COUNCIL
Regular MeetingScranton, PA · June 29, 2026
Minutes
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1 COUNCIL FOR THE CITY OF SCRANTON
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4 HELD:
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7 Tuesday, June 23rd, 2026
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10 LOCATION:
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12 COUNCIL CHAMBERS
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24 Maria McCool, RPR
Official Court Reporter
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1 C O U N C I L M E M B E R S:
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THOMAS SCHUSTER - PRESIDENT
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PATRICK FLYNN, VICE PRESIDENT
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MARK MCANDREW
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JESSICA ROTHCHILD
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SEAN MCANDREW
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FRANK VOLDENBERG, CITY CLERK
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KATHY CARRERA, ASSISTANT CITY CLERK
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THOMAS GILBRIDE, ESQ., COUNCIL SOLICITOR
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1 (Pledge of Allegiance.)
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3 MR. SCHUSTER: Please remain
4 standing for a moment of silent reflection for
5 our service men and women throughout the world
6 and for those that have passed away in our
7 community. Roll call, please.
8 MS. HERBSTER: Dr. Rothchild. Mr.
9 Sean McAndrew.
10 MR. SEAN MCANDREW: Present.
11 MS. HERBSTER: Mr. Mark McAndrew.
12 MR. MARK MCANDREW: Present.
13 MS. HERBSTER: Mr. Flynn. Mr.
14 Schuster.
15 MR. SCHUSTER: Present. Please
16 Dispense with the reading of the minutes.
17 MR. VOLDENBERG: THIRD ORDER.
18 3-A. HISTORICAL ARCHITECTURAL
19 REVIEW BOARD MEETING MINUTES FOR DECEMBER 18,
20 2025, FEBRUARY 12, 2026, MARCH 12, 2026 AND MAY
21 14, 2026 RECEIVED JUNE 12, 2026.
22 3-B. CONTROLLER'S REPORT FOR THE
23 MONTH ENDING MAY 31, 2026.
24 3-C. LACKAWANNA COUNTY Planning
25 Commission SUBDIVISON AND LAND DEVELOPMENT
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1 EVALUATION REPORT RECEIVED JUNE 16, 2026.
2 3-D. MEMORANDUM FROM CITY BUSINESS
3 ADMINISTRATION DATED JUNE 16, 2026 REGARDING
4 PAYMENT IN LIEU OF TAXES (PILOT) FROM SCRANTON
5 HOUSING AUTHORITY.
6 3-E. MINUTES OF THE SCRANTON
7 FIREFIGHTERS PENSION COMMISSION MEETING HELD
8 MAY 20, 2026.
9 3-F. MINUTES OF THE NON-UNIFORM
10 MUNICIPAL PENSION BOARD MEETING HELD MAY 20,
11 2026.
12 3-G. AGENDA FOR THE NON-UNIFORM
13 MUNICIPAL PENSION MEETING HELD JUNE 17, 2026.
14 3-H. MINUTES OF THE COMPOSITE
15 PENSION BOARD MEETING HELD MAY 20, 2026.
16 MR. SCHUSTER: Are there any
17 comments on any of the Third Order items? The
18 only comment I have is 3-D, the pilot from the
19 Scranton Housing Authority. That's required
20 through HUD. Any other comments on Third Order
21 items? All right. If not, received and filed.
22 Do any Council members have any
23 announcements at this time?
24 MR. MARK MCANDREW: Yeah, I have a
25 quick one. This Thursday over in West Side,
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1 the Victor Alfieri Society has their monthly
2 luncheon. But they have a special menu this
3 month. And it is raviolis or pasta with red
4 sauce or chicken parm or half and half of any
5 of the two of three items with meatballs.
6 I could attest they do a great job
7 and the meals are delicious. So the price is
8 12 for members and 14 for nonmembers. That's
9 all I have. Thank you.
10 MR. SCHUSTER: Thank you. Any other
11 announcements from Council members?
12 MR. VOLDENBERG: FOURTH ORDER.
13 CITIZENS PARTICIPATION.
14 MR. SCHUSTER: Our first speaker
15 tonight is Joan Hodowanitz.
16 MS. HODOWANITZ: Joan Hodowanitz,
17 Scranton. I'm just curious, since July 4th
18 falls on a Saturday, does that mean City Hall
19 will be closed July 3rd, Friday?
20 MR. MARK MCANDREW: Probably.
21 MR. VOLDENBERG: That's correct.
22 July 3rd, Friday.
23 MS. HODOWANITZ: So it will be
24 closed. Okay. Just -- I was just curious
25 because I missed the announcement if they had
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1 one about it being closed a week ago, Monday.
2 I noticed in today's agenda there's not much
3 going on.
4 We got one item in Fifth Order and
5 one item in Seventh Order. And I know you're
6 all gearing down towards the August recess.
7 But I hope that Mayor Cognetti is not, you
8 know, getting overwhelmed by her campaigning
9 that city business is not moving forward.
10 It just seems to me like, okay,
11 there's got to be a lot that needs to be done.
12 And so I hope that when I come back next week,
13 we'll have a robust Fifth Order agenda. Let's
14 see, speaking of robust, I'm still looking for
15 the collective bargaining agreements for DPW to
16 be put on the website and eventually the
17 Scranton Fire Department's new thing.
18 It's -- you can't tell me, you know,
19 that it's a massive typing drill because that's
20 all electronic. So, you know, tell them to get
21 it done. Every taxpayer should have access to
22 those documents because we're paying those
23 fees.
24 Also, I don't -- you probably saw in
25 this morning's paper that they're making
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1 considerable progress on the Fidelity parking
2 lot down the street. And if you haven't, you
3 ought to walk past that one of these days. I
4 know you, you know, you park here, you come in,
5 you get in your car, and you're out of here;
6 but you ought to take a look at it.
7 It's gonna -- it's going to be very
8 nice when it's done. It's going to enhance
9 this particular block. And speaking of
10 enhancements, we don't have that many
11 overwhelming crowds right now of people going
12 to see Big Boy, which is fine.
13 But several people had stopped me
14 last week because I live at Samters so I tend
15 to be on the sidewalk quite a bit. People had
16 gone to see the train. And they wanted to know
17 where all the best restaurants were, that kind
18 of thing.
19 And I don't know if it exists, but
20 does the Scranton Chamber of Commerce or
21 Scranton Tomorrow or the city have maybe like a
22 little brochure identifying, you know, the
23 different restaurants downtown or, you know,
24 the various neighborhoods.
25 Somebody asked me, you know, was
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1 there a restaurant that specializes in German
2 cuisine? I didn't know. I told them but I
3 know where the Thai restaurant is. And I know
4 where the Greek restaurant is. And I know
5 where the kosher restaurant is.
6 But that would have been something
7 that would have enhanced the city's experience
8 with having Big Boy come to town. If we don't
9 have such a little brochure, maybe you can ask
10 the Chamber of Commerce and Scranton Tomorrow,
11 whomever, you know, put one together so that
12 when an event like this rolls around, they
13 could stockpile them at the various hotels,
14 because hotels were filled, you know, and have
15 them at the park at the Steamtown, where as
16 they walk in, here, have a brochure. Here,
17 have a brochure.
18 Go spend your money in Scranton.
19 Here, have another brochure, all kinds of
20 wonderful things, you know, where're the
21 nearest gas stations, you know, where's this,
22 where's that. But there's just something, you
23 know, that I'm not all that knowledgeable about
24 all the different restaurants downtown.
25 But I know there's a whole lot of
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1 them, kind of thing. I don't know what the
2 hotels have. Maybe they have something like
3 that where they -- somebody asked me, you know,
4 where the nearest Methodist Church was. And
5 I'm going, I don't know, you know, kind of
6 thing.
7 But it's just something that
8 might -- might have been of use. So maybe in
9 the future because I'd love to see another
10 crowd like that come in. We have conventions.
11 We have other events that occur. That'd be a
12 good thing for the city to do. Thank you.
13 MR. MARK MCANDREW: Mr. Voldenberg,
14 reach out to both Scranton Tomorrow and the
15 Chamber, see what they have. I know most
16 hotels I've been in traveling, they always have
17 something. But if not, I mean, my students
18 will, as a project, will maybe work in tandem
19 with them too and put together a flyer.
20 And, you know, we have a graphics
21 department. And we have a printing department,
22 and an illustrated design department. We -- if
23 it's not -- if it's not already done, I don't
24 want to reinvent the wheel, but I've never seen
25 it. So that's something we could probably work
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1 together on.
2 MR. VOLDENBERG: I will. I'll touch
3 base with them tomorrow.
4 MR. MARK MCANDREW: Thank you.
5 MR. SCHUSTER: Thank you. Next is
6 Mike Mancini.
7 MR. MANCINI: Good evening, Council,
8 and the good people of Scranton. Tonight, PA
9 American Water. I'm here tonight to ask for
10 accountability. PA Water has cut into more
11 than 9 miles of Scranton roads in the last year
12 alone.
13 Many of those pave cuts were left
14 through the winter months for residents to look
15 at, drive over, and pay for when their vehicles
16 get damaged. These are not small cosmetic
17 issues. They're safety, taxpayer, and quality
18 of life issues. Residents pay taxes so our
19 streets can be paved, maintained, and safe.
20 Every time a utility cuts into our
21 streets, that utility has a responsibility to
22 restore the road properly, promptly, and
23 professionally. The burden should not fall
24 back on the people who have already paid once
25 through taxes, increased utility rates, then
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1 pay once again through bent rims, damaged
2 vehicles, alignments, suspensions, and unsafe
3 driving conditions.
4 The city has tools and its own code
5 to address this, Chapter 412, Article Three,
6 Street openings and excavations, require street
7 opening permits and require work to be
8 completed according to city and PennDOT
9 standards.
10 Section 412 through 16 requires
11 temporary restoration immediately after the
12 work is completed and permanent restoration
13 between 30 and 90 days after temporary
14 restoration, unless the city grants an
15 extension.
16 It also requires the permittee to
17 maintain the temporary restoration. If work is
18 unsatisfactory or not completed, the city may
19 correct it and charge the permittee a cost plus
20 20 percent for an administrative fee. Section
21 412 through 19 allows penalties up to $1,000.
22 And every day a violation continues,
23 it's a separate offense. That matters. Fines
24 are not about punishment for the sake of
25 punishment. Fines are how the city protects
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1 taxpayers, forces compliance, and sends a clear
2 message that poor utility work will not be
3 tolerated.
4 I also ask Council to focus on newly
5 paved roads. Section 412 through 15 says newly
6 paved -- paving shall not be opened or
7 excavated for five years, except in
8 emergencies. And the utility openings within
9 that five year requirement need expressed
10 approval.
11 Sections 412 through 16 further
12 require resurfacing standards for streets paved
13 within five years. So when PA Water cut into
14 Stafford Avenue in front of their own building
15 three weeks after the city paid to have that
16 avenue resurfaced, residents want answers.
17 Who approved it? Was it an
18 emergency? Was there a five year protection
19 followed? Was the utility fined or required to
20 restore the road curb to curb as required?
21 There are hundreds of these just like that.
22 Every cut needs to be addressed.
23 Storm drains must also be part of the
24 discussion, blocked, damaged, or poorly
25 restored drainage facilities create flooding,
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1 icing, property damage, and dangerous road
2 conditions.
3 Scranton's code requires drainage
4 facilities disturbed by the permitting to be
5 protected, restored, or replaced, so they could
6 continue to function. Storm water enforcement
7 matters because blocked drains are not just
8 ugly, they threaten homes, streets, and public
9 safety.
10 There needs to be an ordinance in
11 place and fines distributed accordingly.
12 Residents should not be the collection agency
13 for poor utility work. The utilities must be
14 held responsible. When the city grants
15 extensions issued for every pave cut left to
16 the residents to view over -- run over the
17 damage with their vehicles, Council needs to
18 request this information, nine miles worth.
19 If the extensions were not issued,
20 then each utility needs to be backdated and
21 seriously fined, just like Taylor and East
22 Gibson streets in front of the ICC Church.
23 It's disgusting what PA Water's done to our
24 city.
25 They continue to dig up the roads
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1 wherever with the mentality of whatever in the
2 completion date of whenever. Lee Morgan
3 brought water in from his house about two years
4 ago.
5 I wouldn't even wash my car with it.
6 They're quick to raise the rates. They need to
7 be held fully accountable for their disregard,
8 disrepair, disrespect. The words of a
9 wonderful man who we lost recently, shiny city
10 on the hill. The good people always deserve
11 that kind of special.
12 That was once quoted by Dave Wenzel,
13 our 27th Mayor of Scranton. Good evening to
14 our beautiful city.
15 MR. SCHUSTER: Thank you. Our next
16 speaker is Mark Margavitch.
17 MR. MARGAVITCH: Good evening,
18 Council. I just was asking for some
19 clarification on kratom. Last week, is it
20 basically liability concerns? Is that what's
21 holding it up?
22 MR. SCHUSTER: We're getting all of
23 our ducks in a row to get the thing passed. So
24 there's already been some other municipalities
25 that have done it before. So we don't repeat
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1 any mistakes.
2 MR. MARGAVITCH: Okay, sounds good.
3 Okay, well, so I'm just going to read what I
4 have prepared here. So tonight, I stand before
5 you with reservations about bringing this to
6 light. The quandary is between safe housing
7 and constitutional rights.
8 As a former property manager, I've
9 seen my fair share of apartments that, in my
10 opinion, were not up to standards. Every
11 tenant deserves a safe place to live. However,
12 constitutional rights matter too. With that
13 said, I bring your attention to the
14 Commonwealth Court's decision in Rivera v.
15 Pottstown of December of 2025.
16 It made clear that municipalities
17 cannot conditional -- cannot condition rental
18 operations on warrantless inspections, that is,
19 inspections done under the guise of public
20 safety.
21 Scranton -- Scranton's ordinance
22 states that every rental property is subject to
23 regular inspections, and that passing those
24 inspections is essential to maintain a rental
25 license and avoid penalties.
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1 This is in direct conflict with
2 Rivera v. Pottstown, because a lawful entry
3 requires either consent from the landlord or
4 the tenant, exigent circumstances, or a
5 properly issued warrant. So I urge Council to
6 amend this ordinance immediately to bring it
7 into constitutional compliance and avoid
8 unnecessary liability.
9 And so what essentially that is,
10 is -- is landlord and tenants actually teamed
11 up. They -- they actually did a
12 pre-enforcement suit against the Borough of
13 Pottstown. And they won. Pottstown appealed
14 it. And it went to the Commonwealth Court.
15 Seven judges affirmed the decision.
16 Now, currently they are trying to
17 appeal it to the Supreme Court. I don't know
18 if it's going to go anywhere. But so right
19 now, any type of inspections that aren't done
20 with a definite probable cause warrant, a
21 consent from the landlord or the tenants or
22 exigent circumstances is unlawful now.
23 And you could review that. And if
24 anyone wants to reach out to me later, you all
25 know how to find me. If you have any
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1 questions, I'll answer that now. But any --
2 any type of inspections that are done after the
3 fact the tenant is in there, cannot be done
4 unless there is those three conditions.
5 And you can't say, well, we have to
6 get in there because we get in every two years.
7 You don't get to violate everyone's rights just
8 because you do it consistently. That's not how
9 it works. So I just wanted to bring that to
10 light. Now you know. Good luck. Thanks.
11 MR. SCHUSTER: Thank you. Our next
12 speaker is Mark Scarinci.
13 MR. SCARINCI: A pleasant good
14 evening, Council, Mark Scarinci, West Side. I
15 just want to say that every morning you'll see
16 me at St. Ann's Basilica for morning mass at
17 8:30.
18 And when I go there, I see at least
19 two dozen parishioners. And they sit in the
20 same location at the church. And I say that
21 because I rarely come here, but when I do come
22 to the Chamber, I see Joan. I see Les. I see
23 all the others. And it reminds me of going to
24 church.
25 So I have a quick comment before I
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1 get to the matter. Do you see this picture,
2 Council? This is President Trump and Rodrigo
3 Duterte, the President of the Philippines.
4 Trump went over there in his first stint as
5 President.
6 And he shook hands with that Rodrigo
7 Duterte. By the way, he's on the International
8 Criminal Court for Crimes Against Humanity over
9 there in the Hague. But the point I'm getting
10 at is that this man, Duterte, had the most
11 pottiest mouth, vulgarity, obscenity,
12 profanity.
13 And President Trump has been
14 infected with that man. I don't want to hear
15 President Trump saying any more obscenities, no
16 more profanity. This is the American -- this
17 is the United States, not the Philippines. I
18 want him to act in a professional manner, no
19 more profanity.
20 Now, the reason why I'm here. I
21 came here last April 21st, and I said before
22 the Council, we are in a two-week ceasefire
23 with Iran. And in those two weeks it became
24 two months. So from April 21st until June
25 23rd, nothing has happened except a few
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1 skirmishes here and there.
2 And then we have this memorandum of
3 understanding. And it is the most terrible --
4 as Bill -- as Bill Cassidy of Louisiana would
5 say, is the worst policy blunder in decades.
6 Ronald Reagan would be rolling over in his
7 grave.
8 So what happened was, was Trump
9 somehow got a phone call. And he said, I'm
10 going to stop all this stuff. And he literally
11 threw Netanyahu under the bus. So I can tell
12 you something. There is this man here, and his
13 name you all well know, is Benjamin Netanyahu.
14 And he ain't gonna be fancy to anyone in his
15 country.
16 He's going to do what he wants to
17 survive Israel for 500 and more years to come.
18 And there's this thing called the Samson
19 Option. And the Samson Option in the Israeli
20 culture is when someone is going to do a
21 nuclear bomb on Israel, they are going to --
22 they are going to retaliate first -- first.
23 And so that's going to happen
24 because what has happened is that China and
25 Russia are really together with Iran. And
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1 they're providing the GPS for those military
2 weapons to shoot down the Reaper drones, to
3 shoot down the Apache, to shoot down the F-15.
4 It's all China and Russia.
5 We don't want to take on China and
6 Russia. That's why he's breaking it off. And
7 so I have to tell you something. The Jericho
8 three missile is going to be launched. And
9 it's going to come. And it's going to destroy
10 all civilization with this -- with this nuclear
11 bomb.
12 And it's coming. And I'll tell you
13 when the trigger is going to come, Council, and
14 it's right here. And my time is short. Do you
15 see this, Council? This is King Charles the
16 third, in all his glory with his
17 jewel-encrusted crown. When this monarch dies
18 a natural death, it is then you are going to
19 see the nuclear holocaust.
20 But first, he must die a natural
21 death. And then -- and then you will see. I
22 told you we were going to war. I told you that
23 President Trump was weak. And I'm right on
24 this, Council. That is all, Council.
25 MR. SCHUSTER: Thank you very much.
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1 Our next speaker is Rik Little.
2 MR. LITTLE: Hello, Council,
3 Scranton, Rik Little. Ah, I just heard about
4 the Samson Option, which is biblical. A lot of
5 biblical things going on. But this body is
6 supposed to, you know, a lot of talk I've heard
7 before, you know, inspections about health and
8 safety, and it just kills me.
9 I mean, Lackawanna County doesn't
10 even have a health department. But what's
11 really going on, which really struck me when I
12 tried to get discovery when I was being evicted
13 by Scranton Housing Authority, is benefits.
14 And a lot of people are -- they just
15 have played with benefits for years. In this
16 town it's HUD. It's HHS. It's education. And
17 a lot of people are mad that federal benefits
18 are being taken out. But going back to the
19 Samson Option in this town, it's clear to me
20 that these data centers, that's the end.
21 I mean, already our power bills are
22 doubling and en route to tripling. And there's
23 a fire on Cedar Avenue, and there's not enough
24 water pressure. And I see all these signs high
25 up on the PPL poles, we'll buy your houses for
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1 nothing, for cash, no matter what.
2 Scranton has to come out and make a
3 definitive statement as many communities are as
4 Erin Brockovich, which is trying to help all
5 these small towns and townships organized to
6 say, we don't want the data centers. And this
7 is -- this is the real health -- health thing.
8 I mean, it totally overrides the
9 Green New Deal, which I remember, you know,
10 because we're really at a war with -- with AI,
11 you know, from the hanging chads and the 2000
12 election and Gore losing, and then being paid
13 billions of dollars to write the -- I don't
14 know what is it, the inconceivable truth or
15 something, you know, that New York City is
16 going to be underwater by 2013.
17 It's all these things. Meanwhile,
18 you know, talking about electric cars, cars
19 that can drive themselves, they want to control
20 the cars. Anne Heche drives her car right into
21 a damn building and kills herself. Makes you
22 wonder what's going on here.
23 But people have to come together.
24 And as far as the city is concerned, there's
25 nothing good about data centers. And I'll
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1 throw this in that from the top of the state,
2 there's both, you know, political issue
3 Republicans and Democrats, there's a lot of
4 problems across the board.
5 But in this state, I mean, with Josh
6 Shapiro already, you know, setting out a $20
7 billion deal with Amazon to build these data
8 centers here and with Scranton not even owning
9 the water and already on the losing end of the
10 power companies, you know, they're paving over
11 the streets and not keeping up their end of the
12 legal bargains as Mr. Mancini was saying.
13 We have to protect ourselves because
14 I tell you, the water isn't drinkable now. I
15 have to filter it to do it. And, you know, and
16 it's everything. It's -- it's the future.
17 It's the future. And just like a, you know, a
18 spaceship or Jesus appearing in the sky, you
19 know, it's that sort of a moment where people
20 should come together and -- and the officials
21 of Scranton have to come out and say what their
22 positions are on these data centers because
23 it's no good. Thank you.
24 MR. SCHUSTER: Thank you. Our next
25 speaker is Les Spindler.
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1 MR. SPINDLER: Good evening,
2 Council, Les Spindler, city resident,
3 homeowner. It was announced on the news
4 tonight that State Representative Bridget
5 Kosierowski announced that she has breast
6 cancer. So my thoughts and prayers go out to
7 her and her family, met her a few times.
8 She's a very nice person, so all the
9 best to her. The gentlemen spoke before about
10 kratom. I brought that up a number of times
11 now. A number of you up there said you don't
12 want to drag it out. Well, you weren't being
13 truthful. If it's dragged out any longer,
14 those ducks you're putting in a row are going
15 to be dead.
16 Next thing, last week President
17 Schuster just said there's already an ordinance
18 on the book for ATVs. What's the penalty for
19 that; do you know?
20 MR. SCHUSTER: I don't know offhand.
21 MR. SPINDLER: Because something's
22 got to be done. On the news last week, the
23 town of Hughesville, if people are caught with
24 e-scooters either on the sidewalk or on the
25 streets, it's $1,000 fine.
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1 Small towns like Hughesville,
2 Shamokin, they're taking the bull by the horns.
3 Why can't we solve this problem? It's
4 ridiculous. The chiefs should get out there.
5 I don't know what the penalty is. We should
6 get out there like Hughesville and announce
7 what the penalties are going to be.
8 Make it tougher on these people.
9 When they hear this, maybe they won't go out
10 and act like idiots. I was a half a block from
11 my house this afternoon. Here come two people
12 on an e-bike coming right at me. I should have
13 just stopped there. They would have ran right
14 into me, but I didn't want my car to get
15 damaged, so I just moved over and let them go.
16 But I blasted the horn at them.
17 It's out of control. These small towns are
18 taking care of it. Shamokin is overrun with
19 the vehicles that they've confiscated. But we
20 can't do anything. Something's got to be done.
21 MR. MARK MCANDREW: Excuse me. I'm
22 sorry to interrupt, but there's some state
23 legislators are working -- legislation they're
24 working on now with some tougher -- tougher law
25 or strength in the law that hopefully when --
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1 if that passes, I'll bring it back because I've
2 been along with you for the ride.
3 I mean, we've been talking about
4 this for not just this year, for the past
5 couple of years. And I bring it up every year.
6 And -- and so hopefully, you know, the state
7 passes something that we can -- we can grab a
8 hold of and incorporate it and maybe into an
9 ordinance here.
10 MR. SPINDLER: Well, I hope, because
11 it's out of control. To piggyback what Mike
12 was saying, did anybody ask these Pennsylvania
13 American Water people why the corner of
14 Clearview and Main Avenue isn't fixed yet?
15 Because that was their project. I guess --
16 that's one of the worst spots in the city and
17 that was their project.
18 Mike wanted to ask him a question
19 afterwards and they weren't allowed -- they
20 wouldn't answer. Oh, another thing about the
21 scooters, on Friday's news on Channel 16, in
22 Clark Summit, an 11-year-old boy ran a stop
23 sign on an e-bike. And he was hit by a
24 vehicle.
25 He was in critical condition. I
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1 haven't heard anymore on it. But I blame the
2 parents for that, letting an 11-year-old kid
3 just ride around the neighborhood not obeying
4 the laws, and it's -- I hope the child is okay.
5 But it's ridiculous.
6 The parents -- the parents should be
7 fined or something for that. You don't -- I
8 know when my kids were 11, they would never be
9 allowed to do something like that. I blame the
10 parents. Oh, lastly, this is getting
11 hysterical.
12 Friday, I'm driving home, and it was
13 a real windy day, Friday. And I'm driving up
14 the right way on the one way on Euclid. And
15 the cardboard sign I've been talking about, the
16 wind blew so hard that it was like turned
17 around. So it's facing the people coming up
18 the right way, telling them they're going the
19 wrong way.
20 Something's got to be done. I mean,
21 I'm laughing at it at this point. It's
22 ridiculous. That's all I have. Thank you.
23 MR. SCHUSTER: Thank you.
24 MR. MARK MCANDREW: Mr. Voldenberg,
25 did we get anything back on the inquiry I had
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1 last week about, you know, fixing this sign or
2 replace -- we have -- we make signs in DPW,
3 like --
4 MR. VOLDENBERG: I didn't get a
5 status on that particular sign, but I'll follow
6 up --
7 MR. MARK MCANDREW: All right.
8 Thank you.
9 MR. VOLDENBERG: -- on its removal.
10 MR. MARK MCANDREW: Or just let's
11 make one. We have the, you know, the shop that
12 does it. You don't need a cardboard one.
13 MR. SCHUSTER: Our next speaker
14 is --
15 MR. ELLMAN: Good evening, Council.
16 MR. SCHUSTER: -- Ron Ellman.
17 MR. ELLMAN: I think the city forgot
18 this is our city's birthday. We're 160 years
19 old. I hadn't seen a word about -- you know,
20 that should be just as important. Well --
21 DR. ROTHCHILD: There was a
22 celebration for that at -- in front of the
23 Everhart Museum last month, birthday for
24 Scranton. There was a celebration there.
25 MR. ELLMAN: That's good.
29
1 DR. ROTHCHILD: Hosted by the city
2 and the Mayor.
3 MR. ELLMAN: I haven't -- I just
4 haven't seen nothing about it. You know, this
5 should be important --
6 DR. ROTHCHILD: It is important.
7 MR. ELLMAN: -- for us. Anyway, the
8 next hour or so, I'd like to comment about the
9 evils that are overtaking this -- our
10 communities, these data centers. Mr. Kelly and
11 Mr. Gaughan, just -- they just can't impress
12 people enough of the evils of these data
13 centers and the conglomerates that have more
14 money than the communities to fight them.
15 This is a losing battle. It's not
16 going to end well for us. We have to somehow
17 put a limit on these things. There's just so
18 much water and power. And you think water
19 won't end.
20 Look at the people in Dimmick. They
21 went without water. They're still without
22 water, many of them. All these places can't
23 use all this water and power up without
24 disastrous results. I think there'd be people
25 lose everything they've worked for all their
30
1 lives and accomplished because of these greedy
2 landowners selling out without any interest
3 whatsoever of their results of -- against their
4 neighbors and so forth.
5 The trouble is big business. The
6 government wants big business. They don't want
7 little people in business. Look at Shapiro,
8 gives the bankers -- a bunch of failed bankers
9 buying that 150 year old dump down here that's
10 tax exempt.
11 When they're through years from now,
12 the city won't get a penny out of anything,
13 apartments, whatever, it's rented out.
14 Cognetti gives $2 million to a bunch of failed
15 investors. It's unheard of in the banking
16 business.
17 For an absentee Mayor, she sure got
18 here to unload money on them. You know,
19 there's an old axiom, the government can't go
20 against the will of the people, except in
21 Pennsylvania where the people are opposing
22 these giant conglomerates and the results of
23 allowing them.
24 Three or four weeks ago I complained
25 about the streets torn to shreds, North Main
31
1 Avenue and Clearview. They haven't touched it.
2 This is senseless, you know. This is one of
3 the high volume places. A half a mile up on
4 North Main Avenue, the Mayor made sure to tear
5 up 500 feet of perfect -- because I walked it
6 once years ago, curbs and sidewalks to show off
7 the city construction.
8 The worst street in the city is
9 North Main Avenue. You know, I told you years
10 ago -- two or three years ago the cab driver
11 said there isn't a good street in the city.
12 And that's probably the truth. Thank you.
13 MR. SCHUSTER: Thank you. Next is
14 Lee Morgan.
15 MR. MORGAN: Good evening, Council.
16 Two brief things, one is, you know, I love it
17 when President Trump curses. And I also enjoy
18 the fact that he's the first President we've
19 had in a long time that took Iran on. And you
20 know what, we better wait until we see what the
21 result is before we listen to all the armchair
22 generals tell us what's going to happen.
23 Because he's really had some effect
24 on them. The other thing is, you know, people
25 come in here complaining about their gas, their
32
1 electric, their sewer bill. That goes to the
2 Council because the Council should be writing
3 letters to the PUC demanding that action be
4 taken. They should be writing to their state
5 representatives and state senators.
6 And it's not happening because our
7 government isn't functioning. So if we were
8 inventing the wheel here today, it'd be a
9 square, wouldn't even be an octagon. It'd be a
10 square.
11 Now, the thing I wanted to talk
12 about here tonight, which people have --
13 probably have no interest in, except other than
14 myself, is Father's Day just came. You know, I
15 keep talking about these female researchers and
16 the research they've done.
17 And, you know, the sad part is that
18 women are trying to save men and save fathers
19 because the report they've done. And I think
20 that every man and woman should read those
21 reports because they're saying that family
22 court is a court based in politics, but not
23 based in fact.
24 They talk about parental alienation.
25 I've worked with two men last year that killed
33
1 themselves over not being able to see their
2 children for no reason at all. When you start
3 reading the law and the way the law should work
4 with custody and support, you find out that
5 it's not happening.
6 You've had other states pass laws
7 where they stop putting men in jail for
8 children that are not theirs. They started DNA
9 testing all the children being born because in
10 Europe and in some places in the world, 40% of
11 the men who think they're the father are not.
12 They talk about children being
13 raised without a father, and the women
14 researchers have received -- have determined
15 that these individuals, whether their daughters
16 or sons will never be whole individuals ever.
17 Every important thing comes from the father
18 after birth.
19 It's really amazing. And we look at
20 the court, and we see the half-hearted things
21 they do. Don't ever forget one thing. A judge
22 is a politician with a law degree. And the
23 people you elect to represent you in
24 Harrisburg, they're not -- about as capable as
25 the people that are in this Council Chamber
34
1 because everybody's playing politics.
2 Facts don't matter. The streets
3 you're driving on that are a mess, they don't
4 matter. The bridges that are falling down,
5 they don't matter. The debt the city carries,
6 that doesn't matter. The pension debt the city
7 carries, that doesn't matter either.
8 And the Rules of Council, they don't
9 matter. I mean, take a good look at what's
10 going on in New York City. You've got
11 candidates running as Democrats, okay, that are
12 saying you -- telling you that they're
13 Democratic Socialists, and they don't care if
14 illegals rape people in this country, kill
15 people in this country, commit any crime.
16 They don't want ICE. They don't
17 want anything. And then you take a look at
18 what's going on in Ireland. They're taking the
19 place of their government. And they're
20 starting to force illegals out because they're
21 tired of their women and children being
22 sodomized and raped.
23 And they're tired of all the crime
24 that's taking place in their country. And then
25 I remember a year or so ago, a lady came here
35
1 from Green Ridge and talked about how illegals
2 were driving through their neighborhood casing
3 their area. Well, no kidding, because they
4 were pillaging the whole country and selling
5 the loot back to Chile and Argentina.
6 And the government knew about it.
7 And don't forget that we had a President in the
8 White House whose wife said that he never ran
9 the country. Five people helped him run the
10 country. I think we need to take a look at --
11 a hard look at who the Democrats really are and
12 all elected officials. Thank you.
13 MR. SCHUSTER: Would anyone else
14 like to address Council?
15 MS. KOLOSKI: Good evening. Good
16 evening, everyone. Doris Koloski, Scranton.
17 Okay, so I know it's getting old, but I do want
18 to talk about 421 Colfax Avenue again.
19 Somebody came up and cleaned up the whole
20 front. It looks wonderful. But they never
21 touch the back or anything.
22 Now, the -- my friend who is one of
23 the neighbors, she was -- I'm looking to make
24 sure I read the right thing. Okay, she filed
25 the 311. And she said -- she got this letter
36
1 back. Your 311 request blighted property and
2 property maintenance has been resolved. We
3 appreciate your patience and commitment to
4 improving our community here in Scranton.
5 Date of Resolution 6/17/2026.
6 Resolution, property is condemned and on the
7 demo list. Property owner is incarcerated. If
8 you have any questions, feel free to, you know,
9 da da da to the e-mail. Okay, what she had
10 sent in to 311 was the front property has been
11 cut.
12 But the rest of the property is
13 still an eyesore and a jungle. The issue is
14 not resolved. Okay, so before I leave when I'm
15 done speaking, is it okay if I show Mr.
16 Voldenberg the pictures so when he is sending
17 his message back over there he knows what it
18 looks like so what he could say, if it's okay
19 with you guys.
20 Okay, so that is -- that -- it is
21 terrible. The Jeep, the abandoned Jeep with
22 the orange tag on it is still in the same spot
23 on Mulberry Street, for whatever that's worth.
24 And what I was wondering is, if they said it's
25 on the demolition list again, I mean, I've
37
1 heard that, like, six or seven times.
2 They always say that they filed a
3 lawsuit or something and they couldn't do it.
4 Does that mean that the lawsuit was resolved
5 and now it can be torn down on the demolition
6 list or is just -- if we could find something
7 out about that or are we going to get excited
8 and then find out that there's another lawsuit.
9 I notice how everybody is talking
10 about the data centers. I have a question. I
11 don't know, the electric -- the electricity. I
12 know there's a big thing about the electricity.
13 And it's going to use so much electricity. And
14 right now, I think Scranton is having a little
15 problem with the electricity.
16 On Thursday night, I went to pick up
17 a friend on Moltke Avenue, and the electricity
18 was out. The traffic light was out. The
19 electricity was out at her house. I picked her
20 up before 4:00 in the afternoon. When we came
21 back, it was still out.
22 And I think she said sometime in the
23 middle of the night it came back on. Now, that
24 was Thursday night. It was very windy. So we
25 just figured, okay, you know, a line went down.
38
1 Saturday night I got home about 8:30 and I saw
2 on my phone that there was a message from PPL
3 that said you might be a -- electricity outage
4 in your area.
5 And with as soon as I finished
6 reading it, the lights went out. It was out
7 until after midnight. I woke up sometime
8 during night to use the restroom, and I saw
9 that the lights came back on. That was -- that
10 was Saturday night.
11 Monday we lost our electricity again
12 in the morning. I live up on Colfax by the
13 hospital and Arthur Avenue, Colfax Avenue. The
14 whole thing was out. And everybody, of course,
15 is speculating on Facebook about, like, well,
16 somebody hit a transformer; and they only --
17 maybe they only did a patch, maybe not.
18 But it just seems so quick -- weird
19 that it would come out on Thursday in one area
20 of the city, and then Saturday and Monday in
21 another area of the city. And it's what their
22 message was, was that the morning went on --
23 Monday morning, the electric company's message
24 to us was that it should be restored by four in
25 the afternoon.
39
1 But if they could reroute something,
2 it might be earlier. And they did because it
3 was early. It came back on earlier. Today,
4 I'm sitting in my house. I had people over.
5 We play Mahjong. All of a sudden, the lights
6 flickered. And I thought, oh, no, don't tell
7 me the electric's going out again.
8 But it didn't go out. It just
9 flickered and came back on. So I don't know
10 what's going on with the electric company. But
11 if this is a problem now, what's it going to be
12 like when they do data centers? I guess I'm
13 done.
14 MR. SCHUSTER: And then, Doris, if
15 you want to, you could e-mail us those pictures
16 or you could text them, and we'll get them put
17 in with the information that gets sent over.
18 MS. KOLOSKI: Yeah, that's fine. No
19 problem.
20 MR. SCHUSTER: All right. Thank
21 you.
22 MS. KOLOSKI: I'll do it right now.
23 MR. SCHUSTER: And if you could just
24 state your name and address?
25 MS. LOFTUS: Sure. Good evening,
40
1 Council. My name is Jennifer Loftus. I live
2 at 1220 Rundle Street here in Scranton. I've
3 been watching this play out from home. And I
4 couldn't in all good conscience allow this to
5 continue without providing the correct
6 information about kratom.
7 In order to make sense of all of
8 this, I'm going to give you all what I call a
9 quick and dirty explanation of a few concepts.
10 Your body generally wants to achieve what's
11 called homeostasis, which means it looks to
12 keep everything in balance.
13 It has all kinds of mechanisms to
14 make this happen. Weight lifting, for example,
15 causes microtears in the muscle. And that's
16 why you're sore. So the body says, "Hey, we
17 got damaged because we lifted something too
18 heavy." So it repairs that with a larger
19 weight in mind.
20 Now the muscle is bigger, and the
21 muscle can now lift that newly encountered
22 weight. You can use this as a metaphor to
23 understand a lot of the body's processes.
24 Excuse me. If you drink coffee every day, and
25 then suddenly stop, you will experience
41
1 withdrawal.
2 It's the headache, irritability, and
3 other symptoms that many people are familiar
4 with. That is physical dependence. If you
5 drink coffee and it creates an enjoyable
6 experience and helps you be more productive,
7 you have now married the coffee and the happy
8 in your mind.
9 If you then add the pain of
10 withdrawal when you take away the coffee, your
11 brain will naturally make you want to seek out
12 more coffee. Your brain produces natural
13 opiates to help in times of pain and stress.
14 It does not sadly produce enough of these for
15 things like surgery, broken legs, or chronic
16 pain.
17 There are chemical compounds,
18 natural and otherwise, that mimic these opiates
19 in your brain. So now I want you all to think
20 about a lock and key concept. You have a
21 certain number of receptors in your brain
22 naturally. They are the locks.
23 Opioid drugs are the keys that fill
24 up all the open locks. If you flood the brain
25 with an opioid, the brain will create more
42
1 locks to fill so that it doesn't experience
2 breathing depression that can lead to death.
3 This is why pain patients can take
4 an amount of medication that would kill someone
5 who has never taken them before. Kratom is
6 from a tree native to Southeast Asia. It's
7 been used for centuries there by people working
8 in the fields who chew the leaves while they
9 work.
10 It can work as a mild stimulant at
11 lower doses. It has pain relieving properties
12 at other doses. There are not dead workers all
13 over the fields over there. You may hear that
14 it was banned in its country of origin. That
15 is correct.
16 It turns out that kratom is very
17 effective at helping people overcome opium
18 addiction. The British wanted to keep the
19 people there hooked on opium and make sure that
20 they were paying the tax on that opium to the
21 British instead of using their native kratom.
22 So it was illegal.
23 Kratom has chemical compounds that
24 act on the opiate receptors in your brain.
25 Importantly, it has what's called a ceiling.
43
1 You may have heard of Suboxone. That's an
2 opium -- opioid addiction treatment. What that
3 does is, it fills in the locks that I was
4 talking about in the brain for you. And it has
5 a ceiling effect.
6 That means it won't overload the
7 locks and get you high after a certain point,
8 nor will you overdose. It will not cause an
9 experienced opioid user to grow more receptors
10 or locks. Instead of investing in common
11 sense, medically supported, and science-backed
12 methods, this country invested in AA and NA,
13 which relies on abstinence.
14 At the behest of the DEA, guided by
15 hysteria, doctors cut off patients from
16 opioids. They didn't do anything about the
17 locks and keys. They just induced sudden
18 withdrawal. People did not, in fact, stop
19 using opioids. They simply got them from the
20 street.
21 Heroin will fill those locks just as
22 easily as hydrocodone. And it's much cheaper,
23 and it has no ceiling. What a lot of people
24 did was to switch over to kratom. It's legal
25 and safe in its natural state. In many cases,
44
1 they were veterans suffering with
2 service-induced injuries and having been cut
3 off from prescribed drugs. Most people don't
4 want to use street drugs. They're dangerous.
5 I am not talking about the gas
6 station associated compound 70H that's
7 lab-created from one tiny part of kratom. And
8 it's often sold side by side with kratom. Many
9 of the nightmare stories that you hear are
10 coming from that drug, not kratom itself.
11 There's no way to kill yourself with
12 kratom because of the built-in ceiling effect.
13 Any reports of such deaths are always polydrug
14 overdoses, which means kratom was one of many
15 things found in the dead person's system, not
16 specifically the thing that killed them.
17 Making kratom illegal is an
18 ill-conceived idea that will essentially send
19 law-abiding people who don't want to use
20 illegal drugs back to the street. It will lead
21 to a rise in fentanyl use and overdoses. You
22 will be consigning a large number of people to
23 death if you insist on making kratom illegal,
24 especially based on the inappropriate and
25 incorrect information that I hear almost every
45
1 week here.
2 Not everyone using kratom is doing
3 so because they are physically dependent on
4 opioids though. Some use it for concentration
5 and mild pain relief. Others are using it to
6 relax. Would you ban coffee? If you would
7 not, you shouldn't ban kratom.
8 Finally, you should know there is a
9 large constituency in this city that uses
10 kratom. We will organize and vote you out of
11 office if you continue to pursue these
12 ill-advised plans. Thank you.
13 MR. SCHUSTER: Would anyone else
14 like to address Council?
15 MR. COYNE: Tom Coyne, Minooka.
16 First of all, I was fortunate to see Norma who
17 came in here for the flower show. She was up
18 at Nay Aug Park, did a little bench talk
19 seating to a bunch of people who came by to
20 visit her.
21 And she had a question about whether
22 the light on Lackawanna Avenue in front of the
23 train station that was shipped away and
24 possibly going to fall on people, whether or
25 not that was corrected. And I said I'd report
46
1 back to her because she does watch. And that
2 light is not there anymore. And it's actually
3 been removed from that side of the sidewalk.
4 So that's been resolved. There is no light to
5 fall on people, one thing done on Lackawanna
6 Avenue.
7 The flower show, nice show. The
8 only problem I have with it this time is when
9 they moved it, they moved it up next to the art
10 museum. And there's a lot of hills and slopes
11 there. My mother came up this time. And she's
12 not quite as limber at her age that she used to
13 be.
14 And because the ground is unstable
15 up there and everything though it may have
16 helped the museum itself is so packed together
17 in that location directly in front of -- inside
18 the museum itself. It was a lot more congested
19 than going around that nice long paved circle
20 around the bottom of it.
21 I think in the future I would hope
22 they would move back down to the other area,
23 just because it seemed incredibly cramped up
24 where it is now. Thursday we had a cat -- I
25 had a catastrophic failure back in our block
47
1 for electricity. The top of the -- I guess
2 that possibly might have been the closed
3 breaker on the top that went between a high
4 tension wire and the transformer locked up and
5 it blew the top of the pole right in half, took
6 the power out for the neighborhood.
7 And the top section of the pole was
8 actually hanging on the wires underneath it.
9 It burned and severed the pole. And the pole
10 was actually physically burning at the top and
11 the cut off section. So there is something to
12 be said about there is a problem with the
13 infrastructure when the pole -- when there's
14 enough electricity that gets shunted through a
15 telephone pole to burn it in half.
16 Thankfully, it had a wire connected
17 to the top of it or else it would have been
18 coming down to the ground. It actually hung up
19 on the streetlight that was right from that
20 pole underneath it. 3200 block -- 3203 Phinney
21 Avenue in front of that section is that pothole
22 that I talked about, which is roughly 6 inches
23 deep and maybe 18 inches wide.
24 It would be nice if someone got out
25 there to throw some fill in it. For the church
48
1 picnic back there, it seems that DPW went out
2 there and filled the potholes directly around
3 the church picnic within that one block. But
4 it seems they didn't go very far off that
5 block.
6 Like I said, it's out in front of
7 3200 -- 3203 Phinney Avenue. And it's a little
8 bit deep. Church on Pittston Avenue got a --
9 across from Andrew Brown's, we gave them a loan
10 for sidewalks. Where are those sidewalks? It
11 came through a grant.
12 Sidewalks are still jagged, still a
13 tripping hazard, which they came in here for.
14 Cement is all jagged, but nothing has been done
15 on them. When we give a grant to an
16 organization from the -- from the Gambling
17 Association, do we ever follow up to find out
18 if that grant was -- and work was actually
19 done?
20 If the money they came to the city
21 for and asked for is done in a timely fashion?
22 Because there's nothing done back there. The
23 sidewalks in front of the street are exactly as
24 they were beforehand.
25 Data centers, you can't block them
49
1 because you've missed the zoning. Block the
2 electric to them. Don't allow them to make
3 generators. Change the code beforehand so they
4 can't build the generators to power and have to
5 take in the lines from elsewhere because they
6 all want to build generation -- generation
7 stations on site.
8 So if it's too late to block the
9 data centers because it's not part of the
10 zoning, move it on. Storm drains they
11 mentioned. It would be nice if all areas had
12 storm drains in their section unlike our area,
13 which has none.
14 A couple years ago -- about a year
15 and a half ago, I came in there with a sign.
16 And I said Scranton 311 has now gone to
17 Scranton, no, one, one, one. It's still the
18 same. You call up, get no response. No one
19 wins by calling that number.
20 And the last update is, I take it we
21 got nothing about the gift cards back? Okay, I
22 did some research on the gift cards. It is
23 true that 75 were handed out to the city.
24 Evidently, nine were handed out. That was nine
25 in two years, which means to hand out 200 will
50
1 take the city approximately 44 years at that --
2 at that progress.
3 I confirmed the number that 75 were
4 given out in September and October of 2024.
5 And there's still 125 waiting there for the
6 city to pick up and use. It's still out there.
7 So they didn't disappear. And they haven't
8 been used by city employees. They've just been
9 abandoned. Hopefully, we'll move on from that.
10 Thank you.
11 MR. SCHUSTER: Thank you. Would
12 anyone else like to address Council?
13 MR. SEAN MCANDREW: Mr. Voldenberg,
14 for the church on Pittston Avenue, I know
15 sometimes they have to do the work first before
16 they get the grant money and that they get
17 reimbursed. Can we just check to see if that's
18 the case there?
19 MR. VOLDENBERG: I will. I'll check
20 in the morning.
21 MR. SEAN MCANDREW: Thanks.
22 MR. VOLDENBERG: FIFTH ORDER. 5-A.
23 MOTIONS.
24 MR. SCHUSTER: Dr. Rothchild, do you
25 have any motions or comments?
51
1 DR. ROTHCHILD: Yes, I do, a few.
2 First, I just wanted to touch on the Electric
3 City Flower Show. I did have a chance to go by
4 on Saturday. And I was really pleased to see
5 the amount of vendors. It seemed like a lot
6 more vendors this year, but I'm not sure if
7 that was more of the space that it was in and
8 being a bit more cramped compared to its
9 previous location.
10 Although I did like everything being
11 closer together too, but I understand the
12 concerns that were expressed about people being
13 able to get around and uneven grass. But it
14 was quite enjoyable. And there was a really
15 large crowd. We had to park in one of the
16 parking lots, like, all the way in the -- in
17 the back and then walk with the kids up there.
18 But -- but I was still glad to --
19 glad to see it. And I, unfortunately, I missed
20 Norma, so I didn't get to see her there, but
21 sadly enough. But I'm glad to hear that she --
22 that she attended and came back to Scranton for
23 it.
24 Something else that was -- that I
25 believe Mr. Mancini had brought up was one of
52
1 the streets that American Water had been doing
2 a project on. And that's on Taylor Avenue in
3 front of the ICC, which is the church my family
4 goes to all the time.
5 So we're aware of -- of how bad that
6 pave cut seems to be getting. And I think
7 someone has even mentioned that it seems to be
8 more of a sinkhole -- a possible sinkhole at
9 this point. So, Mr. Voldenberg, it's -- it's
10 really important that we get -- that we get
11 them back over there to fix that pave cut
12 because there's, you know, a lot of people that
13 travel there, a lot of people that go to the
14 church there and -- and just, you know, people
15 in the neighborhood that are maybe even
16 avoiding that street because of the severity of
17 it.
18 MR. VOLDENBERG: I'll take care of
19 it, Dr. Rothchild.
20 DR. ROTHCHILD: Thank you. And on
21 the topic of Scranton tourism that was brought
22 up by Miss Hodowanitz, I did just want to make
23 mention I was -- I was out over the weekend
24 downtown as well.
25 And I felt like I was seeing some
53
1 people around still that were here because of
2 tourism. And I think it's fantastic. And it's
3 not that we haven't had any tourism before, but
4 having such a large influx of people in a short
5 period of time for the Big Boy, and now
6 upcoming too for the World Cup watch parties.
7 And today it was just announced with
8 the -- with the concerts that are going to be
9 taking place. And a lot of people my age
10 excited to see the Hansen brothers. So I'm,
11 you know, really happy to see that hustle and
12 bustle downtown.
13 As for restaurants and
14 recommendations for that, anyone with Google
15 who puts in places to eat downtown Scranton,
16 what you'll first get up -- I mean, you'll have
17 suggestions for some of the local restaurants.
18 But if you go to the Lackawanna County Visitors
19 Bureau, you can see on their page -- you can
20 filter it out to specifically to downtown
21 Scranton or to certain types of meals or
22 cuisines.
23 And then same thing, the second one
24 that comes up is Scranton Tomorrow's website.
25 So they have their dining guide. And I -- I
54
1 believe that comes out annually, and same
2 thing, where you can cater it to what type of
3 cuisine you're looking for in downtown
4 Scranton.
5 So those are available resources for
6 people visiting the area that would be I think
7 the places best to encourage them to look for
8 suggestions and recommendations for where to
9 eat downtown or I'm happy to suggest places too
10 because I have plenty of favorites.
11 On another note, I know that
12 Councilman McAndrew had requested that members
13 of the Unsheltered Task Force come in to meet.
14 I did just want to provide an update. I know
15 that an e-mail was sent to the task force
16 asking which members would have an interest.
17 So we're just gathering right now those people
18 who would be able to attend.
19 And I explained when, you know, that
20 our caucuses are at 5:45 and what kind of
21 information we'd be looking for. But if there
22 are specific questions, I know we've had a lot
23 come up from the public in the past about it.
24 So if members of the public have specific
25 questions for the Unsheltered Task Force, then
55
1 even though we don't have a date set yet -- I'm
2 assuming this is going to take place during the
3 month of July, then you might want to begin
4 getting some of those questions to us that we
5 can ask during that -- during that caucus.
6 And on the note of electricity, I,
7 you know, I know as well that people have been
8 experiencing issues throughout the --
9 throughout the Hill Section neighborhood with
10 the electricity shutting off or, you know,
11 lights flickering.
12 And my daughter even made note of
13 it. She's like, the lights are out again. And
14 like, she's, like, why does that happen? Like,
15 that never happens. So I'm not sure what's
16 going on either. But maybe there's something
17 that we can do to reach out from Council or
18 from the city to PPL and find out where the
19 issue is coming from since this is becoming a
20 consistent problem for residents in that -- in
21 that neighborhood. Mr. Voldenberg, would you
22 be --
23 MR. VOLDENBERG: I will, Dr.
24 Rothchild.
25 DR. ROTHCHILD: -- send that
56
1 communication, please? I'd appreciate it as
2 would the neighbors in the Hill Section. And I
3 think the last thing I just wanted to state is,
4 I would not ban coffee. The person who came
5 and brought that up before, and I'm, like,
6 she's talking about coffee. And I love -- I
7 love my cup of Joe. So that's all that I have.
8 Thank you.
9 MR. SCHUSTER: Thank you very much.
10 Mr. Sean McAndrew, do you have any motions or
11 comments?
12 MR. SEAN MCANDREW: Yeah, I have a
13 few. First, answers to my questions from last
14 week. I again asked if the Parks and Recs
15 Director, members of the administration, and a
16 few members of the Scranton Municipal Authority
17 Board -- Recreation Authority would meet to
18 discuss the concerns regarding the new position
19 for the Parks Manager.
20 And as the responsibilities relate
21 to the board, there's some conflicting duties.
22 The response I got was the Nay Aug Park Manager
23 position was included in the 2026 operating
24 budget unanimously approved by City Council.
25 So they're still not answering my question if
57
1 they'll -- if they will set up a meeting with
2 me.
3 So, Frank, can we send a request to
4 have the Parks Director come in for our caucus
5 to maybe see if we can get questions answered
6 that way? I appreciate the info. I understand
7 it was in the budget. But when it was in the
8 budget, the responsibilities were never listed.
9 Responsibilities were given to
10 Council a week ago. So when it was approved,
11 the responsibilities were not listed that
12 Council did not have that information,
13 therefore, I think that now it's some
14 conflicting -- conflicting issues.
15 I think the administration should
16 know that this isn't the 2025 Council. Next
17 question, Councilman McAndrew asked if City
18 Council may please have a copy of the PEL five
19 year plan forecast for the city, indicated we
20 are a few weeks late of the final document and
21 as we're getting ready for upcoming budget
22 season.
23 The response was upon completion and
24 review of the report, the report will be issued
25 with significant time for review prior to the
58
1 presentation of the proposed 2027 operating
2 budget in November.
3 Okay, I'm willing to give them
4 another week or two. But in the meantime,
5 Solicitor Gilbride, can you and me work
6 together on -- I hate to do this, but
7 submitting a right to know to get all the
8 information, drafts included from PEL to the
9 city?
10 And let's also look at options if
11 that doesn't work to use our subpoena power to
12 get the information. We have to ask multiple
13 times for documents and information that were
14 promised to us. Again, I just -- I don't
15 understand why this is so hard.
16 They have the document. They
17 have -- it's completed. Next, Mr. McAndrew
18 asked for clarification. I'm not going to read
19 the whole thing, but basically, working from
20 home. Is everybody equipped to work from home?
21 Do they have duties, like, you know, I work for
22 a company that works from home.
23 There's a lot that goes into working
24 from home, not just, Hey, pack up and let's
25 work from home. The answer I received was,
59
1 appropriate work from home accommodations and
2 equipment are available to city staff when
3 deemed necessary by the Mayor and her
4 administration pursuant to the Mayor's
5 executive authority.
6 All right. Next was regarding
7 again, the Pretzel Park cameras. There's
8 cameras being placed all over the city. Why
9 don't we have an answer regarding our --
10 timeline regarding the Pretzel Park cameras?
11 The administration has previously
12 provided ample information to City Council in
13 recent weeks regarding the prior prioritization
14 and mechanics for installation of cameras
15 throughout the city and its parks.
16 So again, no timeline, no answer.
17 So to the residents of Green Ridge, especially
18 the Green Ridge Neighborhood Association, we
19 are trying up here to get at least some answers
20 to get these cameras up. But again, the
21 administration is not really giving us a
22 timeline or giving us information.
23 I know if we want to speak with the
24 Chief of Police, we were told we can give them
25 a call. But I'm sick of just having
60
1 conversations that aren't in public or getting
2 at least stuff that's in writing. They won't
3 put any concerns in writing.
4 I'm done having those conversations.
5 So hopefully we can get some answers soon. And
6 could we send a message to the Chief of Police
7 to give us whatever he wants to discuss with
8 us, see if he will put it in writing.
9 MR. VOLDENBERG: I will, sir.
10 MR. SEAN MCANDREW: All right.
11 Similar to President Schuster's questions
12 regarding the ambulance service RFP, you know,
13 we had some questions regarding when was the
14 decision made to do the RFP, is Fitch and
15 Associates going to be involved in the process,
16 and there was information told to myself and
17 Councilman McAndrew that when we met with the
18 city regarding EMS services that they met with
19 Geisinger.
20 So the response to me was, in
21 response to the comments made last week at
22 Council's meeting. Please note that it is a
23 city's -- it is a mischaracterization to state
24 the city decided to issue an RFP, and then
25 spoke to Geisinger regarding an RFP for EMS
61
1 services.
2 As was discussed at our meeting, the
3 administration has always had ongoing
4 discussions with various EMT providers that
5 service the city to ensure proper coverage. As
6 clearly stated, the administration was
7 considering an RFP as one approach at the time
8 of our meeting and following said meeting, do
9 what was perceived as interest by members of
10 City Council to be willing and open partner
11 through this process.
12 The administration immediately took
13 steps that day to arrange for an RFP. The
14 administration again reiterates its commitment
15 to an open and fair process for receiving
16 proposals from potential vendors for EMS
17 services and does not believe it is appropriate
18 for any city officials to meet with the vendor
19 to the exclusion of others to discuss possible
20 proposals or future services at this time.
21 So, I'm not sure what the
22 mischaracterization is. I'll be very clear
23 this time. When myself and Councilman McAndrew
24 and Attorney Gilbride met with the city, we
25 asked the question are you looking at any
62
1 avenues? What is your plan forward? Chief
2 Judge -- we asked if they were looking at an
3 RFP, RFQ. We were told there was no plans at
4 all. Then I asked if they met with any --
5 recently met with any local providers.
6 They said, yes. When I asked who,
7 they said Geisinger. So I agree, I would love
8 to be a partner in this -- like it stated here.
9 But we didn't even know there was an RFP being
10 done until we got answers to our questions last
11 week.
12 So they made this decision to do the
13 RFP without even telling us. And to be clear,
14 they did it after they met with Geisinger. I'm
15 not saying that they did the RFP and then met
16 with Geisinger. No, it was before that. So,
17 hopefully that clears up any concerns or
18 misunderstandings that the administration had.
19 Next, we keep getting e-mails
20 regarding Liederkranz Bar. And I know they're
21 an after-hours club. But there's been issues
22 from multiple residents now that have sent me
23 and other Council members documentations of
24 calls regarding noise complaints and a lot of
25 other things.
63
1 So can we, please ask the Chief of
2 Police how many complaints were filed recently
3 in the last year or two from the Liederkranz --
4 and not just the complaints. I know if it's
5 multiple calls come in, they're marketing as
6 one complaint. Can we see how many calls total
7 came in regarding this issue?
8 MR. VOLDENBERG: I will, sir.
9 MR. SEAN MCANDREW: As for the Parks
10 and Recs -- or the Nay Aug Parks Manager, I
11 have an idea. Why don't we have that person
12 lock up the parks at night, especially when the
13 pool season is closed because they're only
14 gonna be managing two people.
15 So we need to start locking these
16 parks up. I drove by Weston Park the other --
17 Weston Field the other -- the other night. It
18 was about 11:00. And there's multiple kids in
19 there and skateboarding. So the residents
20 aren't -- are -- they're not lying.
21 This is an ongoing issue. Again,
22 these parks are beautiful. And I love that we
23 have so many upgrades. But we need to make
24 sure the neighborhoods aren't disturbed at
25 that -- or there's no issues for the neighbors.
64
1 So, can we please look at maybe adding that
2 duty during non pool season for that position?
3 MR. VOLDENBERG: I'll ask that
4 question.
5 MR. SEAN MCANDREW: Okay, and,
6 Frank, can you find out when the Ethics Board
7 meets?
8 MR. VOLDENBERG: Pardon me?
9 MR. SEAN MCANDREW: When the Ethic
10 Board meets next?
11 MR. VOLDENBERG: I will.
12 MR. SEAN MCANDREW: I have some
13 questions for them regarding something that we
14 received from a resident. And, Tom, if you're
15 available -- or Attorney Gilbride, if you're
16 available this week to work on those right to
17 knows and possibly subpoenas.
18 We keep asking questions. It's
19 questions that we deserve answers to because we
20 have a budget season coming up or we're trying
21 to get answers for our residents. I don't want
22 to go down that path doing right to knows and
23 subpoenas and all that stuff.
24 But we got to get a little bit
25 something other than getting no answers or
65
1 getting ignored. So unfortunately, if that's
2 the approach we have to take, then I will be
3 willing to do that. I said when I got in this
4 position or I ran for the position, I will
5 speak up for our residents. And I won't --
6 I'll be the check and balances that's needed.
7 And we're going to do that. And
8 like I said, this isn't 2025 Council anymore.
9 I think you could see by the questions we're
10 asking and -- and the answers we're demanding,
11 we do a little -- things a little bit different
12 here.
13 So hopefully going forward, this
14 relationship with administration can be better.
15 That is my goal. But again, if we're not
16 getting information, we have to go different --
17 different routes possibly. Thank you.
18 MR. SCHUSTER: Thank you. Mr. Mark
19 McAndrew, any motions or comments?
20 MR. MARK MCANDREW: I have a couple.
21 So, first of all, I was in the room with
22 Councilman McAndrew with regards to the
23 ambulance discussion that we wanted -- we
24 wanted to know the concerns of the city as to
25 why we don't have an agreement or why we
66
1 shouldn't have an agreement with a service
2 that's needed. All right. We definitely need
3 something. This city of our size needs an
4 agreement, period. Every surrounding
5 municipality has an agreement with Penn
6 Ambulance, right? We knew that. I knew that
7 going in.
8 Never there -- was there a
9 discussion of RFP, RFQ, whatever -- whatever
10 words you want to use. That came about because
11 we've been hammering it up here complaining
12 about it. And meetings, enough with, like,
13 meeting with institutions or people.
14 How many times did our
15 administration meet with Geisinger, both times
16 with regards to the 100 foot parking garages.
17 It was constant. There's e-mails. I was never
18 at them meetings because I sat here. I didn't
19 want to sit in them meetings because I knew I
20 had to sit here and vote on behalf of the
21 people.
22 Fidelity, were there meetings, yeah.
23 I was never included. There was a lot of
24 meetings with the purchase next door. Call it
25 RFQ, call it our -- call it contracts, call it
67
1 purchasing the building next door. Was there
2 meetings -- behind backdoor meetings, yeah.
3 For our administration to say, hey, wait a
4 second, you know, we're as open and transparent
5 as everybody else. We want you too, Council.
6 That's nonsense.
7 The only reason that that process
8 started because we made enough noise up here.
9 And I'm glad we made enough noise up here to
10 get something moving forward with the -- with
11 an ambulance service with our city. So I don't
12 want to hear anymore of that because that's
13 nonsense.
14 Secondly, so I'm happy to report
15 that the Elm Street Bridge remains on schedule
16 to be completed in July. So everybody
17 listening, because there's people ask me every
18 week. It's soon because, guess what, July is
19 like next week. Also, so, okay, America Water
20 was in here. We talked about what are the, you
21 know, storm drains, basins, whatever you want
22 to call them, the identification of them is a
23 process.
24 And there's always been a blame
25 game. The city says they're not ours.
68
1 American Water says they're not ours. And then
2 now I heard there's some type of split
3 ownership that I'm still have trouble
4 understanding. But we're told that there is a
5 map or somewhat of a map. I asked last week,
6 I'm like, come on already because I've been
7 bringing this up as long as I'm here, right?
8 And my question was, we need a
9 map -- not a map. We need -- if you want to
10 give us a map, fine. Maybe the city -- if we
11 finally get a map from American Water, give it
12 to the city, they have -- they should have the
13 wherewithal to create a list, alphabetical, so
14 it's your street.
15 I live on St. Ann's Street. People
16 live on Rundle. There was a girl here earlier.
17 You should be able to go on the website, click
18 on your street, and like Councilman McAndrew
19 over here said, and it should determine and
20 tell you who owns the drain that's in front of
21 your house or in your court or in your alley.
22 And I find it hard to believe that
23 the city doesn't want to know which drains are
24 theirs. I believe the water company -- because
25 they -- at least they come and tell us they're
69
1 doing the work, they're looking for it and how
2 and the process.
3 I have a better understanding. And
4 I appreciate them coming here. It's a huge
5 undertaking. But why can't, I mean, this
6 building is here over 100 years. There's
7 archives here. There's got to be archives with
8 storm drains.
9 And the Sewer Authority before it
10 was purchased, had to have archives because I
11 had a gentlemen tell me that on Powell Court
12 the Sewer Authority always took responsibility
13 of -- for it.
14 And they told me tonight, well, it's
15 kind of a split thing. But the Sewer Authority
16 knew. It's unfortunate it was sold. We
17 can't -- we can't reel back time or roll back
18 time. But I believe there's got to be archives
19 here and archives at the old Sewer Authority
20 that has it because these things were built.
21 Guess what, they were built. All
22 right. So, if someone built them, someone has
23 ownership of building these drains. I believe
24 there's data there. And I'm just sick of
25 hearing that we're still collecting it. It
70
1 doesn't make sense to me.
2 So I hope both sides get together
3 finally and work this out for the residents
4 because it's terrible. Also, so, Joan, you had
5 a great idea. I like the personal touch of a
6 flyer, personal flyer; you know what I mean? I
7 know Happenings Magazines does it.
8 I know, Dr. Rothchild, I utilize
9 Google sometimes when I'm out of town. But
10 guess what? Sometimes the menu is not updated.
11 Sometimes the business is closed. I'm going
12 fishing tomorrow with -- and I live here. I'm
13 going fishing tomorrow with my grandkids and
14 needed to redo my fishing license.
15 I typed in Field and Stream, tells
16 me Viewmont Mall. Go up there. It's Dick's.
17 So Google's not always as reliable as you think
18 it is. So God forbid someone -- I mean, I at
19 least knew that. But someone coming out of
20 town isn't going to know even who Scranton
21 Tomorrow is with their dining guide.
22 It's going to be great for us, but I
23 just think the personal touch, especially a
24 student-generated project that could be an
25 integrated project with some other classes,
71
1 like for design and the printing of it, and the
2 artistic piece, that is, you know, because a
3 lot of seniors have senior projects.
4 I just think, you know, if they
5 embrace it after you reach out to Scranton
6 Tomorrow and the Chamber, we can partner with
7 this. And this could be a really nice special
8 touch project or a flyer that we can utilize
9 when need be.
10 And let's see what else I have. I
11 think that's all I have. Thank you.
12 MR. SCHUSTER: Thank you. Frank,
13 today we got an inquiry from a church. I had
14 forwarded it over to you to get to the proper
15 department. They were wondering about refuse
16 cleanup or refuse pickup, whether it's the
17 Treasurer's Office or DPW or --
18 MR. VOLDENBERG: -- get that out.
19 MR. SCHUSTER: Thank you.
20 MR. VOLDENBERG: I do believe they
21 do require a hauler to pick their trash up.
22 MR. SCHUSTER: All right.
23 MR. VOLDENBERG: But I'll double
24 check.
25 MR. SCHUSTER: Yep. Thank you very
72
1 much. I had some questions a few weeks ago
2 regarding a property on Wayne Avenue. I had
3 asked -- there were several incidents that
4 occurred at the property. I had asked about it
5 being a nuisance property if it was a -- it is
6 a rental property if there was a property
7 manager, etc.
8 And I did get some answers back
9 at -- from that one. So I asked has the
10 property been deemed a nuisance property by the
11 Scranton Police Department? How many calls are
12 on record with that? What designates a
13 nuisance property?
14 And I was told that we spoke with
15 the homeowner, advised them that this property
16 could be deemed as a nuisance based on the
17 number of police calls. We further advised the
18 owner that any additional issues would result
19 in closure.
20 SPD also sent a letter to the owner
21 with the same regards. The tenants are
22 currently under eviction. However, they filed
23 an appeal, which is remaining pending. So I
24 asked about it. Does the landlord maintain the
25 property or do they have a property manager?
73
1 Was the property -- property visited in the
2 past? Is it registered through rental -- the
3 Rental Department, and have they paid their
4 rental fees?
5 And the answer that came back was a
6 rental inspection has begun on 4/10. But the
7 owner has not scheduled the second
8 re-inspection. It is not passed currently.
9 Once it passes the second inspection, a license
10 can be issued.
11 So it looks like they don't have a
12 rental license as well. So many calls to the
13 residents, no rental license, hasn't been
14 inspected. I asked how many times the Fire
15 Department had been visited to the property
16 because neighbors told me that the Fire
17 Department were there many times as well.
18 And they let me know that there have
19 been approximately 11 incidents that have
20 occurred at this property that the Scranton
21 Police Department have been there since January
22 of 2026. So it's a very short time that the
23 police have been there 11 times.
24 I would think this property is a
25 nuisance property at this point in time. It
74
1 should be noted that not all the calls were
2 counted towards declaring the property as a
3 nuisance, however, due to the nature of those
4 calls.
5 And then they did answer about the
6 Fire Department. The Fire Department responded
7 to the property twice in 2026 because of
8 basement flooding. So that seems to be the
9 only one that makes sense. I did ask about the
10 RFP with Fitch and Associates in regards to the
11 EMS service.
12 They did a study to look into the
13 feasibility of the city opening or starting its
14 own EMS service, which would be another
15 department in the city. That department closed
16 in the city, I believe, in the 1980s due to the
17 cost to the city of running that department.
18 So with this RFP process, Fitch and
19 Fitch -- or Fitch Associates was retained to do
20 the RFP process. But it was not part of the
21 original study. So that question was answered.
22 I did ask about if Council could get a copy of
23 the resume for the new parks manager at Nay
24 Aug.
25 And I got the same answer that Mr.
75
1 McAndrew got as on the advice -- the advice and
2 consent of City Council for the hiring of the
3 Nay Aug Parks Manager is not required per the
4 City's Charter. I do understand that or the
5 Administrative Code.
6 So I understood. But looking to
7 make sure that we're hiring individuals that
8 have the background for these positions. And
9 the last piece was this position was previously
10 approved by City Council in the operating
11 budget.
12 So sometimes things don't look the
13 way they are in a budget. We passed the
14 budget. It had this included. But after that
15 point in time, we're no longer involved in it.
16 Something similar happened with community
17 centers in our area, where, you know, some of
18 the community centers in Scranton were
19 approaching Council saying we need a roof
20 replacement, which costs $33,000.
21 We need some bathroom replacements.
22 We need (inaudible) replacements. These are
23 city properties. And if the city isn't going
24 to help us with the maintenance of these
25 properties, the neighborhood associations might
76
1 not be able to do it.
2 Recently, Tripp Park, the Tripp Park
3 Community Center, has been handed back over to
4 the city. So a neighborhood association, which
5 was volunteering to do that work of maintaining
6 that building, has now given up those reins to
7 that building. And it's now with the Parks
8 Department.
9 Council did want to put money in for
10 those community centers since they are city
11 properties. But when that money got put into
12 the budget, the only say that we had in it was
13 that it was in the budget itself. So that
14 money got put into the budget. That line item
15 was put into the budget.
16 And from there it turned into
17 grant -- grant opportunities to be passed out
18 around the city. And not to say that those
19 aren't good projects, but the money was put
20 there for the maintenance of community centers
21 in Scranton.
22 But once it's put into action after
23 that line item gets put into action, it's a
24 little bit different than sometimes we think it
25 would be, tried to be -- have some oversight on
77
1 Council, just to make sure we had the right
2 position, right person for the position.
3 But we're not privy to know what
4 that individual's background was that was hired
5 for the position. That's all I have for
6 tonight.
7 MR. VOLDENBERG: 5-B. FOR
8 INTRODUCTION - A RESOLUTION - APPOINTMENT OF
9 DORIS KOLOSKI AS A MEMBER OF THE SCRANTON
10 MUNICIPAL RECREATION AUTHORITY TO REPLACE DYLAN
11 CAWLEY FOR A TERM TO EXPIRE ON DECEMBER 31,
12 2027.
13 MR. SCHUSTER: At this time I'll
14 entertain a motion that Item 5-B be introduced
15 into its proper committee.
16 MR. SEAN MCANDREW: So moved.
17 DR. ROTHCHILD: So moved.
18 MR. SEAN MCANDREW: Second.
19 MR. SCHUSTER: On the question? All
20 those in favor of introduction signify by
21 stating aye.
22 DR. ROTHCHILD: Aye.
23 MR. SEAN MCANDREW: Aye.
24 MR. MARK MCANDREW: Aye.
25 MR. SCHUSTER: Aye. Opposed? The
78
1 ayes it and so moved.
2 MR. VOLDENBERG: SIXTH ORDER. No
3 business at this time.
4 SEVENTH ORDER. 7-A. FOR
5 CONSIDERATION BY THE COMMITTEE ON RULES - FOR
6 ADOPTION - RESOLUTION NO. 65, 2026 -
7 AUTHORIZING THE MAYOR AND OTHER APPROPRIATE
8 CITY OFFICIALS TO EXECUTE AND ENTER INTO A
9 MEMORANDUM OF AGREEMENT ("MOA") EXTENSION BY
10 AND BETWEEN THE CITY OF SCRANTON AND LOCAL
11 UNION NO. 60 OF THE INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION
12 OF FIREFIGHTERS, AFL-CIO.
13 MR. SCHUSTER: As Chairperson for
14 the Committee on Rules, I recommend final
15 passage of Item 7-A.
16 MR. SEAN MCANDREW: Second.
17 MR. SCHUSTER: On the question?
18 Roll call, please.
19 MS. HERBSTER: Dr. Rothchild.
20 DR. ROTHCHILD: Yes.
21 MS. HERBSTER: Mr. Sean McAndrew.
22 MR. SEAN MCANDREW: Yes.
23 MS. HERBSTER: Mr. Mark McAndrew.
24 MR. MARK MCANDREW: Yes.
25 MS. HERBSTER: Mr. Schuster.
79
1 MR. SCHUSTER: Yes. I hereby
2 declare Item 7-A legally and lawfully adopted.
3 MR. VOLDENBERG: EIGHTH ORDER.
4 8-A. FILE OF THE COUNCIL NO. 7,
5 2026.
6 MR. SCHUSTER: This ordinance amends
7 provisions to the zoning ordinance for the City
8 of Scranton related to data centers.
9 MR. VOLDENBERG: 8-B. FILE OF THE
10 COUNCIL NO. 8, 2026.
11 MR. SCHUSTER: And this ordinance
12 also amends provisions to the zoning ordinance
13 for the City of Scranton related to data
14 centers. These ordinances have been tabled
15 until a public hearing can be held for a later
16 date.
17 MR. SEAN MCANDREW: Have we heard
18 any updates on this?
19 MR. SCHUSTER: We have not at this
20 time.
21 MR. SEAN MCANDREW: All right. Can
22 we ask again, please? Thanks.
23 MR. VOLDENBERG: I will. 8-C. FILE
24 OF THE COUNCIL NO. 12, 2026.
25 MR. SCHUSTER: This ordinance
80
1 regulates the sale and/or distribution of
2 kratom or chemically modified derivatives for
3 human consumption or ingestion by minors.
4 MR. VOLDENBERG: 8-D. FILE OF THE
5 COUNCIL NO. 13, 2026.
6 MR. SCHUSTER: And this ordinance
7 also regulates the sale and/or distribution of
8 kratom or chemically modified derivatives for
9 human consumption or ingestion.
10 These ordinances have also been
11 tabled for additional input and information
12 currently in process with both the city and
13 Lackawanna County.
14 If there's no further business, I'll
15 entertain a motion to adjourn.
16 MR. MARK MCANDREW: Motion to
17 adjourn.
18 MR. SCHUSTER: This meeting is
19 adjourned. Have a good night.
20
21
22
23
24
25
81
1 C E R T I F I C A T E
2
3 I hereby certify that the proceedings and
4 evidence are contained fully and accurately in the
5 notes taken by me of the above-cause and that this copy
6 is a correct transcript of the same to the best of my
7 ability.
8
9
10
Maria McCool, RPR
11 Official Court Reporter
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21 (The foregoing certificate of this transcript does not
22 apply to any reproduction of the same by any means
23 unless under the direct control and/or supervision of
24 the certifying reporter.)
25
1
$ 3-F [1] - 4:9 A affirmed [1] - 16:15 announced [3] - 24:3,
3-G [1] - 4:12 AFL [1] - 78:12 24:5, 53:7
$1,000 [2] - 11:21, 3-H [1] - 4:14 AA [1] - 43:12 AFL-CIO [1] - 78:12 announcement [1] -
24:25 30 [1] - 11:13 abandoned [2] - after-hours [1] - 62:21 5:25
$20 [1] - 23:6 31 [2] - 3:23, 77:11 36:21, 50:9 afternoon [3] - 25:11, announcements [2] -
$33,000 [1] - 75:20 311 [4] - 35:25, 36:1, abiding [1] - 44:19 37:20, 38:25 4:23, 5:11
36:10, 49:16 ability [1] - 81:7 afterwards [1] - 26:19 annually [1] - 54:1
1 3200 [2] - 47:20, 48:7 able [5] - 33:1, 51:13, age [2] - 46:12, 53:9 answer [8] - 17:1,
3203 [2] - 47:20, 48:7 54:18, 68:17, 76:1 agency [1] - 13:12 26:20, 58:25, 59:9,
100 [2] - 66:16, 69:6 3rd [2] - 5:19, 5:22 above-cause [1] - AGENDA [1] - 4:12 59:16, 73:5, 74:5,
11 [3] - 27:8, 73:19, 81:5 agenda [2] - 6:2, 6:13 74:25
73:23 4 absentee [1] - 30:17 ago [11] - 6:1, 14:4, answered [2] - 57:5,
11-year-old [2] - abstinence [1] - 43:13 30:24, 31:6, 31:10, 74:21
26:22, 27:2 4/10 [1] - 73:6 access [1] - 6:21 34:25, 49:14, 49:15, answering [1] - 56:25
11:00 [1] - 63:18 40% [1] - 33:10 accommodations [1] 57:10, 72:1 answers [10] - 12:16,
12 [5] - 3:20, 3:21, 5:8, 412 [5] - 11:5, 11:10, - 59:1 agree [1] - 62:7 56:13, 59:19, 60:5,
79:24 11:21, 12:5, 12:11 accomplished [1] - agreement [4] - 65:25, 62:10, 64:19, 64:21,
1220 [1] - 40:2 421 [1] - 35:18 30:1 66:1, 66:4, 66:5 64:25, 65:10, 72:8
125 [1] - 50:5 44 [1] - 50:1 according [1] - 11:8 AGREEMENT [1] - anyway [1] - 29:7
13 [1] - 80:5 4:00 [1] - 37:20 accordingly [1] - 78:9 Apache [1] - 20:3
14 [2] - 3:21, 5:8 4th [1] - 5:17 13:11 agreements [1] - 6:15 apartments [2] - 15:9,
15 [1] - 12:5 accountability [1] - AI [1] - 22:10 30:13
150 [1] - 30:9 5 10:10 ain't [1] - 19:14 appeal [2] - 16:17,
16 [5] - 4:1, 4:3, 11:10, accountable [1] - 14:7 Alfieri [1] - 5:1 72:23
12:11, 26:21 5-A [1] - 50:22 accurately [1] - 81:4 alienation [1] - 32:24 appealed [1] - 16:13
160 [1] - 28:18 5-B [2] - 77:7, 77:14 achieve [1] - 40:10 alignments [1] - 11:2 appearing [1] - 23:18
17 [1] - 4:13 500 [2] - 19:17, 31:5 act [3] - 18:18, 25:10, Allegiance [1] - 3:1 apply [1] - 81:22
18 [2] - 3:19, 47:23 5:45 [1] - 54:20 42:24 alley [1] - 68:21 APPOINTMENT [1] -
19 [1] - 11:21 action [3] - 32:3, allow [2] - 40:4, 49:2 77:8
1980s [1] - 74:16 6 76:22, 76:23 allowed [2] - 26:19, appreciate [4] - 36:3,
add [1] - 41:9 27:9 56:1, 57:6, 69:4
6 [1] - 47:22
2 addiction [2] - 42:18, allowing [1] - 30:23 approach [2] - 61:7,
6/17/2026 [1] - 36:5 43:2 65:2
allows [1] - 11:21
2 [1] - 30:14 60 [1] - 78:11 adding [1] - 64:1 approaching [1] -
almost [1] - 44:25
20 [4] - 4:8, 4:10, 4:15, 65 [1] - 78:6 additional [2] - 72:18, 75:19
alone [1] - 10:12
11:20 80:11 alphabetical [1] - APPROPRIATE [1] -
200 [1] - 49:25 7 address [5] - 11:5, 68:13 78:7
2000 [1] - 22:11 35:14, 39:24, 45:14, amazing [1] - 33:19 appropriate [2] - 59:1,
2013 [1] - 22:16 7 [1] - 79:4 61:17
50:12 Amazon [1] - 23:7
2024 [1] - 50:4 7-A [3] - 78:4, 78:15, approval [1] - 12:10
addressed [1] - 12:22 ambulance [3] -
2025 [4] - 3:20, 15:15, 79:2 approved [4] - 12:17,
adjourn [2] - 80:15, 60:12, 65:23, 67:11
57:16, 65:8 70H [1] - 44:6 56:24, 57:10, 75:10
80:17 Ambulance [1] - 66:6
2026 [20] - 1:7, 3:20, 75 [2] - 49:23, 50:3 April [2] - 18:21, 18:24
adjourned [1] - 80:19 amend [1] - 16:6
3:21, 3:23, 4:1, 4:3, ADMINISTRATION [1] amends [2] - 79:6, ARCHITECTURAL [1]
4:8, 4:11, 4:13, 4:15, 8 - 4:3 79:12 - 3:18
56:23, 73:22, 74:7, administration [13] - America [1] - 67:19 archives [5] - 69:7,
78:6, 79:5, 79:10, 8 [1] - 79:10
56:15, 57:15, 59:4, American [6] - 10:9, 69:10, 69:18, 69:19
79:24, 80:5 8-A [1] - 79:4
59:11, 59:21, 61:3, 18:16, 26:13, 52:1, area [8] - 35:3, 38:4,
2027 [2] - 58:1, 77:12 8-B [1] - 79:9 38:19, 38:21, 46:22,
61:6, 61:12, 61:14, 68:1, 68:11
21st [2] - 18:21, 18:24 8-C [1] - 79:23 49:12, 54:6, 75:17
62:18, 65:14, 66:15, amount [2] - 42:4,
23rd [2] - 1:7, 18:25 8-D [1] - 80:4 areas [1] - 49:11
67:3 51:5
27th [1] - 14:13 8:30 [2] - 17:17, 38:1 Argentina [1] - 35:5
Administrative [1] - ample [1] - 59:12
75:5 AND [6] - 3:20, 3:25, armchair [1] - 31:21
3 9 administrative [1] - 78:7, 78:8, 78:10 arrange [1] - 61:13
11:20 Andrew [1] - 48:9 art [1] - 46:9
3-A [1] - 3:18 9 [1] - 10:11
adopted [1] - 79:2 Ann's [2] - 17:16, Arthur [1] - 38:13
3-B [1] - 3:22 90 [1] - 11:13
ADOPTION [1] - 78:6 68:15 Article [1] - 11:5
3-C [1] - 3:24 advice [2] - 75:1 artistic [1] - 71:2
anne [1] - 22:20
3-D [2] - 4:2, 4:18 advised [3] - 45:12, AS [1] - 77:9
announce [1] - 25:6
3-E [1] - 4:6 72:15, 72:17 Asia [1] - 42:6
2
ASSISTANT [1] - 2:9 balances [1] - 65:6 67:24 build [3] - 23:7, 49:4, caucuses [1] - 54:20
associated [1] - 44:6 ban [3] - 45:6, 45:7, blasted [1] - 25:16 49:6 caught [1] - 24:23
Associates [3] - 56:4 blew [2] - 27:16, 47:5 building [7] - 12:14, causes [1] - 40:15
60:15, 74:10, 74:19 bankers [2] - 30:8 blighted [1] - 36:1 22:21, 67:1, 69:6, CAWLEY [1] - 77:11
Association [2] - banking [1] - 30:15 block [9] - 7:9, 25:10, 69:23, 76:6, 76:7 ceasefire [1] - 18:22
48:17, 59:18 banned [1] - 42:14 46:25, 47:20, 48:3, built [4] - 44:12, Cedar [1] - 21:23
association [1] - 76:4 Bar [1] - 62:20 48:5, 48:25, 49:1, 69:20, 69:21, 69:22 ceiling [4] - 42:25,
ASSOCIATION [1] - bargaining [1] - 6:15 49:8 built-in [1] - 44:12 43:5, 43:23, 44:12
78:11 bargains [1] - 23:12 blocked [2] - 12:24, bull [1] - 25:2 celebration [2] -
associations [1] - base [1] - 10:3 13:7 bunch [3] - 30:8, 28:22, 28:24
75:25 based [4] - 32:22, blunder [1] - 19:5 30:14, 45:19 Cement [1] - 48:14
assuming [1] - 55:2 32:23, 44:24, 72:16 BOARD [3] - 3:19, burden [1] - 10:23 Center [1] - 76:3
attend [1] - 54:18 basement [1] - 74:8 4:10, 4:15 Bureau [1] - 53:19 centers [17] - 21:20,
attended [1] - 51:22 Basilica [1] - 17:16 board [2] - 23:4, 56:21 burn [1] - 47:15 22:6, 22:25, 23:8,
attention [1] - 15:13 basins [1] - 67:21 Board [3] - 56:17, burned [1] - 47:9 23:22, 29:10, 29:13,
attest [1] - 5:6 bathroom [1] - 75:21 64:6, 64:10 burning [1] - 47:10 37:10, 39:12, 48:25,
Attorney [2] - 61:24, battle [1] - 29:15 body [3] - 21:5, 40:10, bus [1] - 19:11 49:9, 75:17, 75:18,
64:15 beautiful [2] - 14:14, 40:16 BUSINESS [1] - 4:2 76:10, 76:20, 79:8,
ATVs [1] - 24:18 63:22 body's [1] - 40:23 business [8] - 6:9, 79:14
Aug [5] - 45:18, 56:22, became [1] - 18:23 bomb [2] - 19:21, 30:5, 30:6, 30:7, centuries [1] - 42:7
63:10, 74:24, 75:3 becoming [1] - 55:19 20:11 30:16, 70:11, 78:3, certain [3] - 41:21,
August [1] - 6:6 beforehand [2] - book [1] - 24:18 80:14 43:7, 53:21
AUTHORITY [2] - 4:5, 48:24, 49:3 born [1] - 33:9 bustle [1] - 53:12 certificate [1] - 81:21
77:10 begin [1] - 55:3 Borough [1] - 16:12 buy [1] - 21:25 certify [1] - 81:3
authority [1] - 59:5 begun [1] - 73:6 bottom [1] - 46:20 buying [1] - 30:9 certifying [1] - 81:24
Authority [8] - 4:19, behalf [1] - 66:20 boy [1] - 26:22 BY [2] - 78:5, 78:9 chads [1] - 22:11
21:13, 56:16, 56:17, behest [1] - 43:14 Boy [3] - 7:12, 8:8, Chairperson [1] -
69:9, 69:12, 69:15, behind [1] - 67:2 53:5 C 78:13
69:19 bench [1] - 45:18 brain [8] - 41:11, Chamber [6] - 7:20,
AUTHORIZING [1] - benefits [3] - 21:13, 41:12, 41:19, 41:21, cab [1] - 31:10 8:10, 9:15, 17:22,
78:7 21:15, 21:17 41:24, 41:25, 42:24, cameras [5] - 59:7, 33:25, 71:6
available [4] - 54:5, Benjamin [1] - 19:13 43:4 59:8, 59:10, 59:14, CHAMBERS [1] - 1:12
59:2, 64:15, 64:16 bent [1] - 11:1 breaker [1] - 47:3 59:20 chance [1] - 51:3
Avenue [18] - 12:14, best [4] - 7:17, 24:9, breaking [1] - 20:6 campaigning [1] - 6:8 Change [1] - 49:3
21:23, 26:14, 31:1, 54:7, 81:6 breast [1] - 24:5 cancer [1] - 24:6 Channel [1] - 26:21
31:4, 31:9, 35:18, better [3] - 31:20, breathing [1] - 42:2 candidates [1] - 34:11 Chapter [1] - 11:5
37:17, 38:13, 45:22, 65:14, 69:3 Bridge [1] - 67:15 cannot [3] - 15:17, charge [1] - 11:19
46:6, 47:21, 48:7, between [3] - 11:13, bridges [1] - 34:4 17:3 Charles [1] - 20:15
48:8, 50:14, 52:2, 15:6, 47:3 Bridget [1] - 24:4 capable [1] - 33:24 Charter [1] - 75:4
72:2 BETWEEN [1] - 78:10 brief [1] - 31:16 car [4] - 7:5, 14:5, cheaper [1] - 43:22
avenue [1] - 12:16 biblical [2] - 21:4, 21:5 bring [5] - 15:13, 16:6, 22:20, 25:14 check [4] - 50:17,
avenues [1] - 62:1 Big [3] - 7:12, 8:8, 17:9, 26:1, 26:5 cardboard [2] - 27:15, 50:19, 65:6, 71:24
avoid [2] - 15:25, 16:7 53:5 bringing [2] - 15:5, 28:12 chemical [2] - 41:17,
avoiding [1] - 52:16 big [3] - 30:5, 30:6, 68:7 cards [2] - 49:21, 42:23
aware [1] - 52:5 37:12 British [2] - 42:18, 49:22 chemically [2] - 80:2,
axiom [1] - 30:19 bigger [1] - 40:20 42:21 care [3] - 25:18, 34:13, 80:8
aye [1] - 77:21 bike [2] - 25:12, 26:23 brochure [5] - 7:22, 52:18 chew [1] - 42:8
Aye [4] - 77:22, 77:23, bill [1] - 32:1 8:9, 8:16, 8:17, 8:19 CARRERA [1] - 2:9 chicken [1] - 5:4
77:24, 77:25 Bill [2] - 19:4 Brockovich [1] - 22:4 carries [2] - 34:5, 34:7 Chief [4] - 59:24, 60:6,
ayes [1] - 78:1 billion [1] - 23:7 broken [1] - 41:15 cars [3] - 22:18, 22:20 62:1, 63:1
billions [1] - 22:13 brothers [1] - 53:10 case [1] - 50:18 chiefs [1] - 25:4
B bills [1] - 21:21 brought [5] - 14:3, cases [1] - 43:25 child [1] - 27:4
birth [1] - 33:18 24:10, 51:25, 52:21, cash [1] - 22:1 children [5] - 33:2,
backdated [1] - 13:20 56:5 casing [1] - 35:2 33:8, 33:9, 33:12,
birthday [2] - 28:18,
backdoor [1] - 67:2 Brown's [1] - 48:9 Cassidy [1] - 19:4 34:21
28:23
backed [1] - 43:11 budget [13] - 56:24, cat [1] - 46:24 Chile [1] - 35:5
bit [6] - 7:15, 48:8,
background [2] - 57:7, 57:8, 57:21, catastrophic [1] - China [3] - 19:24,
51:8, 64:24, 65:11,
75:8, 77:4 58:2, 64:20, 75:11, 46:25 20:4, 20:5
76:24
bad [1] - 52:5 75:13, 75:14, 76:12, cater [1] - 54:2 chronic [1] - 41:15
blame [3] - 27:1, 27:9,
balance [1] - 40:12 76:13, 76:14, 76:15 caucus [2] - 55:5, 57:4
3
Church [3] - 9:4, closure [1] - 72:19 completed [5] - 11:8, contracts [1] - 66:25 cramped [2] - 46:23,
13:22, 48:8 club [1] - 62:21 11:12, 11:18, 58:17, control [4] - 22:19, 51:8
church [8] - 17:20, code [3] - 11:4, 13:3, 67:16 25:17, 26:11, 81:23 create [3] - 12:25,
17:24, 47:25, 48:3, 49:3 completion [2] - 14:2, CONTROLLER'S [1] - 41:25, 68:13
50:14, 52:3, 52:14, Code [1] - 75:5 57:23 3:22 created [1] - 44:7
71:13 coffee [8] - 40:24, compliance [2] - 12:1, conventions [1] - 9:10 creates [1] - 41:5
CIO [1] - 78:12 41:5, 41:7, 41:10, 16:7 conversations [2] - crime [2] - 34:15,
circle [1] - 46:19 41:12, 45:6, 56:4, COMPOSITE [1] - 4:14 60:1, 60:4 34:23
circumstances [2] - 56:6 compound [1] - 44:6 copy [3] - 57:18, Crimes [1] - 18:8
16:4, 16:22 Cognetti [2] - 6:7, compounds [2] - 74:22, 81:5 Criminal [1] - 18:8
CITIZENS [1] - 5:13 30:14 41:17, 42:23 corner [1] - 26:13 critical [1] - 26:25
City [12] - 5:18, 22:15, Colfax [3] - 35:18, conceived [1] - 44:18 correct [5] - 5:21, crowd [2] - 9:10,
34:10, 51:3, 56:24, 38:12, 38:13 concentration [1] - 11:19, 40:5, 42:15, 51:15
57:17, 59:12, 61:10, collecting [1] - 69:25 45:4 81:6 crowds [1] - 7:11
75:2, 75:10, 79:7, collection [1] - 13:12 concept [1] - 41:20 corrected [1] - 45:25 crown [1] - 20:17
79:13 collective [1] - 6:15 concepts [1] - 40:9 cosmetic [1] - 10:16 cuisine [2] - 8:2, 54:3
CITY [6] - 1:1, 2:8, 2:9, coming [9] - 20:12, concerned [1] - 22:24 cost [2] - 11:19, 74:17 cuisines [1] - 53:22
4:2, 78:8, 78:10 25:12, 27:17, 44:10, concerns [6] - 14:20, costs [1] - 75:20 culture [1] - 19:20
city [60] - 6:9, 7:21, 47:18, 55:19, 64:20, 51:12, 56:18, 60:3, Council [43] - 4:22, Cup [1] - 53:6
9:12, 11:4, 11:8, 69:4, 70:19 62:17, 65:24 5:11, 10:7, 12:4, cup [1] - 56:7
11:14, 11:18, 11:25, comment [3] - 4:18, concerts [1] - 53:8 13:17, 14:18, 16:5, curb [2] - 12:20
12:15, 13:14, 13:24, 17:25, 29:8 condemned [1] - 36:6 17:14, 18:2, 18:22, curbs [1] - 31:6
14:9, 14:14, 22:24, comments [6] - 4:17, condition [2] - 15:17, 20:13, 20:15, 20:24, curious [2] - 5:17,
24:2, 26:16, 28:17, 4:20, 50:25, 56:11, 26:25 21:2, 24:2, 28:15, 5:24
29:1, 30:12, 31:7, 60:21, 65:19 conditional [1] - 15:17 31:15, 32:2, 33:25, curses [1] - 31:17
31:8, 31:11, 34:5, Commerce [2] - 7:20, conditions [3] - 11:3, 34:8, 35:14, 40:1, custody [1] - 33:4
34:6, 38:20, 38:21, 8:10 13:2, 17:4 45:14, 50:12, 55:17, cut [10] - 10:10, 12:13,
45:9, 48:20, 49:23, Commission [1] - confirmed [1] - 50:3 56:24, 57:10, 57:12, 12:22, 13:15, 36:11,
50:1, 50:6, 50:8, 3:25 confiscated [1] - 57:16, 57:18, 59:12, 43:15, 44:2, 47:11,
55:18, 57:19, 58:9, COMMISSION [1] - 25:19 61:10, 62:23, 65:8, 52:6, 52:11
59:2, 59:8, 59:15, 4:7 conflict [1] - 16:1 67:5, 74:22, 75:2, cuts [2] - 10:13, 10:20
60:18, 60:24, 61:5, commit [1] - 34:15 conflicting [3] - 56:21, 75:10, 75:19, 76:9,
61:18, 61:24, 65:24, commitment [2] - 57:14 77:1
66:3, 67:11, 67:25, COUNCIL [7] - 1:1,
D
36:3, 61:14 congested [1] - 46:18
68:10, 68:12, 68:23, Committee [1] - 78:14 1:12, 2:10, 79:4, damage [2] - 13:1,
conglomerates [2] -
74:13, 74:15, 74:16, committee [1] - 77:15 79:10, 79:24, 80:5 13:17
29:13, 30:22
74:17, 75:23, 76:4, COMMITTEE [1] - 78:5 Council's [1] - 60:22 damaged [5] - 10:16,
connected [1] - 47:16
76:10, 76:18, 80:12 common [1] - 43:10 Councilman [6] - 11:1, 12:24, 25:15,
conscience [1] - 40:4
City's [1] - 75:4 Commonwealth [2] - 54:12, 57:17, 60:17, 40:17
consent [3] - 16:3,
city's [3] - 8:7, 28:18, 15:14, 16:14 61:23, 65:22, 68:18 damn [1] - 22:21
16:21, 75:2
60:23 communication [1] - counted [1] - 74:2 dangerous [2] - 13:1,
considerable [1] - 7:1
civilization [1] - 20:10 56:1 country [9] - 19:15, 44:4
CONSIDERATION [1]
clarification [2] - communities [3] - 34:14, 34:15, 34:24, data [13] - 21:20, 22:6,
- 78:5
14:19, 58:18 22:3, 29:10, 29:14 35:4, 35:9, 35:10, 22:25, 23:7, 23:22,
considering [1] - 61:7
Clark [1] - 26:22 Community [1] - 76:3 42:14, 43:12 29:10, 29:12, 37:10,
consigning [1] - 44:22
classes [1] - 70:25 community [6] - 3:7, COUNTY [1] - 3:24 39:12, 49:9, 69:24,
consistent [1] - 55:20
cleaned [1] - 35:19 36:4, 75:16, 75:18, County [3] - 21:9, 79:8, 79:13
consistently [1] - 17:8
cleanup [1] - 71:16 76:10, 76:20 53:18, 80:13 Data [1] - 48:25
constant [1] - 66:17
clear [5] - 12:1, 15:16, companies [1] - 23:10 couple [3] - 26:5, Date [1] - 36:5
constituency [1] -
21:19, 61:22, 62:13 company [3] - 39:10, 49:14, 65:20 date [3] - 14:2, 55:1,
45:9
clearly [1] - 61:6 58:22, 68:24 course [1] - 38:14 79:16
constitutional [3] -
clears [1] - 62:17 company's [1] - 38:23 court [4] - 32:22, DATED [1] - 4:3
15:7, 15:12, 16:7
Clearview [2] - 26:14, compared [1] - 51:8 33:20, 68:21 daughter [1] - 55:12
construction [1] -
31:1 complained [1] - Court [6] - 1:24, daughters [1] - 33:15
31:7
CLERK [2] - 2:8, 2:9 30:24 16:14, 16:17, 18:8, Dave [1] - 14:12
consumption [2] -
click [1] - 68:17 complaining [2] - 69:11, 81:11 days [2] - 7:3, 11:13
80:3, 80:9
closed [7] - 5:19, 5:24, 31:25, 66:11 Court's [1] - 15:14 DEA [1] - 43:14
contained [1] - 81:4
6:1, 47:2, 63:13, complaint [1] - 63:6 coverage [1] - 61:5 dead [3] - 24:15,
continue [4] - 13:6,
70:11, 74:15 complaints [3] - COYNE [1] - 45:15 42:12, 44:15
13:25, 40:5, 45:11
closer [1] - 51:11 62:24, 63:2, 63:4 Coyne [1] - 45:15 Deal [1] - 22:9
continues [1] - 11:22
4
deal [1] - 23:7 65:17, 76:24 downtown [8] - 7:23, early [1] - 39:3 entertain [2] - 77:14,
death [4] - 20:18, dig [1] - 13:25 8:24, 52:24, 53:12, easily [1] - 43:22 80:15
20:21, 42:2, 44:23 Dimmick [1] - 29:20 53:15, 53:20, 54:3, East [1] - 13:21 entry [1] - 16:2
deaths [1] - 44:13 dining [2] - 53:25, 54:9 eat [2] - 53:15, 54:9 equipment [1] - 59:2
debt [2] - 34:5, 34:6 70:21 dozen [1] - 17:19 education [1] - 21:16 equipped [1] - 58:20
decades [1] - 19:5 direct [2] - 16:1, 81:23 DPW [4] - 6:15, 28:2, effect [3] - 31:23, Erin [1] - 22:4
DECEMBER [2] - 3:19, directly [2] - 46:17, 48:1, 71:17 43:5, 44:12 especially [4] - 44:24,
77:11 48:2 dr [1] - 78:19 effective [1] - 42:17 59:17, 63:12, 70:23
December [1] - 15:15 Director [2] - 56:15, Dr [5] - 3:8, 50:24, EIGHTH [1] - 79:3 ESQ [1] - 2:10
decided [1] - 60:24 57:4 52:19, 55:23, 70:8 either [4] - 16:3, essential [1] - 15:24
decision [4] - 15:14, dirty [1] - 40:9 DR [9] - 28:21, 29:1, 24:24, 34:7, 55:16 essentially [2] - 16:9,
16:15, 60:14, 62:12 disappear [1] - 50:7 29:6, 51:1, 52:20, elect [1] - 33:23 44:18
declare [1] - 79:2 disastrous [1] - 29:24 55:25, 77:17, 77:22, elected [1] - 35:12 etc [1] - 72:7
declaring [1] - 74:2 discovery [1] - 21:12 78:20 election [1] - 22:12 Ethic [1] - 64:9
deemed [3] - 59:3, discuss [3] - 56:18, drafts [1] - 58:8 Electric [1] - 51:2 Ethics [1] - 64:6
72:10, 72:16 60:7, 61:19 drag [1] - 24:12 electric [6] - 22:18, Euclid [1] - 27:14
deep [2] - 47:23, 48:8 discussed [1] - 61:2 dragged [1] - 24:13 32:1, 37:11, 38:23, Europe [1] - 33:10
definite [1] - 16:20 discussion [3] - drain [1] - 68:20 39:10, 49:2 EVALUATION [1] - 4:1
definitely [1] - 66:2 12:24, 65:23, 66:9 drainage [2] - 12:25, electric's [1] - 39:7 evening [10] - 10:7,
definitive [1] - 22:3 discussions [1] - 61:4 13:3 electricity [12] - 37:11, 14:13, 14:17, 17:14,
degree [1] - 33:22 disgusting [1] - 13:23 drains [8] - 12:23, 37:12, 37:13, 37:15, 24:1, 28:15, 31:15,
delicious [1] - 5:7 Dispense [1] - 3:16 13:7, 49:10, 49:12, 37:17, 37:19, 38:3, 35:15, 35:16, 39:25
demanding [2] - 32:3, disregard [1] - 14:7 67:21, 68:23, 69:8, 38:11, 47:1, 47:14, event [1] - 8:12
65:10 disrepair [1] - 14:8 69:23 55:6, 55:10 events [1] - 9:11
demo [1] - 36:7 disrespect [1] - 14:8 drill [1] - 6:19 electronic [1] - 6:20 eventually [1] - 6:16
Democratic [1] - 34:13 distributed [1] - 13:11 drink [2] - 40:24, 41:5 ELLMAN [5] - 28:15, Everhart [1] - 28:23
Democrats [3] - 23:3, distribution [2] - 80:1, drinkable [1] - 23:14 28:17, 28:25, 29:3, evicted [1] - 21:12
34:11, 35:11 80:7 drive [2] - 10:15, 22:19 29:7 eviction [1] - 72:22
demolition [2] - 36:25, disturbed [2] - 13:4, driver [1] - 31:10 Ellman [1] - 28:16 evidence [1] - 81:4
37:5 63:24 drives [1] - 22:20 Elm [1] - 67:15 Evidently [1] - 49:24
department [8] - 9:21, DNA [1] - 33:8 driving [5] - 11:3, elsewhere [1] - 49:5 evils [2] - 29:9, 29:12
9:22, 21:10, 71:15, doctors [1] - 43:15 27:12, 27:13, 34:3, embrace [1] - 71:5 exactly [1] - 48:23
74:15, 74:17 document [2] - 57:20, 35:2 emergencies [1] - example [1] - 40:14
Department [8] - 58:16 drones [1] - 20:2 12:8 excavated [1] - 12:7
72:11, 73:3, 73:15, documentations [1] - drove [1] - 63:16 emergency [1] - 12:18 excavations [1] - 11:6
73:17, 73:21, 74:6, 62:23 drug [1] - 44:10 employees [1] - 50:8 except [4] - 12:7,
76:8 documents [2] - 6:22, drugs [4] - 41:23, EMS [5] - 60:18, 18:25, 30:20, 32:13
Department's [1] - 58:13 44:3, 44:4, 44:20 60:25, 61:16, 74:11, excited [2] - 37:7,
6:17 dollars [1] - 22:13 ducks [2] - 14:23, 74:14 53:10
dependence [1] - 41:4 done [24] - 6:11, 6:21, 24:14 EMT [1] - 61:4 exclusion [1] - 61:19
dependent [1] - 45:3 7:8, 9:23, 13:23, due [2] - 74:3, 74:16 en [1] - 21:22 Excuse [1] - 40:24
depression [1] - 42:2 14:25, 15:19, 16:19, dump [1] - 30:9 encountered [1] - excuse [1] - 25:21
derivatives [2] - 80:2, 17:2, 17:3, 24:22, during [5] - 38:8, 55:2, 40:21 EXECUTE [1] - 78:8
80:8 25:20, 27:20, 32:16, 55:5, 64:2 encourage [1] - 54:7 executive [1] - 59:5
deserve [2] - 14:10, 32:19, 36:15, 39:13, Duterte [3] - 18:3, encrusted [1] - 20:17 exempt [1] - 30:10
64:19 46:5, 48:14, 48:19, 18:7, 18:10 end [5] - 21:20, 23:9, exigent [2] - 16:4,
deserves [1] - 15:11 48:21, 48:22, 60:4, duties [2] - 56:21, 23:11, 29:16, 29:19 16:22
design [2] - 9:22, 71:1 62:10 58:21 ENDING [1] - 3:23 exists [1] - 7:19
designates [1] - 72:12 door [2] - 66:24, 67:1 duty [1] - 64:2 enforcement [2] - experience [4] - 8:7,
destroy [1] - 20:9 DORIS [1] - 77:9 DYLAN [1] - 77:10 13:6, 16:12 40:25, 41:6, 42:1
determine [1] - 68:19 Doris [2] - 35:16, enhance [1] - 7:8 experienced [1] - 43:9
determined [1] - 33:14 39:14 E enhanced [1] - 8:7 experiencing [1] -
DEVELOPMENT [1] - doses [2] - 42:11, enhancements [1] - 55:8
3:25 42:12 e-bike [2] - 25:12, 7:10 EXPIRE [1] - 77:11
Dick's [1] - 70:16 double [1] - 71:23 26:23 enjoy [1] - 31:17 explained [1] - 54:19
die [1] - 20:20 doubling [1] - 21:22 e-mail [3] - 36:9, enjoyable [2] - 41:5, explanation [1] - 40:9
dies [1] - 20:17 down [12] - 6:6, 7:2, 39:15, 54:15 51:14 expressed [2] - 12:9,
different [6] - 7:23, 20:2, 20:3, 30:9, e-mails [2] - 62:19, ensure [1] - 61:5 51:12
8:24, 65:11, 65:16, 34:4, 37:5, 37:25, 66:17 ENTER [1] - 78:8 extension [1] - 11:15
46:22, 47:18, 64:22 e-scooters [1] - 24:24
5
EXTENSION [1] - 78:9 fill [4] - 41:23, 42:1, 54:25 Gibson [1] - 13:22 hammering [1] - 66:11
extensions [2] - 43:21, 47:25 force [2] - 34:20, gift [2] - 49:21, 49:22 hand [1] - 49:25
13:15, 13:19 filled [2] - 8:14, 48:2 54:15 Gilbride [3] - 58:5, handed [3] - 49:23,
eyesore [1] - 36:13 fills [1] - 43:3 forces [1] - 12:1 61:24, 64:15 49:24, 76:3
filter [2] - 23:15, 53:20 forecast [1] - 57:19 GILBRIDE [1] - 2:10 hands [1] - 18:6
F final [2] - 57:20, 78:14 foregoing [1] - 81:21 girl [1] - 68:16 hanging [2] - 22:11,
Finally [1] - 45:8 forget [2] - 33:21, 35:7 given [3] - 50:4, 57:9, 47:8
F-15 [1] - 20:3 finally [2] - 68:11, 70:3 forgot [1] - 28:17 76:6 Hansen [1] - 53:10
Facebook [1] - 38:15 fine [4] - 7:12, 24:25, former [1] - 15:8 glad [4] - 51:18, 51:19, Happenings [1] - 70:7
facilities [2] - 12:25, 39:18, 68:10 forth [1] - 30:4 51:21, 67:9 happy [4] - 41:7,
13:4 fined [3] - 12:19, fortunate [1] - 45:16 glory [1] - 20:16 53:11, 54:9, 67:14
facing [1] - 27:17 13:21, 27:7 forward [4] - 6:9, 62:1, goal [1] - 65:15 hard [4] - 27:16,
fact [4] - 17:3, 31:18, fines [1] - 13:11 65:13, 67:10 God [1] - 70:18 35:11, 58:15, 68:22
32:23, 43:18 Fines [2] - 11:23, forwarded [1] - 71:14 gonna [3] - 7:7, 19:14, Harrisburg [1] - 33:24
Facts [1] - 34:2 11:25 four [2] - 30:24, 38:24 63:14 hate [1] - 58:6
failed [2] - 30:8, 30:14 finished [1] - 38:5 FOURTH [1] - 5:12 Google [2] - 53:14, hauler [1] - 71:21
failure [1] - 46:25 fire [1] - 21:23 FRANK [1] - 2:8 70:9 hazard [1] - 48:13
fair [2] - 15:9, 61:15 Fire [5] - 6:17, 73:14, Frank [3] - 57:3, 64:6, Google's [1] - 70:17 headache [1] - 41:2
fall [3] - 10:23, 45:24, 73:16, 74:6 71:12 Gore [1] - 22:12 health [4] - 21:7,
46:5 FIREFIGHTERS [2] - free [1] - 36:8 government [5] - 30:6, 21:10, 22:7
falling [1] - 34:4 4:7, 78:12 Friday [4] - 5:19, 5:22, 30:19, 32:7, 34:19, hear [7] - 18:14, 25:9,
falls [1] - 5:18 first [9] - 5:14, 18:4, 27:12, 27:13 35:6 42:13, 44:9, 44:25,
familiar [1] - 41:3 19:22, 20:20, 31:18, Friday's [1] - 26:21 GPS [1] - 20:1 51:21, 67:12
family [3] - 24:7, 50:15, 53:16, 65:21 friend [2] - 35:22, grab [1] - 26:7 heard [7] - 21:3, 21:6,
32:21, 52:3 First [3] - 45:16, 51:2, 37:17 grandkids [1] - 70:13 27:1, 37:1, 43:1,
fancy [1] - 19:14 56:13 FROM [2] - 4:2, 4:4 grant [6] - 48:11, 68:2, 79:17
fantastic [1] - 53:2 fishing [3] - 70:12, front [12] - 12:14, 48:15, 48:18, 50:16, hearing [2] - 69:25,
far [2] - 22:24, 48:4 70:13, 70:14 13:22, 28:22, 35:20, 76:17 79:15
fashion [1] - 48:21 Fitch [5] - 60:14, 36:10, 45:22, 46:17, grants [2] - 11:14, hearted [1] - 33:20
father [3] - 33:11, 74:10, 74:18, 74:19 47:21, 48:6, 48:23, 13:14 heavy [1] - 40:18
33:13, 33:17 five [5] - 12:7, 12:9, 52:3, 68:20 graphics [1] - 9:20 Heche [1] - 22:20
Father's [1] - 32:14 12:13, 12:18, 57:18 fully [2] - 14:7, 81:4 grass [1] - 51:13 HELD [5] - 1:4, 4:7,
fathers [1] - 32:18 Five [1] - 35:9 function [1] - 13:6 grave [1] - 19:7 4:10, 4:13, 4:15
favor [1] - 77:20 fix [1] - 52:11 functioning [1] - 32:7 great [3] - 5:6, 70:5, held [3] - 13:14, 14:7,
favorites [1] - 54:10 fixed [1] - 26:14 future [5] - 9:9, 23:16, 70:22 79:15
feasibility [1] - 74:13 fixing [1] - 28:1 23:17, 46:21, 61:20 greedy [1] - 30:1 Hello [1] - 21:2
FEBRUARY [1] - 3:20 flickered [2] - 39:6, Greek [1] - 8:4 help [3] - 22:4, 41:13,
federal [1] - 21:17 39:9 G Green [4] - 22:9, 35:1, 75:24
fee [1] - 11:20 flickering [1] - 55:11 59:17, 59:18 helped [2] - 35:9,
fees [2] - 6:23, 73:4 flood [1] - 41:24 Gambling [1] - 48:16 ground [2] - 46:14, 46:16
feet [1] - 31:5 flooding [2] - 12:25, game [1] - 67:25 47:18 helping [1] - 42:17
felt [1] - 52:25 74:8 garages [1] - 66:16 grow [1] - 43:9 helps [1] - 41:6
female [1] - 32:15 Flower [1] - 51:3 gas [3] - 8:21, 31:25, guess [6] - 26:15, HERBSTER [7] - 3:8,
fentanyl [1] - 44:21 flower [2] - 45:17, 44:5 39:12, 47:1, 67:18, 3:11, 3:13, 78:19,
few [8] - 18:25, 24:7, 46:7 gathering [1] - 54:17 69:21, 70:10 78:21, 78:23, 78:25
40:9, 51:1, 56:13, flyer [4] - 9:19, 70:6, Gaughan [1] - 29:11 guide [2] - 53:25, hereby [2] - 79:1, 81:3
56:16, 57:20, 72:1 71:8 gearing [1] - 6:6 70:21 Heroin [1] - 43:21
Fidelity [2] - 7:1, FLYNN [1] - 2:3 Geisinger [6] - 60:19, guided [1] - 43:14 herself [1] - 22:21
66:22 Flynn [1] - 3:13 60:25, 62:7, 62:14, guise [1] - 15:19 HHS [1] - 21:16
Field [2] - 63:17, 70:15 focus [1] - 12:4 62:16, 66:15 guys [1] - 36:19 high [4] - 21:24, 31:3,
fields [2] - 42:8, 42:13 follow [2] - 28:5, 48:17 generally [1] - 40:10 43:7, 47:3
Fifth [2] - 6:4, 6:13 followed [1] - 12:19 generals [1] - 31:22 H hill [1] - 14:10
FIFTH [1] - 50:22 following [1] - 61:8 generated [1] - 70:24 Hill [2] - 55:9, 56:2
fight [1] - 29:14 foot [1] - 66:16 generation [2] - 49:6 Hague [1] - 18:9 hills [1] - 46:10
figured [1] - 37:25 FOR [8] - 1:1, 3:19, generators [2] - 49:3, half [8] - 5:4, 25:10, hired [1] - 77:4
FILE [4] - 79:4, 79:9, 3:22, 4:12, 77:7, 49:4 31:3, 33:20, 47:5, hiring [2] - 75:2, 75:7
79:23, 80:4 77:11, 78:4, 78:5 gentlemen [2] - 24:9, 47:15, 49:15 HISTORICAL [1] -
filed [5] - 4:21, 35:24, forbid [1] - 70:18 69:11 half-hearted [1] - 3:18
37:2, 63:2, 72:22 Force [2] - 54:13, German [1] - 8:1 33:20 hit [2] - 26:23, 38:16
giant [1] - 30:22 Hall [1] - 5:18
6
Hodowanitz [3] - 5:15, idea [3] - 44:18, 63:11, injuries [1] - 44:2 itself [4] - 44:10, 64:17, 64:22
5:16, 52:22 70:5 input [1] - 80:11 46:16, 46:18, 76:13 KOLOSKI [4] - 35:15,
HODOWANITZ [2] - identification [1] - inquiry [2] - 27:25, 39:18, 39:22, 77:9
5:16, 5:23 67:22 71:13 J Koloski [1] - 35:16
hold [1] - 26:8 identifying [1] - 7:22 inside [1] - 46:17 kosher [1] - 8:5
holding [1] - 14:21 idiots [1] - 25:10 insist [1] - 44:23 jagged [2] - 48:12, Kosierowski [1] - 24:5
holocaust [1] - 20:19 ignored [1] - 65:1 inspected [1] - 73:14 48:14 Kratom [2] - 42:5,
home [9] - 27:12, ill [2] - 44:18, 45:12 inspection [3] - 73:6, jail [1] - 33:7 42:23
38:1, 40:3, 58:20, ill-advised [1] - 45:12 73:8, 73:9 January [1] - 73:21 kratom [18] - 14:19,
58:22, 58:24, 58:25, ill-conceived [1] - inspections [7] - Jeep [2] - 36:21 24:10, 40:6, 42:16,
59:1 44:18 15:18, 15:19, 15:23, Jennifer [1] - 40:1 42:21, 43:24, 44:7,
homeostasis [1] - illegal [4] - 42:22, 15:24, 16:19, 17:2, Jericho [1] - 20:7 44:8, 44:10, 44:12,
40:11 44:17, 44:20, 44:23 21:7 JESSICA [1] - 2:5 44:14, 44:17, 44:23,
homeowner [2] - 24:3, illegals [3] - 34:14, installation [1] - 59:14 Jesus [1] - 23:18 45:2, 45:7, 45:10,
72:15 34:20, 35:1 instead [2] - 42:21, jewel [1] - 20:17 80:2, 80:8
homes [1] - 13:8 illustrated [1] - 9:22 43:10 jewel-encrusted [1] -
hooked [1] - 42:19 immediately [3] - institutions [1] - 66:13 20:17 L
hope [6] - 6:7, 6:12, 11:11, 16:6, 61:12 integrated [1] - 70:25 Joan [4] - 5:15, 5:16,
26:10, 27:4, 46:21, important [5] - 28:20, interest [4] - 30:2, 17:22, 70:4 lab [1] - 44:7
70:2 29:5, 29:6, 33:17, 32:13, 54:16, 61:9 job [1] - 5:6 lab-created [1] - 44:7
Hopefully [1] - 50:9 52:10 INTERNATIONAL [1] - Joe [1] - 56:7 LACKAWANNA [1] -
hopefully [5] - 25:25, Importantly [1] - 42:25 78:11 Josh [1] - 23:5 3:24
26:6, 60:5, 62:17, impress [1] - 29:11 International [1] - Judge [1] - 62:2 Lackawanna [5] -
65:13 improving [1] - 36:4 18:7 judge [1] - 33:21 21:9, 45:22, 46:5,
horn [1] - 25:16 IN [1] - 4:4 interrupt [1] - 25:22 judges [1] - 16:15 53:18, 80:13
horns [1] - 25:2 inappropriate [1] - INTO [1] - 78:8 July [6] - 5:17, 5:19, lady [1] - 34:25
hospital [1] - 38:13 44:24 introduced [1] - 77:14 5:22, 55:3, 67:16, LAND [1] - 3:25
hosted [1] - 29:1 inaudible [1] - 75:22 INTRODUCTION [1] - 67:18 landlord [4] - 16:3,
hotels [4] - 8:13, 8:14, incarcerated [1] - 36:7 77:8 June [2] - 1:7, 18:24 16:10, 16:21, 72:24
9:2, 9:16 inches [2] - 47:22, introduction [1] - JUNE [4] - 3:21, 4:1, landowners [1] - 30:2
hour [1] - 29:8 47:23 77:20 4:3, 4:13 large [4] - 44:22, 45:9,
hours [1] - 62:21 incidents [2] - 72:3, inventing [1] - 32:8 jungle [1] - 36:13 51:15, 53:4
house [5] - 14:3, 73:19 invested [1] - 43:12 larger [1] - 40:18
25:11, 37:19, 39:4, included [4] - 56:23, investing [1] - 43:10 K last [17] - 7:14, 10:11,
68:21 58:8, 66:23, 75:14 investors [1] - 30:15 14:19, 18:21, 24:16,
House [1] - 35:8 inconceivable [1] - involved [2] - 60:15, KATHY [1] - 2:9 24:22, 28:1, 28:23,
houses [1] - 21:25 22:14 75:15 keep [5] - 32:15, 32:25, 49:20, 56:3,
Housing [2] - 4:19, incorporate [1] - 26:8 Iran [3] - 18:23, 19:25, 40:12, 42:18, 62:19, 56:13, 60:21, 62:10,
21:13 incorrect [1] - 44:25 31:19 64:18 63:3, 68:5, 75:9
housing [1] - 15:6 increased [1] - 10:25 Ireland [1] - 34:18 keeping [1] - 23:11 lastly [1] - 27:10
HOUSING [1] - 4:5 incredibly [1] - 46:23 irritability [1] - 41:2 Kelly [1] - 29:10 late [2] - 49:8, 57:20
HUD [2] - 4:20, 21:16 indicated [1] - 57:19 Israel [2] - 19:17, key [1] - 41:20 laughing [1] - 27:21
huge [1] - 69:4 individual's [1] - 77:4 19:21 keys [2] - 41:23, 43:17 launched [1] - 20:8
Hughesville [3] - individuals [3] - Israeli [1] - 19:19 kid [1] - 27:2 law [6] - 25:24, 25:25,
24:23, 25:1, 25:6 33:15, 33:16, 75:7 issue [6] - 23:2, 36:13, kidding [1] - 35:3 33:3, 33:22, 44:19
human [2] - 80:3, 80:9 induced [2] - 43:17, 55:19, 60:24, 63:7, kids [3] - 27:8, 51:17, law-abiding [1] -
Humanity [1] - 18:8 44:2 63:21 63:18 44:19
hundreds [1] - 12:21 infected [1] - 18:14 issued [5] - 13:15, kill [3] - 34:14, 42:4, lawful [1] - 16:2
hung [1] - 47:18 influx [1] - 53:4 13:19, 16:5, 57:24, 44:11 lawfully [1] - 79:2
hustle [1] - 53:11 info [1] - 57:6 73:10 killed [2] - 32:25, laws [2] - 27:4, 33:6
hydrocodone [1] - information [14] - issues [7] - 10:17, 44:16 lawsuit [3] - 37:3,
43:22 13:18, 39:17, 40:6, 10:18, 55:8, 57:14, kills [2] - 21:8, 22:21 37:4, 37:8
hysteria [1] - 43:15 44:25, 54:21, 57:12, 62:21, 63:25, 72:18 kind [6] - 7:17, 9:1, lead [2] - 42:2, 44:20
hysterical [1] - 27:11 58:8, 58:12, 58:13, it'd [2] - 32:8, 32:9 9:5, 14:11, 54:20, least [5] - 17:18,
59:12, 59:22, 60:16, Item [3] - 77:14, 78:15, 69:15 59:19, 60:2, 68:25,
79:2 kinds [2] - 8:19, 40:13 70:19
I 65:16, 80:11
leave [1] - 36:14
infrastructure [1] - item [4] - 6:4, 6:5, King [1] - 20:15
ICC [2] - 13:22, 52:3 47:13 76:14, 76:23 knowledgeable [1] - leaves [1] - 42:8
ICE [1] - 34:16 ingestion [2] - 80:3, items [3] - 4:17, 4:21, 8:23 Lee [2] - 14:2, 31:14
icing [1] - 13:1 80:9 5:5 knows [3] - 36:17, left [2] - 10:13, 13:15
7
legal [2] - 23:12, 43:24 look [12] - 7:6, 10:14, MARGAVITCH [2] - mechanics [1] - 59:14 minutes [1] - 3:16
legally [1] - 79:2 33:19, 34:9, 34:17, 14:17, 15:2 mechanisms [1] - MINUTES [4] - 3:19,
legislation [1] - 25:23 35:10, 35:11, 54:7, Maria [2] - 1:24, 81:10 40:13 4:6, 4:9, 4:14
legislators [1] - 25:23 58:10, 64:1, 74:12, MARK [14] - 2:4, 3:12, medically [1] - 43:11 mischaracterization
legs [1] - 41:15 75:12 4:24, 5:20, 9:13, medication [1] - 42:4 [2] - 60:23, 61:22
Les [3] - 17:22, 23:25, Look [2] - 29:20, 30:7 10:4, 25:21, 27:24, meet [4] - 54:13, Miss [1] - 52:22
24:2 looking [8] - 6:14, 28:7, 28:10, 65:20, 56:17, 61:18, 66:15 missed [3] - 5:25,
letter [2] - 35:25, 35:23, 54:3, 54:21, 77:24, 78:24, 80:16 meeting [7] - 57:1, 49:1, 51:19
72:20 61:25, 62:2, 69:1, Mark [6] - 3:11, 14:16, 60:22, 61:2, 61:8, missile [1] - 20:8
letters [1] - 32:3 75:6 17:12, 17:14, 65:18, 66:13, 80:18 mistakes [1] - 15:1
letting [1] - 27:2 looks [4] - 35:20, 78:23 MEETING [5] - 3:19, misunderstandings
liability [2] - 14:20, 36:18, 40:11, 73:11 marketing [1] - 63:5 4:7, 4:10, 4:13, 4:15 [1] - 62:18
16:8 loot [1] - 35:5 married [1] - 41:7 meetings [7] - 66:12, MOA [1] - 78:9
license [5] - 15:25, lose [1] - 29:25 mass [1] - 17:16 66:18, 66:19, 66:22, modified [2] - 80:2,
70:14, 73:9, 73:12, losing [3] - 22:12, massive [1] - 6:19 66:24, 67:2 80:8
73:13 23:9, 29:15 matter [9] - 15:12, meets [2] - 64:7, 64:10 Moltke [1] - 37:17
Liederkranz [2] - lost [2] - 14:9, 38:11 18:1, 22:1, 34:2, MEMBER [1] - 77:9 moment [2] - 3:4,
62:20, 63:3 Louisiana [1] - 19:4 34:4, 34:5, 34:6, members [10] - 4:22, 23:19
LIEU [1] - 4:4 love [6] - 9:9, 31:16, 34:7, 34:9 5:8, 5:11, 54:12, monarch [1] - 20:17
life [1] - 10:18 56:6, 56:7, 62:7, matters [2] - 11:23, 54:16, 54:24, 56:15, Monday [4] - 6:1,
lift [1] - 40:21 63:22 13:7 56:16, 61:9, 62:23 38:11, 38:20, 38:23
lifted [1] - 40:17 lower [1] - 42:11 MAY [5] - 3:20, 3:23, memorandum [1] - money [9] - 8:18,
lifting [1] - 40:14 luck [1] - 17:10 4:8, 4:10, 4:15 19:2 29:14, 30:18, 48:20,
light [6] - 15:6, 17:10, luncheon [1] - 5:2 MAYOR [1] - 78:7 MEMORANDUM [2] - 50:16, 76:9, 76:11,
37:18, 45:22, 46:2, lying [1] - 63:20 Mayor [6] - 6:7, 14:13, 4:2, 78:9 76:14, 76:19
46:4 29:2, 30:17, 31:4, men [5] - 3:5, 32:18, month [3] - 5:3, 28:23,
lights [5] - 38:6, 38:9, M 59:3 32:25, 33:7, 33:11 55:3
39:5, 55:11, 55:13 Mayor's [1] - 59:4 mentality [1] - 14:1 MONTH [1] - 3:23
limber [1] - 46:12 mad [1] - 21:17 MCANDREW [31] - mention [1] - 52:23 monthly [1] - 5:1
limit [1] - 29:17 Magazines [1] - 70:7 2:4, 2:6, 3:10, 3:12, mentioned [2] - 49:11, months [2] - 10:14,
line [3] - 37:25, 76:14, Mahjong [1] - 39:5 4:24, 5:20, 9:13, 52:7 18:24
76:23 mail [3] - 36:9, 39:15, 10:4, 25:21, 27:24, menu [2] - 5:2, 70:10 MORGAN [1] - 31:15
lines [1] - 49:5 54:15 28:7, 28:10, 50:13, mess [1] - 34:3 Morgan [2] - 14:2,
list [4] - 36:7, 36:25, mails [2] - 62:19, 50:21, 56:12, 60:10, message [6] - 12:2, 31:14
37:6, 68:13 66:17 63:9, 64:5, 64:9, 36:17, 38:2, 38:22, morning [6] - 17:15,
listed [2] - 57:8, 57:11 Main [4] - 26:14, 64:12, 65:20, 77:16, 38:23, 60:6 17:16, 38:12, 38:22,
listen [1] - 31:21 30:25, 31:4, 31:9 77:18, 77:23, 77:24, met [8] - 24:7, 60:17, 38:23, 50:20
listening [1] - 67:17 maintain [3] - 11:17, 78:16, 78:22, 78:24, 60:18, 61:24, 62:4, morning's [1] - 6:25
literally [1] - 19:10 15:24, 72:24 79:17, 79:21, 80:16 62:5, 62:14, 62:15 most [4] - 9:15, 18:10,
LITTLE [1] - 21:2 maintained [1] - 10:19 McAndrew [14] - 3:9, metaphor [1] - 40:22 19:3, 44:3
maintaining [1] - 76:5 3:11, 54:12, 56:10, Methodist [1] - 9:4 mother [1] - 46:11
live [7] - 7:14, 15:11,
maintenance [3] - 57:17, 58:17, 60:17, methods [1] - 43:12 motion [3] - 77:14,
38:12, 40:1, 68:15,
36:2, 75:24, 76:20 61:23, 65:19, 65:22, microtears [1] - 40:15 80:15, 80:16
68:16, 70:12
Mall [1] - 70:16 68:18, 75:1, 78:21, middle [1] - 37:23 MOTIONS [1] - 50:23
lives [1] - 30:1
man [5] - 14:9, 18:10, 78:23 midnight [1] - 38:7 motions [3] - 50:25,
loan [1] - 48:9
18:14, 19:12, 32:20 McCool [2] - 1:24, might [7] - 9:8, 38:3, 56:10, 65:19
LOCAL [1] - 78:10
Manager [3] - 56:19, 81:10 39:2, 47:2, 55:3, mouth [1] - 18:11
local [2] - 53:17, 62:5
63:10, 75:3 meals [2] - 5:7, 53:21 75:25 move [3] - 46:22,
LOCATION [1] - 1:10
manager [5] - 15:8, mean [15] - 5:18, 9:17, Mike [3] - 10:6, 26:11, 49:10, 50:9
location [3] - 17:20,
56:22, 72:7, 72:25, 21:9, 21:21, 22:8, 26:18 moved [6] - 25:15,
46:17, 51:9
74:23 23:5, 26:3, 27:20, mild [2] - 42:10, 45:5 46:9, 77:16, 77:17,
lock [2] - 41:20, 63:12
managing [1] - 63:14 34:9, 36:25, 37:4, mile [1] - 31:3 78:1
locked [1] - 47:4
Mancini [3] - 10:6, 53:16, 69:5, 70:6, miles [2] - 10:11, moving [2] - 6:9,
locking [1] - 63:15
23:12, 51:25 70:18 13:18 67:10
locks [8] - 41:22,
MANCINI [1] - 10:7 means [5] - 40:11, military [1] - 20:1 MR [106] - 3:3, 3:10,
41:24, 42:1, 43:3,
manner [1] - 18:18 43:6, 44:14, 49:25, 3:12, 3:15, 3:17,
43:7, 43:10, 43:17, million [1] - 30:14
map [6] - 68:5, 68:9, 81:22 4:16, 4:24, 5:10,
43:21 mimic [1] - 41:18
68:10, 68:11 meantime [1] - 58:4 5:12, 5:14, 5:20,
LOFTUS [1] - 39:25 mind [2] - 40:19, 41:8
MARCH [1] - 3:20 Meanwhile [1] - 22:17 5:21, 9:13, 10:2,
Loftus [1] - 40:1 Minooka [1] - 45:15
Margavitch [1] - 14:16 meatballs [1] - 5:5 10:4, 10:5, 10:7,
minors [1] - 80:3
8
14:15, 14:17, 14:22, 43:25 nine [3] - 13:18, 49:24 officials [3] - 23:20, 79:25, 80:6
15:2, 17:11, 17:13, naturally [2] - 41:11, NO [6] - 78:6, 78:11, 35:12, 61:18 ordinances [2] -
20:25, 21:2, 23:24, 41:22 79:4, 79:10, 79:24, often [1] - 44:8 79:14, 80:10
24:1, 24:20, 24:21, nature [1] - 74:3 80:5 old [5] - 28:19, 30:9, organization [1] -
25:21, 26:10, 27:23, Nay [5] - 45:18, 56:22, noise [3] - 62:24, 67:8, 30:19, 35:17, 69:19 48:16
27:24, 28:4, 28:7, 63:10, 74:23, 75:3 67:9 ON [2] - 77:11, 78:5 organize [1] - 45:10
28:9, 28:10, 28:13, nearest [2] - 8:21, 9:4 NON [2] - 4:9, 4:12 once [5] - 10:24, 11:1, organized [1] - 22:5
28:15, 28:16, 28:17, necessary [1] - 59:3 non [1] - 64:2 14:12, 31:6, 76:22 origin [1] - 42:14
31:13, 31:15, 35:13, need [13] - 12:9, 14:6, NON-UNIFORM [2] - Once [1] - 73:9 original [1] - 74:21
39:14, 39:20, 39:23, 28:12, 35:10, 63:15, 4:9, 4:12 one [30] - 4:25, 6:1, OTHER [1] - 78:7
45:13, 45:15, 50:11, 63:23, 66:2, 68:8, none [1] - 49:13 6:4, 6:5, 7:3, 8:11, otherwise [1] - 41:18
50:13, 50:19, 50:21, 68:9, 71:9, 75:19, nonmembers [1] - 5:8 26:16, 27:14, 28:11, ought [2] - 7:3, 7:6
50:22, 50:24, 52:18, 75:21, 75:22 nonsense [2] - 67:6, 28:12, 31:2, 31:16, ourselves [1] - 23:13
55:23, 56:9, 56:12, needed [3] - 65:6, 67:13 33:21, 35:22, 38:19, outage [1] - 38:3
60:9, 60:10, 63:8, 66:2, 70:14 Norma [2] - 45:16, 44:7, 44:14, 46:5, overcome [1] - 42:17
63:9, 64:3, 64:5, needs [6] - 6:11, 51:20 48:3, 49:17, 49:18, overdose [1] - 43:8
64:8, 64:9, 64:11, 12:22, 13:10, 13:17, North [3] - 30:25, 51:15, 51:25, 53:23, overdoses [2] - 44:14,
64:12, 65:18, 65:20, 13:20, 66:3 31:4, 31:9 61:7, 63:6, 72:9, 44:21
71:12, 71:18, 71:19, Neighborhood [1] - note [4] - 54:11, 55:6, 74:9 overload [1] - 43:6
71:20, 71:22, 71:23, 59:18 55:12, 60:22 ongoing [2] - 61:3, overrides [1] - 22:8
71:25, 77:7, 77:13, neighborhood [8] - noted [1] - 74:1 63:21 overrun [1] - 25:18
77:16, 77:18, 77:19, 27:3, 35:2, 47:6, open [4] - 41:24,
notes [1] - 81:5 oversight [1] - 76:25
77:23, 77:24, 77:25, 52:15, 55:9, 55:21, 61:10, 61:15, 67:4
nothing [7] - 18:25, overtaking [1] - 29:9
78:2, 78:13, 78:16, 75:25, 76:4 opened [1] - 12:6
22:1, 22:25, 29:4, overwhelmed [1] - 6:8
78:17, 78:22, 78:24, neighborhoods [2] - opening [2] - 11:7,
48:14, 48:22, 49:21 overwhelming [1] -
79:1, 79:3, 79:6, 7:24, 63:24 74:13
notice [1] - 37:9 7:11
79:9, 79:11, 79:17, neighbors [5] - 30:4, openings [2] - 11:6,
noticed [1] - 6:2 own [3] - 11:4, 12:14,
79:19, 79:21, 79:23, 35:23, 56:2, 63:25, 12:8
November [1] - 58:2 74:14
79:25, 80:4, 80:6, 73:16 operating [3] - 56:23,
nuclear [3] - 19:21, owner [4] - 36:7,
80:16, 80:18 Netanyahu [2] - 19:11, 58:1, 75:10
20:10, 20:19 72:18, 72:20, 73:7
MS [13] - 3:8, 3:11, 19:13 operations [1] - 15:18
nuisance [6] - 72:5, ownership [2] - 68:3,
3:13, 5:16, 5:23, never [10] - 9:24, 27:8, 72:10, 72:13, 72:16, opiate [1] - 42:24 69:23
35:15, 39:18, 39:22, 33:16, 35:8, 35:20, 73:25, 74:3 opiates [2] - 41:13, owning [1] - 23:8
39:25, 78:19, 78:21, 42:5, 55:15, 57:8, number [7] - 24:10, 41:18 owns [1] - 68:20
78:23, 78:25 66:17, 66:23 24:11, 41:21, 44:22, opinion [1] - 15:10
Mulberry [1] - 36:23 Never [1] - 66:8 49:19, 50:3, 72:17 Opioid [1] - 41:23
multiple [4] - 58:12, New [3] - 22:9, 22:15,
P
opioid [3] - 41:25,
62:22, 63:5, 63:18 34:10 O 43:2, 43:9 PA [4] - 10:8, 10:10,
MUNICIPAL [3] - 4:10, new [3] - 6:17, 56:18, opioids [3] - 43:16, 12:13, 13:23
4:13, 77:10 74:23 obeying [1] - 27:3 43:19, 45:4 pack [1] - 58:24
Municipal [1] - 56:16 newly [3] - 12:4, 12:5, obscenities [1] - opium [4] - 42:17, packed [1] - 46:16
municipalities [2] - 40:21 18:15 42:19, 42:20, 43:2 page [1] - 53:19
14:24, 15:16 news [3] - 24:3, 24:22, obscenity [1] - 18:11 opportunities [1] - paid [4] - 10:24, 12:15,
municipality [1] - 66:5 26:21 occur [1] - 9:11 76:17 22:12, 73:3
muscle [3] - 40:15, next [12] - 6:12, 14:15, occurred [2] - 72:4, Opposed [1] - 77:25 pain [6] - 41:9, 41:13,
40:20, 40:21 17:11, 21:1, 23:24, 73:20 opposing [1] - 30:21 41:16, 42:3, 42:11,
Museum [1] - 28:23 28:13, 29:8, 46:9, octagon [1] - 32:9 Option [4] - 19:19, 45:5
museum [3] - 46:10, 64:10, 66:24, 67:1, October [1] - 50:4 21:4, 21:19 paper [1] - 6:25
46:16, 46:18 67:19 OF [15] - 1:1, 4:4, 4:6, options [1] - 58:10 Pardon [1] - 64:8
must [3] - 12:23, Next [7] - 10:5, 24:16, 4:9, 4:14, 77:8, 77:9, orange [1] - 36:22 parental [1] - 32:24
13:13, 20:20 31:13, 57:16, 58:17, 78:9, 78:10, 78:11, ORDER [6] - 3:17, parents [4] - 27:2,
59:6, 62:19 78:12, 79:4, 79:9, 5:12, 50:22, 78:2, 27:6, 27:10
N nice [7] - 7:8, 24:8, 79:24, 80:4 78:4, 79:3 parishioners [1] -
46:7, 46:19, 47:24, offense [1] - 11:23 order [1] - 40:7 17:19
NA [1] - 43:12
49:11, 71:7 offhand [1] - 24:20 Order [5] - 4:17, 4:20, park [4] - 7:4, 8:15,
name [3] - 19:13, night [9] - 37:16, Office [1] - 71:17 6:4, 6:5, 6:13 51:15, 56:22
39:24, 40:1 37:23, 37:24, 38:1, office [1] - 45:11 ordinance [11] - Park [6] - 45:18, 59:7,
native [2] - 42:6, 42:21 38:8, 38:10, 63:12, Official [2] - 1:24, 13:10, 15:21, 16:6, 59:10, 63:16, 76:2
natural [5] - 20:18, 63:17, 80:19 81:11 24:17, 26:9, 79:6, parking [3] - 7:1,
20:20, 41:12, 41:18, nightmare [1] - 44:9 OFFICIALS [1] - 78:8 79:7, 79:11, 79:12, 51:16, 66:16
9
Parks [6] - 56:14, 7:13, 7:15, 10:8, 53:9, 55:2 pre-enforcement [1] - properties [4] - 42:11,
56:19, 63:9, 63:10, 10:24, 14:10, 21:14, placed [1] - 59:8 16:12 75:23, 75:25, 76:11
75:3, 76:7 21:17, 22:23, 23:19, places [6] - 29:22, prepared [1] - 15:4 property [28] - 13:1,
parks [6] - 57:4, 24:23, 25:8, 25:11, 31:3, 33:10, 53:15, prescribed [1] - 44:3 15:8, 15:22, 36:1,
59:15, 63:12, 63:16, 26:13, 27:17, 29:12, 54:7, 54:9 present [3] - 3:10, 36:2, 36:6, 36:7,
63:22, 74:23 29:20, 29:24, 30:7, plan [2] - 57:19, 62:1 3:12, 3:15 36:10, 36:12, 72:2,
parm [1] - 5:4 30:20, 30:21, 31:24, Planning [1] - 3:24 presentation [1] - 72:4, 72:5, 72:6,
part [5] - 12:23, 32:17, 32:12, 33:23, 33:25, plans [2] - 45:12, 62:3 58:1 72:10, 72:13, 72:15,
44:7, 49:9, 74:20 34:14, 34:15, 35:9, play [2] - 39:5, 40:3 President [11] - 18:2, 72:25, 73:1, 73:15,
PARTICIPATION [1] - 39:4, 41:3, 42:7, played [1] - 21:15 18:3, 18:5, 18:13, 73:20, 73:24, 73:25,
5:13 42:17, 42:19, 43:23, playing [1] - 34:1 18:15, 20:23, 24:16, 74:2, 74:7
particular [2] - 7:9, 44:3, 44:19, 44:22, pleasant [1] - 17:13 31:17, 31:18, 35:7, proposals [2] - 61:16,
28:5 45:19, 45:24, 46:5, pleased [1] - 51:4 60:11 61:20
parties [1] - 53:6 51:12, 52:12, 52:13, Pledge [1] - 3:1 PRESIDENT [2] - 2:2, proposed [1] - 58:1
partner [3] - 61:10, 52:14, 53:1, 53:4, plenty [1] - 54:10 2:3 protect [1] - 23:13
62:8, 71:6 53:9, 54:6, 54:17, plus [1] - 11:19 pressure [1] - 21:24 protected [1] - 13:5
pass [1] - 33:6 55:7, 63:14, 66:13, Pretzel [2] - 59:7, protection [1] - 12:18
point [6] - 18:9, 27:21,
passage [1] - 78:15 66:21, 67:17 59:10 protects [1] - 11:25
43:7, 52:9, 73:25,
passed [5] - 3:6, People [2] - 43:18, previous [1] - 51:9 provide [1] - 54:14
75:15
14:23, 73:8, 75:13, 68:15 previously [2] - 59:11, provided [1] - 59:12
pole [7] - 47:5, 47:7,
76:17 per [1] - 75:3 75:9 providers [2] - 61:4,
47:9, 47:13, 47:15,
passes [3] - 26:1, perceived [1] - 61:9 47:20 price [1] - 5:7 62:5
26:7, 73:9 percent [1] - 11:20 poles [1] - 21:25 printing [2] - 9:21, providing [2] - 20:1,
passing [1] - 15:23 perfect [1] - 31:5 Police [5] - 59:24, 71:1 40:5
past [4] - 7:3, 26:4, period [2] - 53:5, 66:4 60:6, 63:2, 72:11, prioritization [1] - provisions [2] - 79:7,
54:23, 73:2 permanent [1] - 11:12 73:21 59:13 79:12
pasta [1] - 5:3 permits [1] - 11:7 police [2] - 72:17, privy [1] - 77:3 public [6] - 13:8,
patch [1] - 38:17 permittee [2] - 11:16, 73:23 probable [1] - 16:20 15:19, 54:23, 54:24,
path [1] - 64:22 11:19 policy [1] - 19:5 problem [7] - 25:3, 60:1, 79:15
patience [1] - 36:3 permitting [1] - 13:4 political [1] - 23:2 37:15, 39:11, 39:19, PUC [1] - 32:3
patients [2] - 42:3, person [4] - 24:8, politician [1] - 33:22 46:8, 47:12, 55:20 punishment [2] -
43:15 56:4, 63:11, 77:2 politics [2] - 32:22, problems [1] - 23:4 11:24, 11:25
PATRICK [1] - 2:3 person's [1] - 44:15 34:1 proceedings [1] - 81:3 purchase [1] - 66:24
pave [4] - 10:13, personal [3] - 70:5, polydrug [1] - 44:13 process [9] - 60:15, purchased [1] - 69:10
13:15, 52:6, 52:11 70:6, 70:23 pool [2] - 63:13, 64:2 61:11, 61:15, 67:7, purchasing [1] - 67:1
paved [5] - 10:19, Philippines [2] - 18:3, poor [2] - 12:2, 13:13 67:23, 69:2, 74:18, pursuant [1] - 59:4
12:5, 12:6, 12:12, 18:17 poorly [1] - 12:24 74:20, 80:12 pursue [1] - 45:11
46:19 Phinney [2] - 47:20, position [9] - 56:18, processes [1] - 40:23 put [14] - 6:16, 8:11,
paving [2] - 12:6, 48:7 56:23, 64:2, 65:4, produce [1] - 41:14 9:19, 29:17, 39:16,
23:10 phone [2] - 19:9, 38:2 75:9, 77:2, 77:5 produces [1] - 41:12 60:3, 60:8, 76:9,
pay [3] - 10:15, 10:18, physical [1] - 41:4 positions [2] - 23:22, productive [1] - 41:6 76:11, 76:14, 76:15,
11:1 physically [2] - 45:3, 75:8 profanity [3] - 18:12, 76:19, 76:22, 76:23
paying [2] - 6:22, 47:10 possible [2] - 52:8, 18:16, 18:19 puts [1] - 53:15
42:20 pick [3] - 37:16, 50:6, 61:19 professional [1] - putting [2] - 24:14,
PAYMENT [1] - 4:4 71:21 possibly [4] - 45:24, 18:18 33:7
PEL [2] - 57:18, 58:8 picked [1] - 37:19 47:2, 64:17, 65:17 professionally [1] -
penalties [3] - 11:21, pickup [1] - 71:16 potential [1] - 61:16 10:23 Q
15:25, 25:7 picnic [2] - 48:1, 48:3 pothole [1] - 47:21 progress [2] - 7:1,
penalty [2] - 24:18, picture [1] - 18:1 potholes [1] - 48:2 50:2 quality [1] - 10:17
25:5 pictures [2] - 36:16, pottiest [1] - 18:11 project [7] - 9:18, quandary [1] - 15:6
pending [1] - 72:23 39:15 Pottstown [4] - 15:15, 26:15, 26:17, 52:2, questions [15] - 17:1,
Penn [1] - 66:5 piece [2] - 71:2, 75:9 16:2, 16:13 70:24, 70:25, 71:8 36:8, 54:22, 54:25,
PennDOT [1] - 11:8 piggyback [1] - 26:11 Powell [1] - 69:11 projects [2] - 71:3, 55:4, 56:13, 57:5,
Pennsylvania [2] - pillaging [1] - 35:4 power [7] - 21:21, 76:19 60:11, 60:13, 62:10,
26:12, 30:21 PILOT [1] - 4:4 promised [1] - 58:14 64:13, 64:18, 64:19,
23:10, 29:18, 29:23,
penny [1] - 30:12 pilot [1] - 4:18 promptly [1] - 10:22 65:9, 72:1
47:6, 49:4, 58:11
PENSION [4] - 4:7, Pittston [2] - 48:8, proper [3] - 61:5, quick [5] - 4:25, 14:6,
PPL [3] - 21:25, 38:2,
4:10, 4:13, 4:15 50:14 71:14, 77:15 17:25, 38:18, 40:9
55:18
pension [1] - 34:6 place [6] - 13:11, properly [2] - 10:22, quite [3] - 7:15, 46:12,
prayers [1] - 24:6
people [54] - 7:11, 15:11, 34:19, 34:24, 16:5 51:14
pre [1] - 16:12
10
quoted [1] - 14:12 regarding [14] - 56:18, represent [1] - 33:23 11:17 70:8, 78:19
59:6, 59:9, 59:10, Representative [1] - restore [2] - 10:22, roughly [1] - 47:22
R 59:13, 60:12, 60:13, 24:4 12:20 route [1] - 21:22
60:18, 60:25, 62:20, representatives [1] - restored [3] - 12:25, routes [1] - 65:17
raise [1] - 14:6 62:24, 63:7, 64:13, 32:5 13:5, 38:24 row [2] - 14:23, 24:14
raised [1] - 33:13 72:2 reproduction [1] - restroom [1] - 38:8 RPR [2] - 1:24, 81:10
ran [4] - 25:13, 26:22, REGARDING [1] - 4:3 81:22 result [2] - 31:21, RULES [1] - 78:5
35:8, 65:4 regards [4] - 65:22, Republicans [1] - 23:3 72:18 Rules [2] - 34:8, 78:14
rape [1] - 34:14 66:16, 72:21, 74:10 request [3] - 13:18, results [3] - 29:24, run [2] - 13:16, 35:9
raped [1] - 34:22 registered [1] - 73:2 36:1, 57:3 30:3, 30:22 Rundle [2] - 40:2,
rarely [1] - 17:21 regular [1] - 15:23 requested [1] - 54:12 resume [1] - 74:23 68:16
rates [2] - 10:25, 14:6 regulates [2] - 80:1, require [4] - 11:6, resurfaced [1] - 12:16 running [2] - 34:11,
raviolis [1] - 5:3 80:7 11:7, 12:12, 71:21 resurfacing [1] - 12:12 74:17
re [1] - 73:8 reimbursed [1] - 50:17 required [4] - 4:19, retained [1] - 74:19 Russia [3] - 19:25,
re-inspection [1] - reins [1] - 76:6 12:19, 12:20, 75:3 retaliate [1] - 19:22 20:4, 20:6
73:8 reinvent [1] - 9:24 requirement [1] - 12:9 REVIEW [1] - 3:19
reach [4] - 9:14, reiterates [1] - 61:14 requires [4] - 11:10, review [3] - 16:23, S
16:24, 55:17, 71:5 relate [1] - 56:20 11:16, 13:3, 16:3 57:24, 57:25
read [4] - 15:3, 32:20, related [2] - 79:8, reroute [1] - 39:1 RFP [14] - 60:12, sad [1] - 32:17
35:24, 58:18 79:13 research [2] - 32:16, 60:14, 60:24, 60:25, sadly [2] - 41:14,
reading [3] - 3:16, relationship [1] - 49:22 61:7, 61:13, 62:3, 51:21
33:3, 38:6 65:14 researchers [2] - 62:9, 62:13, 62:15, safe [4] - 10:19, 15:6,
ready [1] - 57:21 relax [1] - 45:6 32:15, 33:14 66:9, 74:10, 74:18, 15:11, 43:25
Reagan [1] - 19:6 reliable [1] - 70:17 reservations [1] - 15:5 74:20 safety [4] - 10:17,
real [2] - 22:7, 27:13 relief [1] - 45:5 resident [2] - 24:2, RFQ [3] - 62:3, 66:9, 13:9, 15:20, 21:8
really [13] - 19:25, relies [1] - 43:13 64:14 66:25 sake [1] - 11:24
21:11, 22:10, 31:23, relieving [1] - 42:11 Residents [2] - 10:18, ride [2] - 26:2, 27:3 sale [2] - 80:1, 80:7
33:19, 35:11, 51:4, remain [1] - 3:3 13:12 Ridge [3] - 35:1, Samson [4] - 19:18,
51:14, 52:10, 53:11, remaining [1] - 72:23 residents [11] - 10:14, 59:17, 59:18 19:19, 21:4, 21:19
59:21, 71:7 remains [1] - 67:15 12:16, 13:16, 55:20, ridiculous [3] - 25:4, Samters [1] - 7:14
Reaper [1] - 20:2 remember [2] - 22:9, 59:17, 62:22, 63:19, 27:5, 27:22 sat [1] - 66:18
reason [3] - 18:20, 34:25 64:21, 65:5, 70:3, rights [3] - 15:7, Saturday [5] - 5:18,
33:2, 67:7 reminds [1] - 17:23 73:13 15:12, 17:7 38:1, 38:10, 38:20,
received [4] - 4:21, removal [1] - 28:9 Resolution [2] - 36:5, Rik [2] - 21:1, 21:3 51:4
33:14, 58:25, 64:14 removed [1] - 46:3 36:6 rims [1] - 11:1 sauce [1] - 5:4
RECEIVED [2] - 3:21, rental [9] - 15:17, RESOLUTION [2] - rise [1] - 44:21 save [2] - 32:18
4:1 15:22, 15:24, 72:6, 77:8, 78:6 Rivera [2] - 15:14, saw [3] - 6:24, 38:1,
receiving [1] - 61:15 73:2, 73:4, 73:6, resolved [4] - 36:2, 16:2 38:8
recent [1] - 59:13 73:12, 73:13 36:14, 37:4, 46:4 road [3] - 10:22, Scarinci [2] - 17:12,
recently [3] - 14:9, Rental [1] - 73:3 resources [1] - 54:5 12:20, 13:1 17:14
62:5, 63:2 rented [1] - 30:13 responded [1] - 74:6 roads [3] - 10:11, SCARINCI [1] - 17:13
Recently [1] - 76:2 repairs [1] - 40:18 response [5] - 49:18, 12:5, 13:25 schedule [1] - 67:15
receptors [3] - 41:21, repeat [1] - 14:25 56:22, 57:23, 60:20, robust [2] - 6:13, 6:14 scheduled [1] - 73:7
42:24, 43:9 replace [1] - 28:2 60:21 Rodrigo [2] - 18:2, SCHUSTER [42] - 2:2,
recess [1] - 6:6 REPLACE [1] - 77:10 responsibilities [3] - 18:6 3:3, 3:15, 4:16, 5:10,
recommend [1] - replaced [1] - 13:5 56:20, 57:8, 57:11 roll [3] - 3:7, 69:17, 5:14, 10:5, 14:15,
78:14 replacement [1] - Responsibilities [1] - 78:18 14:22, 17:11, 20:25,
recommendations [2] 75:20 57:9 rolling [1] - 19:6 23:24, 24:20, 27:23,
- 53:14, 54:8 replacements [2] - responsibility [2] - rolls [1] - 8:12 28:13, 28:16, 31:13,
record [1] - 72:12 75:21, 75:22 10:21, 69:12 Ron [1] - 28:16 35:13, 39:14, 39:20,
RECREATION [1] - REPORT [2] - 3:22, responsible [1] - Ronald [1] - 19:6 39:23, 45:13, 50:11,
77:10 4:1 13:14 roof [1] - 75:19 50:24, 56:9, 65:18,
Recreation [1] - 56:17 report [5] - 32:19, rest [1] - 36:12 room [1] - 65:21 71:12, 71:19, 71:22,
Recs [2] - 56:14, 63:10 45:25, 57:24, 67:14 restaurant [4] - 8:1, ROTHCHILD [10] - 71:25, 77:13, 77:19,
red [1] - 5:3 reporter [1] - 81:24 8:3, 8:4, 8:5 2:5, 28:21, 29:1, 77:25, 78:13, 78:17,
redo [1] - 70:14 Reporter [2] - 1:24, restaurants [5] - 7:17, 29:6, 51:1, 52:20, 79:1, 79:6, 79:11,
reel [1] - 69:17 7:23, 8:24, 53:13, 55:25, 77:17, 77:22, 79:19, 79:25, 80:6,
81:11
reflection [1] - 3:4 53:17 78:20 80:18
reports [2] - 32:21,
refuse [2] - 71:15, restoration [4] - Rothchild [6] - 3:8, Schuster [3] - 3:14,
44:13
71:16 11:11, 11:12, 11:14, 50:24, 52:19, 55:24, 24:17, 78:25
11
Schuster's [1] - 60:11 55:25, 57:3, 60:6 48:10, 48:23 speaker [6] - 5:14, 26:22, 33:7, 40:25,
science [1] - 43:11 sending [1] - 36:16 sign [5] - 26:23, 27:15, 14:16, 17:12, 21:1, 43:18
science-backed [1] - sends [1] - 12:1 28:1, 28:5, 49:15 23:25, 28:13 stopped [2] - 7:13,
43:11 senior [1] - 71:3 significant [1] - 57:25 speaking [3] - 6:14, 25:13
scooters [2] - 24:24, seniors [1] - 71:3 signify [1] - 77:20 7:9, 36:15 stories [1] - 44:9
26:21 sense [4] - 40:7, signs [2] - 21:24, 28:2 special [3] - 5:2, storm [4] - 49:10,
Scranton [39] - 4:19, 43:11, 70:1, 74:9 silent [1] - 3:4 14:11, 71:7 49:12, 67:21, 69:8
5:17, 6:17, 7:20, senseless [1] - 31:2 similar [1] - 75:16 specializes [1] - 8:1 Storm [2] - 12:23, 13:6
7:21, 8:10, 8:18, sent [5] - 36:10, 39:17, Similar [1] - 60:11 specific [2] - 54:22, Stream [1] - 70:15
9:14, 10:8, 10:11, 54:15, 62:22, 72:20 simply [1] - 43:19 54:24 Street [5] - 11:6,
14:13, 15:21, 21:3, separate [1] - 11:23 sinkhole [2] - 52:8 specifically [2] - 36:23, 40:2, 67:15,
21:13, 22:2, 23:8, September [1] - 50:4 sit [3] - 17:19, 66:19, 44:16, 53:20 68:15
23:21, 28:24, 35:16, seriously [1] - 13:21 66:20 speculating [1] - street [11] - 7:2, 11:6,
36:4, 37:14, 40:2, service [8] - 3:5, 44:2, site [1] - 49:7 38:15 31:8, 31:11, 43:20,
49:16, 49:17, 51:22, 60:12, 61:5, 66:1, sitting [1] - 39:4 spend [1] - 8:18 44:4, 44:20, 48:23,
52:21, 53:15, 53:21, 67:11, 74:11, 74:14 six [1] - 37:1 Spindler [2] - 23:25, 52:16, 68:14, 68:18
53:24, 54:4, 56:16, service-induced [1] - SIXTH [1] - 78:2 24:2 streetlight [1] - 47:19
70:20, 71:5, 72:11, 44:2 size [1] - 66:3 SPINDLER [3] - 24:1, streets [10] - 10:19,
73:20, 75:18, 76:21, services [4] - 60:18, skateboarding [1] - 24:21, 26:10 10:21, 12:12, 13:8,
79:8, 79:13 61:1, 61:17, 61:20 63:19 split [2] - 68:2, 69:15 13:22, 23:11, 24:25,
SCRANTON [5] - 1:1, set [2] - 55:1, 57:1 skirmishes [1] - 19:1 spot [1] - 36:22 30:25, 34:2, 52:1
4:4, 4:6, 77:9, 78:10 setting [1] - 23:6 sky [1] - 23:18 spots [1] - 26:16 strength [1] - 25:25
Scranton's [2] - 13:3, Seven [1] - 16:15 slopes [1] - 46:10 square [2] - 32:9, stress [1] - 41:13
15:21 seven [1] - 37:1 small [3] - 10:16, 22:5, 32:10 struck [1] - 21:11
SEAN [17] - 2:6, 3:10, SEVENTH [1] - 78:4 25:17 St [2] - 17:16, 68:15 student [1] - 70:24
50:13, 50:21, 56:12, Seventh [1] - 6:5 Small [1] - 25:1 staff [1] - 59:2 student-generated [1]
60:10, 63:9, 64:5, several [2] - 7:13, 72:3 Stafford [1] - 12:14 - 70:24
Socialists [1] - 34:13
64:9, 64:12, 77:16, severed [1] - 47:9 stand [1] - 15:4 students [1] - 9:17
Society [1] - 5:1
77:18, 77:23, 78:16, standards [3] - 11:9, study [2] - 74:12,
severity [1] - 52:16 sodomized [1] - 34:22
78:22, 79:17, 79:21 12:12, 15:10 74:21
Sewer [4] - 69:9, sold [2] - 44:8, 69:16
Sean [3] - 3:9, 56:10, standing [1] - 3:4 stuff [3] - 19:10, 60:2,
69:12, 69:15, 69:19 Solicitor [1] - 58:5
78:21 start [2] - 33:2, 63:15 64:23
sewer [1] - 32:1 SOLICITOR [1] - 2:10
season [4] - 57:22, started [2] - 33:8, 67:8 SUBDIVISON [1] -
shall [1] - 12:6 solve [1] - 25:3
63:13, 64:2, 64:20 starting [2] - 34:20, 3:25
Shamokin [2] - 25:2, someone [8] - 19:20,
seating [1] - 45:19 74:13 subject [1] - 15:22
25:18 42:4, 47:24, 52:7,
second [6] - 53:23, state [10] - 23:1, 23:5, submitting [1] - 58:7
Shapiro [2] - 23:6, 69:22, 70:18, 70:19
67:4, 73:7, 73:9, 25:22, 26:6, 32:4, Suboxone [1] - 43:1
30:7 something's [2] -
77:18, 78:16 32:5, 39:24, 43:25, subpoena [1] - 58:11
share [1] - 15:9 24:21, 27:20
Secondly [1] - 67:14 56:3, 60:23 subpoenas [2] -
shiny [1] - 14:9 Something's [1] -
Section [5] - 11:10, State [1] - 24:4 64:17, 64:23
shipped [1] - 45:23 25:20
11:20, 12:5, 55:9, statement [1] - 22:3 sudden [2] - 39:5,
shook [1] - 18:6 sometime [2] - 37:22,
56:2 states [2] - 15:22, 33:6 43:17
shoot [3] - 20:2, 20:3 38:7
section [4] - 47:7, States [1] - 18:17 suddenly [1] - 40:25
shop [1] - 28:11 sometimes [4] -
47:11, 47:21, 49:12 suffering [1] - 44:1
short [3] - 20:14, 53:4, 50:15, 70:9, 75:12, stating [1] - 77:21
Sections [1] - 12:11 suggest [1] - 54:9
73:22 76:24 station [2] - 44:6,
see [31] - 6:14, 7:12, suggestions [2] -
Show [1] - 51:3 Sometimes [2] - 45:23
7:16, 9:9, 9:15, 53:17, 54:8
show [5] - 31:6, 36:15, 70:10, 70:11 stations [2] - 8:21,
17:15, 17:18, 17:22, suit [1] - 16:12
45:17, 46:7 somewhat [1] - 68:5 49:7
18:1, 20:15, 20:19, Summit [1] - 26:22
shreds [1] - 30:25 sons [1] - 33:16 status [1] - 28:5
20:21, 21:24, 31:20,
shunted [1] - 47:14 soon [3] - 38:5, 60:5, Steamtown [1] - 8:15 supervision [1] -
33:1, 33:20, 45:16,
shutting [1] - 55:10 67:18 steps [1] - 61:13 81:23
50:17, 51:4, 51:19,
sick [2] - 59:25, 69:24 sore [1] - 40:16 still [15] - 6:14, 29:21, support [1] - 33:4
51:20, 53:10, 53:11,
side [3] - 44:8, 46:3 sorry [1] - 25:22 36:13, 36:22, 37:21, supported [1] - 43:11
53:19, 57:5, 60:8,
Side [2] - 4:25, 17:14 sort [1] - 23:19 48:12, 49:17, 50:5, supposed [1] - 21:6
63:6, 65:9, 71:10
sides [1] - 70:2 sounds [1] - 15:2 50:6, 51:18, 53:1, Supreme [1] - 16:17
seeing [1] - 52:25
sidewalk [3] - 7:15, Southeast [1] - 42:6 56:25, 68:3, 69:25 surgery [1] - 41:15
seek [1] - 41:11
24:24, 46:3 space [1] - 51:7 stimulant [1] - 42:10 surrounding [1] - 66:4
selling [2] - 30:2, 35:4
Sidewalks [1] - 48:12 spaceship [1] - 23:18 stint [1] - 18:4 survive [1] - 19:17
senators [1] - 32:5
sidewalks [4] - 31:6, SPD [1] - 72:20 stockpile [1] - 8:13 suspensions [1] -
send [4] - 44:18,
stop [5] - 19:10, 11:2
12
switch [1] - 43:24 three [6] - 5:5, 12:15, towns [3] - 22:5, 25:1, underwater [1] - 22:16 V
symptoms [1] - 41:3 17:4, 20:8, 30:24, 25:17 uneven [1] - 51:13
system [1] - 44:15 31:10 townships [1] - 22:5 unfortunate [1] - various [3] - 7:24,
Three [1] - 11:5 traffic [1] - 37:18 69:16 8:13, 61:4
T threw [1] - 19:11 train [2] - 7:16, 45:23 unfortunately [2] - vehicle [1] - 26:24
throughout [4] - 3:5, transcript [2] - 81:6, 51:19, 65:1 vehicles [4] - 10:15,
tabled [2] - 79:14, 55:8, 55:9, 59:15 81:21 unheard [1] - 30:15 11:2, 13:17, 25:19
80:11 throw [2] - 23:1, 47:25 transformer [2] - UNIFORM [2] - 4:9, vendor [1] - 61:18
tag [1] - 36:22 Thursday [5] - 4:25, 38:16, 47:4 4:12 vendors [3] - 51:5,
tandem [1] - 9:18 37:16, 37:24, 38:19, transparent [1] - 67:4 UNION [1] - 78:11 51:6, 61:16
Task [2] - 54:13, 54:25 46:24 trash [1] - 71:21 United [1] - 18:17 veterans [1] - 44:1
task [1] - 54:15 timeline [3] - 59:10, travel [1] - 52:13 unlawful [1] - 16:22 VICE [1] - 2:3
tax [2] - 30:10, 42:20 59:16, 59:22 traveling [1] - 9:16 unless [3] - 11:14, Victor [1] - 5:1
TAXES [1] - 4:4 timely [1] - 48:21 Treasurer's [1] - 71:17 17:4, 81:23 view [1] - 13:16
taxes [2] - 10:18, tiny [1] - 44:7 treatment [1] - 43:2 unlike [1] - 49:12 Viewmont [1] - 70:16
10:25 tired [2] - 34:21, 34:23 tree [1] - 42:6 unload [1] - 30:18 violate [1] - 17:7
taxpayer [2] - 6:21, TO [3] - 77:10, 77:11, tried [2] - 21:12, 76:25 unnecessary [1] - violation [1] - 11:22
10:17 78:8 trigger [1] - 20:13 16:8 visit [1] - 45:20
taxpayers [1] - 12:1 today [4] - 32:8, 39:3, tripling [1] - 21:22 unsafe [1] - 11:2 visited [2] - 73:1,
Taylor [2] - 13:21, 53:7, 71:13 Tripp [2] - 76:2 unsatisfactory [1] - 73:15
52:2 today's [1] - 6:2 tripping [1] - 48:13 11:18 visiting [1] - 54:6
teamed [1] - 16:10 together [10] - 8:11, trouble [2] - 30:5, 68:3 Unsheltered [2] - Visitors [1] - 53:18
tear [1] - 31:4 9:19, 10:1, 19:25, true [1] - 49:23 54:13, 54:25 VOLDENBERG [25] -
telephone [1] - 47:15 22:23, 23:20, 46:16, Trump [7] - 18:2, 18:4, unstable [1] - 46:14 2:8, 3:17, 5:12, 5:21,
temporary [3] - 11:11, 51:11, 58:6, 70:2 18:13, 18:15, 19:8, up [56] - 11:21, 13:25, 10:2, 28:4, 28:9,
11:13, 11:17 tolerated [1] - 12:3 20:23, 31:17 14:21, 15:10, 16:11, 50:19, 50:22, 52:18,
tenant [3] - 15:11, Tom [2] - 45:15, 64:14 truth [2] - 22:14, 31:12 21:25, 23:11, 24:10, 55:23, 60:9, 63:8,
16:4, 17:3 Tomorrow [5] - 7:21, truthful [1] - 24:13 24:11, 26:5, 27:13, 64:3, 64:8, 64:11,
tenants [3] - 16:10, 8:10, 9:14, 70:21, trying [5] - 16:16, 27:17, 28:6, 29:23, 71:18, 71:20, 71:23,
16:21, 72:21 71:6 22:4, 32:18, 59:19, 31:3, 31:5, 35:19, 77:7, 78:2, 79:3,
tend [1] - 7:14 tomorrow [3] - 10:3, 64:20 37:16, 37:20, 38:7, 79:9, 79:23, 80:4
tension [1] - 47:4 70:12, 70:13 Tuesday [1] - 1:7 38:12, 41:24, 45:17, Voldenberg [6] - 9:13,
TERM [1] - 77:11 Tomorrow's [1] - turned [2] - 27:16, 46:9, 46:11, 46:15, 27:24, 36:16, 50:13,
terrible [3] - 19:3, 53:24 76:16 46:23, 47:4, 47:18, 52:9, 55:21
36:21, 70:4 Tonight [1] - 10:8 turns [1] - 42:16 48:17, 49:18, 50:6, volume [1] - 31:3
testing [1] - 33:9 tonight [7] - 5:15, twice [1] - 74:7 51:17, 51:25, 52:22, volunteering [1] -
text [1] - 39:16 10:9, 15:4, 24:4, Two [1] - 31:16 53:16, 53:24, 54:23, 76:5
Thai [1] - 8:3 32:12, 69:14, 77:6 two [14] - 5:5, 14:3, 56:5, 57:1, 58:24, vote [2] - 45:10, 66:20
Thankfully [1] - 47:16 took [4] - 31:19, 47:5, 17:6, 17:19, 18:22, 59:19, 59:20, 62:17, vulgarity [1] - 18:11
that'd [1] - 9:11 61:12, 69:12 18:23, 18:24, 25:11, 63:12, 63:16, 64:20,
tools [1] - 11:4 65:5, 66:11, 67:8,
THE [15] - 1:1, 3:22, 31:10, 32:25, 49:25, W
4:6, 4:9, 4:12, 4:14, top [7] - 23:1, 47:1, 58:4, 63:3, 63:14 67:9, 68:7, 70:16,
77:9, 78:5, 78:7, 47:3, 47:5, 47:7, two-week [1] - 18:22 71:21, 76:6 wait [2] - 31:20, 67:3
78:10, 78:11, 79:4, 47:10, 47:17 type [4] - 16:19, 17:2, upcoming [2] - 53:6, waiting [1] - 50:5
79:9, 79:24, 80:4 topic [1] - 52:21 54:2, 68:2 57:21 walk [3] - 7:3, 8:16,
theirs [2] - 33:8, 68:24 torn [2] - 30:25, 37:5 typed [1] - 70:15 update [2] - 49:20, 51:17
themselves [2] - total [1] - 63:6 54:14 walked [1] - 31:5
types [1] - 53:21
22:19, 33:1 totally [1] - 22:8 updated [1] - 70:10 wants [5] - 16:24,
typing [1] - 6:19
there'd [1] - 29:24 touch [6] - 10:2, updates [1] - 79:18 19:16, 30:6, 40:10,
therefore [1] - 57:13 35:21, 51:2, 70:5, upgrades [1] - 63:23 60:7
U urge [1] - 16:5 war [2] - 20:22, 22:10
They've [1] - 50:8 70:23, 71:8
they've [4] - 25:19, touched [1] - 31:1 ugly [1] - 13:8 user [1] - 43:9 warrant [2] - 16:5,
29:25, 32:16, 32:19 tougher [3] - 25:8, unanimously [1] - uses [1] - 45:9 16:20
Third [2] - 4:17, 4:20 25:24 56:24 utilities [1] - 13:13 warrantless [1] -
third [1] - 20:16 tourism [3] - 52:21, under [4] - 15:19, utility [8] - 10:20, 15:18
THIRD [1] - 3:17 53:2, 53:3 19:11, 72:22, 81:23 10:21, 10:25, 12:2, wash [1] - 14:5
THOMAS [2] - 2:2, towards [2] - 6:6, 74:2 underneath [2] - 47:8, 12:8, 12:19, 13:13, watch [2] - 46:1, 53:6
2:10 town [6] - 8:8, 21:16, 47:20 13:20 watching [1] - 40:3
thoughts [1] - 24:6 21:19, 24:23, 70:9, understood [1] - 75:6 utilize [2] - 70:8, 71:8 water [11] - 13:6, 14:3,
threaten [1] - 13:8 70:20 undertaking [1] - 69:5 21:24, 23:9, 23:14,
13
29:18, 29:21, 29:22, 14:9, 35:20
29:23, 68:24 wondering [2] - 36:24,
Water [8] - 10:9, 71:15
10:10, 12:13, 26:13, word [1] - 28:19
52:1, 67:19, 68:1, words [2] - 14:8,
68:11 66:10
Water's [1] - 13:23 workers [1] - 42:12
Wayne [1] - 72:2 works [2] - 17:9, 58:22
weak [1] - 20:23 world [2] - 3:5, 33:10
weapons [1] - 20:2 World [1] - 53:6
website [3] - 6:16, worst [3] - 19:5,
53:24, 68:17 26:16, 31:8
week [18] - 6:1, 6:12, worth [2] - 13:18,
7:14, 14:19, 18:22, 36:23
24:16, 24:22, 28:1, write [1] - 22:13
45:1, 56:14, 57:10, writing [5] - 32:2,
58:4, 60:21, 62:11, 32:4, 60:2, 60:3,
64:16, 67:18, 67:19, 60:8
68:5
weekend [1] - 52:23 Y
weeks [6] - 12:15,
18:23, 30:24, 57:20, year [12] - 10:11, 12:9,
59:13, 72:1 12:18, 26:4, 26:5,
Weight [1] - 40:14 30:9, 32:25, 34:25,
weight [2] - 40:19, 49:14, 51:6, 57:19,
40:22 63:3
weird [1] - 38:18 years [16] - 12:7,
Wenzel [1] - 14:12 12:13, 14:3, 17:6,
West [2] - 4:25, 17:14 19:17, 21:15, 26:5,
Weston [2] - 63:16, 28:18, 30:11, 31:6,
63:17 31:9, 31:10, 49:14,
whatsoever [1] - 30:3 49:25, 50:1, 69:6
wheel [2] - 9:24, 32:8 York [2] - 22:15, 34:10
where're [1] - 8:20 yourself [1] - 44:11
wherewithal [1] -
68:13 Z
White [1] - 35:8
whole [6] - 8:25, zoning [4] - 49:1,
33:16, 35:4, 35:19, 49:10, 79:7, 79:12
38:14, 58:19
wide [1] - 47:23
wife [1] - 35:8
willing [3] - 58:3,
61:10, 65:3
wind [1] - 27:16
windy [2] - 27:13,
37:24
wins [1] - 49:19
winter [1] - 10:14
wire [2] - 47:4, 47:16
wires [1] - 47:8
withdrawal [3] - 41:1,
41:10, 43:18
woke [1] - 38:7
woman [1] - 32:20
women [4] - 3:5,
32:18, 33:13, 34:21
won [1] - 16:13
wonder [1] - 22:22
wonderful [3] - 8:20,