some of the lessons that were learned.

03:08:05
Speaker 37

With this book club, they're going to be having an event at the men's museum.

03:08:10
Speaker 37

That is going to be on,

03:08:16
Speaker 37

it's at the men's museum, and I think it's on October 21. I forgot to mark that down. Oh, no. It is. It's October 21 at 04:30PM

03:08:25
Speaker 37

at men's museum.

03:08:27
Speaker 37

And

03:08:30
Speaker 37

one of the reasons I also wanted to share why this is important to me,

03:08:34
Speaker 37

because recently I was told that I supported affordable housing,

03:08:39
Speaker 37

and I do.

03:08:42
Speaker 37

Some of the reasons is, while I'm reading this book, I've been keeping a picture of my father with me.

03:08:49
Speaker 37

My father,

03:08:50
Speaker 37

spent time at the Decatur's Children Town.

03:08:54
Speaker 37

Though he experienced

03:08:56
Speaker 37

instability in his housing.

03:08:59
Speaker 37

It impacted him.

03:09:01
Speaker 37

It impacted

03:09:03
Speaker 37

marriage with my mother.

03:09:05
Speaker 37

It impacted me.

03:09:08
Speaker 37

But

03:09:09
Speaker 37

overall,

03:09:11
Speaker 37

in the end,

03:09:13
Speaker 37

he was very proud. He was a homeowner in the end, and he was very proud of being able to support me

03:09:19
Speaker 37

in part through college.

03:09:23
Speaker 37

I've also brought with me and I've been keeping with me a brick.

03:09:29
Speaker 37

This brick is something that my mother brought to me

03:09:34
Speaker 37

when I first purchased my home.

03:09:39
Speaker 37

She made a point to put a plate on it. It has my great grandfather's name on it.

03:09:46
Speaker 37

It's on Briarcliff Road, so we're

03:09:49
Speaker 37

three generations of Metro Atlantans.

03:09:53
Speaker 37

But my great grandfather,

03:09:55
Speaker 37

during the Depression,

03:09:58
Speaker 37

supported,

03:09:58
Speaker 37

multiple family members.

03:10:02
Speaker 37

And so there was multi generational

03:10:04
Speaker 37

housing in regards, you know, throughout the depression there, there was housing instability.

03:10:14
Speaker 37

My grandfather was a World War II veteran.

03:10:20
Speaker 37

Unfortunately, he did not come back and live with them.

03:10:24
Speaker 37

That was post traumatic stress syndrome is what I learned later.

03:10:30
Speaker 37

But her great grand my great grandfather, her grandfather made sure that the family stayed together and there was a home.

03:10:38
Speaker 37

So I feel like I've been that kind of six degrees from separation,

03:10:42
Speaker 37

perhaps, from homelessness.

03:10:46
Speaker 37

Whether it's from my mother's experience or my father's experience.

03:10:51
Speaker 37

Because with some of that instability,

03:10:53
Speaker 37

there was divorce

03:10:55
Speaker 37

between my mother and my father.

03:10:57
Speaker 37

And my mother had to scramble. I was one years old.

03:11:02
Speaker 37

Fortunately,

03:11:03
Speaker 37

my grandmother

03:11:04
Speaker 37

was able to take her in.

03:11:08
Speaker 37

We actually lived together for a while. They bought a home together.

03:11:12
Speaker 37

So we were fortunate in that regard.

03:11:15
Speaker 37

But

03:11:17
Speaker 37

the Economy Hotel has kind of put on my heart

03:11:21
Speaker 37

wanting to serve that community, make sure that there's workforce housing here in the Roswell.

03:11:28
Speaker 37

So I hope that if you have the time on the twentieth or before the twenty first sorry, I think it was the twenty first, to read this book or to take part in this conversation. I hope you will.

03:11:40
Speaker 37

I'm planning on it. I want to learn more and learn more about how I can contribute

03:11:46
Speaker 37

to, make sure that there is workforce

03:11:49
Speaker 37

housing in Roswell.

03:11:51
Speaker 37

I want to thank the council,

03:11:54
Speaker 37

for

03:11:55
Speaker 37

Pelfry Pines, for the rebuilding of that apartment.

03:12:00
Speaker 37

Another experience that I've had too is that my grandmother, my mama d, she ended up living at, Phillips Tower in Decatur, and that's a senior housing facility that has affordable housing available in it. Thank you. So thank you and I hope you're able to join.

03:12:16
Speaker 1

Thank you. Thank you so much. Thank you for your

03:12:19
Speaker 1

very heartfelt

03:12:20
Speaker 2

story and sharing it with us. Thank you. Also, miss Rozier, I did receive your email. Nine or ten in the morning is fine. I think it's an extension of your comments tonight. So I look forward to speaking with you tomorrow morning. Thank you. I appreciate that. And thank you for reaching out to me. Absolutely.

03:12:36
Speaker 15

Yes, sir. Lee.

03:12:38
Speaker 21

Thank you, mayor. Thank you, miss Rosier.

03:12:41
Speaker 21

I appreciate you mentioning Pelfrey Pines and the redevelopment of the Roswell Housing Authority. That has been,

03:12:49
Speaker 21

a behemoth

03:12:50
Speaker 21

of a lift, for this mayor and council.

03:12:53
Speaker 21

And I think every well, I know everybody sitting up here has been in in favor of this, this redevelopment.

03:13:00
Speaker 21

And while it's not favorable for some people, I believe it is the right thing to do that we're giving first right of refusal to all of the folks that,

03:13:09
Speaker 21

had to move out so that we can demo 199 Grove Way, and they'll have their the first right of refusal to come back.

03:13:16
Speaker 21

We you'll be getting some notice surely through social media and otherwise about a groundbreaking that will most likely be in October.

03:13:23
Speaker 21

We're going from '40 units on that site to 102.

03:13:27
Speaker 21

Those will be 99 single bedroom units and three two bedroom units. And with

03:13:34
Speaker 21

the quad, which is the property right across the street on Grove Way, has just been approved through DCA,

03:13:40
Speaker 21

to be redeveloped. So phase two is about to be launched. That should be signed off on oh my gosh.

03:13:48
Speaker 21

It'll probably close next, I think, next March or May. Anyway, it's rolling.

03:13:53
Speaker 21

And that will include single fam single bedroom, double,

03:13:57
Speaker 21

two bedroom units, three bedrooms. They're talking about possibility of one or

03:14:11
Speaker 21

affordable housing in the city of Roswell,

03:14:13
Speaker 21

and,

03:14:14
Speaker 21

we are the affordable housing

03:14:16
Speaker 21

solution for North Fulton.

03:14:18
Speaker 21

No other city, no other sister city has what we have here. You mentioned the Drake House, of course. We have Homestretch,

03:14:24
Speaker 21

Family Promise. We have,

03:14:26
Speaker 21

supporting a lot of these individuals in peril. They're not all the same people. It's different people, different weeks. We have the North Fulton Charities,

03:14:35
Speaker 21

and, of course, the Housing Authority.

03:14:36
Speaker 21

And, you know, that it gets a bad name. I've said it up here before. We are a municipality

03:14:42
Speaker 21

bailing out a failing federal

03:14:44
Speaker 21

program

03:14:45
Speaker 21

across the nation, and we're doing our part.

03:14:48
Speaker 21

So we do take it seriously. We are concerned about our residents.

03:14:53
Speaker 21

I won't speak for the rest of the council and mayor. I have no intention of building millions of apartments here and welcoming everybody in from everybody else. Zero intention of that. I never have had that intention.

03:15:03
Speaker 21

My intention is to take care of our Roswell residents, and I know people move in and move out. And those applications will be open for anybody to apply for,

03:15:13
Speaker 21

for these spaces at 199 Grove Way and then the quad that'll,

03:15:18
Speaker 21

be redeveloped after this first phase. But we have taken a very aggressive approach,

03:15:23
Speaker 21

and we've committed $2,000,000

03:15:26
Speaker 21

to make that capital stack work so that this project can get off the ground. And that will all be re

03:15:32
Speaker 21

repaid to us through the CDBG

03:15:34
Speaker 21

funding for the next, probably eight years.

03:15:37
Speaker 21

We should have that paid off. So it it came at,

03:15:42
Speaker 21

you know, a commitment from us to make that loan from the city. It's your taxpayer money that's been put forward and it through a section one zero eight loan, which is funded through HUD, through the section one zero eight fund, loan process. And that'll be paid back through CDBG funds. So a little technical to go along with the we're doing something, and I believe that we should be really proud of what we've got going on in the city of Roswell long before we got involved in the housing authority. But,

03:16:08
Speaker 21

I

03:16:09
Speaker 21

I've said some things that I'll back up. We haven't had any interest from previous mayors

03:16:15
Speaker 21

with the housing authority. It hadn't been. It has been looking the other way, turned a blind eye. Don't wanna see it. Don't wanna talk about it. So

03:16:23
Speaker 21

I I'm very proud of what we've got doing, and I look forward to seeing, hopefully, all of you at the groundbreaking

03:16:29
Speaker 21

in October.

03:16:30
Speaker 1

Well, I'll just say just gonna

03:16:32
Speaker 1

Courtney, thank you. Speaking as someone who had a maternal grandmother who was chronically

03:16:38
Speaker 1

homeless,

03:16:39
Speaker 1

familiar with your story,

03:16:41
Speaker 1

understand the all the dynamics of that, the generational impacts, they're severe,

03:16:47
Speaker 1

and thank you for sharing that.

03:16:50
Speaker 1

I will share with you one of the many dynamics that when we came into the city, not looking for

03:16:55
Speaker 1

any credit, just wanna illuminate.

03:16:58
Speaker 1

When we walked in in 2022 in January,

03:17:01
Speaker 1

we knew of Karen Parrish was the

03:17:04
Speaker 1

volunteer head of the RHA.

03:17:07
Speaker 1

And we downloaded some information from her.

03:17:10
Speaker 1

And Randy can tell you,

03:17:13
Speaker 1

when I walked in, we kind of all looked at each other and said, you got anybody in this inside of city halls

03:17:20
Speaker 1

Looked all around, even with our historical legacy expert.

03:17:25
Speaker 1

And, like, it was amazing.

03:17:27
Speaker 1

Like, the Kansas City and Roswell Housing Authority

03:17:29
Speaker 1

had no formal really relationship other than the appointment

03:17:33
Speaker 1

from the mayor

03:17:34
Speaker 1

appointing volunteers

03:17:36
Speaker 1

to this amazingly powerful organization

03:17:39
Speaker 1

that if you wanna talk about it, I've heard a candidate say he would do a forensic audit. There's a great forensic audit for you back in 02/2011, 2012 you should go check out. But,

03:17:50
Speaker 1

I mean, like, a

03:17:51
Speaker 1

an a housing authority that was in financial disrepair,

03:17:55
Speaker 1

did not have a plan,

03:17:58
Speaker 1

and had no relationship with the city that created it. And so the first thing we went about was creating relationship. Then we started looking at the properties, and we realized, as Randy could tell you, oh my god. We have a building. And by the way, the people that get most affected by poor housing

03:18:15
Speaker 1

are the most vulnerable who can't do anything about it and usually are not protected.

03:18:19
Speaker 1

And we came across a building in the housing authority

03:18:22
Speaker 1

that we said, oh my god. This building could literally collapse any day. It's all elderly people in it, and they will not survive. That literally will have 31 people die in our city because the the housing authority has no overwatch, no oversight. And so we stepped in as a city,

03:18:39
Speaker 1

condemned the building. We also did something again that cities don't do. We filled in the gaps,

03:18:44
Speaker 1

and we found homes for those 31 people. Got killed in the press for it, like, I mean, destroyed. But the honest job was this staff and this team and Lee was a big part of it, Christine as well,

03:18:56
Speaker 1

went out of their way

03:18:58
Speaker 1

along with Beth from Grainsville

03:19:00
Speaker 1

to find housing

03:19:01
Speaker 1

for all 31 people.

03:19:04
Speaker 1

And then we went about the business and said, alright. This thing's a financial mess.

03:19:08
Speaker 1

So the city, the taxpayers of Roswell don't know about this, but we gotta solve for it. Even though the taxpayers are completely unaware and it's a federal program,

03:19:16
Speaker 1

it's in our city limits, and there are vulnerable people here and they need help. And we gotta solve for it. And Lee came to the forefront of really stepping in the middle of this and really getting highly involved.

03:19:26
Speaker 1

And, again,

03:19:27
Speaker 1

call it don't call it business.

03:19:29
Speaker 1

Call it common sense and practical. We had the acumen

03:19:32
Speaker 1

and the financial ability to figure out solutions to help put a cap stat together for a developer to come in who needed this very complicated point system. So bam. And then we said, guess what? We said, look. Here's our conditions.

03:19:46
Speaker 1

You must provide the most pristine housing of a housing authority.

03:19:50
Speaker 1

If you're gonna put housing in a housing authority in the city of Roswell, any resident that lives in that must be pristine housing. That's the requirement.

03:19:58
Speaker 1

And once they said we'll do that, we said, alright. We'll figure out a way to financially do it. And the CDBG fund, $2,000,000 loan for the cap stack was a brilliant way to do it because it didn't put any pressure on the taxpayer, but it still solved a very difficult solution.

03:20:12
Speaker 1

Lee, major kudos to you for being the tip of the spear on that. Mister Knighton, major kudos to you for being the tip of the spear on that. You guys, the city's done an amazing job. The city's don't get any credit for it, but it did the right thing when nobody's looking

03:20:24
Speaker 1

continually and found a financial solution without burdening the taxpayer. It's a pretty incredible feat. So, yes, Courtney, there are people for those,

03:20:32
Speaker 1

like, literally, we're increasing the housing from 40 to one twenty,

03:20:38
Speaker 2

one of two, and then there's a second one that'll be coming right around the corner inside the housing authority itself. So thank you for bringing that up. And thank Courtney, thank you very

03:20:43
Speaker 1

thank you for bringing that up. And thank Courtney, thank you very heartfelt story. Appreciate that. Yes, ma'am. Sarah.

03:20:50
Speaker 11

Sucker. You gave me a microphone. We're gonna talk about housing.

03:20:54
Speaker 11

No. Just joking. I just wanted to say that I can completely relate. I know that, predating my time on council housing has been my hot topic and something that I more likely than not would come out to council meetings to discuss.

03:21:06
Speaker 11

And very similar to your story, it's because it was something very, near and dear to my family.

03:21:11
Speaker 11

My great grandmother was a, one of the first residents of Techwood Homes, which has a really complicated history and one of the first of four,

03:21:19
Speaker 11

federally subsidized affordable housing units in City Of Atlanta when she passed away.

03:21:24
Speaker 11

My grandmother was,

03:21:26
Speaker 11

living in Winder and,

03:21:30
Speaker 11

public housing then as well when she also passed away in 1998.

03:21:34
Speaker 11

My mother was a resident of public housing when she was a teenager when she was growing up. And I know that that's something that's come up before. It's like, oh, Sarah, you you come from, an affluent family and you come from a life of privilege. I come from a life of privilege because of three

03:21:49
Speaker 11

generations of my family were supported by public housing. They would not have been housed. My mother's family going through a divorce, she would not have had a place to live. My grandmother later in life would not have had a place to live, same with my great grandmother.

03:22:03
Speaker 11

And I I think that's one of the reasons that I ran for office originally is because I do feel very passionately about housing.

03:22:09
Speaker 11

I reflect

03:22:11
Speaker 11

not only in my,

03:22:13
Speaker 11

public role but also in my academic role often

03:22:17
Speaker 11

on how I find it egregious that in life

03:22:20
Speaker 11

there's poppers graves that can guarantee somebody dignity and death, but they were never guaranteed a place to live during life. And one of the most basic tenants of life is shelter is one of them.

03:22:32
Speaker 11

But I will say too on the the city end, it's not that I'm sitting up here being like, yeah. Let's talk housing. But when it comes down to having to, put rubber to the road, it's just punt the ball. It's a very complicated subject that the municipal level is very difficult to fund. Most of the social services in the local area are taken care of theoretically at the county level. That's what your tax dollars go towards. The continuum of care for homelessness has gone through Fulton County.

03:22:56
Speaker 11

But oftentimes, we're overlooked by Fulton County because Roswell is, quote, unquote, affluent. We'd we don't have homeless people here. You and I both know that's not necessarily the case.

03:23:05
Speaker 11

We we do have have, unhoused population and we do not have county tax dollars or assistance often coming into Roswell because we're overlooked.

03:23:15
Speaker 11

Roswell as a city does not have the funds nor the abilities to have social services at that level. That's not to say that they don't try. I know for a fact that we have police officers who have patrolled the road and have tried to give resources,

03:23:28
Speaker 11

given recommendations for continuum of care, even literally taken people off the streets into warming shelters or, housing facilities in inclement weather.

03:23:36
Speaker 11

I know that the fire department as well was active not only in literally bringing cots in from asthma when we had,

03:23:43
Speaker 11

cold spells, but also,

03:23:45
Speaker 11

making sure that literally help people move out of Economy Hotel. So it's not that we turn a blind eye to unhoused populations here in Roswell. We pretend they don't exist. It's not that we are ambivalent towards housing.

03:23:58
Speaker 11

It's that the cost of living has doubled more than doubled in the last five years for our area specifically, and that's gotten away from us much faster than we want it to. It's a complicated topic, and I think it's something that we as a city has tried to invest more in and something I would like to continue to try to, put more investments in.

03:24:16
Speaker 11

But thank you for your comments.

03:24:18
Speaker 1

Thanks, Sarah.

03:24:20
Speaker 1

Yeah. Just I'm surprised you didn't mention chief Conroy.

03:24:23
Speaker 1

We actually have other municipalities

03:24:25
Speaker 1

and counties actually dump they bring homeless people into our city,

03:24:30
Speaker 1

believe it or not. Whole another story.

03:24:33
Speaker 1

And we manage that, FYI. We manage that actively. Chief and his team did an amazing job of managing that. Like, this is not a city that turns a blind eye.

03:24:43
Speaker 1

But I will tell you just an inside ballpark story. I've had this conversation with mister Knighton and mister Stevens and haven't really shared it with the council much. But we talk about sometimes some of the grander issues that need to be solved.

03:24:55
Speaker 1

And I've said to them, like, there's issues that, like I've said, and I don't mean this cash aspersions on the federal government, state government, or county government. But I've said, like, on the issue of homelessness,

03:25:05
Speaker 1

I said, do you really believe the federal government's gonna solve it for us? Do you believe the state government's gonna solve it for us? With all due respect, do you think the county government's gonna solve it for us? Because there's tremendous resources and dollars being spent there, but the problem's not being solved. And we've kinda talked about this internally,

03:25:19
Speaker 1

like, hey.

03:25:20
Speaker 1

I don't know. Sounds like it's gonna be an art. We better figure this out. And so thank you for raising the issue.

03:25:26
Speaker 1

Nancy,

03:25:27
Speaker 1

next speaker, please. But three speakers left, so forgive me if we're not going to a bathroom break and there's three speakers left. So y'all just bear with me. Sorry. Next speaker, please, Nancy. Jerry Wood.

03:25:39
Speaker 1

Welcome, Jerry.

03:25:49
Speaker 38

Wondering if Dave Woodrow has left because I wanted to address

03:25:52
Speaker 38

what he brought up. But I wanna bring up three things tonight. The first is, talk about the the bond.

03:26:00
Speaker 38

I was surprised when,

03:26:02
Speaker 38

I learned that we didn't have enough money to buy the

03:26:06
Speaker 38

Hardscrabble And Chaffin property, the $7,500,000,

03:26:10
Speaker 38

given that we had just passed a $107,600,000

03:26:14
Speaker 38

bond issue for recreation and parks.

03:26:18
Speaker 38

So my question is,

03:26:20
Speaker 38

where did the

03:26:22
Speaker 38

what has happened to the $107,600,000

03:26:24
Speaker 38

for recreation and parks?

03:26:27
Speaker 38

I've looked at the dashboard and, does not appear to be accurately representing what's happened on the ground.

03:26:33
Speaker 38

So my

03:26:34
Speaker 38

specific question is,

03:26:36
Speaker 38

how much of that $107,600,000

03:26:39
Speaker 38

has been spent on recreation and parks and trails?

03:26:44
Speaker 38

What was it spent for?

03:26:47
Speaker 38

And how much of have we contractually committed to spend

03:26:51
Speaker 38

even though we haven't spent it yet if we've entered a contract? And I asked the same question about the $52,000,000

03:26:57
Speaker 38

for

03:27:00
Speaker 38

fire safety and the $20,000,000

03:27:03
Speaker 38

for the

03:27:07
Speaker 38

parking deck.

03:27:09
Speaker 38

And

03:27:10
Speaker 38

we've admitted that we can do a better that that I think you've admitted that you need to do a better job of communicating. And I think that dashboard and telling the people,

03:27:20
Speaker 38

how that money's been spent is a is a good start on,

03:27:23
Speaker 38

communication.

03:27:26
Speaker 38

I couldn't find out looking at anything on the records how the money's been spent. So I think you can do a better job there.

03:27:33
Speaker 38

Warner I'm sorry. David Woodrow has left. He's a good friend of mine.

03:27:39
Speaker 38

I think his

03:27:41
Speaker 38

he has forgotten

03:27:42
Speaker 38

the $32,000,000

03:27:43
Speaker 38

bond issue that we passed

03:27:46
Speaker 38

the city passed the first year

03:27:49
Speaker 38

after I was elected.

03:27:53
Speaker 38

And he said that in the past two administrations,

03:27:56
Speaker 38

there had been no bond.

03:27:58
Speaker 38

Though he's forgotten a $32,000,000

03:28:00
Speaker 38

bond and I think that put us on the right path.

03:28:04
Speaker 38

Some people have said nothing was accomplished in the last twenty seven years and I'm most proud of the acquisition of Parkland.

03:28:11
Speaker 38

We went from around 300 acres to over a thousand acres of Parkland

03:28:17
Speaker 38

in the twenty years I served.

03:28:19
Speaker 38

And the parks that were built included the Big Creek Park, the Leida Thompson Park, the Riverwalk seven miles, Girard Landing,

03:28:27
Speaker 38

expansion of East Roswell Park,

03:28:29
Speaker 38

purchase of Barrington Hall and Mimosa Hall,

03:28:32
Speaker 38

the 7 Branches Park, the first 25 acres on the Spruill Park. And that which I'm most proud of, mayor, is the Tillywood Preserve

03:28:41
Speaker 38

located in your neighborhood,

03:28:43
Speaker 38

which was acquired with zero tax dollars and is currently owned by

03:28:48
Speaker 38

a a trust.

03:28:52
Speaker 38

Now as far as the

03:28:56
Speaker 38

pension, I will confess, I know nothing about pensions. I relied upon people like David Davidson to steer us on

03:29:04
Speaker 38

making good decisions about pensions, and I relied upon staff. I can't explain

03:29:09
Speaker 38

anything of what he brought up.

03:29:12
Speaker 38

I may be a lawyer, but I'm no pension expert. I'm not sure anybody understood what the pension expert said.

03:29:18
Speaker 38

So I'm not in position to respond to that. And the last thing I'd like to respond to

03:29:22
Speaker 38

and touch on briefly is Mimosa.

03:29:26
Speaker 38

The question was,

03:29:30
Speaker 38

you know, when is this gonna go away?

03:29:32
Speaker 38

What would can make it go away? Well, the first thing I wanna make is there's been a statement that no laws were broken, that our that your attorneys have looked into it. I also looked into it.

03:29:42
Speaker 38

I came to the conclusion that there were city ordinances broken. There's a difference of opinion I recognize.

03:29:48
Speaker 38

What we don't have is an independent decision.

03:29:51
Speaker 38

I'm sure that every inmate in the prison is innocent, if you ask him.

03:29:56
Speaker 38

And if you ask staff, did they make any mistakes? And I'm sure they're going to say they didn't.

03:30:01
Speaker 38

But until you get an independent decision, you're going to have two different opinions,

03:30:05
Speaker 38

the city's opinion and people's opinion like Jerry would,

03:30:10
Speaker 38

And the the only way to resolve that is to get an independent decision.

03:30:15
Speaker 38

Now you've said you could have done a better job. I think that's clear.

03:30:20
Speaker 38

I think the first but you know what I have not never heard yet

03:30:23
Speaker 38

on Mimosa?

03:30:25
Speaker 38

Is an apology for doing a bad job.

03:30:28
Speaker 38

I think that would be a good beginning.

03:30:30
Speaker 38

So

03:30:31
Speaker 38

I will give you the opportunity to respond to my questions about the bond, and I appreciate your service.

03:30:37
Speaker 1

Thank you, Jerry. I appreciate you, mayor. Appreciate your service, and thank you for your comments very much. I,

03:30:45
Speaker 1

Bill,

03:30:47
Speaker 1

when are we doing this? Because I think, the Sharon,

03:30:51
Speaker 1

who's gonna do the bond question? Because it's a great question. The illumination of all three bonds,

03:30:57
Speaker 1

the $107,800,000

03:30:59
Speaker 1

for the parks and rec.

03:31:04
Speaker 1

Yeah. Yeah. Would you upload the website, please, Nance, Sharon?

03:31:08
Speaker 1

$20,000,000 for the parking garage and $52,000,000

03:31:11
Speaker 1

for public safety.

03:31:12
Speaker 1

Just illuminate that a little bit. And then

03:31:15
Speaker 1

yeah.

03:31:17
Speaker 1

That's that's the first question that,

03:31:20
Speaker 39

I'm sure you have. Well, I I first wanted to address,

03:31:23
Speaker 39

some questions about the the bonds and how we're tracking them. We do have a bond dashboard, which you'll see here up above.

03:31:31
Speaker 39

What we have,

03:31:33
Speaker 39

pulled up right now is Riverside Park.

03:31:36
Speaker 39

I think some of the the confusion is the,

03:31:40
Speaker 39

part the projects that are shown right now are the projects that are funded through the first tranche.

03:31:45
Speaker 39

We had two tranches,

03:31:47
Speaker 39

issued. In the first tranche, it was $86,200,000

03:31:51
Speaker 39

and the second tranche was 93.4.

03:31:54
Speaker 39

So sometimes when people are looking for the projects, it's it's because the projects are in the second tranche. A good example of that would be Henbury Park. So right now, Henbury Park is not showing on the bond dashboard because we're not actively working on it.

03:32:08
Speaker 39

We have just begun working on it. We actually just released surveyors to go ahead and start the top design

03:32:16
Speaker 39

process now that we

03:32:17
Speaker 39

have those second tranche trends.

03:32:20
Speaker 39

Example here of Riverside Park.

03:32:24
Speaker 39

Here above, looking here, you can see that the project is showing 50% complete.

03:32:29
Speaker 39

I think one of the questions that are being asked is

03:32:32
Speaker 39

why we're showing that only 840,000.00

03:32:35
Speaker 39

of the 14,800,000.0

03:32:37
Speaker 39

has been spent.

03:32:39
Speaker 39

What that's really showing is is we're tracking time,

03:32:42
Speaker 1

not just dollars. So there's Sharon. Yes, sir. Let's slow that down because I think there's a lot of information there. Okay. So let's look at this current site

03:32:50
Speaker 1

and refer everybody to the bottom right hand corner

03:32:53
Speaker 1

where it shows 840,000.00.

03:32:55
Speaker 1

You got a blue little thing there going on, right? So it starts up 0

03:33:00
Speaker 1

to half to half curve,

03:33:01
Speaker 1

and it goes all the way to 14,800,000.0.

03:33:03
Speaker 1

So this could

03:33:05
Speaker 1

look, if you're familiar with looking at it, it probably makes sense. If you're not looking at this all the time, it's right. Okay. What's $840,000

03:33:12
Speaker 1

So $840,000

03:33:13
Speaker 1

is what you've actually spent

03:33:15
Speaker 1

on the Riverside Park project, correct? Correct. So that is And you budgeted

03:33:21
Speaker 1

out of the $107,800,000

03:33:23
Speaker 1

you budgeted $14,800,000

03:33:25
Speaker 1

correct? That is correct. And then the bar graph above in the green, right,

03:33:31
Speaker 1

shows 50% completion. So people are probably going, My Lord, how have you spent $840,000

03:33:37
Speaker 1

out of 14.8,

03:33:39
Speaker 39

and yet you're telling me you're 50% completed? How does that work? I don't understand that. Correct. So there's a great deal of time that went into the planning process. And earlier, some of the council members were talking about that, how it is frustrating probably to people in the community when we start talking about

03:33:53
Speaker 39

community when we start talking about projects. There's a period of time where there's not a lot of information

03:33:58
Speaker 39

shared because the engineering

03:34:00
Speaker 39

process, the field work that goes into that, the subsurface investigations that are necessary,

03:34:06
Speaker 39

the permitting, the reviews

03:34:08
Speaker 39

takes a great deal of time. So we account for that in the process because

03:34:13
Speaker 39

in managing the process, we're basically managing the time, the schedule,

03:34:17
Speaker 1

we're managing the dollars, and we're also managing what's actually being built. In the case of Riverside Sharon, let me ask you a question. So is that a Sharon operational decision, or does that does that framework come from somewhere else? Bill, this is your chance.

03:34:33
Speaker 1

Where does that framework come

03:34:35
Speaker 1

based upon like you can you just say, look, I'm spending $8,400,000

03:34:39
Speaker 1

but 50% of design

03:34:41
Speaker 1

at the time of this project's already built in. So I'm 50% complete on this project, even though I've got

03:34:48
Speaker 1

basically

03:34:49
Speaker 1

$14,000,000

03:34:50
Speaker 1

left to spend and construction hasn't started. So how in the world am I 50%?

03:34:53
Speaker 39

So for us, it is best management, best practices of how we manage projects. But Bill's gonna explain a little bit of the fiduciary side of that,

03:35:02
Speaker 39

from his side of the table, and I'll just step aside.

03:35:07
Speaker 4

Thank you, Sharon. Thank you, mister mayor.

03:35:09
Speaker 4

In accounting for construction projects, it's a it's a fairly complicated area under generally accepted accounting principles,

03:35:16
Speaker 4

which we have to follow as a as a as a city.

03:35:20
Speaker 4

Your your percentage of completion is measured basically by the input method, whether input is time

03:35:27
Speaker 4

or dollars.

03:35:29
Speaker 4

So in this case, probably the most meaningful measure is the amount of time it takes to complete the project and the high value time of design

03:35:35
Speaker 4

and review and and designing and printing plans, all that. That takes place upfront as a big piece of the load.

03:35:43
Speaker 4

But relative to the huge amount of materials that you buy for the park, it's not a lot of dollars.

03:35:49
Speaker 4

So generally accepted accounting principles do not allow you to front load your spend with materials

03:35:55
Speaker 4

and then consider that in the completion process.

03:35:58
Speaker 4

That just becomes inventory that could wind up stale, obsolete,

03:36:02
Speaker 4

or spoiled.

03:36:03
Speaker 4

So you're you're

03:36:05
Speaker 4

not incented from an accounting perspective to buy those materials and let them sit in the yard

03:36:10
Speaker 4

and count towards your percentage of completion.

03:36:13
Speaker 4

So there's a It's

03:36:14
Speaker 4

best practices. Is it is it also a legal issue from an accounting perspective? It's a compliance issue under accounting. And if you if you you have to pick a method that's

03:36:24
Speaker 4

most appropriate for your project. And if you don't do that, you violate accounting principles, and we would literally get an adverse audit opinion if it were material

03:36:32
Speaker 1

Thank you. Which is pretty much the worst thing you can get in our capital markets. Thanks so much. Alright. Sorry. Let me let me let me keep sharing going though. One second, Alan. I'm gonna just keep sharing because this is are we gonna get can I ask a question to you guys?

03:36:44
Speaker 1

So I've seen nice clean spreadsheets, $107,800,000

03:36:48
Speaker 1

with all the projects, like, very simple.

03:36:50
Speaker 1

Do we have something like that that is that on there? Because this is project by project by project, which is cool. Right? I'm dialed down to it. But I I think Jerry's question was, hey, man. You got a $107,800,000.

03:37:01
Speaker 1

You got general obligation bonds from the you know, the residents voted on 74.5%

03:37:06
Speaker 1

and gave you a $107,800,000

03:37:08
Speaker 1

for parks and rec. There's a $107,000,000

03:37:10
Speaker 1

projects. Where's that money?

03:37:12
Speaker 1

Can we show a $107,800,000

03:37:14
Speaker 39

where all the projects are? We are certainly tracking that, and we can,

03:37:19
Speaker 1

prepare it in such a way that we can make it available. Yeah. Let's make that let's work on that so that I think that's a very reasonable

03:37:26
Speaker 1

request

03:37:27
Speaker 1

because I like that you're gonna show it project by project. I like that you're showing the status of the project. But the aggregate was the question. That's a fair question. Hey. I gave you a $107,800,000.

03:37:38
Speaker 1

Tell me where that's going. That's fair.

03:37:41
Speaker 1

I might be on the previous page, but we just need to bring it clear

03:37:46
Speaker 1

to go back. Is that where it is? That's That could be wrong. Yeah. You usually are. So, you know, I'm not wrong. The

03:37:53
Speaker 1

front Yes. We you're you're looking at that, which is the sum of funds spent, sum of funds remaining,

03:37:59
Speaker 1

which is We want something a little more specific. But this is pretty good, but a little more specific. But this is pretty good. This is your total bond front bonds with a 179.6.

03:38:08
Speaker 1

So it could be a little confusing because you've got

03:38:12
Speaker 1

public safety in here along with,

03:38:15
Speaker 1

parks and rec along with the parking deck. And it's tranche one. In tranche one. Correct. Yep. Correct. And to your point on the left hand side, it shows eight park and rec projects, four public safety projects, and, of course, the one parking deck project.

03:38:28
Speaker 1

So yeah.

03:38:30
Speaker 1

And this tranche one budget.

03:38:31
Speaker 39

Sorry, Sharon. Forgive me. Oh, not at all. I also wanted to show you an example of a different project. If you go to Roswellerie Park, Jeff

03:38:44
Speaker 39

so here you see that we have a subprojects that are that are shown here. We've got the athletic fields, two different athletic fields. We've got the pond embankment project,

03:38:54
Speaker 39

and the total allocated for Roswell Area Park

03:38:58
Speaker 39

is that 14,800,000.0.

03:39:00
Speaker 39

The projects that are listed in those subcomponents

03:39:03
Speaker 39

do not total up to the $148,800,000.0.

03:39:06
Speaker 39

There are additional projects that are gonna be done at Roswell Area Park,

03:39:10
Speaker 39

and that is why sometimes we get the question, hey. I'm confused.

03:39:15
Speaker 39

You have 14,800,000.0.

03:39:16
Speaker 39

I don't understand how that ties back to these sub projects. So I just wanted to make that clear as well. The, the two athletic fields are complete already,

03:39:26
Speaker 39

the two sub projects there that that Jeff is clicking on, and there's some information about those in the text below.

03:39:33
Speaker 39

And then in the Pond Embankment,

03:39:36
Speaker 39

we're just, we just authorized that. That's about 2 and a half million dollars right there.

03:39:42
Speaker 39

And you can see that the, information about where we are in the process updates as well as as far as that it's gonna be starting in the '25

03:39:50
Speaker 39

and complete in the 2026.

03:39:52
Speaker 1

And this is, roswellgov.com//bond.

03:39:57
Speaker 1

Correct? Bond. Yes. And if I go to the roswellgov.com

03:40:00
Speaker 1

website, can I just type in bond in the in the search bar? That's what I typically do. K. And it quickly takes you to the So if I wanna find this, that the place I go is just roswaldgov.com

03:40:09
Speaker 1

and just put bond in the search bar. Exactly. Okay. Exactly.

03:40:16
Speaker 39

And like you said, mayor, we're gonna provide you with our monthly update at your, Wednesday workshop, which is something we're doing in internally for all of our projects.

03:40:26
Speaker 1

We we do a a project management steering committee, and we'll provide those updates to you on Wednesday. So Bill, Adam, and Don, do we have the ability to kind of give I know you're doing a budget workshop on f y twenty six.

03:40:40
Speaker 1

I would love for you if you could do a presentation on the bonds. You can take a little snippet of time, put it out there, give some clarity, I think, to Jerry's questions. I think those are reasonable questions. And I think

03:40:50
Speaker 1

us being providing clear answers

03:40:53
Speaker 1

very very clearly

03:40:55
Speaker 1

because this is great, but could be a little confusing.

03:40:58
Speaker 1

Right? So

03:41:00
Speaker 1

the simple question is where where's my $107,800,000

03:41:03
Speaker 1

going? Right?

03:41:05
Speaker 39

Thank you. I think we can do that. Thank you.

03:41:09
Speaker 1

Mayor Wood asked another question. What was

03:41:11
Speaker 1

yes. Council member sales.

03:41:14
Speaker 14

Bill, before you step away, I believe that the blue part is the actual disbursed funds. Is that a fair statement?

03:41:23
Speaker 14

Yes. Okay. So

03:41:25
Speaker 14

so to your point, the the, the green bar at the top is on a calendar basis

03:41:30
Speaker 14

and

03:41:31
Speaker 14

the money spent is on a cash basis and that front loading of time is is in the design phase. It's on it's it's on a

03:41:40
Speaker 4

hours budget,

03:41:41
Speaker 4

time budget. Not count well,

03:41:44
Speaker 4

not a traditional calendar day by day, but It's Kronos. We expect it to take eight thousand hours. We're hours. We're four thousand eight hundred hours and something like that. Right. Fair enough. Thank you. Those are just a couple of example numbers. I don't know what those actual on this one represent. And then, I'm almost I don't

03:42:00
Speaker 1

feel like

03:42:02
Speaker 14

The only thing I'd say is what we what we did apologize for, what we are part apologizing for is the communication. And I think I think everybody on this dias apologize for the lack of communication.

03:42:13
Speaker 14

We aren't apologizing,

03:42:15
Speaker 14

at least speaking for myself, for the project.

03:42:19
Speaker 1

I think, you know, I think that that and that probably upset some people. But I Jared, if I knew what to apologize for, I'd apologize for it. Like, what do you want me to apologize for? The fact that the project happened.

03:42:32
Speaker 1

To Ellen's point, like, it's the right project for the city. It's the right project for these properties. It's the right project.

03:42:38
Speaker 1

I'm not nobody's happy trees went down.

03:42:40
Speaker 1

Nobody jumps up for joy. Oh my gosh. Beautiful

03:42:43
Speaker 1

specimen trees and

03:42:46
Speaker 1

Jeff's not happy about it. Dina's not happy about it. Steve's not happy about it.

03:42:51
Speaker 1

But it's gonna work out in the long run. It's gonna be good for the city. It's gonna be good for that property. It's gonna be good for the other story properties. Nobody jumps up for joy that the trees are down.

03:43:02
Speaker 1

And but

03:43:04
Speaker 1

if that's what you want me to say, Hey, I'm sorry trees got cut down. Is that what you want me to say, I'm sorry for trees got cut down? Well, I think when y'all came into the office, so May, we talked about this. It was like, The project

03:43:16
Speaker 1

to Sarah May, that project was gonna happen because it was the right thing for the city. And so the experts on our side of the equation made the determination,

03:43:25
Speaker 1

this is how it needs to happen.

03:43:27
Speaker 1

And I don't think they were reckless.

03:43:30
Speaker 1

And so I don't know how to charge

03:43:32
Speaker 1

go against the charge. Jerry makes an interesting point. We'll bring in a third party. At some point, when do you like,

03:43:38
Speaker 1

look, this government's pretty introspective.

03:43:40
Speaker 1

And interestingly enough, they do admit when they're wrong internally a lot.

03:43:45
Speaker 1

Like, everybody in this I'm telling you, there's a lot of internal

03:43:49
Speaker 1

honesty that goes on inside of this conversation. And we talked about this with Mo Milosa a lot. Tell me if we made some errors.

03:43:55
Speaker 1

Right? Like, let's be honest with ourselves hard and fast. And I would say, look, continue to keep the doors of communication open. But I don't think Alan, I'm afraid. Like, Jerry, if I knew what to say I was sorry for, I promise you I'd say I'm sorry.

03:44:09
Speaker 1

I'm you know, and I I don't know what to say sorry for.

03:44:13
Speaker 1

And that's I think that's a that's a loggerhead. Yes, sir. Councilor Gibson. Just a couple of other it is

03:44:18
Speaker 14

somewhat ironic

03:44:20
Speaker 14

that,

03:44:22
Speaker 14

the the people inside this building have been very, very clear that we followed oil, that we,

03:44:28
Speaker 14

follow the law. And yet when the question is put back on regarding the,

03:44:34
Speaker 14

pension,

03:44:35
Speaker 14

he defers to the experts and blames them for the debt problem. And so I found that quite ironic.

03:44:42
Speaker 1

Well, it's funny. I will take accountability. As you know, as the leader of the city elected leader of the city,

03:44:49
Speaker 1

I take responsibility for damn near everything. And I will. It's my job.

03:44:53
Speaker 1

Good, bad, or indifferent. And that's why,

03:44:56
Speaker 1

honestly, mister Knight knows this.

03:44:58
Speaker 1

I'm a serious operator,

03:45:00
Speaker 1

and,

03:45:01
Speaker 1

it's my job to know what's going on. It's my job to make sure that we're heading in the right direction. It's my job job to make sure the council's informed. And council knows how many times I've screwed up. Sarah.

03:45:12
Speaker 1

Right? Not informing you on something

03:45:15
Speaker 1

not informing you on something and it blows up, and I have to say, man, I screwed up. I didn't inform you. Because it is my job.

03:45:21
Speaker 1

It is my job. Anyway, thank you, and I appreciate your comments, mayor Wood. Next speak Nancy, next speaker.

03:45:28
Speaker 7

Gus Haydorn.

03:45:29
Speaker 1

Mister Haydorn. Gus, welcome.

03:45:34
Speaker 1

I think I know what you're gonna talk about.

03:45:43
Speaker 40

Mayor and council. Welcome, sir.

03:45:48
Speaker 40

I appreciate very much the service of

03:45:52
Speaker 40

the leadership, and I appreciate very much the service of

03:45:56
Speaker 40

all the people that work for the city. I know the job is

03:46:00
Speaker 40

challenging.

03:46:04
Speaker 40

I think

03:46:05
Speaker 40

well, and I would also like to say thanks to Christine

03:46:11
Speaker 40

and Will and Sarah

03:46:14
Speaker 40

for your response to what happened at Mimosa.

03:46:20
Speaker 40

I believe that civic engagement

03:46:23
Speaker 40

is the heartbeat of democracy, but unfortunately,

03:46:27
Speaker 40

there are people on

03:46:30
Speaker 40

in the leadership

03:46:32
Speaker 40

that do not see it that way.

03:46:35
Speaker 40

And that kinda gets at the heart of what went wrong here.

03:46:42
Speaker 40

I served on the board of Mimosa for eight years.

03:46:46
Speaker 40

I love that place.

03:46:48
Speaker 40

At this point, it's really hard for me to go back there.

03:46:52
Speaker 40

The assault

03:46:55
Speaker 40

on the natural environment, the assault on the beauty,

03:46:59
Speaker 40

the assault on the history

03:47:01
Speaker 40

was

03:47:03
Speaker 40

staggering,

03:47:04
Speaker 40

and still is, and will resonate with those of us that were close to that

03:47:09
Speaker 40

project

03:47:11
Speaker 40

for a long time.

03:47:15
Speaker 40

I think the core of the issue

03:47:18
Speaker 40

is

03:47:19
Speaker 40

that you folks operated

03:47:22
Speaker 40

in a silo,

03:47:24
Speaker 40

and there was a lack of respect

03:47:27
Speaker 40

for the public.

03:47:32
Speaker 40

You chose an idea

03:47:35
Speaker 40

that seemed to make sense financially,

03:47:38
Speaker 40

but it didn't take into

03:47:42
Speaker 40

the equation

03:47:44
Speaker 40

the beauty and the natural world and and and the history.

03:47:51
Speaker 40

One of you know, we worked the board,

03:47:54
Speaker 40

we worked very closely with the city

03:47:56
Speaker 40

on developing the improvements on the house,

03:48:01
Speaker 40

and that was quite cordial.

03:48:03
Speaker 40

Everybody on that board, as you know,

03:48:06
Speaker 40

is an unpaid

03:48:08
Speaker 40

member.

03:48:09
Speaker 40

And there were some

03:48:10
Speaker 40

wonderful people on that board, and still are.

03:48:13
Speaker 40

I'm no longer affiliated with it.

03:48:17
Speaker 40

But we ask many times

03:48:20
Speaker 40

to be at the table when the decisions

03:48:22
Speaker 40

were to be made

03:48:25
Speaker 40

on the site development.

03:48:27
Speaker 40

We've been working on that for years.

03:48:30
Speaker 40

We had a lot of ideas that we had discussed

03:48:33
Speaker 40

endlessly.

03:48:35
Speaker 40

We had plans.

03:48:36
Speaker 40

It's not like Mr. Leatherman's plan was the only plan that was out there. You just didn't want to hear it.

03:48:49
Speaker 40

So I respect your work,

03:48:51
Speaker 40

but I expect you

03:48:54
Speaker 40

to respect

03:48:55
Speaker 40

the citizens

03:48:57
Speaker 40

to seek our input

03:49:00
Speaker 40

because there's enough work out there for all of us to do.

03:49:12
Speaker 1

Thank thank you, Gus. Thank you for your comments. Thank you, sir.

03:49:20
Speaker 1

Gus, do you wanna any questions or just you you want any response from us?

03:49:27
Speaker 1

Thank you, sir.

03:49:30
Speaker 1

Nancy,

03:49:31
Speaker 7

next speaker, please. Yes. The final speaker is Lucia Frazier.

03:49:36
Speaker 1

Thank you, ma'am.

03:49:37
Speaker 1

Welcome, Lucia.

03:49:46
Speaker 41

Evening, everybody.

03:49:48
Speaker 41

I didn't know open mic night goes so late.

03:49:53
Speaker 41

I was just remembering the days when it was just Palermo and Zapata speaking, the voice of the residents.

03:49:59
Speaker 41

Those were hard times for us.

03:50:01
Speaker 41

I talked to a lot of people in Roswell, and we all basically want the same thing.

03:50:08
Speaker 41

Pretty much the number one thing is low density.

03:50:11
Speaker 41

So

03:50:13
Speaker 41

we appreciate you guys for that. That's why we put you in,

03:50:17
Speaker 41

and now we have a wonderful council

03:50:21
Speaker 41

that's doing projects that support resident wallets,

03:50:26
Speaker 41

when previous councils only supported developer wallets.

03:50:31
Speaker 41

We finally have a council creating projects meaningful to residents.

03:50:36
Speaker 41

So of course, we're gonna have differences of opinion now

03:50:41
Speaker 41

among the residents as this is navigated.

03:50:44
Speaker 41

I am so thankful that we finally have this meaningful interaction with the council.

03:50:50
Speaker 41

The alternative to this council is so much worse.

03:50:56
Speaker 41

Without this council, I don't think there would be a mimosa left.

03:51:00
Speaker 41

It would be condemned and unused.

03:51:03
Speaker 41

Any other council would just let developers have their way with it. This council is actually showing that historical preservation is a priority.

03:51:13
Speaker 41

I'm the biggest supporter of maintaining green space, and even if I don't agree with every detail of a project, I would still support this council

03:51:21
Speaker 41

over anyone else.

03:51:26
Speaker 41

It's on me to look at what the city is doing. This council doesn't need to babysit me.

03:51:34
Speaker 41

My fellow Roswell friends that are here worried about Mimosa or anything else,

03:51:39
Speaker 41

remember that we stood together to get this council elected and to get this wonderful interaction.

03:51:46
Speaker 41

Stand with me again,

03:51:49
Speaker 41

and let's continue this wonderful participation.

03:51:52
Speaker 1

Thank you. Thank you, Lucia.

03:51:58
Speaker 1

Nancy, are there any other speakers for this evening?

03:52:03
Speaker 7

There are no other speakers.

03:52:04
Speaker 1

Thank you very much. Well, council, everyone who came, thank you so much. Thank you for being part of the conversation and for your continued improvement in making the city of Roswell

03:52:15
Speaker 1

the number one family community in America. Thank you so much. The open forum of 09/29/2025

03:52:21
Speaker 1

is adjourned. Thank you.

03:52:24
Speaker 1

And I gotta go to the restroom. Bad

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