MILLENNIAL TASK FORCE
Regular MeetingMilwaukee, WI · July 10, 2020
Minutes
200 E. Wells Street
City of Milwaukee Milwaukee, Wisconsin
53202
Meeting Minutes
MILLENNIAL TASK FORCE
CHAIR: MARQUAYLA ELLISON
Jezamil Arroyo-Vega, Nick Carnahan, Angela Damiani, Jordan
Donald, Tenia Fisher, Jeremy Fojut, Adam Gabornitz, Michael
Hostad, Amelia Kegel, Noel Kegel, Kacee Ochalek, Jason Rae,
Ger Thao, Tiffany Henry and Sam Woods.
Staff Assistant: Chris Lee, 414-286-2232
Legislative Liaison: Alex Highley, 414-286-8661
Friday, July 10, 2020 1:00 PM Virtual
This will be a virtual meeting conducted via GoToMeeting. Should you wish to join this
meeting from your phone, tablet, or computer you may go to
https://global.gotomeeting.com/join/358857853. You can also dial in using your phone United
States: +1 (872) 240-3212 and Access Code: 358-857-853.
1. Call to order.
Meeting called to order at 1:05 p.m.
2. Roll call.
Present 12 - Rae, Fojut, Donald, Ellison, Fisher, Gabornitz, Hostead, Kegel, Kegel,
Ochalek, Thao and Henry
Absent 2 - Arroyo-Vega and Damiani
Excused 1 - Carnahan
Also present:
Bernadette Karanja, Common Council, City-Clerk’s Workforce Development Office
Alex Highley, Legislative Reference Bureau
3. Review and approval of the previous meeting minutes.
The meeting minutes from June 11, 2020 were approved without objection.
4. Set priority items and recommendations.
a. Goals
b. Actionable Objectives
c. Measurable Expected Outcomes
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MILLENNIAL TASK FORCE Meeting Minutes July 10, 2020
d. Other
5. Assessment and analysis.
a. Milwaukee Department of Employee Relations workforce data
b. Population migration
c. Economic inequality
d. New City Observatory Report: Youth Movement
e. Diverting funds from public safety
f. Reasons Millennials and Gen Z leave Milwaukee
g. Any research requests?
h. Other
Chair Ellison said that the task force should have an internal discussion on members'
ideas and suggestions made thus far from previous meetings, assess the reasons why
people leave or stay in the City, identify items of priority to progress forward, and to
review the member ideas document.
Members questioned the employment boundaries and sectors that the task force was
directed to address and what government can do in response to task force
recommendations.
Mr. Lee said that the legislation creating the task force directs the task force to
address the City of Milwaukee as a whole, including both the private and local
government sectors.
Chair Ellison commented. The research document "America's Opportunity Gaps: By
The Numbers" contains six key opportunity gap areas that reflect the same gaps that
the task force would like to address: education, employment, entrepreneurship,
criminal justice, health, and wealth disparity. Perhaps the task force can provide
recommendations quick enough to impact the City's upcoming budget proposals for
next year. The task force should work to identify and build upon existing initiatives and
programs rather than reinvent them. Examples of existing programs include Upward
Bound. The task force has identified two different groups to address: 15-25
(pre-college/education) years of age and 25-35 (early workforce) years of age. Public
employment in the City of Milwaukee can be a starting point to address. There should
be incentives towards first time home buying and residence in particular areas of the
City. A reason why people leave the City may be due to the inner city being too
congested. Exposure to pathways is important for young people. There are some
persons within her Social X organization that can come speak to the committee to
share insight on their successes. Through various Social X events a positive that she
has heard from many people from the outside is the lower cost of living in Milwaukee.
Ms. Karanja commented. The City budget is finite with small allocations going directly
towards the community. Both public and private funding is needed to work in
partnership towards solutions. There should be expansion into private dollars. She
came to Milwaukee from Kenya as an immigrant, remained in Milwaukee for its
big-city-small-town feel, was surprised by the racism issues in the City, and was
motivated to fight for more inclusiveness.
Member Ochalek commented. She is working with the Common Council President's
office to develop an ERG career development program to provide mentorship to City
employee and can share information from the program. Perhaps information can be
collected on Common Council legislation impacting, relating to, or addressing the brain
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MILLENNIAL TASK FORCE Meeting Minutes July 10, 2020
drain topics that the task force is exploring. DCMKE is about connection, breaking
down silos, and should be given more resources to expand.
Mr. Highley said that he can collect information on Common Council legislation that
would be relevant to the task force and also on the City's 10,000 Homes Initiative.
Member Fojut commented. Measures are needed to help retain people with upward
mobility since these people are the ones that are able to leave the City. One year
programs are not successful. There are some business improvement districts (BID)
that have been successful, and more capacity and resources should be given to BIDs
to help them improve commercial corridors. Tax Incremental Finance (TIF) is an
economic development technique to expand the property tax base and value to fund
site improvements that would not otherwise occur. A Tax Incremental District (TID) is
physical area designated for improvements via a TIF. He is part of summer course
pilot program called The Great Lakes Gap Year with MATC for in-state and out-of-state
high school and pre-college students. Students can convert credits and have access
to employers.
Member Hostad commented. Reasons people may leave the City include high property
taxes, inflated childcare costs, and inflated college tuition costs. There should be
anti-displacement measures and programs for childhood development or tax credits for
childcare. Successful TIDs can allocate funds to underperforming TIDs, and BIDs
should be able to do the same to assist underperforming BIDs. Childcare issues may
impact older people and not younger people.
Members said that Millennials include people at various different points of life and
recommendations should not be age specific but rather be based on stage of life as
follows: high school to precollege (up to 23 years of age), those with no children (23 to
30 years of age), and those with families (30 to 38 years of age), that the City of
Milwaukee needs to market better its many programs, which many people have no
awareness about, and that there are too many silos.
Members Rae and Thao shared that they moved to Milwaukee from elsewhere to
originally attend college in Milwaukee and remained in Milwaukee post-college due to
employment and internship opportunities; Milwaukee being a big enough city for
upward mobility, success, and personal achievement; and being in close proximity to
family back home.
Member Rae added comments. Pipelines to jobs are crucial for retaining people.
Based on his college experience, many people do not venture off campus and remain
in the campus bubble. Students need to venture out more to learn about and be more
exposed to the City.
Member Thao added that he is at a stage in life to start a family and is assessing
whether or not he and his family will remain in the City with the education system being
one important factor in his decision making.
Members commented. Staying in Milwaukee is about integration. For younger people
of importance is to increase university enrollment for them, make the college
experience better, implement curriculums to teach them about Milwaukee possibilities,
and expose them to the City and its opportunities. Career opportunity, upward
mobility, and family well-being are more important to older people.
Member Hostad said that he was interested to be further involved with creating
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MILLENNIAL TASK FORCE Meeting Minutes July 10, 2020
incentive-based solutions and policies.
Members Hostad and Fojut left the meeting at 2:28 p.m.
Members further commented. Solutions need to be inclusive of everyone and also be
intentional to aide those who have been systematically disenfranchised (African
Americans and other minority groups). Safety in all aspects need to be considered,
including police brutality and strained police-community relations. Recommendations
should address racial justice and mirror what the City is doing. More support should be
given to the Office of African American Affairs.
Mr. Highley said that recommendations can be symbolic and does not all have to be
program-based. Task force support can lead to government support and outside
awareness. For context, some Common Council legislation has come through the
form of supporting existing programs and initiatives rather than creating them.
Mr. Lee said that task force agendas, minutes, and collected data/research are all
collected under Common Council File Number 191649. The file is publicly accessible,
and he can forward the access link to members.
6. Next steps moving forward.
a. Task force schedule of meetings and structure
To be determined. Task force to remain meeting as a whole group to continue
discussing the direction of the task force.
b. Agenda items for the next meeting
Items to include:
-Further assessment of reasons why Millennials and Generation Z stay or leave
Milwaukee
-Identification of existing programs or initiatives (homebuyer assistance,10,000 Homes
Initiative, childcare assistance) relating to task force brain drain topics
-Information on Common Council legislation relating to task force brain drain topics
-Examples of task force reports
c. Set next meeting dates and times
To be determined.
d. Other
There was no other discussion.
7. Adjournment.
Meeting adjourned at 2:54 p.m.
Chris Lee, Staff Assistant
Council Records Section
City Clerk's Office
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MILLENNIAL TASK FORCE Meeting Minutes July 10, 2020
City of Milwaukee Page 5
Agenda
200 E. Wells Street
City of Milwaukee Milwaukee, Wisconsin
53202
Meeting Agenda
MILLENNIAL TASK FORCE
CHAIR: MARQUAYLA ELLISON
Jezamil Arroyo-Vega, Nick Carnahan, Angela Damiani, Jordan
Donald, Tenia Fisher, Jeremy Fojut, Adam Gabornitz, Michael
Hostad, Amelia Kegel, Noel Kegel, Elizabeth McLaren, Kacee
Ochalek, Jason Rae, Ger Thao, and Tiffany Henry
Staff Assistant: Chris Lee, 414-286-2232
Legislative Liaison: Alex Highley, 414-286-8661
Friday, July 10, 2020 1:00 PM Virtual
Amended 7/9/20 - Meeting location changed to be solely virtual.
This will be a virtual meeting conducted via GoToMeeting. Should you wish to join this meeting
from your phone, tablet, or computer you may go to https://global.gotomeeting.com/join/358857853.
You can also dial in using your phone United States: +1 (872) 240-3212 and Access Code:
358-857-853.
1. Call to order.
2. Roll call.
3. Review and approval of the previous meeting minutes.
4. Set priority items and recommendations.
a. Goals
b. Actionable Objectives
c. Measurable Expected Outcomes
d. Other
5. Assessment and analysis.
a. Milwaukee Department of Employee Relations workforce data
b. Population migration
c. Economic inequality
d. New City Observatory Report: Youth Movement
e. Diverting funds from public safety
f. Reasons Millennials and Gen Z leave Milwaukee
g. Any research requests?
h. Other
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MILLENNIAL TASK FORCE Meeting Agenda July 10, 2020
6. Next steps moving forward.
a. Task force schedule of meetings and structure
b. Agenda items for the next meeting
c. Set next meeting dates and times
d. Other
7. Adjournment.
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