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6 8 20 City Council Proceedings Official_Special1 CITY OF DUBUQUE, IOWA CITY COUNCIL PROCEEDINGS SPECIAL SESSION OFFICIAL The Dubuque City Council met in special session at 6:30 p.m. on June 8, 2020. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic and mandates for social distancing, this meeting was con- ducted virtually and aired live on CityChannel Dubuque (Mediacom cable channels 8 and 117.2), streamed live on the city’s website at www.cityofdubuque.org/media, and streamed live on the City’s Facebook page at www.facebook.com/cityofdubuque. Present: Mayor Buol; Council Members Cavanagh, Jones, Resnick, Roussell, Shaw, Sprank; City Manager Van Milligen, City Attorney Brumwell Mayor Buol read the call and stated this is a special session of the City Council called for the purpose of conducting a work session on the internal and community-facing re- sponse to COVID-19. PRESENTATION 1. Mayor Buol's Emergency Declaration Proclamation Update: Mayor Buol provided an update to his Emergency Declaration Proclamation of June 1, 2020 highlighting infor- mation relative to the opening of Leisure Services facilities; rescinding and refunding spe- cial event permits already granted through July 6; and giving the City Manager the au- thority to review special event requests held on public property and rights-of-way through July 6, 2020 on a case-by-case basis. ACTION ITEM 1. City Council Resolution on Racism: Mayor Buol presented and read the Dubuque City Council’s joint Resolution on Racism. Motion by Resnick to receive and file the doc- ument and adopt Resolution No. 171-20 Dubuque City Council Resolution on Racism. City Council Members thanked Mayor Buol and provided individual statements regarding the need, significance and priority of the joint resolution. Seconded by Jones. Motion car- ried 7-0. RESOLUTION NO. 171-20 DUBUQUE CITY COUNCIL RESOLUTION ON RACISM Whereas, the City of Dubuque has a committed interest in promoting the health, safety, and inclusiveness of all community residents and has a responsibility to oppose, and aid in eradicating systemic racism, racial bias, and racial animus; and Whereas, racism is rooted in the foundation of America creating preferential opportu- nities for some while subjecting people of color to hardships and disadvantages in every area of life; and Whereas, racism is an ongoing community and public health crisis; and Whereas, racism, racial discrimination and violence are pervasive and persisting 2 challenges in our cities, counties, states, and nation; and Whereas, racism, racial discrimination, and related intolerance have been shown to be attitudes and behaviors that are learned; and Whereas, racism and racial discrimination create obstacles to the fulfillment of basic human rights to survival, security, development, and social participation; and Whereas, racism and poverty are inextricably linked, causing disproportionate impacts in economic status, education, health care access, employment, access to healthy food, reduced life expectancy, increased rates of lead poisoning, higher rates of infant mortality, and more; and Whereas, we acknowledge both recent, and historical, incidents of police brutality and other acts of oppression and harm against people of color in other cities have a local impact and, while not representative of the majority of individual law enforcement officers, do create pain, mistrust and anger locally; and Whereas, the local legacy of racism conjures painful memories and puts in perspective the trauma inflicted upon people of color and other harm it has caused to members of our community; and Whereas, every American and every level of government has a role to play in ending this painful cycle and ensuring there is equal justice for all; and Whereas, the City of Dubuque takes police misconduct seriously, and has a forum for complaints against the Dubuque Police Department through a memorandum of under- standing between the City of Dubuque and the Dubuque Branch of the NAACP, facilitated by the Community-Police Relations Committee; and Whereas, the City Council steadfastly supports efforts that focus on improving the qual- ity of life and equity for our communities of color; and Whereas, we remain committed to the City’s partnerships and ongoing initiatives in- cluding Inclusive Dubuque; the Dubuque Equitable Poverty Prevention Strategy; the Chief’s Forum where citizens can directly engage with the Chief of Police; the work of our City Departments to engage the community and create equity plans specific to the ser- vices each department offers; as well as continuing the City’s decades long emphasis on intercultural competency training for all employees; and Whereas, no person should ever wake up in Dubuque, Iowa feeling like they are not an important part of Dubuque, Iowa; and Whereas, the Dubuque City Council acknowledges the pain, fear and anger felt by communities of color, in Dubuque and around our country, and pledges to identify addi- tional and specific ways to engage, to listen, and create a community where every resi- dent feels welcome and safe, productive and valued. NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF DUBUQUE, IOWA THAT: Section 1. The City Council denounces racism in all its forms for its negative psycho- logical, social, health, educational and economic effects. Section 2. The City Council encourages other local, state, and national entities to rec- ognize racism as a public health crisis. Section 3. The City Council unanimously advances, pursuant to our Vision to make Dubuque a “sustainable and resilient city and an inclusive and equitable community,” pri- oritizing racial equity in the City’s Action Plan, to be developed by the City Council at its annual Goal Setting Session, with regular updates on progress to be available on the 3 City’s website and by other appropriate means to be determined. Passed, approved, and adopted this 8th day of June 2020. Roy D. Buol, Mayor Attest: Kevin S. Firnstahl, City Clerk WORK SESSION Internal and Community-Facing Response to COVID-19 1. COVID-19 Update: Assistant City Manager Cori Burbach facilitated updates on the internal and community-facing response to COVID-19 from City departments and network partners. Community COVID-19 Update & Communication Response: Mary Rose Corrigan, Public Health Specialist, reported on information from the Dubuque County Incident Man- agement Team and the Iowa Department of Public Health that included an overview of the number of positive cases and deaths related to COVID-19 for the state, by county and by age group; community testing changes, testing providers and targeting testing; in- creases in the TestIowa state-wide testing capacity; and state-wide outbreak data in long- term care facilities. Alexis Steger, Housing & Community Development Director, reported on the status and success of the non-congregate sheltering program that is preventing spreading of COVID-19 to larger census shelters adding that these sheltering needs will continue. Mask of Wellness Campaign Update: Randy Gehl, Public Information Officer, reported that the Mask of Wellness is a positive empowering approach that promotes responsible behavior that is necessary to keep society open during this pandemic while benefiting the social, physical and economic areas of wellness. He added information on outreach ef- forts and the results of marketing the online program through social media and trusted sources. www.maskofwellness.com, and www.cityofdubuque.org/covid19. Community Foundation of Greater Dubuque Update: Jenna Manders, Director of Stra- tegic Relations, reported on the status of the Foundation’s Disaster Recover Fund includ- ing donation commitments, applications and grants; focused funding for vulnerable pop- ulations; grant submissions to date; Food System services and data; impact on immigra- tion systems; updated Resource Guide and brain health resources. United Way of Dubuque Update: Danielle Peterson, President/CEO, reported on relief funding recipient data; partnerships; identifying needs such as childcare, food scarcity, and eviction and funeral issues; updates to and data from the 211 help line; legislative advocacy; and human resource network. Greater Dubuque Development Corporation: Rick Dickinson, President/CEO, reported on the regional economy and workforce data and recovery projections; ranked impacted areas of food service/hospitality, retail, industry, health/social assistance, manufacturing, government/education; establishing the business help line 563-588-3350, public-private 4 partnerships assistance; small business loan program, and the Safe-at-Work program; business retention expansion; and workforce recruitment www.accessdubuque.com. Rental & Mortgage Assistance (Local & Iowa Finance Authority) programs: Alexis Steger, Housing & Community Development Director, reported on the eligibility criteria for the rental/mortgage assistance program for renters, mortgage holders and landlords, www.iowafinance.com. The program is retroactive to April 1, 2020. Leisure Services Update: Marie Ware, Leisure Services, reported on the status of the recreational programs that will return in phases; online seasonal brochures coming; com- pliance with social distancing component; Miracle League Field opens in late July; Bunker Hill Golf Course is open with the clubhouse delivering food and beverage outside only; the Marina is open with the C-Store providing only outside service of priority items; Multi- cultural Family Center remodeling completed the first week of July with programming un- der review and special events cancelled; status of AmeriCorps grant applications and activities. Park Division seasonal staff is not hired; restrooms remain closed; a minimal number of picnic tables will be placed; sanitation of playground equipment is under re- view; Comiskey Park redesign continues with a protracted schedule; the Five Flags Cen- ter remains closed with most events having been rescheduled and staff furloughed; Grand River Center remains closed with 2020 events postponed or rescheduled. Fiscal Year 21 Budget Team Strategies: Jennifer Larson, Finance & Budget Manager; and Cori Burbach, Assistant City Manager, reported on the state of the City’s 2020 and 2021 fiscal years and departmental strategies to review revenue; essential vs. non -es- sential services; guidance from four budg et review teams; 10-20-30% budget reduction plan exceptions and criteria; review of revenue resources and projections; operating budget review and criteria; staffing review and criteria; capital and equipment review and criteria; purchase of services and contract review; and measuring the equity impact. The presenters responded to questions from the City Council following groups of presentations. There being no further business, Mayor Buol declared the meeting adjourned at 8:55 p.m. s/Kevin S. Firnstahl, City Clerk