HomeMy WebLinkAbout2021.0105.TCRM.Minutes TOWN OF FOUNTAIN HILLS
MINUTES OF THE REGULAR MEETING
OF THE FOUNTAIN HILLS TOWN COUNCIL
JANUARY 5, 2021
1. CALL TO ORDER AND PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE — Mayor Dickey
2. MOMENT OF SILENCE
A Moment of Silence was held.
3. ROLL CALL—Mayor Dickey
Present: Mayor Ginny Dickey; Vice Mayor David Spelich; Councilmember Mike
Scharnow; Councilmember Sharron Grzybowski; Councilmember Peggy
McMahon; Councilmember Alan Magazine; Councilmember Gerry Friedel
Staff Town Manager Grady E. Miller; Town Attorney Aaron D. Arnson
Present: (telephonically); Town Clerk Elizabeth A. Burke
4. REPORTS BY MAYOR, COUNCILMEMBERS AND TOWN MANAGER
Town Manager Grady Miller said that the new COVID relief bill will be providing
organizations the opportunity to apply for assistance.
Mayor Dickey said that Item 5A, the Active Transportation Plan, is postponed due to
technical issues, and Item 7-F has been removed from the agenda.
She said that they have hundreds of cards regarding the Special Events item and the
Town Clerk will read the names and positions. The Town Council has the hard copies
and the names/positions will become part of the public record. This is their first meeting
using Zoom, so when they get to specific items, she will ask the Town Clerk if someone
wants to speak and/or if there are comment cards related to the item. Governments,
business, schools and organizations have been successfully conducting meetings
virtually for many months, and this process was cleared long ago by legal authorities for
public entities.
A. PROCLAMATION January as Speak Up, Stand Up, Save a Life Month.
Mayor Dickey thanked former Councilmember Sherry Leckrone for bringing this to the
Council's attention. She said that they still plan to have a community meeting in the
future, which Councilmembers Leckrone and Scharnow, along with herself, were
involved with. She then read the proclamation for January as Speak Up, Stand Up, Save
a Life Month.
Town Council Regular Meeting of January 5, 2021 2 of 14
5. SCHEDULED PUBLIC APPEARANCES/PRESENTATIONS
A. A PRESENTATION on the proposed Active Transportation Plan and Town Council
feedback regarding its recommendations.
Mayor Dickey noted that this item will come back at a future time.
6. CALL TO THE PUBLIC
Pursuant to A.R.S. §38-431.01(H),public comment is permitted(not required)on matters NOT listed on the
agenda.Any such comment(i)must be within the jurisdiction of the Council, and(ii)is subject to reasonable
time,place, and manner restrictions. The Council will not discuss or take legal action on matters raised during
Call to the Public unless the matters are properly noticed for discussion and legal action.At the conclusion of
the Call to the Public, individual councilmembers may(i)respond to criticism, (ii)ask staff to review a matter, or
(iii)ask that the matter be placed on a future Council agenda.
None
7. CONSENT AGENDA ITEMS
All items listed on the Consent Agenda are considered to be routine, noncontroversial matters and will be
enacted by one motion of the Council.All motions and subsequent approvals of consent items will include all
recommended staff stipulations unless otherwise stated. There will be no separate discussion of these items
unless a councilmember or member of the public so requests. If a councilmember or member of the public
wishes to discuss an item on the Consent Agenda, he/she may request so prior to the motion to accept the
Consent Agenda or with notification to the Town Manager or Mayor prior to the date of the meeting for which
the item was scheduled. The items will be removed from the Consent Agenda and considered in its normal
sequence on the agenda.
MOVED BY Councilmember Alan Magazine, SECONDED BY Councilmember Mike
Scharnow to approve Consent Agenda Items 7-A through 7-E (as Item 7-F was removed
from the agenda).
Vote: 7- 0 Passed - Unanimously
A. CONSIDERATION OF approving the meeting minutes of the Regular Meeting of December
1, 2020; and the Regular Meeting of December 15, 2020.
B. CONSIDERATION OF Ordinance 21-05, text amendment to Chapter 12 of the Town Code,
Section 12-3-10 C, defining term "overnight."
C. CONSIDERATION OF Resolution 2021-02, abandoning a 10' Public Utility and Drainage
Easement at the rear of 15747 E. Golden Eagle Blvd.(Plat 505-A, Block 3, Lot 16).
D. CONSIDERATION OF consent to the formation of the Rio Verde Foothills Domestic Water
Improvement District.
E. CONSIDERATION OF Resolution 2021-01 to update the Employee Pay Plan.
Town Council Regular Meeting of January 5, 2021 3 of 14
F. CONSIDERATION OF approving a Special Event Liquor License application for the
Fountain Hills VFW Post 7507 for a beer garden in conjunction with the Fountain Festival
of Arts and Crafts on February 26-28, 2021.
8. REGULAR AGENDA
A. HOLD A PUBLIC HEARING AND CONSIDER Ordinance#21-01, amending the official
Zoning Maps of the Town of Fountain Hills, Arizona by adding the Planned Shopping Plaza
Overlay District to the area bounded on the south by East Avenue of the Fountains, on the
west by North La Montana Drive, on the north by East Palisades Boulevard, and on the
east by North Saguaro Boulevard. (Case #Z 2020-10)
Mayor Dickey opened the Public Hearing.
Development Services Director John Wesley gave a brief review, noting that this is the
same property that was discussed back in September when the Council adopted a new
zoning designation of Planned Shopping Overlay Plaza. This would actually rezone this
property to such designation. He said that staff and the Planning and Zoning Commission
were recommending approval.
MOVED BY Councilmember Alan Magazine, SECONDED BY Councilmember Mike
Scharnow to adopt Ordinance 21-01.
Vote: 7 - 0 Passed - Unanimously
B. CONSIDERATION OF Ordinance 21-03 amending Town Code Chapter 8, Business
Regulations, by adding Article 8-6, Vacation Rentals.
Mr. Wesley said that as vacation rental homes have grown over the years, the impacts on
adjacent properties has also increased, often due to renters using the property for large
scale parties and events. In response to these issues, the legislature passed a bill that
allows some limited action by communities to address some of the resulting effects.
The attached ordinance seeks to implement the provisions allowed by state statute.
Section 8-6-1 establishes the registry for vacation and short term rental property owners.
This registry, when created, will be available to citizens on the Town's website. Section
8-6-2 provides for the requirement that the property be in conformance with all health and
safety rules and ordinances. Section 8-6-3 provides the use limitations allowed by the
state statute.
As an additional step, the Town is reviewing related rules and regulations, including the
noise and ordinance, for any modifications that might assist in the implementation of this
ordinance and address the impacts of vacation and short-term rentals in Town. Any
recommended ordinance changes will come to the Town Council when they are ready for
consideration.
Councilmember Scharnow asked if they would have to post them on the website. Mr.
Wesley said that they are not required to do so, but they could if they would like. Mr. Miller
said that perhaps they could just list the property by address, so that neighbors would be
able to determine if it was a short-term rental.
Town Council Regular Meeting of January 5, 2021 4 of 14
Trent Heidke, Fountain Hills resident, said that he opposes vacation rentals so he would
probably support this proposal.
MOVED BY Councilmember Mike Scharnow, SECONDED BY Councilmember Peggy
McMahon to adopt Ordinance 21-03.
Vote: 7 - 0 Passed - Unanimously
C. CONSIDERATION OF Approving Contract 2021-028, a Services Agreement with Online
Solutions, LLC, for Citizenserve, an electronic application processing software and ongoing
maintenance and the associated budget transfers.
Mr. Wesley reviewed a PowerPoint Presentation which addressed:
ISSUES & SOLUTION
Currently require all applications by paper
Creates issues for staff and applicants
Apply when office is open
Cost of paper copies
Comments only when office is open
Review by one person at a time
Working remotely highlighted these issues
Electronic permit processing solves the issues
PROCESS
Requests for Proposals
Received 9 responses
Staff team evaluated
Presentation/demonstration by top 3
Selected Online Solutions (DBA Citizenserve)
SOFTWARE OVERVIEW
Examples from other communities
Will be able to configure to our needs
Will guide applicants in what is needed
We will assist people as needed
PORTAL HOME PAGE
PERMIT APPLICATION (1 of 3)
PERMIT APPLICATION (2 of 3)
PERMIT APPLICATION (3 of 3)
VIEW PERMIT SCREEN FROM PORTAL - PERMIT TAB
VIEW PERMIT SCREEN FROM PORTAL - REVIEWS TAB
STAFF HOME PAGE - APPLICATION INTAKE
STAFF VIEW- PERMIT WORKFLOW ROUTE
STAFF HOME PAGE - INSPECTOR
INSPECTION SCREEN FROM A DESKTOP
INSPECTION SCREEN FROM AN IPAD
SYSTEM NEEDS AND COSTS
Town Council Regular Meeting of January 5, 2021 5 of 14
Citizenserve software
1st year (configuration + annual fee) - $58,000
Annual subscription - $27,000
Bluebeam software
Upfront cost- $4,930
Annual subscription - $3,123
Additional hardware (monitors, tablets) - $6,500
Councilmember Friedel asked how long the vendor had been in business. Mr. Wesley
said that he did not know the specific number, but more than ten years. He said that they
are based in Tempe and there are several hundred local governments that use their
system.
Councilmember Scharnow asked if a contractor would be sent home if they come up to
start the permit process. Mr. Wesley said that staff will help them through the system and
can scan papers for them. The larger contractors will have to be electronic, but staff will
be set up to help them get started.
Mr. Miller said that they are probably one of the last cities in the Valley that are not on an
electronic permitting process. He said that this is a great opportunity for the contractors,
and it provides them the ability to see where their permits are within the process.
Vice Mayor asked, with everything being electronic, if there would also be a paper file. He
recently implemented a case management system, and found that when it goes bad, it
goes really bad.
Mr. Wesley said that their system is very redundant in its backup systems. Mr. Miller said,
in regard to records retention, the Town Clerk is the Records Manager for the Town and
she and Mr. Wesley will work with the vendor to ensure all requirements are met in
accordance with state statutes.
Mr. Miller said that the Town uses Neogov for employment applications, and everything is
done online. When they are hired, their record is printed from the program and that goes
into their file.
Councilmember Friedel said that it sounds like efficiency for staff.
MOVED BY Councilmember Sharron Grzybowski, SECONDED BY Councilmember Gerry
Friedel to approve Contract 2021-028 with Online Solutions, LLC, in the amount of$58,000
and the associated budget transfers in the amount of$66,400 for License
Fees (Citizenserve and Bluebeam) and $6,500 for hardware.
Vote: 7 - 0 Passed - Unanimously
Town Council Regular Meeting of January 5, 2021 6 of 14
D. CONSIDERATION OF approving the purchase of(1) Toro Multi Pro Sprayer Accessory;
(1) Toro Groundsmaster 7200 turf mower.
Public Works Director Justin Weldy said that the Community Services Department
currently has one (1) turf mower at Golden Eagle Park. Originally, the mower was
scheduled for replacement on July 1, 2021. However, the mower sustained significant
damage after being submerged in water during the flood of 2018 and required extensive
repairs so it would last as long as possible. The mower is in need of additional repairs,
and the total exceeds the adopted vehicle replacement policy that states, "Excessive
maintenance is defined as a repair cost that exceed 40% of the vehicle value in a
twelve-month period." Staff is requesting permission to 1) replace that piece of
equipment one year earlier ahead of schedule; and 2) purchase a spring apparatus for
equipment they already own for turf maintenance.
Councilmember Grzybowski clarified for the public that"next fiscal year" meant July
2021. Staff agreed.
MOVED BY Councilmember Mike Scharnow, SECONDED BY Councilmember Alan
Magazine to approve the first amendment to cooperative purchasing agreement
C2020-17 in the amount of$53,524.56 for turf maintenance equipment.
Vote: 7 - 0 Passed - Unanimously
E. DISCUSSION AND CONSIDERATION of the Findings and Recommendations for the
Fountain Park Bollard Light Fixture Painting Pilot Project.
Community Services Director Rachael Goodwin said that Council has received quite a
bit of information, but she wanted to offer some background from staffs perspective.
She thanked the efforts put forth by the volunteer group that painted the 20 bollards at
Fountain Park. She showed one of the bollards that had been removed, so the Council
could see the condition it was in. She said that it is showing some wear and they are
concerned with the effect of the water environment.
Councilmember Magazine asked if the bollard had been primed. Ms. Goodwin said that
once it was approved by Town Council, staff has been hands off and were not involved.
Someone from the volunteer group would need to answer that question.
Ted Blank, representing the volunteers, reviewed the handout he provided to each of the
Councilmembers. He said that their volunteer group has been working on this project for
almost five years. They received 200 signatures asking for some type of light mitigation
for the lights around the Park. They repainted four bollards last August which were
chipping, and there has been no problem since then. Any future painting will include the
primer. He said that it takes about one minute to remove the water stains with CLR.
Councilmember Friedel thanked the group for their work and labor, and the hours to get
this done. It is a testament to the volunteers in Town. Mr. Blank said that there are 27
volunteers on the list.
Councilmember Scharnow asked Ms. Goodwin if staff had issues with the
Town Council Regular Meeting of January 5, 2021 7 of 14
recommendation from the group. Ms. Goodwin said that it is contrary to staffs
recommendation as they are looking at it from maintenance and public perception.
Councilmember Scharnow said that he has been part of several volunteer groups over
the years, and sometimes it is difficult to depend on them with consistency. but he
believes they should allow them to continue and do all the bollards. It will not cost the
Town any money or heartburn.
Councilmember McMahon asked if they have an organized plan for once they are all
painted, to check for repainting. She asked if there was any type of commitment by the
volunteers to make sure that until they are replaced, that they are going to maintain
them. Mr. Blank said that it is their intention to maintain them.
Councilmember McMahon asked long they anticipated the primer and paint would last.
Mr. Blank said that there has been no degradation yet. It should last forever as it is
designed for people to spray paint the barrels of rifles and shotguns.
Councilmember Magazine said that staffs recommendation is based upon the situation
in front of them. Ms. Goodwin said that they were repainted around August, and then
they went into autoseeding. The concern of staff is that this current primed version has
not really even seen a year-long process. They turned the water off in September and it
was not back on until early November.
Councilmember Magazine asked what the worst thing that could happen was if all the
bollards got painted with primer. Mr. Miller said that those that have been left alone are
unpainted and came from a factory that uses a galvanized finish. It has a much longer
life than something that is hand painted. Also, he said, that over time with 280 of these,
they have people complaining about the condition at the park.
Councilmember Friedel asked if they were getting complaints about the glare. Mr. Miller
said that they were not getting complaints. The biggest concern was from people that
were gone for the summer and when they came back, it had gone from no lighting to
lighting.
Mr. Blank said that they have identified a real issue. The walkers there at night loved
having the ability to walk at night; they felt safer and more secure.
Councilmember Grzybowski said that these are approximately five years old and their
expected life is eight to ten years. Having volunteered some, sometimes they are not the
most reliable. She asked if they should be concerned that the project may be blown off.
Ms. Goodwin said there is that concern of staff because it is a manual labor activity.
They are trying to consider things they encounter day to day.
Councilmember Grzybowski said that they already hire a company that comes through to
clean the artwork; perhaps they could clean these as well. Mr. Blank said that was a
volunteer effort as well.
MOVED BY Vice Mayor David Spelich, SECONDED BY Councilmember Alan
Magazine to continue the pilot program.
Vote: 7 - 0 Passed - Unanimously
Town Council Regular Meeting of January 5, 2021 8 of 14
F. CONSIDERATION of Approving the Cooperative Purchasing Agreement with Precision
Electric Co. Inc., Contract No. 2021-029, for $100,000 annually, not to exceed $500,000
over the term of the contract.
Parks Superintendent Kevin Snipes said that they have had this contract annually, but
only at $50,000 a year and after 1 1/2 years they have to come back because the
$50,000 is never enough. They are trying to streamline the process by awarding a
larger contract amount so they do not have to continue coming back over and over. He
said that this does not allow them spend any money that is not in the budget; it just
speeds up the process. He said that it was for the speciality electric work, for pump
motors, etc.
MOVED BY Councilmember Gerry Friedel, SECONDED BY Vice Mayor David Spelich to
approve the Cooperative Purchasing Agreement with Precision Electric Co. Inc., Contract
No. 2021-029, for $100,000, not to exceed $500,000 for the term of the contract.
Vote: 7 - 0 Passed - Unanimously
G. DISCUSSION AND POLICY DIRECTION to Mayor Ginny Dickey regarding the possible
prohibition of special events in Fountain Hills due to the surge of COVID-19 cases in
Maricopa County.
Mayor Dickey said that before they start, she wanted to remind everyone that this was
for discussion only. The agenda does not allow for voting or action on this item. She
apologized for not keeping up with responding to all the e-mails, but she did read them
all. She said that she would begin with what led her to bring this item to the Council,
staff, and the public.
She said that mayors received an email from the Greater Phoenix Leadership Health
Sector Task Force, a letter dated 12/3/20 signed by Presidents and CEO's of Banner
Health, Blue Cross, Cigna, Dignity Health, Envision Physician Service, Flinn
Foundation, Honor Health, Phoenix Children's Hospital, Translational Genomics
Research Institute, TriWest Healthcare Alliance, United Healthcare, Valleywise Health,
Vitalyst Health Foundation, and the AZ Healthcare and Hospital Association. It included
a copy of a similar one sent to Dr. Cara Christ recommending several actions. She said
that only one of their recommendations is being discussed--limiting larger events
permitted by the Town. The overriding reason is that hospitals are near or at capacity.
The discussion has no bearing on anything else--churches, grocery stores, protests,
schools, bars or restaurants. She said that the Governor prohibited gatherings over 50 in
June with exceptions.
Mayor Dickey said that the initial letter suggested a one-month period, then a
reassessment, but on December 31, they said, "it's been recommended that the
previous guidance apply to any gathering large groups of people for the next two to
three months until there is significant movement on disseminating vaccines, especially
with the hospitals at capacity and likely anticipating continued capacity through
February." She received the updated information yesterday from the CEO of Blue
Cross/Blue Shield and also Banner: "we are in a very dire time now, with hospitals at
93% capacity and triage balancing now in effect." That means they have to make
choices on who to treat. They are already diverting patients. To continue, "Maricopa
County is #3 in COVID cases, behind only Los Angeles and Chicago. We are currently
Town Council Regular Meeting of January 5, 2021 9 of 14
dealing with the Thanksgiving infections, and will be dealing with Christmas and New
Year infections toward the end of January and well into February. Until we are well
passed the holiday infections and have given vaccines to a higher percentage of
Arizonans... we recommend that January-March large gatherings be postponed. We are
hopeful that by April we will have a majority of Arizonans vaccinated, and public safety
restrictions can start to be eased." She said that they were unequivocal about saying
this action would save lives.
Vice Mayor Spelich said that out of all of the e-mails he received, he wanted to
emphasize that he never met with the Mayor, nor did the Mayor consult with him, about
the closing of the Community Center and Town Hall for meetings.
He then shared some statistics, noting that Arizona was currently#1 in new cases of
COVID per capita. He said that#2 is California, which has some of the most restrictive
measures in the nation. He said that Florida has the lowest numbers and they have the
most minimal restrictions. Lockdowns do not work. They are once again being asked to
enact more restrictions, and by the hospitals and insurance providers. This time of year
is always the busiest time for hospitals, with the holidays.
Vice Mayor Spelich said that numbers increased since the first of the November fair, but
it was not mentioned that contact tracing has been done and it has shown that not one
of those cases was from the fair, as indicated by the Maricopa Department of Health. He
said that also not mentioned is that during that same time, they have had multiple
holidays with Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Years, where family gatherings occur
and there is a lot of travel. He said that studies have shown that 73.84% transmissions is
from home gatherings, 1.43% restaurants and bars, .069% religious gatherings, and all
with a 99.5% recovery rate. The CDC has shown the average age of death from COVID
is at 75 years of age with 2.3 underlying health issues.
He said that this is not about politics or about money. It is about what is right for the
people. Recently, the Concours in the Hills was canceled due to one of their major
sponsors, a hospital, withdrawing their support at this time. It is what it is at this point. He
said that one decision costs about $250,000 in terms of research and charity care for
sick children, not including the incidental loss of businesses in Fountain Hills. They have
all heard about the increased cases of suicide, depression and domestic abuse. Leaders
should be cautious, not reactive, and their decisions should be balanced. He said that he
has no interest in closing the art fair, nor the senior softball tournaments, which went off
twice already without any problems.
Councilmember Friedel said that he looked at this issue from different perspectives: 1)
the mental health of the residents; 2) people coming from all over to the fairs and
tournaments, and they may go elsewhere and the Town could lose those in the future;
and 3) economics. They have businesses in Town that are weak and suffering, with loss
of employees, and there are no parachutes out there. He said that the November Art Fair
was a beta test and they passed; they were successful. That tax revenue helped to
allow the Council to vote in a 3.5% raise for employees. He asked what happens if they
cancel outside events that draw sales tax revenues. He said that sales tax is important
to businesses. The Chamber did an outstanding job with the art show and the
tournaments have safety protocols.
Councilmember Scharnow said that he wanted to clarify that they are considering this
one thing--the gatherings of over 50 people. He said that his Noon Kiwanis group had a
concession stand at the last fair. They changed things up in how they operated, but he
Town Council Regular Meeting of January 5, 2021 10 of 14
agreed with Councilmember Friedel, what he saw was 99% compliance. He said that
there is a big difference between indoor and outdoor events. The current spikes are from
the holidays; he does not think the outdoor events are the super spreaders and he sees
no need to prohibit it.
Councilmember Grzybowski said that she had been copied on an e-mail which
specifically asked if the Mayor had an opportunity to go visit the hospitals. In November,
she had to fly to Virginia as her sister had an emergency. She has never seen a hospital
so busy. She was able to speak about their situations. She then came home and tried to
visit a friend here, but she was declined because she was only allowed one visitor per
person.
She has talked to a number of personal physicians about their feelings and about mask
wearing. She was one of three new councilmembers who had an opportunity to attend
the Newly Elected Officials training and one of the things mentioned to them is that their
job is to provide for the health, safety and welfare of their residents. There are a lot of
examples of things some people used to consider overreach, such as seatbelts,
insurance requirements, handicapped entrances, etc.
Councilmember Magazine said that he wished that people would stop reading social
media. If they have questions, e-mail or text the Council with them. They should not
believe everything they read. He wished people could be civil. These are serious issues,
with serious thoughts and facts, not assumptions. He asked who they trust. He trusts the
CDC, John Hopkins, etc. Many of those that wrote the Council had no facts whatsoever.
He questioned how they did the contact tracing. And, even if that was the case, who is
to say they wll not get it at the next fair. He spoke to the head of the local mortuary
where six to ten people from Fountain Hills have died due to COVID.
He said that he participates in art fairs and has made many friends that are artists. He is
not insensitive to their plight, but he supports having a 50-person limit on organized
events.
Councilmember McMahon said that whether they like it or not, they are in an
extraordinary pandemic. They cannot do contact tracing with accuracy. They have a
responsibility to their community's health and welfare to postpone the fair until they get
through the triple surge. They cannot ignore the fact that Arizona is the worst in the
world. She is sick of sheltering herself, but hospitals are near capacity and she wants to
have the ability to go to the hospital if it is necessary, and everyone should have that
opportunity. They have a vaccine on the way; they need to wait and see. She said that
they need to consider all of the resources that are available and make an educated
decision.
Mayor Dickey said that she wanted to make it clear that Phoenix Children's Hospital
was one of the original signers of the letter, so those writing the letters were not just
those benefiting from it. Vice Mayor Spelich said that he did not question the veracity of
the hospitals signing the letter. If Phoenix Children's Hospital had drafted a letter to
Peter Volny and one person got COVID they would be in trouble. He said that they have
gone through lockdowns and they don't work. He said that they should give the residents
the respect that they know when they should not attend an event. He said that some use
contact tracing to make their case, but at other times they say it does not work because
it does not support their position. They cannot have it both ways.
Town Council Regular Meeting of January 5, 2021 11 of 14
Councilmember Magazine said that he is tired of hearing that if he does not want to go
somewhere he does not have to, but those that do then go to other locations where he
may come into contact with them.
Mayor Dickey said that she wanted it made clear that the letter from the hospitals came
prior to any decision made by the sponsors of the Concours in the Hills. She said that
she did not want to argue on whether or not lockdowns work, but they were in lockdown
early on and it was working, until in May when things opened back up and then the
numbers starting increasing by July.
She said that the Executive Order of the Governor in December did put the onus on
cities and towns that if they approved an event of over 50, the jurisdiction must approve
safety measures and enforce them, and send it to Department of Health Services. The
25% positivity announced today, surpassed the 21% former high in July.They know over
930 Fountain Hills residents have contracted COVID; too many have died. What they do
not know is what the long-term health effects may be. And, with the hospitals at capacity,
it affects who they are able to treat that are not related to COVID.
Councilmember Friedel said that the rate of infection in Fountain Hills is three percent,
which he believes is one of the lowest in the area. He thinks they have done an
outstanding job and with the protocols they had in place before, he supported moving
forward with the fair.
Mayor Dickey then read a listing of events that have been canceled due to COVID:
Tempe Festival of the Arts: Canceled; had been scheduled for Dec. 4-6.
Guaranteed Rate Bowl (formerly Cactus Bowl): Canceled. It had been scheduled for
Saturday, Dec. 26, at Chase Field,
Fiesta Bowl Parade: Postponed to APRIL 10th
Barrett-Jackson auto auction: Originally announced for Jan. 16-24, it has been
postponed to the week of March 22.
Barrett Jackson To Reschedule Scottsdale Auction To March 2021 To Safeguard
Customers Sponsors And Guests (barrett-jackson.com)
"The difficult decision to postpone the auction was made out of an abundance of caution
to safeguard auction customers, sponsors, guests and employees from the current spike
of coronavirus cases— the worst since the pandemic began— as well as the spike in the
number of cases following the upcoming holidays that health authorities are predicting."
While every indication showed that our bidders, consignors and sponsors were behind
our efforts to hold our auction next month, we decided it would be prudent at this time to
safeguard everyone's health,"said Craig Jackson chairman and CEO of Barrett-Jackson.
Rock 'n' Roll Arizona Marathon: Rescheduled from Jan. 16-17, 2021, to Jan. 15-16,2022.
Arizona Renaissance Festival: Canceled, after originally announcing a Feb. 6-April 4
run.
Phoenix Chinese Week: Canceled; was scheduled for Feb. 12-14.
Buckeye Air Fair: Canceled; was scheduled for Feb. 13-14.
Innings Festival: Canceled; was scheduled for Feb. 27-28. Tempe Beach Park
Arizona Matsuri, Festival of Japan: Virtual event Feb. 27-28.
Devour Phoenix: Scheduled for Feb, dates to be determined. Desert Botanical Garden
McDowell Mountain Music Fest: Dates to be determined, from March.
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Chandler Ostrich Festival: Rescheduled to March.
Art Detour: 2021 information to be announced. March
Western Week and Arizona Indian Festival: April 15-18 (rescheduled from Feb)
Scottsdale
Pat's Run: The run will be virtual on April 24, 2021.
Councilmember Friedel asked where the magic number of 25 came from. Mr. Miller said
that he believed it was from Europe as that is the protocol they have been following.
Councilmember Scharnow asked if the Art on the Avenue and Farmers Market would
still be able to continue if the Mayor was to sign something at 50. Mayor Dickey said that
due to their size she did not think they would fall over that thresshold.
Ms. Burke then read the names of those individuals who submitted cards opposing
the prohibition of special events (supported the Special Events)
Pam Aguilu, Daniel Burch, Judy Conrad, Kedy Fossenkemper, John Kavanagh,
Christine McGinn, Tony Pierce, Paz Winshtein, Cyndi Buck, Sophie Christian, Deanna
Mumfrey, Jennifer Ernst, Douglas H Falk, Jennifer Jankovich, Ramon Velasquez, Janet
LeRoy, Harry Friedman, Deedee Samos, Al & Laure Weaver, Lynn Alchin, K & Kerri
Rasmussen, Mike Dwyer, Amy Wolfe, Peggy P Soong, Sarah DeFer, Paul Uhl, Steven
Makransky, Teresa Turner, Randy & Terry Romanin, Molly Wilson, Perry, Jane Jones,
Stephen McCullough, Adam Rubinstein, Chris Heede, Sarah Foster, Daniel Coulon,
Tom and Susan Mason, Dawne Olsen, John and Danice Person, Charles Sherman,
Tara Lamar, Daniel & Deborah Fenn, Bonnie Revelle, Vivien Buffa, Jeff Wesley,
Michelle Haden, Sallyjane Schmoll, Dana Spanierman, Richard Rutkowski, Cheryl
Shewak, Nzalamba Artworks, Dina Galassini, Rick Murphy, John Redmon, Donn
Moseley, Nancy Russell Plencner, Beverly Tall, Hector Perez Velasquez, Eddy
Crutcher, Liana Colbert, Cassie Crutcher, Peter Volny, Karen Goodwin, Jeff and Jimee
Taylor, Carolyn Henderson, Rachelle Albrecht, Jerry & Jena Andrews, Andrew Day,
Willey Beers, Anna Baum, Carole Osburn, Sonya Pacheco, Connie Little, Brian Billow,
Ted Mielke, Jennifer Defoe, Jodi Mullen, Laurie Hansen, Rick Fitch, Lynn Breezley,
James W. Gesell, Tina Garner, Deborah Brawley, Celia Sislow, Cheyenne Rouse, Jeff
Seemayer, Susan Tate, Siep Bueneker, Tracy Foltz, Brittany Hansen, Peter Z, Jessica
Robertson, Sue Kraus, Dan Hornsby, Karen K Frye, Patrick Tutt, H Victoria Mountz,
Tammy Bell, Boe James, Ray Dossey, Helena Benedetto, Tami Camody, Ann R Tanko,
Geraldine Dixon, Grete Carlson, David Crawford, Hayle, Maryann Hamel, Judith
Keenan, Tonya Hunter, Vicky Derksen, Laura Alleman, Paige Lorentzen, Becky Kayser,
Tracy Reule, Camille Andrews, Daniel Kovacevic, Rod Warembourg, Laurel Grisbach.
Total: 125 (95 nonresidents t/vendors /artists )
(NOTE: In preparing the minutes of this meeting, additional cards were found to be part
of the record,whose names were not read during the meeting. These are:
Moss Schacter, Josh Hirt, Alexandra Camacho, Rick Martin, Jerry M. Locke, Linda
Reese, Melinda Lusk, Paula Plotkin, Susan Elliot, Alice C. Novotny, Patricia West, Meg
Harter Art, LLC, Ron Kolitz, Loren Feldman, David Mosier, Robyn Mosier, Michelle
Moriarty, Laura Hennen, David Switzer, Yvonne Betts, Rocky Rothschiller, Barbara H.
Pederson, Scott Hanson, Marsena Bryant, Holly Blayes, Sandi Tychewicz, Tim DePuydt,
Mary Jo Waddell, Patty Herrer, Russell Peters, David Cook, Lisa Stotska, Brent
Treadway, Thomas Gaughan, Nancy Sliwa, Lynn Lucas.
Town Council Regular Meeting of January 5, 2021 13 of 14
Total: 36 (29 nonresidents /vendors / artists)
She then read the names of those who supported the prohibition of special events: (No
to holding Special Events)
Catherine Gilbert, Kathleen Butler, Dianne Price, Cindy Couture, Crystalle Ebbinga,
Sharon Groves, Eric Landau, Anne Hayes, Billie Jon King, Ukiah Odom, Chris Clemens,
Dave Long, Sharon Ehrlich, Fred James, Nancy Gibson, Amy Arnold, Al Ronca, Scott
Huske, Clifford King, Hilary Quintin, Nita, Sherri James, Jessamyn Clark, Marion Wilson,
Sue Kelly, Joan and David Dunham, David Clark, Peggy Yeargain, Evelyn
Sonenschein, Kelly Follett, Robert Hersh, Don Scott, Cheryl Graham, Chris Brezler,
Christy Baxter, Naomi Matusow, Cynthia Lewis, Stuart Wecker, Robert Shields, Pietrina
Pensabene, Peggy Roberts, Lisa Miller, Kathy Florence, Paul Coleman, Amy Burnett,
Dan M Davisson, Debbie Duckro, Debbie Clason, Judith Becker, John McNeill, Tess
Stevens
Total: 52 (all but 2 are residents)
Ms. Burke noted that they also received cards from 87 individuals, nearly all of whom
were residents, who were opposed to "closing down the Town." These individuals
believed that the Council was considering stricter regulations that would close down
restaurants, bars, businesses, etc. The names were not read during the meeting, but are
shown here for informational purposes:
Barbara Altergott, Kathy Barnes, Chuck and Barb Beverly, Mary Ann Bosnos, Breton's
Automotive, Barbara Cardinal, Becky Chapman, Dave Clark, Jessica Clayton, Amy
Cosman, Chuck Otto, Mal Davis, Marilyn Davis, Deborah Bigler, Peter & Linda Donzelli,
Mary Edman, Lyle Edwards, Betsy Engle, Thomas and Jennifer Gaughan, Amy and
Luke Glomski, Robert Hager, Sid Hall, Gary Hoger, Ken Holloway, Sheldon Johnson, Jill
Kasper, Scott Kasper, Jon Knapp, Bob Lull, Steve & Vicki Lynes, Pat McCarty, Christine
McGinn, Linda McGoldrick, Dave Morgel, Monica Mullen, Teresa Muul, Mia Marletto,
Thomas Pagliuco, Cynthia Parke, Lance Parr, Danielle Pela, Chuck Pisano, Eva Porter,
Sherry Taylor, Melinda Stanton, Bill Luzinski, Belinda Read, Alexandra Shamaya, Craig
Wilson, Marianne Winchester, Charles Spielvogel, Tony Pierce, Martha Brown, Rebecca
Chapman, Jennifer Southwick, Kriwer Svob, Beverly Tall, Dianne Price, JD, James
Waddell, Anthony J. Pistilli, Mike Reuvers, Kathy Ruebusch, Connie Saggione, Dick
Schaffer, Tim Sciutto, Sharla Shore, Jim and Arlene Stewart, Susan Titus, Stephen J.
Ward, Mary Webster, Ron Williamson, Craig Wilson, Jane Wingert, Barb & Brad Tesch,
Dave & Jean Peterson, Alan Grosso, Susan Curry, Ron Renaud, Debra J. Elder,
Stephanie Leevan.
The following individuals then addressed the Council through the Zoom meeting:
Opposed to Prohibiting the Art Show
Betsy LaVoie
John Manley
Boe James
Supported Prohibiting the Art Show
Kim Ptak
Town Council Regular Meeting of January 5, 2021 14 of 14
Mayor Dickey said that the purpose of bringing this item before the Town Council was to
share information and hear from the Town Council, as well as the public, and she would
be talking to others and staff.
9. COUNCIL DISCUSSION/DIRECTION to the TOWN MANAGER
Item(s)listed below are related only to the propriety of(i)placing such item(s) on a future agenda for action,
or(ii)directing staff to conduct further research and report back to the Council.
10. ADJOURNMENT
MOVED BY Councilmember Alan Magazine, SECONDED BY Councilmember Sharron
Grzybowski to adjourn.
Vote: 7 - 0 Passed - Unanimously
The Regular Meeting of the Fountain Hills Town Council held January 5, 2021,
adjourned at 8:05 p.m.
TOWN OF FOUNTAIN HILLS
0 N
Gin Dickey, Mayor
ATTEST AND PREPARED BY:
Eliza th Arke, Town Clerk
CERTIFICATION
I hereby certify that the foregoing minutes are a true and correct copy of the minutes of the Regular
Meeting held by the Town Council of Fountain Hills in the Town Hall Council Chambers on the 5th day of
January, 2021. I further certify that the meeting was duly called and that a quorum was present.
DATED this 19th day of January, 2021.
lizabet . Burke, Town CI rk