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30 things need a look · 4 meetings clear
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The name 'Brian' wasn't found in the audio.
thank you Mr Mayor Proclamation Water Conservation Month whereas water is a basic and essential need of every living creature and whereas the state of Florida water management districts and the city of Palm Coast are working together to increase awareness about the importance of water conservation and whereas the city of Palm Coast and the state of Florida had designated April typically a dry month when water demands are most acute Florida's Water Conservation Month to educate citizens about how they can help save Florida's precious water resources And whereas the city of Palm Coast has always encouraged and supported water conservation through various educational programs and special events and whereas every business industry school and citizen can make a difference when it comes to conserving water and whereas every business industry school and citizen can help By saving water and thus promote a healthy economy and community and whereas efficient irrigation design programming and maintenance can conserve water the city of Palm Coast will encourage citizens and businesses to evaluate their irrigation systems for potential efficiency enhancements Now therefore be it proclaimed by the mayor and city council of the city of Palm Coast Florida that the month of April 2026 be officially designated as Water Conservation Month And calls upon each citizen and business to help protect our precious resource by practicing water saving measures and becoming more aware of the need to save water Signed the 7th day of April 2026 Michael Norris mayor
The name 'Joseph' wasn't found in the audio.
I'm on polyfluorethylene Um two items uh definitely against anything happening down the end of our street with making the lot smaller I understand that's on the agenda No items on the agenda to be discussed in this period OK um in in then in regard to the skate park all for it Next to the skate park is a nice wood a nice um grass area right next to it Consider turning that into a remote control park for remote control cars It would only take moving around a little bit of dirt to make it something that really wouldn't cost anything But it's at the perfect size the perfect location and the only thing around here is down in Ormond that we have something similar but you could put something here and just move around a little bit of dirt and have a great place to play with remote control toys Thank you sir Anyone else for public comment
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Good morning Commissioner Mayor I stand before you today not in opposition of progress but in defense of responsible planning infrastructure integrity and the safety of our community You're being asked to approve a rezoning from light industrial to heavy industrial too to allow a concrete batch plant Before you cast your final vote I urge you to require a comprehensive traffic impact study not a conceptual estimate an actual full scale analysis Other key concerns on this are the single egress point Uh the entire industrial complex has only one viable exit on the US one a four-lane divided highway This intersection already bottlenecks during peak hours adding symmetrics and semis hauling raw materials will strain an already fragile artery The infrastructure burden Hargrove Grave and Hargrove Lane was not built for this level of heavy industrial traffic What will the cost to the taxpayers be to repair and replace this road that inevitably fails under the weight especially the culvert for the Saint Joe's Canal that runs through there on the north side of this property The water quality I couldn't ask for a better tee up than you guys pro proclamation this morning for water quality Um the environmental risk the Saint Joe's Canal runs the length of the proposed site and continues into the grand swamp A contamination event here wouldn't just affect one parcel it would smear through half of the city Wetlands don't forgive mistakes Then there's the chemical compatibility sunshine belt and already H2 zone It was there before Palm Coast was a was a city Um it it it was there so we deal with them Um they they do hydrochloric acid which is also known as muriatic acid um and to quote the uh National Institute Of occupational Safety and Health the Chemical Safety Guide publication 2016-160 When hydrochloric acid comes into contact with calcium carbonate or cement dust It can release carbon dioxide and hydrogen chloride gas both of which are hazardous to inhale The reaction is exothermic and may intensify airborne particulate exposure It's especially relevant when cement dust is present in the air such as me batching plants scrub washouts or construction zones Also add we don't currently have a hazmat team or a Thomas center This isn't just about one plan it's about setting a precedent If you allow one incompatible heavy industrial to use how will you deny the next Let's not rush into what could cost us in dollars safety and trust I thank you Thank you ma'am Yes ma'am
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The name 'Peter Johnson' wasn't found in the audio.
I can ask some more pointed questions for you So one of the big issues was just the criteria that was included in it So like for example we asked for a letter of support We received no letter of support from them Every other organization put in not just one but numerous letters of support Uh another issue that we had was simply that There was a little bit of miscommunication We had offered help for the applicants at any point of the process They could have called Julie and literally had their hand held for the application process Um I I'll be candid Palm Coast Historical Society did not apply the first go around They waited till the second application process and it was put in seemingly rushed And some of the issues that we faced were some of the criteria So like Miss Pabst thought that they weren't able to fundraise for the event That wasn't accurate They weren't able to use the money that we were giving them as a fundraiser for their organization but they could use it as a fundraising event and quite frankly just the the application in its entirety in order to preserve the integrity of the entire scoring system had to be graded accordingly Um if you want me to get into the specific grades I'd be happy to I gave them an 81 which was passing Some of the other people I believe gave them in the 80s There was one low score that threw it I think everyone scored it pretty accurately for what was presented
The name 'Tony Amaral' wasn't found in the audio.
I know you're going to get tired of hearing me I want to first offer apologies for coming out a little passionate I like my city I like my living And I appreciate what you do I understand the comments of the mayor and the vice mayor On it all and I appreciate you saying we're not going to rehash it That's acceptable but I want to apologize but you've woke my eyes up and you've helped me make a determination that I'm gonna move forward just like I did when I was in the HOA And I'm gonna help guide this city or try to in a good way I wanna thank you for your time Thank you for listening to me and appreciate your comments We are supposed to be revenue neutral and I'll leave it at that Have a blessed day
The name 'Mr. Webb' wasn't found in the audio.
comment on um this goes back a long time with me but as far as surveys go I I believe in what they call the Delphi project uh procedure and that is you go out with the initial survey And then you get results and then you go back to the people that it has to be and this is hard you have to be the same people who did the first part of it And and then they see what see what what was done and usually there's some significant changes at that point because they begin to see that well most of the people want to do this that that you know that makes sense so we're not gonna do it I'm not saying but but I like that kind of a survey I think you end up with better results than just going out one time shot Um and I think if people get a second chance and they see kind of what everyone else is thinking you get a little better um result but it's it's very hard to do They usually do it with smaller numbers so on and so forth but just to comment I'm I'm not trying to
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I have a a few here Sorry I have a little bit of a handful Um so first thing I know we have the procurement ordinance coming before us in a few weeks I would like consensus from council as a part of that procurement ordinance to evaluate our policy for local preference There's a few things that have come to light um just meeting with residents where I think we need to evaluate our local preference Um policy and make sure it's in line with what we think is important um helping our business owners making sure we're keeping dollars in the city and in the county as much as possible So if I can get consensus to add that to that procurement ordinance presentation I have no problem with that Ms Ponti can you just give a little more direction to myself and staff so maybe what you're looking for uh yeah sure So we do have um from my understanding we have a local preference policy now as far as when we go out to RFQ RFP Um but my understanding also is that it's not There's a lot of discretion I'll say that um so I would just like us to reevaluate that and make sure we have a very um specific policy as far as when we have to go with the local um the local contractor the local business whatever it may be that is bidding on providing services to the city before we go outside of city or county Is that sufficient You're good Marcus OK thank you I appreciate that council Um the second thing I would also like consensus for the city to evaluate an ordinance to prohibit potable reuse for our drinking water in the city So believe it or not the state of Florida currently allows potable reuse for drinking for drinking water um if the city or the county um Allows that process as well So for the public's benefit um potable reuse is the process of augmenting our drinking water with treated wastewater or directly inject injecting it into our aquifer So it's the practice of taking treated wastewater from our city sewage systems and subjecting it into advanced purification processes to produce water that meets or exceeds drinking water standards I know I don't want us to engage in that process but I also know that um we know that we have water shortage issues in the state So I I fear that um and we're there are just so you all know um across the state there are current pilot programs that are going on for this process So there are pilot programs currently in Altamonte Springs Clearwater and Polk County Um they also do this in California and Texas currently so I never want to see our city engaging in that I don't care how many issues we have with with water I think we need to figure it out And I also think that it sends a message to our state legislature to perhaps stop tying our hands with regards to the development that we can control in our own city
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The name 'Unidentified commenter 1' wasn't found in the audio.
Yes ma'am
The name 'Unidentified male commenter' wasn't found in the audio.
There's one extraordinary circumstance that was missing from the list and that's the fact that for the last 25 years we lived here in this city that ITT had left and there was a political and special interest group that ran the city Without question Anybody who's lived here for a long time and has even been here recently knows that And I think one of the things that you're seeing is the carve out for the ITT There was lots that was done in 2018 Well 2018 we're already 18 years into a new city at that point but that just goes to show you that the hand was still there and it was still manipulating the process here OK for the benefit of a chosen few And so you without question have an extraordinary circumstance here and I think we've finally gotten to the threshold that we can get beyond it OK and we can get the city moving in a positive direction So I might also add that that same circumstance 2018 was the time that there was some work that was being done on the wireless program again things were just inserted by a certain group of people that This city much to the detriment of the citizens that lived here and the ratepayers because one of the points that you made very clearly was the fact that these guys all had a deal that they didn't have to pay their impact fees upfront How's that How come they didn't there was an exception made for builders to be able to pay their impact fees when a certificate of occupancy was issued You know you stepped up you gave them an approval you gave them a building permit pay for it They weren't paying for it They were they were taking an exception to that Without question hopefully uh council you know we're moving in the right direction and we're going to be someplace where you're representing all the voters and the ratepayers in this city Thank you very
The name 'Jerry' wasn't found in the audio.
I got an email about that actually from a concerned uh resident Um can we maybe help her out city manager about when that will be coming Is that is that here June 2nd That'd be I guess it is within the city right That's part of the what's the name of the ordinance What is it Um it has the application number and it says the city council will hold a public hearing on 6 p.m. June 2nd here If if I could just if we could get uh what's your name ma'am Excuse me Jerry Jerry if you could please see uh Mr Kyle Berryhill back there with his hand raised we'll get you squared away Thank you All right thank you ma'am Anyone else for public comment Yes sir I know
The name 'Chantelle Broninger' wasn't found in the audio.
Hi I'm Chanta Broninger and I'm going to bring something to you that you might not like to hear but I hope it will grab your attention Oh God I read somewhere that DC Blocks is bringing an undersea cable landing station OK that's one thing but I continued reading and it says and data center campus So reading Mall is 20 acres a facility of less than 100,000 square feet at the beginning And according to the city from what I heard it's a low impact project that would keep the water usage mostly to minimum like restrooms and basic staff needs and that would operate quietly uh except some occasional generator testing OK so that's What I read the city bill is now I I saw something else on the Internet I saw some complaints of people who live in areas where um data centers were established and there was clearly a problem of water so here's the article that grabbed my attention The sacred cost of Google's data centers is billions of gallons of water to cool servers A reason that Google was guaranteed 1 million gallons per day to cool the data center and up to 5 million per day if it hits project milestones So something else I find is Google considers its It's water use Proprietary trade secret and bars even public officials from disclosing the company's consumption that kind of bothers me but information has leaked out sometimes through legal battles with local utilities and consumption groups So in 2019 alone Google requested or granted more than 2.3 billion gallon water for data centers in three different states according to public records posted online and legal filings So whereas you are elected or appointed council members and mayor are acting as a gatekeeper You came into office with a vision for the city Now it's the time to wonder if you don't deal With Google or more precisely DC blocks needs some adjustment based on truth rather than hopes concerning the amount of water required to cool the
The name 'Brittany' wasn't found in the audio.
All right Um thank you The team put together just a few briefs here just you know good evening to the mayor and the council members and members of the community Um on behalf of the utility department we're about 165 folks uh we'd like to sincerely thank you for the proclamation recognize the importance of water conservation Um water conservation is not just about saving water It's about protecting the environment and a resource for the future We want to reduce the strain on the infrastructure We want to be responsible for the resources that's been trusted to us to lead this utility Every gallon conserved helps extend the life of the water supply system reduces treatment and energy costs and supports long-term resilience in our community The um as we as a utility we're committed to looking at efficient system operations leak detection infrastructure on a on a large scale improvements and public education like today Well we also uh the small actions that communities and customers can take such as fixing leaks using water efficient fixtures and being mindful of irrigation can collectively make a significant impact for long term resources We appreciate the council's leadership in highlighting this important initiative and supporting policies and programs to promote sustainability and responsible water use Thank you sir
The name 'CD Rossell' wasn't found in the audio.
OK the better on the pier where they were digging and they hit an electrical line That's an 811 call that should have been made and wasn't June 16 1976 I was in the center With a fuel line explosion that took out a city plot and proved that Vapor bombs can work Fuel vapor bombs can work Took out a whole city block I was there 3 minutes after it went off I couldn't do anything about it then but 811 was created and happened 15 years later We need to make sure that anybody that's digging Gets that call done and has a survey done proper survey because you can fix property but you can't fix life for 30 casualties in that event So it's very familiar in my opinion you can go look it up uh Venice Boulevard Culver City A fuel line explosion Anyway and we're coming up on the 50th anniversary of it so it's Very close to me about 811 Because it doesn't need to happen and the fire department went down there and those guys are not hooked up for FPNL work OK They're hooked up for fire and It's dangerous for them to go down on an electric Like Anyway that's something I'd like to follow up on And then on this the uh I'd like to get together with you guys on it you know talk about what I dug up and what I know about it and we can make the wastewater treatment plant literally almost self-sustaining And you should have it in your email He got a chance to read it because you know I sent it like All right thank you sir
The name 'Darlene Shelly' wasn't found in the audio.
There's an agenda item for the Fro County uh Planning Board regarding a future use land change from timberland to multi-use on Seminole Woods Uh many residents of Grand Landings have expressed their concerns regarding compatibility noise and destruction of green spaces that they were told by the developer would be conservation lands Why would Flagler County be changing Flume for properties located within Palm Coast borders Um oh
The name 'Jessica Voorhees' wasn't found in the audio.
Good evening everybody I am Jessica Burges I am a Palm Coast citizen since 2017 Uh little by little I realized how much I love this city My two daughters are growing up here They are almost teenagers both of them And I'm a Peruvian architect Uh I've been working in several places in construction and in industry and when I realized that the vacancy here and the drainage committee Uh I realized that oh why not do it And I'm here I've been with all the team Trying to find out solutions for the people and as a team with Lynn too that she has been awesome And It's just what I wanna say today and I offer myself as a member after being as an alternate
The name 'Sandra Shank' wasn't found in the audio.
Good morning Mayor and City Council I am Chris Rowe I'm with the law firm Bryant Miller Olive which serves as bond counsel to the city Thank you Repeat your name again sir I'm I'm Chris Rowe yes sir sir Thank you I I prepared the resolution uh that you have for consideration this morning I'll give you a brief overview on it Glad to answer any questions you might have Just for for brief context in 2021 the city adopted a resolution which serves as the we call the master utility bond resolution I'm still not still not able to hear I don't have cannon ears and I'm having a hard time hearing Uh how how about now little better now I'll I'll lean in a little more OK sorry about that So for for context in 2021 the city adopted a master utility bond resolution and basically what that resolution does is it authorizes the issuance of bonds From time to time for purposes of financing capital improvements to your utility system It's uh basically a contract between the city and the lenders who provide the city with loans on occasion to finance those improvements Um the resolution uses the vernacular of bond issues A bond issuance is merely just borrowing money You issue a bond it serves as the promissory note or the evidence that you owe a debt obligation to the lender That master resolution sets forth all the terms conditions and covenants that are associated with any utility system borrowing incurred by the city It basically describes the source of revenue you use to repay the loans over time that being the revenues of the utility system establishes various covenants basically promises by the city to its lenders to ensure that the lenders are repaid the amount that they've lent to the city And it provides that any time the city wants to borrow money for a particular purpose a given capital project it will authorize that bond issuance through a supplemental resolution The supplemental resolution refers back to the master resolution for all the details Uh associated with repayment but it provides the terms of the given borrowing It describes the project that you're undertaking etc What you have for consideration this morning is a supplemental resolution that authorizes bonds in a capital amount not to excuse me a principal amount not to exceed $330 million If the city is to issue the bonds the proceeds of the bonds will be used to finance certain improvements to your utility system which I understand were discussed at some length during the workshop last week Also in the event there are cost savings opportunities a portion of the bond proceeds may be used to refund outstanding debt that the city has that was issued in 2021 The supplemental resolution sets forth various parameters or conditions that have to be met in order for these bonds to be issued For instance it it limits the amount that can be borrowed to 330 million It provides the maximum rate of interest It provides the date by which the bonds have to mature basically a 30 year term It also says that that refunding of the 2021 bonds can occur as long as it results in savings for the city Typically anytime you refund or refinance a debt obligation you're doing so to save money That's basically what this parameter says This will be structured
The name 'Dennis McDonald' wasn't found in the audio.
One of the things I urge you to look at here and put some kind of caveat on is the fact that you haven't addressed the parking issue You've got individual units You're going to have at least 2 maybe 3 cars for every unit You're reducing the size of the lots There's no place to go with this And yet I've spoken before to you and I can tell you that when I look around Palm Coast It seems especially in the multi-family and the very tight neighborhoods the high density neighborhoods nobody uses their garage and this is something that you need to require if you're going to be able if you're going to want to go forward with this OK You got to use your garage to park a car in it because you're getting credit for a parking space for it So it has to be carried forward especially when you're cranking down the density like this There's no question that this is a very unique situation and it's being done on its own on its own piece of property Um so you know that that's certainly a plus 4 in that respect but don't trip it up And and create all kinds of problems for the sheriff having fights with who's parking where and what and how a garage is utilized You've got to put a caveat on this so that the garage has to be used as its parking space which the planning department is a requirement So put it into the to the approval that they've got to use their garage as a garage not as a storage area not as a living area or an exercise room or anything else OK Cause the density is way down on this and I built density I know what it does to people So um I would like you to for a second here if you could put that map up of the of the project I want to just show you something here that one thank you very much OK so my question is why wasn't there a construction bond I don't care who did what and you know with the drainage water and the damage that was done to the mill The question is why wasn't there a construction bond in place to take care of that Why wasn't the planning Department and the people who pushed this stuff forward where is the construction bond that would have covered the um uh the the dedicated lands and the uh the historical lands that we have out there that would have taken care of any of the damage The other point I wanted to make on this is that if you look at this plan it's it's already done for It was a long time ago but look at it and consider the situation that we're in right now with the water having been a guy who built a couple 2 or 3 water companies in his own right Look at that project It's all impervious and you're saying to me Oh Mr McDonald it's not impervious Look at that big blue lake in the center there From an engineering standpoint that might as well be a parking lot It's the same coefficient because when the when the rain comes down hard the water goes it's just as hard as a blacktop surface and it goes right off and ruins the mill So you know when you approve these things and you see all this water it's impervious Thank you
The name 'Robert Porter' wasn't found in the audio.
I'm Bob Porter with DR Horton I won't take but a minute of your time I think you got a clear presentation from the staff and from Michael Essentially the way we look at this is these are the same multi-family units that we normally put in a building that's 150 ft long What we're doing is we are detaching them so To me it is sort of a detached Multi-family so everybody gets side yards They get a yard a rear yard that they can fence for the kids and the dogs A much nicer unit If you're in a middle unit of the town home you really don't have a private yard Very little privacy So we just think this is a nice improvement It is less density the lots are bigger the units are happy to answer any questions Thank you sir Um Yeah I I I've never liked the concept of pretty much zero lot lines I've seen it all down in South Florida uh but It's within the comp plan and I guess the the question though is is it Worse than A town home that is attached in terms of the lot lines right Well it's kind of I hate to use the word I was trying to think of a word for it but the best word is wishy-washy Yeah the market has changed It's such evidence flow in the market and I can assume that the reason they're doing that is because people people want some type of yard you know to be detached not attached to someone else's property and and I'm assuming that the reason that the like up at the trails the reason the the the house values are going down is people just don't like that lifestyle and I I think you're trying to solve that with this type of project or or these few houses in the project is trying to Make it more appealable to families with children How many bedrooms do these townhouses have How many bedrooms What's the standard layout How many bedrooms Townhomes are normally either 2 or 3 bedrooms These will be uh 23 or 4 OK Anything else for council I mean the way I look at it is uh just with the numbers you've got a reduction in density you've got Um in terms of pervious versus impervious you have um A reduction of impervious square footage as well So you have more land and more of it is also pervious so it should improve what's already entitled in terms of stormwater in that area So um you know for me any reduction in density is a good thing that that we can approve um you know looking forward to hearing everybody else's thoughts on that Yeah no I I think um I appreciate the reduction in density I appreciate the effort to present a diversity of housing products um I I guess on this site is
The name 'Tony' wasn't found in the audio.
Um just two points of clarification well actually one point of clarification on that comment Um I do know it's a confidential um The word you used the agreement you came to for the what If it's monetary Where is that money going Because it came out of an impact fee which is a that is kind of restricted on what it can be used So if it is a if it is a monetary issue is that money being returned Or if not where is it going Is a general fund or something else And the other thing is um last week I wasn't here but I heard the talk about reducing the speed limits um And the money it would cost and possibly have to take money away from other projects that are priorities such as our microsurfacing At the end of the day I don't think it's the speed limits the issue It's everyone breaking the speed limit We just gave the sheriff an increase for enhanced services Maybe that might be for this next year at least and look at it again for next year as opposed to taking money away from a project that we're way behind on like resurfacing That we can maybe talk to the sheriff's department and specifically say hey we've got our enhanced service we added 2.5 $3 million And we allocate specifically to reducing speed Again it's not the speed limit that is the problem I believe It's the speeders who no matter what you put the limit at It's not gonna solve anything and they're gonna still be speeding by at the same speed So that's just a comment Thank you Thank you sir Anyone else for public comment
The name 'Ms. Chantelle' wasn't found in the audio.
I want to make sure I understand
The name 'Ms. Chantelle' wasn't found in the audio.
I wanted to know why we don't have buses to serve the population and not just 11 group of of
The name 'Ms. Pallett' wasn't found in the audio.
I just want to commend you all and thank you again All the construction on Florida Park Drive right now Even though the road is closed the people are detouring on Flower Park or Flower Flower Hill Drive and that has turned into Florida Park Drive It needs to have some speed calming devices I know that it's a short-term thing but Um honestly this morning when I was leaving up here um a woman and her dog were nearly trampled on by a car that was speeding and so I drive between 12 and 15 miles an hour on that road as opposed to 45 which is what the lady was doing So um it's it's a dangerous thing The sheriff has been advised and the sheriff That is in charge of the deputy that's in charge of that area of um the F section does have to take the same detour but he's not there at the same time that the speakers are going They're there um Inconsiderate so I thank you for what you're trying to do Thank you ma'am Thank you Ms Pallett Um do we have an update on this Carl do you know what's going on over there Anyone Storm it's all water utility What yeah what's the peak on the on Florida Park When is that project gonna be completed I'm not exactly sure uh but we're at the tail end from what I believe OK thank you And uh Ms Chantelle for public transportation it it's about density Our city is not densely populated so public transportation is not as efficient and uh doesn't have the cost-benefit that large dense cities have That's why we don't have the type of system that
no second source confirms this name
George Mayo Palm Coast uh I recently saw a video on TV We are always here looking to put in new ballparks new football parks new baseball parks for the children and everything There's still a lot of senior citizens and retirees here Two people that moved into my street are retirees so we still have to consider that And what I saw on TV was a city put up a park I won't say what city And if you look at it it looks just like the regular park with permanent equipment out there like kids would have the seesaw and and whatever else Well this was a senior or a retiree senior citizen park and what it has is uh the pipes with about a 2 ft wheel centered with a bolt and a handle so that people can go there and use seniors move their uh elbows their arms and whatever Standing in place uh steps made of metal where you would see in any gym so you're walking in place and there are other things built specifically for seniors and what it has done it's covered to keep them out of the sun to get people out of their houses and cure loneliness and they've made contacts and now these people are contacting with each other So if we're going to build a park please consider that you know have a senior park You have plenty of parks Highland Park for the kids and that's all well and good but maybe there's time we think of putting in a senior park The other thing I wanna speak about is what I've read is we're talking about workforce housing and all this and that and what's been happening throughout the country is uh venture capitalist hedge funds are buying up all these new houses And now cities and states are now putting resolutions and laws in place barring them from buy this because all these hedge funds and their venture capitalists are preventing people from buying these house cheaply enough that we might call workforce housing So this may be something we wanna look into it if we wanna help workforce housing and people will be able to afford houses just watch you know who's able to Uh you know buy and control the housing market So thank you very much again
no second source confirms this name
Jeanie Duarte uh I think this ordinance is ridiculous when it comes to these colors Um there are a lot of beautiful orange houses out there that are not pass out you could be causing them to have to repaint That's an unnecessary expense that you're causing to these residents in a time where money's tight everything's going up insurance taxes you name it
no second source confirms this name
Good morning Pen Mosco I own a business over there on Power Grove Lane A lot of my concerns have just been addressed but I just wanna touch on a couple of things Uh one I would hope that the traffic study includes not a current traffic study but an oversight of what's actually happening there I pulled up a couple of articles one from uh the news Journal out of Daytona Observer that says uh They're um putting a mock facility just north of Hargrove That's gonna be every single fleet vehicle for the city I counted 4 just driving over here I mean that's a lot of vehicles that are now gonna be just north of the Power growth rate That's on top of the uh 5000 projected residences that are gonna be built from Power Grove all the way up to Old Kings Road Uh there's a I just pulled it up average Florida home has 2 vehicles That's an additional 10,000 10,000 vehicles that are gonna be added to that So that study needs to be a little bit more comprehensive than just you know a current traffic study Cause right now as it stands trying to get out of there at certain parts of the day is already difficult Uh you know heavy industrial which brings the bigger trucks that need bigger leadway times to get across Um the gentleman that was representing the land said most of these trucks are gonna be heading south I I don't know how we could like back that up when most of the new construction is going north it says you know all these 5000 residences are heading north So if this concrete is gonna facilitate the construction plans of the city it's not going south It's got a crack you know across two lanes of a very busy highway And then head north So uh The rest of them have already been you know addressed Thank you Thank you sir Yes sir Yes good morning George May Palm Coast Uh in my younger years
no second source confirms this name
Kurt Wen Bay with Alliance Engineering I'm the uh uh representative uh for Jill Corp property owner and I'm joined with Matt uh Matt Bosserrados here today with Jill Corp and of course Mr Brian Hercules who was here last time Um and I appreciate the questions on traffic I actually did a lot more information and research on that uh to look closer at that I'd be happy to answer some more questions um if if the council would like Let let me ask you this What is what would be your your market share So you would for our city if we allowed you to establish this facility you would have a 100% market share for our city I'm gonna turn that question over to Mr Perkins Uh I I don't know it wouldn't be 100% It wouldn't be 100% but what would you what would you expect We would anticipate you know a large portion of the uh market share to be here because it's local Uh one thing about a batch plant that people don't understand is once that truck is loaded You basically have one hour to to get good crop So right now there's trucks coming out of Bnell and other places that are coming here to serve So if we're able to put a plant here and successfully achieve that then we're gonna have a better distribution of quality product in the community which in turn we would hope uh not only because of the competitive competitiveness of the marketplace itself The requirements of the marketplace that yes we would we would anticipate getting 40 50% of the market OK And and how significant would that be to bringing down prices of concrete in our city I think it would be significant So developers and builders of anything that use concrete it would significantly impact the cost of that building As far as the base foundation of those buildings or any other structures our our responsibility to be competitive in the marketplace OK that was my question Um anything else from the council For for the developers
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my bill I fixed it Thank Tony Amaral Palm Coast I wanna thank all of you for a uh year that started off a little rocky and has worked out to be beneficial to everyone in the city We've all come together and I appreciate everything that has been done from each and every one of you Lauren I know you're probably tired of hearing about it but you have done a phenomenal job Um thank you for all the work you've put in and we look forward to still seeing you around and being part of the city Merry Christmas and happy holidays everyone
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This looks cut off — we may have captured only part of what was said.
The longer version we think it is
Good morning Mark Webb Palm Coast I think first of all I'd like to take a moment And acknowledge The assassination of elected officials in this country All of us are public All of you have been elected officials and we know it's a hard position and not everyone is going to be Happy content or supportive in what we do So with that I want to extend and appreciate the risk that you may or may not even be aware of what we do as public officials And elected officials Secondly I want to applaud our sheriff's department for their hands-off support of the rally of the No Kings event this weekend Every single representative of our sheriff's department was supportive was there for protective reasons allowed us all of us to speak and practice our First Amendment rights which is what I'm doing right here today They did a phenomenal job We didn't get on the news Congratulations to everyone So again I just want to appreciate and understand the sad fact of we're in a time where There's unknown risks sacrifices putting yourself out there and it's important that the citizens know that that is an element Of the job we're doing Thank you Thank you sir Anyone else for public participation Yes Mr McDonald
Keeps the quote as shown; drops our suggested change.