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Archive for the 'Brandy Williams' Tag

City schedules oil and gas public meeting May 24

May 18th, 2012, 6:25 am by

The City Council issued the following press release Thursday:

The city will host a public meeting on Thursday, May 24 from 6-8 p.m. at the City Administration Building (30 S. Nevada Ave.), suite 102 to get public input on proposed options for local oil and gas regulations.

City staff, elected officials, and Oil and Gas Committee members will be available to answer questions and record feedback on proposed levels of regulation for oil and gas exploration and development within city limits. The input will be considered by the voting members of the Oil and Gas Committee, who will deliver recommendations to City Council on June 12 for formal Council direction.  The City Attorney’s Office will draft the regulations, which will then be presented to Council for approval later this summer.

The Oil and Gas Committee was appointed by City Council in January and met over the course of 14 weeks to learn about oil and gas exploration and production, as well as review state and local regulations. Three councilmembers – Val Snider, Brandy Williams and Angela Dougan – served on the committee as voting members with the responsibility to bring forward recommendations on areas and levels of local regulation. The areas identified for regulation are: adherence to the pre-application/site plan process; impact fees; water quality compliance; land use setbacks; operational conflict avoidance language; zoning districts for oil and gas; high density/low density considerations; and conditions of Colorado Oil and Gas Conservation Commission (COGCC) operator approvals for city government.

Handouts will be available following the meeting on the City’s Oil and Gas Committee webpage at www.springsgov.com. Public comment can also be submitted through the webpage or via email at OilandGasCommittee@springsgov.com.

Quote of the Day

April 26th, 2012, 10:52 am by

The chairman of the mayor’s Transit Solutions Team is at the center of a political controversy after telling City Councilwoman Brandy Williams to mind her own business.

Robert Shonkwiler, a retired businessman, said he doesn’t quite understand why the incident, which happened at Monday’s City Council meeting, has blown up.

In fact, he said, Williams apologized to him afterward.

“I don’t quite understand the controversy because after the meeting, Brandy came up to me and offered her apology, and I gladly accepted.”

Williams did not immediately return a call for comment.

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Poll: Shonkwiler disrespected city councilwoman

April 26th, 2012, 7:58 am by

Robert Shonkwiler

Did the chairman of the mayor’s Transit Solutions Team disrespect Councilwoman Brandy Williams on Monday?

Yes, according to an online poll.

Nearly 75 percent of gazette.com readers who responded to the poll said Robert Shonkwiler was “disrespectful” toward Williams when he told her it was none of her business whether he or anyone on the transit team rode city buses as part of their research.

If you haven’t voted in the poll yet, click here.

The team spent three months evaluating the city’s public transportation system and then recommending how to make it more efficient.

To read the team’s full report, click here.

Mayor ‘very disappointed’ in council members

April 25th, 2012, 2:58 pm by

Mayor Steve Bach

Mayor Steve Bach says the chairman of his Transit Solutions Team lost his cool Monday when he told Councilwoman Brandy Williams that it was none of her business whether he used public transportation as part of his research.

But Bach defended businessman Robert Shonkwiler, saying that he was “very disappointed” in the treatment he received from some City Council members.

“Robert  Shonkwiler is a volunteer citizen who has given substantially of his time and talents, among others, to  try to help our city rethink , in this case, transit,” the mayor said in a statement.

“He is working towards fiscal sustainability for our transit system while concurrently delivering the best service we can. He is a volunteer from the community.  He is not a politician,” Bach said.

“He was peppered with questions by councilors – and yes he lost his composure.  However, I am very disappointed in how he was treated.  I believe we need to have some deference for citizens who are doing their best to try and help,” Bach said.

 

Fallout from ‘disrespectful’ remark to councilwoman

April 25th, 2012, 12:33 pm by

Brandy Williams

The mayor’s Transit Solutions Team presented its final recommendations to City Council on Monday.

When Councilwoman Brandy Williams asked whether anyone on the team tried to get around the city using only the bus system as part of their research, Chairman Robert Shonkwiler refused to answer the question.

“I was asked to do this by the mayor, and there weren’t any qualifications that I had to do that,” Shonkwiler responded.

“And frankly, our recommendations stand where they are, and personal questions about what I do or don’t do, I think, is my business,” he said.

When Williams said she wasn’t meddling in his personal business, Shonkwiler she was.

“I don’t think you’ve got any right to ask me that question, and I respectfully decline to answer. It’s none of your business,” he said.

Williams didn’t engage Shonkwiler from the dais, but she said Tuesday that she was “taken aback” by his reaction to her question.

“I thought it was disrespectful,” she said.

“I definitely did not expect that kind of reaction, not in my wildest dreams.”

Reaction from Williams’ colleagues has been mixed.

“Shonkwiler is one of the brightest minds in the public policy debate. To call him out was very disrespectful and is another reason we cannot get more community involvement. Private citizens won’t put up with the brain damage,” Councilman Tim Leigh wrote on Facebook.

“‘Brightest minds in the public policy debate’” — gimme a break,” responded Councilwoman Lisa Czelatdko. “According to whom and displayed when Tim? Also, an expert in Boulder does not make an expert in Colorado Springs.”

But Czelatdko said council members “should just listen and say thank you” when community volunteers give of their time to provide reports and recommendations to council.

“We shouldn’t question, debate, point out disagreements, etc. until a recommendation comes forward needing a vote. Nobody who has sat on a committee and given their time and attention to a subject wants it picked apart or criticized. I’ve seen my colleagues do that several times and so I can understand the defensiveness and irritation. I think things could have been handled better on both sides,” she wrote.

Councilman Bernie Herpin said it boiled down to respect.

“It’s not whether or not he used public transportation. It was his reply that was uncalled for. All he had to say was, ‘No I haven’t, but I had experience in Boulder…’” Herpin wrote.

At the beginning of Tuesday’s council meeting, Council President Scott Hente said Shonkwiler’s response “unfortunately” was “not in keeping with the civility and the decorum” expected at council meetings and then he apologized to Williams because he didn’t say anything Monday.

“That sort of instant will not happen again,” Hente said.

In a telephone interview Wednesday, Leigh said if anyone should be apologizing, it should be Williams.

“Someone should ask her if she’s sold a hospital before,” Leigh said, referring to Williams being one of two council liaisons to the Memorial Health System negotiating team.

“If there’s an apology to be made, I think it should come from her to him because if there’s anybody who’s doing on-the-job training, it’s Brandy,” Leigh said.

Here’s video of Shonkwiler telling Williams that her question was none of her business:

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Quote of the Day

April 19th, 2012, 3:24 pm by

Time flies.

“One year ago today six new members were sworn into the City Council for the City of Colorado Springs, Merv Bennett, Lisa Czelatdko, Angela Dougan, Tim Leigh, Val Snider and myself. We took an oath to uphold the Constitution of the United States, the Constitution of the State of Colorado and the Charter of the City of Colorado Springs. While this position has not always been easy, I am honored, as I know my colleagues are, to serve the Citizens of Colorado Springs to the best of my ability. Thank you for your support!” Councilwoman Brandy Williams wrote today on Facebook.

 

Councilwoman needs magniflying glass to find name card

February 23rd, 2012, 11:12 am by

Check out the name cards from yesterday’s Mayor’s Counsel Meeting.

Cindy Aubrey, the mayor’s chief communications officer, said she was trying to cut back on paper costs.

Oh yeah?

Then why is the mayor’s name card bigger?

Just saying.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

VIDEO: Bach pulls support for cycling event Part 1

February 23rd, 2012, 9:37 am by

Mayor Steve Bach announced Wednesday that he was pulling general fund support for the proposed Tour of Colorado Springs cycling event in 2012.

The conversation starts at about six minutes into the video.

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Who applied for Oil and Gas Committee? Who got passed over?

January 20th, 2012, 10:40 am by

Thirty-seven people applied to serve on the city’s new Oil and Gas Committee.

Council members Angela Dougan, Val Snider and Brandy Williams, who will serve on the committee, reviewed all the résumés and are recommending the selection of the following seven people:

Randy Case

Jan Handke

Stephen Harris

Chris Mendrop

John Maynard

Michael Martin

Ed McCord

The nominations have to be confirmed by the full City Council.

The city did not include the résumés of those seven individuals. A request for their résumés was referred to Dougan, who is apparently in charge of committee communications. Dougan did not immediately return a call for comment.

The committee, previously called a task force, was commissioned by council President Scott Hente in response to plans by Texas-based Ultra Resources to drill on Banning Lewis Ranch in east Colorado Springs.

Hente gave the committee until May to issue a report. That’s because the council issued a six-month moratorium on oil and gas exploration Nov. 29 to determine whether the city has the right regulations in place.

The committee will meet every Thursday from 8:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. starting Jan. 26. Committee members are expected to attend the weekly meetings on a regular basis, perform research assignments as needed and go on possible field trips, the city said.

Only Dougan, Williams and Snider, who will chair the committee, will have a vote on the final report to council.

Here’s a list of everyone who applied:

Jim Adcox

Val Barrutia

Russell J. “Jeff” Cahill

Randy Case

Gary Casimir

John Crandall

John E. Donovan

Jack Flobeck

Charles Guy

Jan L. Handke

Stephen D. Harris

Scott Harvey

Walter H. Heckelmann

Stephen Hench

Rob Henderson

Bruce Hughes

Michael Humberd

Stacy S. Jensen

Robert Jones

Robert W. Kettle

Liz Klein

R.Terry Krai

Randy Kraeger

Jonathan Macomber

Michael Martin

Mark Masters

John Maynard

Ed McCord

Chris G. Mendrop

Brian Penn

Dick Standaert

Cris Stoddard

John Stokes

Mary J. Talbott

Grady Vaughn

Michael S. Welsh

Lynn Wilkinson

State extends public comment period on applications to drill on Banning Lewis Ranch

January 13th, 2012, 12:46 pm by

The Colorado Oil and Gas Conservation Commission has approved the city’s request to give citizens more time to comment on Ultra Resources’ applications to drill on Banning Lewis Ranch.

The deadline to submit comments is now Jan. 17.

City Attorney Chris Melcher requested the time extension, city spokesman John Leavitt said Friday.

“It was just a matter of trying to give folks a sufficient amount of time to look at everything, consider whether they had any concerns or not, and if they did, they could go ahead and register those comments,” Leavitt said.

“Hopefully that gives them a sufficient amount of time to do it,” he said.

Citizens can leave comments and review Ultra’s applications on the commission’s website www.cogcc.state.co.us by clicking on “permits” and then by searching “pending applications” in El Paso County, the city said.

The City Council, which enacted a six-month moratorium on oil and gas exploration on Nov. 29, has asked the commission to wait to make a decision on Ultra’s two applications until local regulations are in place.

The city recently formed an Oil and Gas Committee to look at regulations for oil and gas exploration in Colorado Springs. The committee is expected to issue a report before the end of the six-month moratorium.

Thursday was the deadline to submit applications to serve on the committee.

Council members Val Snider, who will chair the committee, and Angela Dougan and Brandy Williams will be the only voting members of the committee.

Committee meetings, scheduled every Thursday from 8:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m., are slated to begin Jan. 26.