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HomeMy WebLinkAbout10-24-2013 Board of Library TrusteesQ4 IOWA CITY f! PUBLIC LIBRARY 123 S. Linn St. •Iowa City, IA 52240 -. Susan Craig•r..a 119,5651CV.u. 319d56 XW.www 2pl org BOARD OF TRUSTEES AGENDA S:00 pm - 2"d floor Board Room October 24, 2013 Meredith Rich -Chappell, President Diane Baker Thomas Dean Mark Edwards, Vice President Janet Freeman Thomas Martin Linzee McCray Robin Paetzold, Secretary Jay Semel 1. Call Meeting to Order. 2. Public Discussion. 3. Approval of Minutes. A. Approve Regular Minutes of Library Board of Trustees meeting of September 26, 2013. 4. Unfinished Business. A. Building Project Update. Comment: Status report on the building project. B. Strategic Plan FY16. Comment: A status report on the RFP process for the next strategic plan will be discussed. C. FY15 Budget. Comment: A status report on the budget will be presented. 5. New Business. A. Children's and Teen Technology Resources. Comment: New technology resources for children and teens will be given. 6. Staff Reports. A. Director's Report. B. Departmental Reports: Children's Services, Collection Services, IT. C. Development Office Report. D. Spotlight on the Collection. E. Miscellaneous. 1 7. President's Report. 8. Announcements from Members. A. Report from ILA Conference. 9. Committee Reports. A. Foundation Members. 10. Communications. 11. Quarterly Financial Reports. A. First quarter Receipts and Expenditures. 12. Quarterly Use Reports. A. Three Month Output Measures, Circulation by Type and Format, Circulation by Area and Agency. 13. Disbursements. A. Review MasterCard expenditures for September 2013. B. Approve Disbursements for September 2013. 14. Set Agenda Order for November Meeting. 15. Adjournment. 2 al IOWA CITY PUBLIC LIBRARY Iowa City Public Library Meeting Agendas and Other Significant Events OCTOBER 24, 2013 NOVEMBER 21,2013 DECEMBER 19, 2013 Budget Discussion Policy Review: Policy Review: #101: By -Laws #815: Internet Use Departmental Reports: CH, CLS, IT #809: Conduct #813: Unattended Children Select Strategic Planning Consultant Departmental Reports: AS, CAS Departmental Reports: CH, CLS, IT OTHER: Iowa City Book Festival, OTHER: Legislative Reception,12/3, 10/11-13 5:30-6:30, Meeting Room A ILA Annual Conference,10/16 evening Arts & Crafts Bazaar,12/7 reception OTHER: Book Gala,11/10 Inservice Day, 12/13 JANUARY 23, 2014 FEBRUARY 27, 2014 MARCH 27, 2014 Policy Review: Policy Review: Appoint Committee to Evaluate Director #601: Collection Development #812: Hours of Service Policy Review: Review 2ad Quarter Goals/Statistics Set Hours for Next Fiscal Year #501: Statement of Authority #502: General Personnel Policies 6 month Strategic Planning Update Departmental Reports: CH, CLS, IT #503: Administrative/Confidential Rights & Benefits Departmental Reports: AS, CAS Departmental Reports: AS, CAS OTHER: One Book, Two Book, 1/17-19 APRIL 24, 2014 MAY 22, 2014 JUNE 26, 2014 Appoint Nominating Committee Meet as Members of Friends Foundation Develop Ideas for Board Annual Report Policy Review..- President Appoints to Foundation Board Director Evaluation #702: Library Programs #703: Cable TV Channel Programming Election of Officers Departmental Reports: CH, CLS, IT Departmental Reports: AS, CAS Departmental Reports: CH, CLS, IT JULY 24, 2014 AUGUST 28, 2014 SEPTEMBER 25, 2014 Review Board Annual Report Review Annual Staff Report Budget Discussion Adopt NOBU Budget Departmental Reports: CH, CLS, IT Departmental Reports: AS, CAS Planning Update Departmental Reports: AS, GAS I OTHER: Annual Board Dinner 1013boardsked Agenda Item 3A-1 QI&4 IOWA CITY rvi PUBLIC LIBRARY 123 S. Linn St. • Iowa City, IA 52240 Jw. SYun Cng.w 319356SM-A. 3M3WM9b wwcp1or9 BOARD OF TRUSTEES Minutes of the Regular Meeting DRAFT September 26, 2013 Members Present: Diane Baker, Tom Dean, Janet Freeman, Tom Martin, Linzee McCray, Robin Paetzold, Meredith Rich -Chappell, Jay Semel. Members Absent: Mark Edwards. Staff Present: Terri Byers, Maeve Clark, Susan Craig, Kara Logsden, Anne Mangano, Patty McCarthy, Elyse Miller, Brent Palmer, Vickie Pasicznyuk. Guests Present: Cindra Bombei, UI student. Call Meeting to Order. President Rich -Chappell called the meeting to order at 5:04 pm. Public Discussion. None. Approval of Minutes. The minutes of the regular meeting of the Library Board of Trustees on August 22, 2013 were reviewed. A motion to approve the minutes was made by McCray and seconded by Paetzold. Motion carried 6/0. Freeman in at 5:05. Baker in at 5:06 pm. Unfinished Business. Building Project Update. The eSigns look great and overall the building project is on track. By this time next week it is hoped the screens on the eSigns will have more ICPL specific content. We do not have a delivery date for one section of the glass walls for the teen area yet. Paetzold asked whether we have received comments from the public about the building changes. Craig said that as soon as the kiosks were installed adults and children began asking questions and were quite interested. Rich -Chappell asked if the Children's Room was complete. Craig said their electric sign is up already, it is a static display and provides lots of information about the Children's Room and keeps approximately two days' worth of programming on it. Other work is ongoing. Furniture is scheduled to arrive the week of October 7. Strategic Plan FY16. A draft of an RFP for a planning consultant has been prepared by library staff. It does not yet include language that City Purchasing requires which will be part of the final version. Craig stated the timeline is an important consideration. Craig would like Board suggestions and be ready to send this out by October 10. Martin asked about the RFP process. Agenda Item 3A-2 Craig explained it is considered a public document and is posted on the City website. Craig consults with other larger libraries that have used consultants recently, and networks with others to compile a list of approximately ten potential companies/persons who will also receive the proposal personally. Semel wondered how many proposals would be evaluated. Craig said the library building consultant process had five proposals. Freeman said we present ourselves as a place that knows its numbers and finds this interesting. She wondered if it is required that the company perform data gathering and organizing. Craig said the process can occur both ways but likes having one consultant organize both the process of working toward a new strategic plan and the data gathering step. Craig said we have organized the data gathering in the past, using a different consultant for our community survey. Library staff then organized and created other data collection and analysis. McCray wondered if the consultant will provide other data, like national and future trends, for us to consider, Craig said we rely on sound information from the consultant for the larger perspective, and ourselves because we know our local data better than anyone. Craig borrowed some language for our RFP from the Des Moines Public Library RFP. New Business. FY15 Budget. Firm numbers from the City are not available yet but we do have some preliminary estimates from the City and Craig used these to prepare the budget. There are no costs for permanent or permanent part-time staff included in the document. The City will calculate these numbers for existing staff and put them in. A significant item in the budget is a proposed adjustment in the temporary wage scale which has not been increased for a number of years. Semel asked if Craig got any comparison wage scales from the University of Iowa or other employers. Craig said she spoke with City Parks and Recreation Department, University of Iowa, and Coralville Public Library, and they pay better than we do. Paetzold asked about our overtime expense. Craig explained that staff who work on Sunday can either be paid overtime or get time and a half off. This represents the bulk of our overtime. This is a benefit in our labor agreement. Longevity pay is another bargained benefit like overtime, and it is also provided to Administrative staff. Longevity pay begins after five consecutive years of service and goes to 25 years of service. In a nutshell, the Library has a $6 million budget, and after personnel costs and the cost of the collection we have $1 million to spend on everything else. A motion to approve the budget as submitted was made by Martin and seconded by Dean. Motion carried 8/0. Teen Center Naming Opportunity. A significant donor to Better Building Better Service has requested the new teen area be named for the donor family. McCarthy has met and exceeded by far the original goals for the Better Building, Better Service fundraising project. One of the contributors to the initiative made an inquiry about naming the teen space. Craig said the Board is authorized to name areas within the building, for example the Ellen Buchanan Children's Room. Craig endorses naming the Teen Center. Paetzold is concerned about naming a space in the building which might be stigmatized or perceived as exclusionary and wondered if there is a formal document about price structure for naming parts of the Library. Craig said the original building campaign identified thresholds for naming. Martin asked about the City naming policy and if this request falls within that policy. Craig replied there is no formal Board policy, just past practice. Semel asked if there was due Agenda Item 3A-3 diligence on researching the background of the donor. There was discussion about whether the donor's name was necessary to approve this opportunity. Dean noted that existing procedure has been followed for this request. It was decided that further discussion to develop a formal naming policy be undertaken after this meeting. A motion to accept the naming opportunity presented to the Board was made by Baker and seconded by McCray. Motion carried 8/0. A motion was made by Paetzold and seconded by Freeman for the naming rights policy to be discussed in the near future with Board approved criteria. Motion carried 8/0. Staff Reports. Director's Report. Craig wanted to let Board members know she received correspondence about a program scheduled in Meeting Room A on Sunday. Numerous communications requested the program be cancelled due to the expected content of the meeting. Paetzold asked if Craig had any security concerns about this program. Craig said she told the Iowa City Police about this and made her correspondence available to them. Coincidentally, it is Banned Book Week this week and this is a timely reminder that intellectual freedom is at the core of what we do. We provide the space for that freedom; we do not present the message that happens in the space. Departmental Reports: Adult Services. The new Reference Desk is in place and once the phones are installed, staff will shift, possibly yet this week. There will be another scanning day in October. The first program was quite successful and all slots for the October program were quickly filled. Community & Access Services. No comments. Facilities Services. Craig mentioned one of the reasons this building looks so good is because it is well maintained by the Facilities Services staff who have taken good care of it despite long term understaffing. Development Office Report. Next week you can show your library card to a teller in any MidwestOne Bank and $1 will be donated to the library. State Report. Not quite ready. An email will be sent with the link when it is. Spotlight on the Collection. No comments. Miscellaneous. No comments. President's Report. Iowa Library Association Annual Conference, 10/16-18/2013, Coralville. Reception begins at 6:30 pm at ICPL. Trustees will be greeters at the welcome table in 30 minute shifts. Announcements from Members. Martin said the State Library Director search is ongoing. There was some discussion about hiring a search firm but they decided against this. Thejob description has been completed. Agenda Item 3A-4 Committee Reports. Foundation Members. No report. Communications. Email about Sunday program. Disbursements. The VISA expenditures for August, 2013 were reviewed. A motion to approve the disbursements for August 2013 was made by Martin and seconded by McCray. Motion carried 8/0. Set Agenda Order for October Meeting. Budget information about special accounts and revenues. Naming polity. Adjournment. A motion to adjourn the meeting was made by Baker and seconded by Martin. Motion carried 8/0. Rich -Chappell adjourned the meeting at 6:22 pm. Respectfully submitted, Elyse Miller Agenda Item 66-1 Children's Services Report Prepared for the Iowa City Public Library Board of Trustees, October 24, 2013 meeting By Vickie Pasicznyuk, Children's Services Coordinator Christmas has come early to the Children's Room! With new furniture, computers, toys, and display shelving, we have been celebrating! Our new service desk has a sleek profile that is accessible and welcoming. Light flows through the room, which now feels open and spacious. The kids' computer desks are friendly and fun and the stools for the desks were put to use as soon as they were unpacked. Both colorful and comfortable, they are popular with patrons and staff! Other chairs in the Children's Room have been recovered with bright, cheerful fabrics. On the computer desks, the preschool A.W.E. computers feature educational games, colorful keyboards, and touch screens. The Windows 8 computers for older kids also have touch screens, internet access, and a variety of apps. With 9 computers and 10 !Pads available, the Children's Room is well equipped to meet the technology needs of our kids, all with an educational gaming focus. Technology is not the only way kids can play and learn in the Children's Room. We have brand new matching train and Duplo tables, and kids have been enchanted! These sturdy tables inspire creativity and have plenty of storage to keep the room neat New display shelving will help us merchandise our books in timely anticipation of current interests. Slat wall, similar to those in bookstores, will help feature books by themes. A new "New Books" shelf has room for face -out displays and potential for creative signage. We've integrated the Dr. Seuss books into the picture book and reader collections, and in hopes of boosting circulation, will do the same with the Caldecott collection. The board books will move to those bins, providing the space and opportunity to further develop that collection, one of the highest circulating collections in the library. The renovation has been exciting, with many people working together to make it happen. Foundation staff raised money to fund the project. Collection Services staff have been re -cataloging, weeding, and shifting books. Pages have moved books. IT staff have been installing computers and equipment. Public Relations staff have created new signs galore. Maintenance staff have coordinated much of the project, as well as moving furniture, doing handiwork, and cleaning. And the Children's staff have jumped in to help at every level. The changes are fabulous, but the teamwork that made them happen —priceless! Agenda Item 66-2 Collection Services Department Report Prepared for the October 24, 2013 meeting of the Iowa City Public Library Board of Trustees Anne Mangano, Collection Services Coordinator Changes in Young Adult and Children's Collections The new Koza Family Teen Center and the modifications to the Children's Room are not the only changes made to better serve our patrons. We are making a few small changes to the collections as well. Last month, audiobook titles geared towards teens were pulled from the Fiction on Disc collection and recataloged and relabeled for their new location next to the Young Adult Fiction collection. Now patrons can find both the book and the audiobook in close proximity. In the Children's Room, Collection Services is recataloging and relabeling jSeuss and jCaldecott (collections previously shelved outside of the picture book collection) to interfile these collections with the rest of the picture books. When completed, patrons will find Kitten's First Full Moon with other picture books by Kevin Henkes and Madeline's Rescue with the other Madeline books. The former home of the jSeuss and jCaldecott collections is the perfect place for the board books and we are currently cataloging and relabeling this collection. Board books were not cataloged in the past because of the short life span of these materials. Books used by babies contend with a different type of use, including chewing and drooling, and only last a fraction of the time that other books do. However, publishers, children's authors, and ICPL are focusing on early literacy and there are number of great board books in our collection. Having these titles in our catalog allows patrons to look them up at home, place holds, and easily find them on the shelf. New Zinio Titles There are a few exciting changes to Zinio, our digital magazine service. This month we added forty-five new titles to the collection, including Aperture, Country Gardens, Games, Nylon, Scholastic Parent & Child, Sierra, and Veranda. Patrons have access to 142 titles in our digital magazine collection to download to their devices or computers. However, some may notice a few popular titles missing from our collection. A small number of publishers have dropped out of the service making their magazines no longer available, including Consumer Reports, Harper's Magazine, and Parenting. Although losing these titles is disappointing, patrons now have access to back issues for all the titles we held last year, including those that were dropped. When you click Backissues _ living Jmml'Idx ,addle See4messetelill ]dl+ Martha Stewart Living C..'xb,, ill ;-19 .. expanded v.mayannehpne,sou me,e el Nemead,ouwdmrw o,s.u, enledamnq.'ell a m afusel anm one plate Plus, she speoll Gndenmg Issue, En hisheng lesue. 0ew:a4np Issuedhd HoibaPsaue al.N yours loery., se a suMulOae see., sh.d dpne.IPad Mdroid POP. Ave Peade,a, PIIA. 1dp$. Win B. she PdMe f yG • Y' u�gs i!!4Sk4YLH9y' 4MY,. y l snemwmv on a magazine cover on the Zino page, there is an option to download the current magazine. Below this month's issue, you will find the previous year's issues available for checkout! Agenda Item 66-3 INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY REPORT TO LIBRARY BOARD October, 2013 Brent Palmer, IT Coordinator Finishing Touches As I write, we are in the final sprint to the finish line for the renovation project. We have been fully concentrated on putting in place the new technology for the Children's Room, new Teen Center and refurbished Reference area in time for the ILA reception. Kudos to Don Delp, Jay Beattie and the Facilities team for calmly putting all the pieces into place at the right time. As we finish up that work, the IT team is using the opportunity to initiate a reorganization of our space and much needed purge of old equipment that has built up over the years. Network Changes The library's network is fairly complex for an organization of our size due to redundant access to the Internet for our staff and patrons, a separation between public and internal traffic and WI-FI service on the Ped-Mall, There are several changes on tap that will improve and simplify our network topology. First, the Downtown Association will take over the WI-FI service on the Ped-Mall. Second, the City of Iowa City (which provides us our main connection to the Internet) is getting a new ISP which will provide a substantially larger connection. Finally, we will eliminate one redundant connection to the Internet, Catalog Upgrades This year's strategic plan specifies upgrades to both the web front-end as well as the back -end of our Integrated Library System (ILS). Encore is the name of the web front-end and is supposed to be a fairly routine two-day upgrade. We are particularly excited about this one as it purports to improve the integration of our digital resources with our other physical resources in the public catalog. We had expected to be done with the Encore upgrade by now but our vendor has delayed the release of that update. Sierra is the name of the new back -end system. This migration is a much more elaborate process that stretches over several weeks with overlapping access to both the new and old systems. We have scheduled a slot with the vendor to perform this update sometime in mid to late January. Digital Inclusion and Innovation Surveys Another strategic plan goal calls for the library to participate in the Edge Initiative which, according the website, "is a management and leadership tool that helps library leaders: • Assess current public access technology and how it's used • Identify ways to strengthen or enhance public technology • Engage with key leaders about the value of the public library in strengthening communities" A local Library Science student will be assisting us in participating in this program and another related survey, interpreting the results and coming up with a technology plan based on those outcomes. Agenda Item 6C-1 Development Office Report Prepared for the Iowa City Public Library Board of Trustees October 24, 2013 By Patty McCarthy, Director of Development Book Gala 20131 We look forward to seeing you at Prairie Lights on Sunday, November 10, 2013, for the Book Gala. It is a very special event for donors to the Friends Foundation who will have the opportunity to shop when the store is usually closed. A portion of the evening's sales is donated to the Iowa City Public Library Friends Foundation. Additional information is available on the invitations which were mailed last week. A cash wine bar and light refreshments provided by Friends Foundation Board members will help ensure that all will enjoy this fun evening of shopping and enjoying the company of other library friends while fundraising for the Iowa City Public Library. You are welcome to bring family and friends eager to shop with you to the 2e annual Book Gala! Annual ADueal Letters requesting financial contributions to the Annual Fund of the Friends Foundation will soon be mailed. In addition to the request for support, recent past donors will receive the 2013 Annual Report and Honor Roll of Donors, skillfully designed and created by Christina Davis of the Development Office. A separate mailing will be sent to potential contributors whose names have been shared by Board members and staff. The Friends Foundation Board of Directors has set a goal of raising $175,000 for the Annual Fund this year. That goal will be easily achieved if we all give as generously as we can and continue to encourage friends, colleagues and neighbors to join us in a first-time or increased repeat contribution. Annual Fund donations are used by the library for whatever is most needed. Past needs have focused on growing the collection available through the library. A new focus on expanding children's programs, and strengthening the library's role as the community center for everyone to learn how to improve information literacy skills begins this year. Thank you for your loyal support and for speaking up to encourage others to give. Successful Book Drive The community's response was the most generous ever to this year's used book drive hosted by MidWestOne Bank for the Book End store of the Iowa City Public Library Friends Foundation!! We could literally replace every item in the store with donations received through the book drive. A special section of shelves at the Book End has been set aside to feature the unique high quality donations. The selection changes daily so stop by the store on the second floor of the library soon and often. MidWestOne Bank. ...FOR COMUING HUNDREDS GE GRETTWONS FROM THWUGHOW THE COMMUNITY WRING THEIR 8TH ANNUAL BOOK DRIVE To BENEEITTHE BOOKENDI The Book End relies on volunteer staff. Hours are: Monday -Thursday 10:30 a.m.-7 p.m., Friday 10:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m., Saturday 10:30 a.m.-4 p.m. Agenda Item 613-1 By Melody Dworak, Collections Librarian, Iowa City Public Library melody-dworak@icpl.org Fall football season is in full swing. What better way to pregame the night before than to grab a hot toddy, a Hawkeye Snuggie and curl up with a great read? The Iowa City Public Library has no shortage of books on Hawkeye football, Study up on your history by checking out The Gazette's own "Greatest Moments in Iowa Hawkeyes Football History" (2006) or Michael Maxwell's "The 50 Greatest Plays in Iowa Hawkeyes Football" (2008). You can even set the mood on Game Day by bringing the marching band to your living room. "Go Hawkeyes" (2001) is a CD compilation with songs and sound bites from the Hawkeyes' memorable moments. A fan of the Big Ten in general? "Blood, Sweat, and Cheers" (2007) by Todd Mishler chronicles the great rivalries in Big Ten football, and John Bacon's "Fourth and Long" (2013) breaks into the back story of the positions money and power play in the game. Bacon's investigative journalism took him beyond the locker rooms of Penn State, Ohio State, Michigan, and Northwestern for unprecedented access into what drives this sport. For the pigskin -curious who wonder what all the awesome is about, check out "Slow Getting Up" (2013) by Nate Jackson. As a New York Times review says, Jackson is "that unicorn -like rarity among former football players: He can write." Jackson's book will give you the player's perspective on why risking early onset dementia from repeated head injuries is worth it. Also consider "I Beat the Odds," (2011) by Michael Oher, the player author Michael Lewis featured in "The Blind Side" (2006), Those needing the insanity of the college football chaos explained should read Warren St. John's "Rammer Jammer Yellow Hammer" (2004), which details the fervor surrounding the NCAA's Southeastern Conference. Gridiron lit is another easy entry point into the meaning of football life. "Billy Lynn's Long Halftime Walk" by Ben Fountain is a good place to start. Fountain uses a Thanksgiving Day football halftime show as the setting for war heroes being paraded around on a victory tour, pitting millions of television -watching, unquestioning American eyeballs against the PTSD- suffering insight of the young man who lived through it and is about to go back. "Billy Lynn's Long Halftime Walk" received the 2012 winner of National Book Critics Circle Award for fiction. John Grisham fans will want to check out "Bleachers" (2003), which tells the story of a star player for a high school football team comes back 15 years later to bury his coach, and lay his anger at him to rest as well. Grisham even narrates the audiobook. Lest you think romance is a genre unadulterated by football, think again. Zuri Day's steamy "Love in Play" (2011) pits a confident and curvaceous business woman against her son's commanding football coach —in bed. The tagline? "The only way to win is to get in the game." Get into the reading game this fall by stopping by ICPL on your next trip downtown. You'll win big. Agenda Item 6D-2 Mystery and Suspense Fiction in Translation Jason Paulios, Senior Librarian, Adult Fiction Selector, Iowa City Public Library Mystery and suspense novels in translation, such as those by Henning Mankell, Jo Nesbo, and Stieg Larsson, provide Iowa City Public Library readers with a guide to unfamiliar cities and cultures in foreign Nordic lands. If you've grown tired of following morose detectives through the long winters in fjords and forests, there are a number of publishers printing crime genre translations from other countries. Melville House released Austrian author Wolf Haas' mystery series translated by University of Iowa alum Annie Janusch. "Brenner And God" is the seventh in the series, but first to be translated into English. It opens with ex -detective Simon Brenner now contentedly working as a chauffeur for the young daughter of an up-and-coming construction giant and an abortion clinic doctor. Despite his new lifestyle, he has the world weary personality that comes with a career that regularly dishes out bad news. When the girl is kidnapped, he finds himself drawn back into the life of a detective, this time as an outsider. The hunt finds him investigating shady multinational political dealings, a radical anti -abortion leader, and an alluring hermit from South Tyrol who seems to survive on milk and cigarettes. Brenner's journey is told by a narrator who speaks in an off-the-cuff delivery, occasionally interrupting the plot or influencing the reader. The clipped delivery keeps the story moving and can help demonstrate a character's urgent thoughts, "The text message had something to do with it, guaranteed. Because: emergency." The story moves quickly, the voice is charming, Haas has a good sense of humor, and noir fans will appreciate his playful manipulations of the genre. Europa Editions has curated a World Noir series composed of redesigned classics and new titles. Yishai Sarid's "Limassol," translated from the Hebrew by Barbara Harshav, is a literary espionage story following the life of an Israeli secret service interrogator. Originally hired for his nuanced, sensitive approach to interrogation, he's been in the job too long and succumbed to the more direct "butcher' method: "With pliers, with a white hot blade, hanging by the feet so the secret will fall out of his head." The pressure to find intel about endless suicide bomb attacks has poisoned his worldview and destroyed his relationship with his wife and young son. It comes to a boiling point when he is too violent during a series of interrogations and a detainee dies. His superiors send him on an undercover operation to befriend a dissident writer. The plan is to lure out the son of her friend, a terrorist leader, but as he gets closer to the people involved he finds it difficult to identify with the man he has become. Check out these and other mystery and suspense novels in translation in the Iowa City Public Library fiction collections. IC Library hosts discussion on medical ethics - The Daily Iowan http://www.dailyiowan.com/2013/10/02/Metro/34953.html Agenda Item 5E-1 The Daily Iowan N E W S P A P E R 0 S L I N E IT LEV I S I O N WEDNESDAY. OC OBER 02, 2013 1 HOME METRO SPORTS OPINIONS No HOURS PHOTO VIDEO IC Library hosts discussion on medical ethics BY OI STAFF I OCTOBER 02, 2013 T:09 AY 'r� RR6iENRlt THIS R¢neLP Asa prequel to the descendent family members of Henrietta Lacks speaking at the Iowa City Book Festival on Oct. 9, professors from the University of Iowa Carver College of Medicine spoke at the Iowa City Public Library Tuesday night about the history of medical ethics, as well as issues that still exist today regarding humans being used in research. More than sixty years ago, scientists at Johns Hopkins Hospital took the cells of cervical cancer patient, Lacks, without her consent in order to conduct experiments on them. The few cells that they took went on to change history with their rare ability to divide indefinitely, which made them ideal for scientific research. However, the fact that doctors at the time never got consent from Lacks made her case a central focus in the issue of human consent regarding medical studies. "In planning for the book festival and the Lacks family coming, we decided that we would hold book discussions," said Maeve Clerk, the information -services coordinator for the library. 'But we also thought a broader discussion of medical ethics seemed appropriate, and that's why we held this ,,at." '.. Speakers at the event included Andrew Bertolatus, Executive Director of Human Subjects Office & Associate Professor of Internal Medicine, and Martine Dunnwaid, Research Assistant Professor of Pediatrics -Neonatology. The speakers emphasized the current laws of research on human beings, as well as how the field of medical research on humans developed. "I think it's important for people to understand what regulations govern the ability of scientists to do research on human beings," Bertolatus said. Clark said the program, which drew crowds large enough to nearly overflow the presentation room at the library, provided citizens with a solid background before the main event with the Lacks family next Thursday. '.. "I think that people left with a better understanding of what took place in the pest with human '.. experimentation and medical ethics, as well as an understanding of the legislation that now governs how human experimentation that takes place and how that has changed," Clark said. — by Julia Davis PiW.ty Polley(8115107)1Tehnsof Use(4128/08)1 Content Submksbn Agreement(8/23/Ol) I Co pyrght Compliance Poll (8/25/07) 1 ass Terms of Use COPwght ® 2013 The Daily bwan, All Rghts Reserved. 1 of 1 10/2/2013 5:05 PM Local residents, students'geek out' over banned books I Iowa City Ps.. http://www.press-citizen.com/apps/pbcs,dll/article?AID=2013309270014 Agenda Item 6E-2 Local residents, students 'geek out' over banned books Written by Adam 8 Sullivan Iowa City Press -Citizen Sep. 29 press-citizen.com IF YOU GO • What: Documentary screening, "Far Out Isn't Far Enough."When: 7 p.m. today.Where: Iowa City Public Library, 123 S. Linn St. Many local residents have spent this week reading books that somebody somewhere didn't want people to read. The Iowa City Public Library held a handful of events to mark Banned Books Week, a national observation organized by the American Library Association and other groups. The "Banned Poems That Built America" presentation Thursday extended beyond books, featuring work from poets such as Pablo Neruda, Elizabeth Bishop, Tupac Shakur and Dr. Suess. The events are part of the library's Intellectual Freedom Festival, which concludes today with a screening of the documentary "Far Out Isn't Far Enough," about children's illustrator Tomi Ungerer. "It really fits in with one of our cornerstones in our mission statement: to be a place for intellectual freedom," said Terry Byers, a library employee and member of the Intellectual Freedom Committee. About 25 South East Junior High students showed up after school Tuesday to learn about banned books. Language arts teacher Sara Jones said she's long had an interest in what she calls "challenged books" — writing that has been banned or otherwise restricted. She mentioned a few of her favorites, such as S.E. Hinton's "The Outsiders," Rudolfo Anaya's "Bless Me, Ultima," and Sherman Alexie's "Absolutely True Diary of a Part -Time Indian." Jones said in many cases, books geared toward young adults are challenged because they address sensitive subjects — drugs, racism, abuse — in a real way. "They're often the most honest books. They're the books that don't condescend to students," Jones said. " ... But it happens in the world. You need to know about it. You need to be able to think about it." South East librarians set up a display of books that have been challenged at one time. That's earned attention from students and about half the titles have been checked out in the past week, librarians said. "The idea is that in a democracy, you have freedom of expression and to read what you want and someone else doesn't get to make that decision for you. Someone else doesn't get to oft 9/30/2013 10:16 AM Local residents, students'geek out' over banned books I Iowa City Pr... http://www.press-citizen.com/apps/pbcs.dii/article?AID=2013309270014 Agenda Item 6E-3 say what's OK," librarian Chelsea Sims said. The banned books event at South East was part of the school's new Geek Club. Members will meet every other week to "geek out" over a different subject. Yasar Gobre, a South East seventh -grader, said he hadn't read any of the banned titles the club covered this week, but that they piqued his interest. "I love reading books all the time," said Gobre, 12, "so I think it's a wonderful club." Reach Adam B Sullivan at asullivan@press-citizen.com or 887-5412. 2 of 2 9/30/2013 10:16 AM Our View; Finding the line between personal opinion and censorship ...http;Hwww,press-citizen,com/apps/pbes.dll/article?AID=2013309260015 Agenda Item 6E-4 Our View: Finding the line between personal opinion and censorship Written by Press -Citizen Editorial Board Our View press - Sep. 29 citizen. com To contact us • All letters (up to 250 words) should include the writer's name, address and daytime phone number.- The editor reserves the right to edit for length, clarity, style and content.- Send letters to opinion@press-citizen.com. When you read through the list of books challenged or banned in 2012-13 (www.ila.org/BannedBooks/BBW_2012-2013_Shortlist.pdf), the accounts of book banning in other countries read very differently than the largely unsuccessful challenges to books in U.S. libraries and schools. Take the entry for Norani Othman's "Muslim Women and the Challenges of Islamic Extremism," for example: "Banned by the Malaysian Ministry of Home Affairs (2008) on the grounds that it was 'prejudicial to public order' and that it could confuse Muslims, particularly Muslim women. The Malaysian High Court overturned the ban on January 25, 2010, and on March 14, 2103, the Federal Court threw out the government's appeal to reinstate the ban." Or the entry for Akram Aylisli's "Stone Dreams": "Burned (2013) at various locations around Azerbaijan. The novella is sympathetic to Armenians and recounts Azeri atrocities in the war between Azerbaijan and Armenia twenty years ago. Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev stripped the author of his title of 'People's Writer' and the pension that goes with it. A pro -government political party in Baku, Azerbaijan, announced that it will pay $12,700 to anyone who cuts off the ear of the 75-year-old novelist for portraying Azerbaijanis as savages." Anyone interested in learning how writers from other countries define, endure and thrive despite various types of censorship should consider attending the special event titled "is This Censorship? International Writers Weigh in on the Freedom to Read." Organized as part of Banned Book Week, the discussion begins at 7 p.m. Thursday in the Iowa City Public Library and is scheduled to feature the following participants from this year's International Writing Program: • Burmese poet Zeyar Lynn. • Pakistani novelist Shandana Minhas. • Panamanian performance poet Lili Mendoza. • And Portuguese playwright and multimedia artist Patricia Portela. The discussion is sure to provide multiple (even contradictory) answers to the main question in the title. of 2 9/30/2013 10:10 AM Our View: Finding the line between personal opinion and censorship ...http://www.press-citizen.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=2013309260015 Agenda Item 6E-5 After all, the Committee to Protect Journalists lists Burma as one of the 10 most censorious nations in the world (the other countries on the list include, Eritrea, North Korea, Syria, Iran, Equatorial Guinea, Uzbekistan, Saudi Arabia, Cuba and Belarus). On the other hand, Reporters Without Borders lists Portugal as having more press freedom than the United States. (Portugal ranks No. 28 on the organization's 2013 World Press Freedom Index, while the U.S. is No. 32.) We've regularly encouraged our readers to take advantage of the three dozen or so international writers in our midst each fall as part of the IWP. And tonight's discussion is sure to be a dynamic way to do just that. For a list of other local Banned Book Week activities, visit www.icpl.org/iff, 2 of 2 9/30/2013 10:10 AM Library festival celebrates our freedom to read I Iowa City Press Citi.., http://www.press-citizen.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=2013309180008 Agenda Item 6E-6 Library festival celebrates our freedom to read Written by Maeve Clark Sep. 29 press -citizen. com In 1995, the Iowa City Public Library established the annual Carol Spaziani Intellectual Freedom Festival to honor its namesake's 26-year career at ICPL and lifelong commitment to the freedom of ideas. Intellectual Freedom is a basic human right, defined by Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, and central to a democratic society. Libraries provide information, ideas and resources in a variety of formats, enabling an informed citizenry. Whenever possible, the Intellectual Freedom Festival coincides with Banned Books Week, an annual event celebrating the freedom to read sponsored by the American Library Association, the American Booksellers Association and the American Society of Journalists and Authors among other groups and associations. Banned Books Week brings together the entire book community — librarians, booksellers, publishers, journalists, teachers and readers of all types — in shared support of the freedom to seek and to express ideas, even those some consider unorthodox or unpopular. For more information, go to www.ala.org/bbooks/bannedbooksweek. This year, the library is collaborating with Iowa City/Johnson County Senior Center Reading Aloud, the University of Iowa International Writing Program and the School of Library and Information Science on Freedom Festival programs. Festival highlights include: • Why books are banned: Explore censorship in libraries by participating in the library's interactive first floor display and program. What book at ICPL do you find problematic? What book or film has offended you in plot, character or language? Stop by our Intellectual Freedom Festival table to pick up an "I ban this book because ..." label and place your book on the display. You might be surprised by what you and others would challenge. Writers from the International Writer's Program, library staff and members of the public will gather at 7 p.m. Sept. 26 to discuss what books and films were banned and why. • Banned Poems That Built America — From Whitman to Tupac: Senior Center Reading Aloud. Join the Reading Aloud Group from the center and Iowa City Public Library staff at noon Sept. 26 as they explore the subject of banned poems. • Documentary Film Screening: Far Out Isn't Far Enough — The Tomi Ungerer Story: Tomi Ungerer, along with his contemporary Maurice Sendak, changed the landscape of children's literature in the '50s and '60s with books adored by children and abhorred by adults. By the 1970s, though, Ungerer's works disappeared from bookstores and libraries when he began illustrating books for adults. Jennifer Burek Pierce, associate professor in the UI School of Library and Information Science, will introduce the film with a brief history of censorship and children's literature at 7 p.m. Sept. 27. For more information on the Carol Spaziani Intellectual Freedom Festival and Banned Books week, go to www.icpl.org/iff. I of 2 9/30/2013 10:11 AM Library receives threats about lecture I Iowa City Press Citizen I press..http://www.press-eitizen.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=2013309300022 Agenda Item 6E-7 Library receives threats about lecture Written by Mitchell Schmidt Iowa City Press -Citizen Sep. 29 press-citizen.com Despite an unprecedented number of threatening phone calls to the Iowa City Public Library for Sunday's presentation by the local group People for Justice in Palestine, the presentation by Katie Huerter went on without a hitch. Reflecting on her 2011 visit to Palestine and Israel, Huerter said understanding and sharing the experiences of citizens of both nations requires courage. "There's something about each others' stories, that's where you get that connection and that understanding," Huerter told the crowd of about 40 people at the Iowa City Public Library. "We try to use a lot of facts and statistics and reasoning to make these points, but they're there, we just have to be willing and courageous enough to hear their stories." Huerter and another 23 people with an Interfaith Peace Building Delegation visited Israel and Palestine in July 2011. Recalling her visit, Huerter told the stories of two women — an Israeli and a Palestinian — with very different, yet similar, lives full of fear, oppression and violence. Julia Daugherty, who has been with People for Justice in Palestine since the group formed more than 10 years ago, said the group's main goal is to educate people on the situation that citizens of Palestine face almost every day. "It's a matter of getting people a little more informed on this issue," Daugherty said. "The U.S. is doing something overseas that involves controversy and injustice, we think people should know about it." A few days before Huerter's presentation, officials with the Iowa City Public Library received their own scare when phone calls started coming in with threats and demands that the presentation not take place. Concerned, library officials contacted the Iowa City Police Department and a uniformed officer attended the event. Jason Weeks, facilitator of the event and member of People for Justice in Palestine, addressed the calls before Huerter's speech, something he said he has never witnessed in more than 10 years with the organization. "It turns out that none of these people were here today and we believe that they are Facebook trolls," Weeks said, adding that callers accused Huerter and People for Justice in Palestine of hate speak and propaganda. "I think anybody who sees the program today with an open mind will see that this is completely removed from reality." One of Weeks' biggest concerns was about the threats made to the library. "The library, they should not be harassed for this program, they didn't have anything to do I of 2 9/30/2013 10:12 AM Amazon.com: Sam Garchik:ILA Gun Presentation http://www.amazon.com/gp/registry/wishlist/ref=cm_wl_act_pr... Agenda Item BA-1 n amazon Sam Garchik ILA Gun Presentation This The Hour I First Believed by Welly Lamb (Paperback) Murder Reports 90 Minutes in Heaven: A True Story of Death and Life by Don Piper, Cecil Murphey (Paperback) The Bully Society: School Shootings and the Crisis of Bullying in America's Schools (Intersections: Transdisciplinary Perspectives on Genders and Sezualities) by Jessie Klein (Hardcover) Sandy Hook: A chart of all 137 fatal school shootings since 1980. -Slate Magazine Facing the Real Gun Problem by David Cole I The New York Review of Books Shooting Our Way to Safety by Charles Simic I NYRblog I The New York Review of Books Choice Books to Spark Discussion on Bullying I School Library Journal Hate List by Jennifer Brown (Kindle Edition) Offered by Hachette Book Group. Crash and Burn by Michael Hassan (Kindle Edition) Offered by HarperCollins Publishers. Cain Rose Up by Stephen King free online reading books Forgive Me, Leonard Peacock by Matthew Quick (Hardcover) Rage by Richard Bachman (Mass Market Paperback) Can Columbine Page The Reluctant Journal of Henry K. Larsen by Seem Nielsen (Hardcover) Training To Survive An Active Shooter I Oskaloosa News VICE on HBO Season t: Expanding your world view. Weekly. &Idquo;l See Everything Through This Tmgedy&rdquo; I The Interrupters I FRONTLINE I PBS Murder Reports Doppelgiingers I This American Life Rampage: The Social Roots of School Shootings 1 of 2 10/14/2013 1:57 PM Amazon.com: Sam Garchik:ILA Gun Presentation http://www.amazon.com/gp/registry/wishlist/ref=cm_wl_act_pr... Agenda Item 8A-2 by Katherine S. Newman, Cybele Fox, Wendy Roth (Paperback) Why Kids Kill: Inside the Minds of School Shooters by Peter Langman (Paperback) Elephant: A Film By Gus Van Sant Staring Alex Frost, Eric Deulen, John Robinson (DVD) Bowling for Columbine (Special Edition) Guns by Stephen King, Christian Rummel (Audio CD) Nineteen Minutes: A novel by Jodi Picoult (Mass Market Paperback) She Said Yes: The Unlikely Martyrdom of Casale Bernal) by Misty Barrel (Mass Market Paperback) Rachel's Tears: tgth Anniversary Edition: The Spiritual Journey of Columbine Martyr Rachel Scott by Beth Nimmo, Darrell Scott, Steve Rabey (Paperback) The Better Angels of Our Nature: Why Violence Has Declined by Steven Pinker, Arthur Morey (MP3 CD) To Heaven and Sack: A Doctor's Extraordinary Account of Her Death, Heaven, Angels, and Life Again: A True Story by Mary C. Neal Md (Kindle Edition) Offered by Random House LLC. Heaven is for Real: A Little Boy's Astounding Story of His Trip to Heaven and Back by Todd Burpo, Lynn Vincent (Paperback) On Killing: The Psychological Cost of Learning to Kill In War and Society by Dave Grossman (Paperback) Columbine by Dave Cullen (Paperback) The Next Place by Warren Hanson (Hardcover) 2 of 2 10/14/2013 1:57 PM Agenda Item 11A-1 IOWA CITY PUBLIC LIBRARY RECEIPTS FY14 COMPARED TO FY13 (YEAR TO DATE) 3 MOS 3 MOS % FY14 °% FY13 FY14 CHANGE BUDGET REC'D I. GENERALFUND Fines, Fees, etc. $48,000 $43,233 -9.9% $201,461 21.5% Vending, etc, $718 $626 -12.8% $3,008 20.8% Rent $32,844 $30,604 -6.8% $123,829 24.7% TOTALS $81,562 $74,463 -8.7°% $328,298 22.7% II. ENTERPRISE FUND Photocopies $1,188 $1,016 -14.5% $4,020 25.3% Electronic Printing/Debit Card $3,200 $3,076 -3.9% $12,270 25.1% Counter/Cloth bag/Misc $532 $384 -27.8% $2,512 15.3% Recycle $188 $290 54.0°% $179 161.8% TOTALS $5,108 $4,766 -6.7% $18,981 25.1% III. LOST & DAMAGED $5,288 $4,905 -7.3% $22,000 22.3% IV. STATE FUNDS Open Access / Access Plus $0 $0 0.0% $49,133 0.0% Enrich Iowa $0 $0 0.0% $11,900 0.0% STATE FUND TOTAL $0 $0 0.0% $61,033 0.0% Distribution: One copy each Director, Board Packet, NBk1 g;\data\adtnln°ff\dep=t\Receipts 24 Agenda Item 12A-1 y�i�i I' IIf'i'•. FY14 OUTPUT STATISTICS - QUARTERLY REPORT QS Q2 Q3 Q4 YTD Last YTD %Change IN -BUILDING SERVICES: Provide libraryfacilities, materials, equipment A. BUILDING USAGE Total hours open 861 0 0 0 861 854 0.8% People into the building 188,927 0 0 0 188,927 199,672 -5.4% Average number per hour 219.4 0.0 010 0.0 219.4 234 -6.2% B. MEETING ROOMS Number of non -library meetings 367 0 0 0 367 393 -6.6% Estimated attendance 7,139 0 0 0 7,139 5,411 319% Equipment Set-ups 104 0 0 0 1G4 108 -3.7% Group Study Room Use 1,283 0 0 0 1,283 1,246 3.0% Lobby Use 1 0 0 0 1 3 -66.7% Meeting Roams Booked In House 138 0 0 0 138 196 -7%6% Meeting Rooms Self -Booked on-line 236 0 0 0 236 209 12.9% Meeting Room Turn -Downs 35 0 0 0 35 48 -27.1% C. EQUIPMENT USAGE Photocopies by Public 19,019 0 0 0 19,019 16,696 13.9% Pay for Print Copies 23,023 0 0 0 23,023 21,191 8.6% % Checkouts by Self -Check 68.8% 0.0% D.O% 0.0% 68.8% 63.7% 7.9% D. IN -BUILDING USE OF MATERIALS Ustening/Vlewing Sessions 4,573 0 0 0 4,573 4,787 -4.5% E. PARK'N' READ, RIDE'N' READ Parking stamps issued 3 0 0 0 3 3,758 -99.9% Bus passes distributed 1,874 0 0 0 1,874 1,897 -1.2% LENDING SERVICES: Lend materials forhome, school, and office use A. TOTAL CIRCULATION 381,404 0 0 0 381,404 396,652 -3.8% materials plus equipment; Includes eAudio; does not include items circulated In-house Average circulation per hour 443 0 0 0 443 464 -4.6% B. CIRCULATION BY TYPE OF MATERIAL Includes downloads, does notinclude mending, lost etc. Adult Materials 260,490 0 0 0 260,490 272,948 -4.6% Children's Materials 122,194 0 0 0 122,194 123,829 -1.3% Percent Children's 32.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 32.0% 31.2% 2.6% Non -Print 151,048 0 0 0 151,048 159,006 -5.0% Percent Non -print 39.6% 0.D% 0.0% OD% 39.6% 0.0% 0.0% Equipment loans ISO 0 0 0 150 79 89.9% Downloads 18,6S3 0 0 0 18,651 13,360 39.6% C. CIRCULATION BY RESIDENCE OF USER 381,404 0 0 0 391,404 396,652 -3.8% materials plus equipment includes downloads; does not Include Items circulated in-house IOWA CITY 291,886 0 0 0 291,885 300,796 LOCAL CONTRACTS Hills 835 0 0 0 835 651 28.3% Hills as %of all 0.2% 0.0% 0.0% DA% 0.2% 0.2% 0.0% Johnson County (rural) 27,372 0 0 0 27,372 28,868 -5.2% Johnson Ca as %of all 7.2% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 7.2% 7.3% 0.0% University Heights 4,328 0 0 0 4,328 5.743 -24.6% University Heights as %of all 1.1% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 1.1% 1.4% 0.0% Total Local Contracts 32,535 0 0 0 32,535 35,262 -7.7% Page J Agenda Item 12A-2 FY14 OUTPUT STATISTICS - QUARTERLY REPORT Q3 Q2 Q3 04 YTO Last YTD %Change STATE CONTRACT - Open Access Caralville 24,415 0 0 0 24,415 24,055 1.5% Cedar Rapids 1,846 0 0 0 1,846 3,642 -49391 Other Open Access 30,614 0 0 0 30,614 32,887 -6.9% Total Open Access 56,875 0 0 0 56,875 60,584 -6.1% Open Access as % of all 14.9% 0.0% 0.0% 0.07. 14.9% 15.3% -2.4% D. INTERLIBRARY LIBRARY LOANS Loaned to other libraries 545 0 0 0 545 478 14.0% Percent of requests filled 30.8% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 30.8% 39.7% -22.2% Borrowed from other libraries 628 0 0 0 628 678 -7.4% Percent of requests filled 79.4% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 79.4% 87.5% -9.2% Books/Periodicals/AV borrowed 621 0 0 0 621 676 -8.1% Photocopy borrow requests filled 7 0 0 0 7 2 250.0% E. RESERVES PLA€ED- Materials 33,470 0 0 0 33,470 24,643 35.8% F. DOWNLOADABLE MEDIA ByAreo Iowa City 15,868 0 0 0 15,868 11,823 34.2% Johnson County 2,443 0 0 0 2,443 1,941 25.9% Hills 25 0 0 0 25 156 -84.0% University Heights 315 0 0 0 315 304 3.6% Total 18,651 0 0 0 18,651 14,224 31.1% By Demographic Adult 17,443 0 0 0 17,443 12,903 35.2% Children's 1,208 0 0 0 1,208 1,321 -8.6% Total 18,651 0 0 0 18,651 14,224 31.1% Number of items owned E-Audio items available 4,105 0 0 0 4,105 3,388 21.2% E-Video Items available 7,224 0 0 0 7,224 4,834 49.4% E-Book items available 72 0 0 0 72 73 -1.4% E-Music owned 133 0 0 0 133 126 5.6% E-Magazines owned 98 0 0 0 98 98 0.0% Total Items 11,401 0 0 0 11,401 8,295 37.49. INFORMATION SERVICES: Furnish Information, reader advisory and reference assistance. A. QUESTIONS ANSWERED 20,038 0 0 0 20,038 20,855 -3.9% REFERENCE DESK -TOTAL 5,427 0 0 0 5,427 7,309 -253% In -Person 4,167 0 0 0 4,167 4,972 -162% Telephone 645 0 0 0 645 1,682 -6L7% Community 3 0 0 0 3 2 50.0% At Home 22 0 0 0 22 41 -46.3% Email 553 0 0 0 553 558 -0.9% Chat 37 0 0 0 37 54 -31.5% Text 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0% HELP DESK -TOTAL 1,856 0 0 0 1,856 3,401 -45.4% In -Person 1,703 0 0 0 1,703 2,556 -33.491 Telephone 141 0 0 0 141 580 -75.7% Community 2 0 0 0 2 40 -95.0% At Home 2 0 0 0 2 180 -98.9% E-mail 8 0 0 0 8 45 -82.2% Page 2 Agenda Item 12A-3 EY14 OUTPUT STATISTICS - QUARTERLY REPORT Ql Q2 Q3 Q4 YTD Last YTD %Change CHILDREN'S DESK - TOTAL 6,375 0 0 0 6,375 5,547 14.9% In -Person 6,222 0 0 0 6,222 5,295 17.5% Telephone 96 0 0 0 96 174 -44.8% Email 8 0 0 0 8 12 -33.3% Request to pull books (Community) 49 0 0 0 49 66 -25.9% SWITCHBOARD -TOTAL 1,898 0 0 0 1,898 491 286.6% Reference Questions 1,755 0 0 0 1,755 477 267.9% At Home 143 0 0 0 143 14 921.4% Total Information Questions by Telephone 2,790 0 0 0 2,780 2,927 -5.0% ON -CALL TECH HELP Staff 74 0 0 0 74 0 0.0% Public 89 0 0 0 89 0 0.0% eMedia (subset) 36 0 0 0 36 0 0.0% Meeting Rooms (subset) 9 0 0 0 9 0 0.0% Wireless (subset) 21 0 0 0 21 0 0.0% Tech Help Quest -Total 163 0 0 0 163 0 0.0% DROP -IN TECH HELP In -Person 224 0 0 0 224 254 -11.8% B. ELECTRONIC ACCESS SERVICES IN-HOUSE COMPUTER SERVICES Pharos Internet 27,107 0 0 0 27,107 29,015 -6.6% Wireless Internet (unique connections) 24,211 0 0 0 24,211 28,910 -26.3% Total In -House Computer Use 51,318 0 0 0 51,318 0.0% CATALOG ACCESS Pageviews 964,564 0 0 0 964,564 1,050,484 -8.2% Visits 106,064 0 0 0 106,064 111,855 -5.2% Total Catalog Access 1,070,628 0 0 0 1,070,628 1,162,339 -7.9% ELECTRONIC RESOURCES SERVICES Library Website Remote Access (www and mobile) # Pageviews of Homepage 163,415 0 0 0 163,416 176,169 -7.2% # Pageviews of Entire Site 276,620 0 0 0 276,620 290,492 -4.8% #User Sessions 158,871 0 0 0 158,871 a60,804 -1.2% SUBSCRIPTION DATABASES ACCESSED Total In -House 1,101 0 0 0 1,101 1,678 -34.4% Toni Remote 251,956 0 0 0 251,856 318,564 -20.9% TOTAL 252,957 0 0 0 252,957 320,242 -21.0% CATALOG SERVICES Best Seller Lists 4,820 0 0 0 4,820 4,979 -3.2% New Usts 11,987 0 0 0 11,987 13,367 -10.3% Maps 2,360 0 0 0 2,360 1,516 55.7% C. TOTAL SWITCHBOARD CALLS RECEIVED 6,237 0 0 0 6,217 4,584 36.1% Clic Calls 3,097 0 0 0 3,097 2,998 3.3% Reference Questions 1,755 0 0 0 1,755 477 267.9% At Home 143 0 0 0 143 14 921.4% Meeting Room Booking calls 112 0 0 0 112 30 273.3% Transfer 1,130 0 0 0 1,130 1,065 6.1% PAMPHLETS DISTRIBUTED FROM LOBBY RACKS 8,137 0 0 0 8,137 6,372 27.7% STATE/FEDERAL TAX FORMS DISTRIBUTED - . • . . • • 0 0 0 0.0% ALERTING SERVICES: Promote awareness of the Library and use of Its resources. Number of publications printed 18,827 0 0 0 18,827 32,085 -41.3% Copies printed for public distribution 6,554 0 0 0 6,554 16,984 -61.4% B. NEWSPAPER ITEMS CLIPPED 13 0 0 0 13 7 85.7% C. DISPLAYS 17 0 0 0 17 17 0.09s Library 13 0 0 0 13 it 18.2% Other Groups 4 0 0 0 4 6 -33.3% Off -site locations 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.0% Page 3 Agenda Item 12A-4 FY14 OUTPUT STATISTICS- QUARTERLY REPORT 41 QZ Q3 Q4 YTD Last YTD %Change D. SPEECHES, RADIO/TV/ONLINE APPEARANCES 13 0 0 0 13 8 62.5% E. THE LIBRARY CHANNEL Library Promos on The Library Channel 15 0 0 0 15 73 -79.5% Total ICPL Productions 29 0 0 0 29 27 7.4% Programs Cablecast 2,093 0 0 0 2,093 2,124 -1.5% F. HOMEPAGE/SOCIAL MEDIA News scrollers on Home Page 79 0 0 0 79 39 102.6% Media releases sent 23 0 0 0 23 26 -11.5% Tweets sent 366 0 0 0 366 203 80.3% FacebookEvents' promoted 0 0 0 0 0 42 300.0% Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest followers 6,006 0 0 0 6,006 4,624 29.9% New Facebook, Twitter, and Pinterest followers 381 D 0 0 381 214 78.0% OUTREACH SERVICES: Provide library service to people who connotget to the library building. A. AT HOME SERVICE Packages sent 640 0 0 0 640 797 -19.7% Items Loaned (no renewals) 680 0 0 0 680 789 -13.8% Registered At Home Users 136 0 0 0 136 146 -6.8% New Users Enrolled 4 0 0 0 4 6 -33.3% People served(avg of monthly count) 40 0 0 0 40 44 -8.4% Peopleserved 371 0 0 0 371 304 22.01y. Items loaned (no renewals) 1,341 0 0 0 1;341 1,173 14.3% C. DEPOSIT COLLECTIONS Locations 15 0 0 0 is 16 -6.3% Items loaned 90 0 0 0 90 120 -25.0% Items added to perm collections 2,394 0 0 0 1,394 1,666 -16.3% Remote as Percent of All Items Checked In 13.9% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 13.9% 13.7% 1.5% Does not Include renewals or in-house E. ITEMS RENEWED BY PHONE AUTOMATION 7S0 0 0 0 750 2,675 -72.0% F. HOLDS NOTIFIED USING AUTOMATED PHONE 1,556 0 0 0 1,556 1,297 20,0% GROUP AND COMMUNITY SERVICES: Provide 1@mryserviceW groups, agencies, and organizations In -House Number 55 0 0 0 55 54 1.9% Attendance 602 0 0 0 602 650 -7.4% Outreach Number 8 0 0 0 8 31 -27.3% Attendance 3,136 0 0 0 3,136 6,029 -48.0% B. YOUNG ADULT PROGRAMS In -House Number 48 0 0 0 48 53 -9A% Attendance 478 0 0 0 478 386 23.8% Outreach Number 1 0 0 0 1 1 0.0% Attendance 11 0 0 0 11 5 120.0% C. CHILDREN'S PROGRAMS In -House Number 119 0 0 0 219 120 -0.9% Attendance 7,288 0 0 0 7,288 7,633 -4.5% Outreach Number 47 0 0 0 47 67 -29.9% Attendance 1,087 0 0 0 1,087 1,821 -40.3% Page 4 Agenda Item 12A-5 FY14 OUTPUT STATISTICS -QUARTERLY REPORT Q1 CQ 03 Q4 TO Last YTD %Change D. LIBRARY TOURS AND CLASSES Number 24 0 0 0 24 22 9.1% Attendance 97 0 0 0 97 65 49.2% E. CONSULTING FOR AREA GROUPS 1 0 0 0 1 0 0.0% Maintain library resources through registration of borrowers, overdue mores, training in use of equipment and control of valuable materials A. LIBRARY CARDS ISSUED 2,236 0 0 0 2,236 2,508 -10.8% Iowa City 1,740 0 0 0 1,740 1,947 -10.6% Percent Iowa City 77.8% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 77.8% 77.6% 0.2% LOCAL CONTRACTS Hills 3 0 0 0 3 5 -40,0% Johnson County (rural) 89 0 0 0 89 98 -9.2% University Heights 22 0 0 0 22 18 22.2% STATE CONTRACT - Open Access Coralvllle 133 0 0 0 133 184 -27.7% Cedar Rapids IS 0 0 0 15 24 -37.5% Other Open Access 234 0 0 0 234 232 0.9% Total Open Access 382 0 0 0 382 440 -13.2% Open Access as % of all 17.1% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 17.1% 17.5% -2.6% B. TOTAL REGISTERED BORROWERS 69,608 0 0 0 69,609 72,008 -3.3% #At Home Users Registered 136 0 0 0 136 146 -6.8% Items searched to verify claim of return 118 0 0 0 118 259 -54.4% Page 5 Agenda Item 12A-6 FY14 Circulation by Type & Format 3 Months Category Year Percent LAST Percent Percent to Date of Total YTD of Total Change ADULT MATERIALS General fic/Fic express 29,694 11.4% 30,138 11.0% Mystery 10,635 4.1% 10,224 3.7% 4.0% Science fiction 6,124 2.4% 6,251 2.3% -2.0% Young adultfiction 7,522 2.9% 8,113 3.0% -7.3% Large print 3,133 1.2% 3,321 1.2% -5.7% Books in other languages 588 0.2% 564 0.2% 4.3% TOTAL FICTION 57,696 22.1% 58,611 21.4% -1.6% EXPRESS/Nonfiction 766 0.3% 1,097 0.4% -30.2% Large Print Nonfiction 504 0.2% 416 0.2% 21.2% 000-General/Computers 1,391 0.5% 1,636 0.6% -15.0% 100-Psych/Philosophy 2,806 1.1% 2,820 1.0% -0.5% 200-Religion 2,291 0.9% 2,526 0.9% -9.3% 300-Social Sciences 5,906 2.3% 6,826 2.5% -13.5% 400-Language 679 0.3% 706 0.3% -3.8% 500-Science 2,427 0.9% 2,556 0.9% -5.0% 600- Applied Technology 13,593 5.2% 15,297 5.6% -11.1% 700 - Art & Recreation 18,327 7.0% 22,952 8.4% -20.2% 8D0 - Literature 3,097 1.2% 3,497 1.3% -11.4% 900- History &Travel 5,766 2.2% 6,663 2.4% -13.5% Biography 1,730 0.7% 2,361 0.9% -26.7% TOTAL NF: ADULT & INTERMEDIATE 59,283 22.8% 69,353 25.3% -14.5% Paperbacks 343 0.1% 968 0.4% -64.6% Magazines 2,926 1.1% 3,527 1.3% -17.0% TOTAL MISC 3,269 1.3% 4,495 1.6% -27.3% TOTAL ADULT PRIM 120,248 46.2% 132.459 48.4% Art to go 517 0.2% 479 0.2% 7.9% DVD (Movies/TV) 67,492 25.9% 71,964 26.3% -6.2% EXPRESS/DVD 9,387 3.6% 6,702 2.4% 40.1% N-F DVD 7,394 2.8% 9,573 3.5% -22.8% Fiction on Disc 6,711 2.6% 7,1D4 2.6% -5.5% N-F on CD 3,386 1.3% 3,878 1.4% -12.7% Compact disc (Music) 25,008 9.6% 26,073 9.5% -4.1% Young Adult Video Games 2,726 1.0% 2,613 1.0% 4.3% Adult Multimedia (Language) 8 0.0% 13 0.0% -38,57. Book Club Kits (10 items per kit) 20 0.0% 10 0.0% 100.0% Circulating Equipment(chess/checkers, 150 0.1% 79 0.0% 89.9% video & audio players, camera) Adult E-Audio # Downloads 4,008 1.5% 3,073 1.151. 30.4% Adult E-Book # Downloads 10,593 4.1% 8,271 3.0% 28.1% Adult E-Video # Downloads 2 0.0% 0 0.0% 0.0% Adult E-Magazines 2,115 0.8% 0 010% 0.0% Adult E-Music # Dlds/Local Music Project 128 0.0% 695 0.3% -81.6% Adult Streaming 597 0.2% 864 0.3% -30.9% TOTAL ADULT€ -DOWNLOADS 17,443 6.7% 12,903 4,7% 35.2% TOTAL ADULTCIRCULATION 260,490 100.0% 273,850 100.0% -4.9% Agenda Item 12A-7 FY14 Circulation by Type & Format 3 Months Category Year Percent LAST Percent Percent to Date of Total YiD of Total Change CHILDREN'S MATERIALS Fiction 22,713 18.6% 19,467 15.7% 16.7% Holiday 454 0.4% 474 0.4% -4.2% Paperbacks: chapter books 662 0.5% 716 0.6% -7.5% Picture: Big, Board, Caldecott, Easy 35,552 29.1% 37,082 29.9% -4.1% Readers 12,017 9.8% 11,846 9.6% 1.4% Parent/Teacher Center 389 0.3% 476 0.4% -18.3% Non-fiction & Biography 20,712 17.0% 21,590 17.4% -4.1% Magazines 238 0.2% 339 0.3% -29.8% TOTAL CHILDREN'S PRINT 92,737 75.9% 91,990 74.3% 0.8% Video/DVD 20,810 17.0% 22,823 18.4% -8.8% Books on Disc 1,949 1.6% 2,000 1.6% -2.6% j Compact Disc/400 70 0.1% 61 0.0% 14.8% Read -Along set 1,511 1.2% 1,360 1.1% Children's Music 1,611 1.3% 1,495 1.29K, 7.8% Children's Video Games 1,337 1.1% 1,564 1.3% -14.5% Storytime Kits 114 011% 117 0.1% -2.6% Games & Toys 839 0.7% 1,079 0.9% -22.2% Children's Multimedia (Language) 8 0.0% 19 0.0% -57.9% TOTAL CHILDREN'S NONPRINT 28,249 23.1% 30,518 24.6% -7.4% j E-Audio p Downloads 297 0.29/ 384 0.3% -22.7% j E-Book N Downloads 911 0.7% 937 0.8% -2.9% I E-Video N Downloads 0 0.0% 0 0.0% 0.0% TOTAL CHILDREN'S E-DOWNLOADS 1,208 1.5% 1,321 1.7% -8.6% TOTAL CHILDREN'S 122,194 100,0% 123,829 100-0% -1.3% ALL CIRCULATION BY TYPE/FORMAT All Fiction 80,863 21.1% 79,552 19.7% 2.9% All Non-fiction and Biography 80,384 21.0% 91,419 22.9% -12.1% Picture books & Readers 47,569 12.4% 48,928 12.3% -2.8% Paperbacks 1,005 0.3% 1,684 0.4% -40.3% Magazines 3,164 0.8% 3,866 1.0% -18.2% TOTAL PRINT 212,985 55.6% 224,449 56.3% -5.1% Toys 839 0.2% 1,079 0.3% -22.2% Art 517 0.1% 479 0.1% 7.9% DVD (F, NF, & Express) 105,083 27.4% 111,062 27.9% -5.4% CD (Music) 26,619 6.9% 27,568 6.9% -3.4% Books on CD (F & NF) 12,116 3.2% 13,043 3.3% -7A% Video Games 4,063 1.1% 4,177 1.0% -2.7% Multimedia 16 0.0% 32 0.0% -50.0% Kits: Story and Book Club 1,645 0.4% 1,487 0.4% 10.6% Circulating Equipment 150 0.0% 79 0.0% 89.9% TOTAL NONPRINT 151,048 39.4% 159,006 39.9% TOTAL E-DOWNLOADS 18,651 4.9% 14,224 3.6% 31.1% TOTAL IN-HOUSE/UNDEFINED 624 0.2% 695 0.2% -10.2% TOTAL ADULT MATERIALS (Inc[ e-items) 260,490 68.0% 273,850 68.7% -4.9% GRAND TOTAL 383,308 100.0% 398,374 100.0% -3.79% (Adult + Children's + Undefined) Agenda Item 12A-8 FY14 CIRCULATION BY AREA AND AGENCY YEAR TO LAST P'CENT AREA/AGENCY 1ST Q 2ND Q 3RD Q 4TH Q DATE YTD CHG IOWA CITY General Iowa City Downloads +Streaming Temporary Public schools Private schools Preschool/Daycare Non-profit organizations Business City departments At Home Interlibrary loan Deposit collections/Nursing Homes Jail patrons 271,582 271,582 285,370 -4.8% 15,868 15,868 11,823 34.2% 218 218 241 -9.5% 93 93 69 34.8% 2 2 0 0.0% 564 564 387 45.7% 501 501 1 50000.0% 4 4 13 -69.2% 37 37 41 -9.8% 846 846 975 -13.2% 665 665 552 20.5% 161 161 129 24.8% 1,345 1,345 1,195 12.6°%a TOTAL IOWA CITY 291,886 0 0 0 291,886 300,796 -2.96% LOCAL CONTRACTS Johnson County General 24,902 Downloads 2,443 At Home 27 24,902 26,905 -7.4% 2,443 1,941 25.9% 27 22 22.7% TOTAL JOHNSON COUNTY 27,372 0 0 0 27,372 28,868 -5.2% Hills General 781 Downloads 25 At Home 29 781 471 65.8% 25 156 -84.0% 29 24 20.8% TOTAL HILLS 835 0 0 0 835 651 28.3% University Heights General 4,223 Downloads 105 At Home 0 4,223 5,439 -22.4% 105 304 -65.5% 0 0 0.0% TOTAL UNIVERSITY HEIGHTS 4,328 0 0 0 4,328 5,743 -24.6% UI Dept of Ed/Libr Science UI Dept Institutional 0 UI Dept Student 0 0 4-100.0% 0 0 0.0% Total UI Dept of Ed/Libr Science 0 0 0 0 0 4-100.0% TOTAL LOCAL CONTRACTS 32,535 0 0 0 32,535 35,266 -Z7% Agenda Item 12A-9 FY14 CIRCULATION BY AREA AND AGENCY AREA/AGENCY 1ST Q 2ND Q YEAR TO 3RD Q 4TH Q DATE LAST YTD WCENT CHG STATE CONTRACT Reciprocal/Open Access JOHNSON COUNTY LIBRARIES Coralville 24,415 24,415 24,055 1.5% Lone Tree 513 513 999 -48.6% North Liberty 10,763 10,763 10,669 0.9% Oxford 260 260 304 -14.5% Solon 672 672 933 -28.0% Swisher 22 22 6 266.7% Tiffin 1,128 1,128 909 24.2% ALL OTHER LIBRARIES Adel 12 12 0 0.0% Amana School 200 200 238 -16.0% Ames 22 22 0 0.0% Anamosa 12 12 34 -64.7% Ankeny 0 0 98 -100.0% Atkins 0 0 17 -100.0% Audubon 11 11 0 0.0% Belle Plaine 0 0 1 -100.0% Bettendorf 60 60 62 -3.2% Blairstown 0 0 11 -100.0% Brooklyn 9 9 54 -83.3% Burlington 15 15 120 -87.5% Cedar Falls 92 92 56 64.3% Cedar Rapids 1,946 1,846 3,642 -49.3% Clarence 2 2 5 -50.0% Clear Lake 0 0 2 -100.0% Clinton 65 65 99 -34.3% Columbus Jct 30 30 245 -87.8% Cornell College 480 480 849 -43.5% Creston 0 0 2 -100.0% Dallas Center 5 5 0 0.0% Davenport 20 20 38 -47.4% Decorah 19 19 0 0.0% Des Moines 12 12 23 -47.8% Dubuque 52 52 284 -81.7% Eldon 48 48 0 0.0% Elkader 0 0 68 -100.0% Ely 78 78 54 44.4% Estherville 1 1 6 -83.3% Fairfax 110 110 88 25.0% Fairfield 1,175 1,175 1,108 6.0% Fort Madison 1 1 0 0.0% Grinnell 46 46 36 27.8% Hawkeye 2 2 0 0.0% Hiawatha 144 144 54 166.7% Johnston 8 8 3 166.7% Kalona 2,510 2,510 2,171 15.6% Keokuk 0 0 1 -1000% Keota 35 35 6 483.3% Letts 9 9 0 0.0% Lisbon 43 43 122 -64.8% Lowden 11 11 11 0.0% Agenda Item 12A-10 FY14 CIRCULATION BY AREA AND AGENCY YEAR TO LAST P'CENT AREA/AGENCY 1ST Q 2ND Q 3RD Q 4TH Q DATE YTD CHG Maquoketa 8 8 54 -85.2% Marengo 305 305 343 -11.1% Marion 448 448 1,190 -62.4% Mason City 8 8 2 300.0% Mechanicsville 5 5 55 -90.9% Mediapolis 7 7 0 0.0% Monticello 3 3 66 -95.5% Montrose 9 9 0 0.0% Mount Pleasant 226 226 217 4.1% Muscatine 479 479 569 -15.8% New Hampton 0 0 7 -100.0% Newhall 3 3 16 -81.3% North English 386 386 495 -22.0% Norway 1 1 0 0.0% Olin 1 1 4 -75.0% Ottumwa 21 21 0 0.0% Pella 0 0 3 -100.0% Scott Co (Eldridge) 1 1 4 -75.0% Sigourney 70 70 45 55.6% Sioux City 15 15 0 0.0% South English 74 74 54 37.0% Stanwood 17 17 39 -56.4% Tama 5 5 0 0.0% Tipton 585 585 555 5.4% Urbandale 1 1 1 0.0% Victor 4 4 2 100.0% Vinton 3 3 38 -92.1% Wapello 4 4 25 -84.0% Washington 1,824 1,824 1,780 2.5% Waterloo 46 46 4 1050.0% Wellman 1,233 1,233 1,266 -2.6% West Branch 3,264 3,264 3,315 -1.5% West Des Moines 0 0 551 -100.0% West Liberty 1,765 1,765 1,517 16.3% What Cheer 11 it 0 0.0% Williamsburg 633 633 534 18.5% Wilton 365 365 231 58.0% Winfield 83 83 116 -28.4% Wyoming 4 4 4 0.0% TOTAL RECIP/OPEN ACCESS 56,875 0 0 0 56,875 60,584 -6.1% TOTAL CIRCULATION 381,404 0 0 0 381,296 397,477 -4.1% (Intl E-Downloads, not in-house) Percent Iowa City 76.5% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 76.6% 75.7% 1.2% Percent Hills 0.2% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.2% 0.2% 33,7% Percent Johnson County 7.2% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 7.2% 7.3% -1.2% Percent University Heights 1,1% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 1.1% 1.4% -21.4% Percent UI Dept of Ed/Libr Science 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% -100.0% Percent Reciprocal/Open Access 14.9% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 14.9% 15.2% -2.1% 100.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0% 100.0% 99.8% Agenda Item 13A-1 c Q L � cc) — I UU Q-i 5m OnR fk 4 t Y C O ow- `m W Y C 7 0 Q `I 0 M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M W W lD W LD LD ID LD LD LD lD ID LD W W ID W W W W O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N M O O M M O O O ID 0 0 0 0 M M N O O Il 0 lD O O M '7 V1 N n m N O O cF N cY w O O O w 6 6 o ri n 6 6 6 6 w 6 o ri Ci w n o ao cri 06 M M O N M 0 rl M m 1, 0 N N M m M O N N 0 G1 in i N Y U � L w .N N > > of Q \ a (0 N a� 0 0 E ` •� to o2i OJ U Ltio O O M GI O' ], K of on coh a Ln E N �_ �_ CL U O M u t0 �?� IlCG LL2C Oac v - OO O w t m c M0 " ucOJQ C pa,V N _ cu D O G. 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D K O C C M O C V Ln 2 O D_ 2 w D- m Z Z 0 0 O n m to 0 0 m L U -O v M 0 Agenda Item 136-1 Hro u aq u a N >•1 �w �q, bl W'�U W !HA W W W O m M W •.ql W m Val N m q q W m U U UI a VV z H'O M ri H ,p ,q Fri -.1 •r1 ?Id a 'E H rH o >> itW(] I .4OI aC�j] ve W a a 11 ����1vviiU a H ;4 H a H .y � [Njj a [4 HH a a L W v r>1 w w Ea a X a w 0 sWia qa w H H U V W U U W 'MU OU A a O wH H a W H H a $H £H N N PIq M � P M 10 m Nm 10O d' W NIO m N 10 m O M m O10 d1 d� Nm m M M N M M N Mm mm 10 10 10 mN iG 0 O 0 00 0 0 0 0 O O 0 0l0 00 00 U r-1 r•I �i r-1 ri ri rl ri ri 'i r1 rl ri ri M M MM M M M M M M MM MM N N HH N N N H H N c� m 0w oa C N N 00 00 O N N 0 N N N N O 0 00 NO LK m MO O m 01 0 m0 a S o 0 0 OH Ho a 0 0 0 0 0 O o H CH M M l0 MN C W H H m m O O O O O NN N O O O a lON m m C M O O O O O O O OO O VN W N N O N N N O O N N O N Ill Ill OO O 10N I(1 I!I n O O m M N N N N M M M N H N m In b W m C C H H N N N H H NN W U a 0 Wapa a m 2 w ppa 7Z ..77 a ppw m2z pa z a a ya 2 R ppa 2 >>a 2 >a 2 bpa z a22 ppa pa >s zz &I WH F MH F NHH F H F FH E H H H H E HH HH F U E E m H E E F F E uWi 'OMM M OM M M M MM asM zE >,M yla 1(0,'WW [z� �M ,[?�. F WMM K\K11 FNaI P a WW Nw P My c ov" R OqH O HH O WHH O NH O OH O NH H H H O AHH HI Mw 'rIHO U +'10 U 0100 U WO U a0 U 1 c O O O U aOO 00 N 11 N U ,pN U roNN U •iN U WN U WN N N N U NN NN N W W W q ro b H a M q ao coy r~ a u u u q a rl o e u OF7 0 Id ro w m a F H to N .i (li A� 1 I I 1 I d1 I QI OH '.lo o to n o o M om H a a0 0 N M p Ml Mo Qo 0 0 OM o 0 o N01 aw NN IN IM m m O V No N m MH N M M M M H M m M N H C O sP O M m 71 Q I M I M 1 N 1 dl 1 1 N 1 Ip FD w ON oN Om Ole o Om o w m H %i U O O cc no O Om cc O o t0 UH H ON ON O Omw ON O N O O l0 NN M0 OW Oa HlHm O0 C• N \ 1 w 1 N M 1 O In I O ,H 1 N I N I 1 N cc O O dl o" OH H O no Om N N O on HH O a 0 O H C H cc cc n o o o N H H o m M cc O O 0 O O O O O O N 1 w I w I U U I U I 1 U W 1 OH OH O OH 0 O U O O Ha Ha Haa Hrz H Ha a N F H H Ha H HS w N 0 m 0 Ill o0o ON I11N o N 00 a w owm I m In In In M E.In MMwM MW \ 10 1 1 0 1 I w w l a I I w VI H OH of OH of 000 ow ogg Oo w x Iz-I owpaW7 O N H o H a oz O H �I o[+ oU H aa'' orj H N H2 op o H N of ,'� W r1 N W W ONN H H H 1n N In H H Ina lO In In H E H In as N a I1 z In0 Inym In In mm E W Z2 as ao Of] 0 ou] 0 Om laa owW IQ oW ou a oW X d a oo ww a HZ wH MH N InE MH m w x O oNN mHH UU H a In 1l1 M�yH H N H In MHU1 '�7y� Ina w M -06 MR 09 U w H Nu N'� pp I m I M M I M I M I to N O h I N N m m �1M aY HOVI OC Of�l� Oh ON 0{� N M M omm mm ,W M110 HHO HO HWVI HW HM HV 0 M M H"l mm n H U O I H I N 1 0 o In In In o o O I no cc i H U m O H O H O H H OH OH CH H H H O H H HH \•r1 a NOO 00 000 00 00 00 O O O 000 no > OO O O O O O O i I H H H H H N EzE O a Agenda Item 136-2 N 0 y 11 r a v r'1 to v N u H W H W H W H W H W a w p N 0) Dix rC E RC RC rj R vi ro GJ 00, N 11 JJ W H �C 5 H H H N W a m rU1 ,�'1 m > H > 9 0 w o u w �wW v I I I 1 v q IQ roFo a a a a a U a N N a H H H H H U 'U 0 q H OOH W P'. W W W W £ a u1 m m W R u1 r r r r to Iu H Rrm N r N N N N Iff O W W W W N R N N N N W H 0 MN N m N CG 0 000 O 0 O O 0 O O 0 iWpp1 'i fi ri ri ei N `i ri rl r-I r1 'I p1 U ri ei ri ei ri ri rl ri '1 rl '1 '1 R M M r lU O lD l0 l0 0 M {'yyC' N HHN O N O O o O H 0 m mmm m m m m m m m m � a o00 0 o O o 0 o O o W W O o W W O O O Ot of M m O O O o O o M III M M NOV w m 0 O o M M W W M M N N O O m m R R M M R R O m m m m m m In ul r r W W H H H H H H H N N H H H H 1 1 H H QI ii .y N 'M 0 H rl N w Nwa a ay>s a m a a�pa >a >>a G222 II..�� pa ..77 ..77 .7 ..77 v pa 2 H •C E -HHHH .[2 2 RC NZ ry lTZ r.0 �H 4 oiz a mz N N O E .0 q E4 F 0 NH 11 H F O NH -.1 F O WH E O H H F O WH w F O H N E O iiH F N pp Ix v M -� MMM F 0 jj M M E H QM F N Um F M F N M F 7 0 M F > F v M ��+i [�-iI aWWW �+I 'y NNW R\'I JAW i� V EC'W W W wOCi i� roW V '3,N O 0 0 NW 0 OV 0 Piq+ll 0 V o a o o V 0 0 U On U oU 0 0 U 0 rt0 V N NN U N N ON MN MN U ON U U LCW QO O O R w Q Q 1Ni N W071 aW S4 y 0 M U O 0 O £ W W £ W U a p a a w� F H N m m U m m oNG ,H-1 0 H H M SCE mm OH O O O O O O O O OW H r7 W W 10 H M Of H N H H O O O O N M M NH M m If1 01M NM NM 0u OU M W WH 10H 1IIH NH MH wH 10H w wMN b H W W W W d W W W W W W W v W iO 1 1 I 1r I I I I I F> W o 0 om om ow am w ow o 0 H U OR 0 0o M o0 00 00 00 0 0 U H M OH O R O H O O O O O O — MO ow o to or o or or or or o 0 W Om O N or M Or Or Or or O 0 !{H OM O m 00 O no 00 00 00 O O O O 0 O O O O O O 0 N I I 1 U 1 U I L I V I U 1 H 1 ow O O O 0 O O OU O O H% H HIZ HRC H/.� HRC HR4' H H E+ HO H OH O OO 00 OO OO OO mF III MH WH NH MH MH Mo MLK M NRC M m M M M IIIH MO \ W I U off I Oc90Q I W 00 K 0 1 W 00 1 W 00 I w 00 I W 00 I or, I F OW I.1 0 02?,2 0 W o 0 0 0 00 0 O H HHHH H> O H>, H>I H>I H>I H Hn N o of-IE-I F-I OF £ of of of OF ow oO N MH MI MH MH MH M" WW Mo N ••ai m0 MHHH MW MW WW om MM Mx MF( H (.i O 1 V I a W W 104 W I a 1 ix 1 W 1 W 10 1 10 p H 0 W oaaa oW (ij oW 'J o 0 0 oW OW H P'i !fi Itl$ If1 Inaaa m i MH r7 W Il1 IIIH I(1 M lI1 MH Ifl MH M a MH M M M Pq a\ I Q MH I H H H Inaaa 10 ai Illb I IOP IIIP z II1 ^� I III 1 N{y' H \ N N N N N N N N N 0 W O MMM 1 I(1 N 11(I I III 1 1(1 1 M 1 C 1 N14 �C oW orrR 0R H 0r 0r or 0r Ow OH ,0 WO HM HMMM HW M HW HW HW HW HN HN GBH }IU 10 1 000 l 0 N 1 0 1 0 l 0 1 0 1 N I O OH O .i .i .i O rl H O H O O H O H O H , H 00 0000 00 0 00 00 00 00 00 no 0 0 0 .'0i �0-I r0i r0i 0 r0i ral Agenda Item 1313-3 .0 U U -Li 0 > > al o ro u m p a q q E m q E d d u +1 W m W .N ..i N N c9 a U z m ro ro E -.+ E L pp H a m H H rtDQ w q N--1 H E w a a of W OUW a z a a m m EC r1 ro r1 4 d H H H a s w w ro w roww W a H m m a a °u a -Haa m w m a ro ro a a D a qww R7 H H O "" U U :1 V roUU L1 a (] Ul W cn H H U< H m H H N N Ill O m m IIl o www MMm W C Ol N H m q� O H M �p l0 YI I(1 1[1 1p �O 111 m III Ip N O O O O O O O O O 000 HHH M M M M M M M M M MMM HHH r r O �D ID r W O a Mrr N N N O O N O N O HNN a m m m m m m o m o mmm go 0 0 0 0 o H o H o00 M l0 IO M Ill O O O O O o o O o O O O 000 Ill m M r r o O r O r o O N r M O O oo0 Ill C sM O O N Ill lD O N N O H H r r M M M M M [X C m m ei rl M N Ifl r r M r O Ip 1p H ""N H r H H H H M m N HH N N H N N N 7-1 U ro N .ti U al N U it N m u w m a 0a qa a as aw a �a aaw a v F NH H NH H 41N F trIH H H H H EH H F aH F HHH O U U O r O U O q O ,£ O W O 1 O N E.-H A H H H W F -.a H 5 F -H F U F H WO ~3roiM �+ �M F ,r'I-1M F HM M [-� aM H 'JM M [. >M �r MMM \ H 2 W 2 O FWP z ViH 2 q H IL Na P .+w 0 O 4iO O HH O H O WH " O ❑.+ o1H H O H O Ma000 I HO U MO V NO U O O U 110 iI Ill N U N U NN U 34N N U UN U -riN N U NN U SlNNN O O Nan w°' O 0 U z O U a S U O A M o ro a a H Ne W U W C v N 6 N �C F H m H 0m OH -NO O O O O O o oN Ha f7O O O N W M 1p 0aM Mo y10 H o 0 o HM WN HN HN m NlD N N N A DV NOl N01 M cr d� W d1 ep H CO CO sM W C C tl1 C HVI itO I M M I I I 1 Ill I I 4 OO O O O m U 00 O O m -i U 00 000 Or O Oyu O O O M O UH H omN ON 00 0 Ow 0H d1 O O M — MO oW orS oul o oM oo o MM vv mm O H "H Ma M[] M MH MN M MO1 M N .Iw �iw r11 .'U S O H H .1 H OH OH OO O O O O O Na Na NW N� Fi N N N Nz'zz F H H " F H 3 z H H H N O O O O O am 00 H O ul In In 71 In H 8 M In ul z m H H H M Illz M Mm Ill w M MC9 In rC ,¢,C \ 1 0 10 1 1 w I I I H I a a rL' w off off oqq 00 O�d 0 0m 0000 H of OH orj o H a 0 ON Oaaa o H!j HH HO HU Hn Haaa N 00 0E-1 fy' Oa oz O OQOO In Ill Ills III" rh Ill M" Ill %l M U U U V a Illz Illz MM mm a N� III Ilia Ill i "0 N l a 1 I O I z Wz I NUJ O lO-I Ti NH IIIH IIIp Il1i m IIIW NU ,DWG IIIW -1 i a of m In U In H W In In Q to 1n 2 2 �i am pi I I I I O I I El 1 IHHH i \{y.. 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H 1 0 0 1 o I o 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 i H U M O H O H O H O H H O H O H H O H O H H H •M II'j mot 00 00 00 O Oo 00 O 00 0000 q 0 0 O O o O O O O i QI H H H H H H H H H Agenda Item 136-4 a N N E O Oro-, w 0 o w Ol H H > W 8 mwv ro wmm HN q a14 > bl H ..+ al m 14 3 m 7 w ro H W q 7U H Cqw U q .0 .V W H UI W 0 0 01u H qH LIw N N w ro N W W W SI -u ro-H rox ro 0 SI H W 0 U -1 U to it O ro ro m -H W ro d) N H E w H 3 o W 0 w 0 U a U N W O O w `1 111 q JOI .4 FC FC H Rfi u rov w mww ow w rn V O N W7N a a-iU-Iaa m w q u Www w qww w w N H W U -1 ro ro N-H U NU wrkF H WHH HH H ^{ w M cr N NON m r N N W O M p H M M b HSMH Ifl Nm b M C d� H b rwr M M M M bb W O eN l0 N N Itl l0 I(1 b 1f1 l0 b ow lO ul O O O o 0 o O 0 0 0 O O O O O H H H HHH H HHH H H H H H W U M M M MMM M MMM M-I M M M H H H HHH H HHH H H H H H r b O or0 r Mrr OVA yl b M ry O N NNN N H N N NO O O m m m 000 0 000 Oo o m 0 000 0 000 off H o 0 o O O N N Oom m o OWp M b WO o a0 dl y' 1p 10 r O O O O M Ill q rm H O rMm W r m O w T M M w (p N O O o b H r NM�N m H r W mm O W H H N N N 1!) Yl N b N I -I mmo M m b M M111w10 l!1 r b Ill I(1 C C rl (p r r N H r O M M O H H M N M M N bw b W VI H H .l v w u v uG r+ % P to N W m W N d) rl -A U \ L W H H H apw Nww>a v>wp 010, aps sp>w pw >a aa R q Z >>a Z >a>a>a 2zz w pWp Wzz 04> �2 It w2 RC w Its -'Im �jl H F WH H F HHUH H HHH E WHH F H El F F U H F O E. v O F W O F 7 w O E E 41 O E N 7 O E O E uW N oM M F CMMM M MMM OCd�V' "Hid HH MwM Pj !iWyl C ~ p o WW 0H W H p U.+.+.i sM .i sX dl CI .i ., ., J o UdIW -1-1-1 P 0v o o u.+ O U o O U r0000 o oOo V uoo U Bo V .io U In I o N U SIN N U J-INNN N NNN U UNN U WN U vN V M UN Re °a c Om Rc 11II a a 7 S w U ra W E £U 0 a IT � w pq F M N m H >I sM H p U G! H N b p u Ed r N u I I I+MI I I I AI OH O O N O O O MO H a M y1 yl m N N a N O p M O o M O D U Ill of b b b M Ho H 1 W -1 o O m lop o 0 0 ro H JH U H O I O o b M om -IM OM"w m r w O o O O O O N N N N MM M M O W H OM O m O o O O ro \ H 1p 1 rrr Il) NN I Or 1 N I 1 W VI IT H sM Hvvv H VIW Hbb HV H Nro H H O M N mmmm H MM M N N MH M MU O H H H H H 'I N I z W I w w w IL I N U] I U I U O w W O H O D U U H 'j-,7„$ O O O z O E a N Hw H NRCFC�Q H w F 000 H'(Szj.]7-� NN NRC NH N RC O OSG �bgm VJ HHH O W H$ OO H O(q H O m In W M W W W H E E F Ip £ In H In F In M \ >I M I H w W Inaa.7 HHH q RC IS W� w' W Maa 1 H H M I w Inu ul>>>111 a H 0 o 7-� ff ODUO o Rf 9 000 WWw opp 0OO 00 0 aq 00 oa�y O O H U1 H 0 wCax Hww H>1 Hw' Ho N fA o p 0 H 000 0 of ow oU H M RI Lf1 UUV NUU IIIH m N V OC a Ill >l Ill MHH Illm Mx Mz i QO 02 W 1µ' orb w W Iy�y�y� oUUU www R�ry'R� 1pf of + 1W OW IU oy 10 oW p i HT. W z Ill 1K Ill cL N000 EE'I f'I Mu M Mrj In$ oG� W o {p 1 H W o Ill'G z'L w 7, .'�i'jy HHH MIAW I as MI -I I$$ M I M.T'i n A. f] Mll w Illaaa u uVu MpgW 111 `a In 111M 1 0 1111-j i \ N N N N N p pi r I M M 1 000 O rrr I mm 110 I m NII m V w IC w0 p\ Olp H omm1 r NNN OMM Or am ,m n H 040 w O HW 1 H Ill N HNNN 1 000 Ill O wwo O O o HMM I H H HW 10 HM IN .N-ION O 1 0 i H U H O H H O H H H H HHH O H H O H 0,1 M O H RE o 00 0 0000 o 0 o O 000 00 00 M O O 0 0 0 0 0 00 i H H H H H HH Agenda Item 136-5 mti -eyi 11N E zU W� rt bl 3 Nm v m � U r u' P, 7 mmw lH U z 00 m m P. L H✓11 N H 11 JJ W N m a x ro 0 r 3 -H-H m v u W H W q a a m WqC W Elo o H a N H4 H H [7m4y H N L it YCH CG u = vaa v W 00 v v 17 W m w A a a a.1 W m E E a+ L w E+ ci \ UUU ro H H Nv 0 0 U ❑ H O H H 3 I-7 ❑ as H H H H N rNN m N N rr N In q q rH mbb r W C IO M M M m W dl ww q bb q b bmm0 m b b GE O 00 coo O O O 00 00 O O O U �-I ri ri ei ri .-1 .i rl .i ri fi rl rl W x u m mmm m m m mm m M M M N HHH H H H HrH H N H H o mrr M r r oo b b w w N H NM�m N N N N N N O O O O W q q mm q q o O �S o 0 0 o 0 0 0 O o o 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 O W b b m m O o N o O cc O O b m Ill O b O q m q qqq m m m mb M m m q m m 00 0 o m q dl o N Ill W W rrr m m m m b r r m m Wl� w C b b g W m r r m m m rH H io to m b b m m mr b to m m q q r H H H N N b H H Cq C d1 N H r M m ri H H W u 7 H N m m rH W a ro U m o a q ap v a'a ya pw .7 a pa .� a H HHH F E 7H E �HH F H H H ^F E— F �-ml E U pF E H mH q pH H H E m E N E a' 6m mmmm HM 0m m mm vm m m m W F 22H 3 2Ez N E a �y-I +�+ �z-I q a Nwwdl P Wa P H Nm�N P -.ia p mww P al a� c a el P 0 bIH o aHHH o mH o o YIf.H o .��+ 0 1JHei o vH ti rH H o U Ci0 U 000 U \O U w mH0 U -Ho U Hoc U Oo O O O U U Q -MN U rt .4NNN U R HN u Q m >, N mw U AN U Q ONN U Q NN N N N U Q b i H v °u z o a" ya q N a o a °a w a o No u UR N H H \ In m ro � q $m I Im I AI I Io O m OH o ON O -HO 0 0 o � HO m NC C po O l0 Cm r O r m O m 0 do O H m v N aW N m m HN HN N mr OU W VI b Nm Nm m MN \ O H VI C N m <M w o w o W sM W r 'I O 1 1 N O I 1 M I m I 1 b HD W o o mb D OH OH o o q r H%i, U O O r-im O 00 00 O O N M U H H O O m m O cm O O r O m MO OOHO Mm O OW 0 fl'i Or, o O m O \ IN I NN I IW Im Imr-1 VI NH N W v N O H O H O H N O W q HH mw m mM M OI.7 O❑ omm o H O O H H H O O O O N I W I 1 W 1 W I W I I co O 00 OH o ff o O O N Nzzz N Wr] VO dIUU 04 H rHm HOOO rHm H H HIP 'H3 OW oHHH OW 0 0 O ,a 00 0 III" MPHP I H m m q OH U M mo III FC Ic V rq N Ill I(1 fC FC III \ .0 I ,Pi a' 10 1 O I O 133 I W E p o,.a 0000 op OH OH 000 o0 H H H O o0 H$ o a H a o0 of OE 0HH O N O O O O O H O z Hry' 0 z Hµ1 O z H O m m ,-I?I OE. H N % mr) tttW MUUU m q MN N mz m Illz Wm III rZm mH ,i ❑O IE Immm IE 10 10 la ,G O H o If1 Q orj rj rj 1(1 [� �1 [-1 o If1 om M H om OH o$z Ill o O OCai.] m> a H a H m ((�� ,i M OS W WW a\ III D IOI N� I(1 %� "rT °,Zj IHHH YfUUU MO IOI NIj 1(1 (� ff. Ill Ifl I q 1(1 U U Imm mWW w H I'y IIl6 ❑ W �' a .21 H $ N N D 1 q r r r 1 q O I W 1 W 1 N m I m H q H N M Py O m O N N N O m p 0 W O W O N N O r m m m \N O Hb Hbbb rib ei o Ho Hqm HC b M Ill MH DHu Io Io0o Io oIH I Ioo Io o H H HH U off oHHH OH IIIoH off oHH 0H H H H o0 0000 0o moO 0o coo 00 0 O o 0 0 0 o oo o o 0 ,i H H rH ri rH H H H Agenda Item 13B-6 F' a a 0 N pq U mH W 0 N F S M £ m m A H 0 E. 4 -4 A W H q rl A m v 0 H H -1 0 0 F 0 H 0 W m H a 1 b a w W roq III H H W H U 0 H U H E 0 -H W .`I U i-1 W 9 a L �H -Id W 0 W Ix It III IdX A OSH H-. m a'HA U am m H a q 0 0 0mew vro .,I H a t�F0 o q a ro a W q H q q W w H O O H a a 0 W O H > 4 H H m W u m RC W 10 OFFu HW In u a HF H 0 E F 00WFFF H H El F F mH m q H H 0OHHH m m RPm uH H H 3 3 W H 0.H 3 3 H W > a Y L a a WFUaaa a a a a wa w q a a 0 Waaa w W raga a s ou 0 0 u U oa HUUU 0 0 o U U W H m U H H E x U H H H U] w Uu m H N H H NW r m m N b H OON H NW N eX b "VvWmm sNCWbbb N O M Mw m W b m W NW r W b N bbb b m M m M W b m MMWWWW b m m M b m 0m O O O O 0 O O OInom O O O O O O O O 0 00b O O O O 0 O O H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H M M IIH bw 00 mo O H O O NIX) m� rr 0 O o r o m I N O a} o H IUV 0000 00 m H H 000 a F E �aama o w m IIf H N Inn orr H W W 100 O H H O O O H M M M H H H M o r H N N m m m 0 0 0 O O O O 0 O O O O O M O o o M In O O 10 rl H O O M U1 O M M H H M M M M M M M H H H H H H H <x 000rrr O ry N N N N N o mmmmmm H O O O O O O o bmobmo O m m O m m 0 O InOrCOm m m m 1 N m I l0 N H I 0 LL1 HeiHHHH 1I1 000000 W O O O O O O I I I I I I 00 Ob NrWbHmoN om MMW O N b b b H H H IN HHHNNN O01 ON 000000 O O vU Hz NH �Ti f11 wlWA IA f�m171 wN o �rria'aia'ni O H aaaaaa o xxxxxx mW wwwwww o [>ry UUUUUU 0 H H H H H H MM NNNNWa I q NNNNNN mU 000000 N I ri b1010bb10 o m w w w w w w H O b b b b b b O 000000 OH 00 000000 H M M M M M H H H H H b M o o V o H N N O m m mmo O O O O H O O O O O 1O O m In O O 7100 r r o o O WMM H r O In m Hrr H H b N m N N N H H W H ro H H H E xHHH O 0 11 F+ F W M M .puMMM Eg. Ww P a 0rj E'waw U U $ N N U MINN y' yl rj U N 0 m }y' � r o In H W m H I O 1 o W o H v D N Hm I H > MIN 7-i M v I H v I O O m H O O Ormb O O M m m O O r r N 0 ONW01 O ogWW O O 1 U 1 m No z �E7[�Hr [7H IN 00 OC�1W G1 $H MH .2r In MM > 1 V4 fy$HA o LQ09 WH I1 W ui one N N 1 In N 1 r1 H H or In ommm H C N H O O D I O H O O O O H H O H H H 0 0 O 0 0 0 0 O O H H M M M H H H N O N m o m O H O O O N M m o w o M m O O l0 m N m r w b m r In M M r m yl O H H dl t11 H H M �1001001L-, O O F F M M M F O Agenda Item 136-7 r1e U a a U a w m tp m am N z 2 > > b A m o %1 a 04 1 I o I H ^^^��� [••I a a m 04 ri H £ W P P P4 V U M a 0 O O W w a W H H N N M Ill r r OI r N C d� d1 O r N N H N M H C C H H N N N N W W b b N N N 0 m b b O O O O O U H H H H H H H H H H W r r m Io m Io Io m r Lr�L N N O O o O O O N 0 C m m m m m m m m m o 0 0 o H m m M M a In m o o O 0 M M M M m 0 O O o N N r r N N C O O O W N N d� cN Yl O O O O m m M M M r O O H H O O W m O O M M v O N N N O O N N M M H H w 1Il Ill a C N N [N C m W N N m m O N N m w w -H U H H w W N H bl 7 w w w H w H w U 6 H a 2 FG >s 7z 4 �z 2 4 u>s Paz w mz 4 PaZ 4 wm �Z ..]] 4 w 002 4' 0Z 4 wH E mH E 'HH H F H F wH E NH E H E U d O F C H O O m pp 'H O H O N O pp L N O +.l O P: mM M El 0 HM M E+ w UM F H (i1M H 0 M E 7 OM E E H m y wM E 0 -HM E a H wmw H >. H zb H `w -H E 0 a my E. IM E. Hm o ro W H E � w 0 uqo HH o wH H o OH wH o H 0 o r. CIH 0 o HH 0 o 0 l 1aH o wH o -MHO u 'HO u ro0 o v Wo u wo u -Ho u. o u M O U ro0 u ?I N U AN U -HN N U N U UN U 1N U ON U M NHN V -HN U w wW 4 m N 4 w 11 4 w m 4 -H W 4 0 -H 4 w m 4 o H ww UA 4 m 1.1 4 W -H H pi H W H .H -H A 7 °u a o o a 2: 0 wa a �0 H o 4 m O F H, Um qq OH 0 0 0 0 -rio 0 H.4 ao 0 W MO H N O O m O H Ww HN In OlM NM N Il1 OU NM NM NM W �H MH IIIH MH WI bH M d1 H vo •M o W o C o o om oW om Om o 0 H co n00 0 ow oO o0 00 00 0 0 UH H ON O(� OW O O O O O 0H — MO Ow O? Otll 1(1 M Or Or Oyu Or 0111 OIO \I✓ 1W 1 IO W 1. Ir 1b 1' 1N I M OH OHH OH H Or 0r ON Or HO HN HH Oa on OH m Oo 00 00 00 m0 O O O 6 O p O O � MMW !`I'1 N I W 1 W 1 1 U I U I U I U U OH OH Oa' O O o O OH O o Ina Ina ulw In4 ul4 N4 m4 Ills M F H H H H3 H3 H3 HI< H 0,7 0 0 o0 00 00 00 04 0 M4 M MO Ill" MH OH MH Ifl In M Illz Ill Ina M M M Ill Ill i+ In \ 1 O I O 1 W I rL 1 W 1 a 1 a 1 E I VI OH ON O U OO oO OO 00 Oy 00 H off OF opp z o o O o op oz O H4 H4 H,T� H HN HN HO HH N oz In oz In o Ifl E '%� OE H H WH 0E. off Ill H op In MH oV In o N pi Illz W',J.� N H Nw M ulm M III UI H MW Ill �Jy Ill MH ii0 10 Io 1 a 104 IP: Ia Ia o 1x b 0 H ow InH om IIIH OW 1(Ya a ow Ifl> ow In> ow Vl> O MIll$ ow oa ei Pi In Ill Nm a IllH MH MH Ill M N Ma M W a\ 1 In 1 In 10 NP'. H a Illy IfIQ mp W� Ill l-� Na H \[H N N N N N N N N N o pE 0 1 m I m 1 01 M 1 I(1 l In I Ill 1 In 1 1 M NH P7.� 4 HHO O0 oo r or or or or m m or wO HHO HO M H0 HHO HM Mw Yl r'I 71 U O 1 '1 1 r-1 1 O 10 O 1 O 10 1 O I O .0 1 O .0 010 O 1 O 1 O Ii r'I u Illo0 Or O0 H OH O0 O0 Ill O0 Ofl \M 4 00 00 O 00 o 00 00 00 00 II100 00 0 000 0o a o 0 0 0 o co 0 H HH H H H H H H HH H Agenda Item 136-8 WH W N Hq H q N ro Ua U q q N qC q m N M O H M U Ol •.i •.i N H H � N 7 H 7 H m W OU W Q 0 aw V 3 H � m w4 w u 00 roro m a W a O Ww W �a%1 a O w ° W a 0 rou ro x7 u 0 u 0 q H W aH a OO N m H u r b MI(1 M ul ul ul b M ul N O Nb N rr b O H H b H N W N HH vl 0 Itl l(1 b b Ilf !G O 0 00 0 0 00 O 0 O O ei ri ri rl e-1 'i ri ri ri .i ri [WU� V E'1 M M MM M MM M M M M O b 0 b bb a b N o N O 0 00 O 00 O O N N 0.' m mo m 01 o al m m o 0 0 off o 0 o H o 0 0 0 O a NM r .1 O O H Ow b lD 01 M M M O O O 0 O O M W N . 0 C 0 0" MM r r OI M dl v N O O O Ill U1 r r 0 m 0 0 M M M 01 a;r O III I(1 H In N r M o O m N rl m m M v1 In w In 0 M c r W N N qa ma as a as as wa a a a° m�Z �Z � E vR� N F NH HH E NH E F H'r1HH p 0 O O O 'O v O W O N O O m O +.I Pi Itl M E > W M M M HI U .'J M F P H S1 -r1-.1 M M H 0 O M F > 0 M E F m N ZJIM M E q -'1 a \ N A F Z W E 2 'U 0 2 H In .0 N U a F 2 N Id z M 2 N In U p U'.a H a r1H row mm D Nay D0 cc P Id. GP v� P a,mm v OH 0 (7N HH aH 0 1 yHH O rlH O qH O O -rlH H O Ul 10 U IQO cc o U III 'fio o U r O V ro O U M J O 0 U 'd HN U N NN U NN V III W+iNN U ON V N U Ill HN N VH W cC T) 4 N RC O OM Q U n'i 'O Q O ow Q N tl O a H U N m O H IJ > +1 a a �o i a O UN o o y� cu C u m O A um r H N HH o a A'H r m m Ww u1 OH O OsN O HO O Op •M a1 O Ha III bN r rr aw N bN alll sN N MH N MN H M MH O H DR m O1N O OlO IA OI O1N I(1 III U dI b N bN W 10 b MQl sN H W H W T sN dI d� H dI 71 O I m I I I I I I o I HD W OM 0 0 0 0 o Oo 0 H V OH 0 0 o O O Ob o UH H OH O N O O 00 O OH 0 RIO 001 O 01 O O 001 O ON b O I O r I dl H O H dI H N N p N OI O W 01 1!I'1 of rl Ill 1!I 1I1'i III NO rl t(1 0 O M M M M M M M M N 1 H I U V I U I I U 1 I H N I oa o O o 0 0 off RC o o II1 qIi a a I(1 fV' III MH Ill F H>+ H H $8 H HC� H HS H HU H 0 m oW 00 HH 00 00 MH O OR 0[[xx77 o O M M111 o M Ill Ill N IIIH MIII o M Wm Ill W M \ IO I Wa IW I IW IE IW U I VI oU 0Vl 00 op OU 00 ou! olY, rc o o o O O"H 0 O 0Iji O >I >I a N In 00 Mo HH H" n>I OHi OHH oFE Ill,'HH OH off NH O❑ o0 Illy 0>1 a H '� o 0 �I ••Pi III Ilia MN U1 Ul IIIW MM 1I1HH III UI 1(I [l+ I11H MH If1 M 0 I z 1 [k 104 10404 1 a 1 I u WW 1 G O N'Ty off 1(1a oW u1 W "✓ o oaa ON ON i W Ifl III HH Ill MH M Naa M> MH III III 1I1 RI'i 1I1$ [HrI E-I 1Il W> 1 1 I 1 HH 1 2 I 1 O H N n a \ v1 W In RB a� P Ill r'� B In a a ul �7 IIl x Ill H a I() •1 \ HI N N N N N N N ry 7 1b IN IrIINra O1HIfl11l VAi�J P OO O1101r11 OO11 0OH11 OHO1I O H" HN HNIllHo1I M U >IIU}i N 10 0 10 0,0M 0M 0HM 0WMN 0 H O H- OO11rI1 •N'ANG•II 00 00 O0 0c 0oo 00 00 0O 0WNM O O O O 00 O 00 O � H N H HH H H HH H Agenda Item 13B-9 r M IS M fl 0 9 0 u -H-H-H-H-N-H-H-H-H-H-.1-H a bl Wro W Id rororoldrorororororo 0 -H > Rl w q W W WNW WNNNN WN.%1 .rot .%1ti a m -+ w aaaaaaaaaaaarorororo O W W >I L U IU U z H H H H H H 1,1 H H H H H H }I H H ro H H NdlN d)d)dINWd)NNN Wdl Ndl 'O -ri r1 N tl V w Y w V ✓ 11 a1 al i> ✓ H0 �? 4 a W u �I 0 Id Id rorororororomrororororororororo M H 111 U U V U H H H H H H H H }1 a p� rororororororororomro ro V W dla roa a a a a a a w a a m HHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH AA A AA A AA A AA AA A AA w -HU U V U H H `H-H -H -H -H -H -H p aH H H H a p 1414-H-H-H aa14 a0aaAaa9aaaaaa r v tU III M N N fO IO IO W lO IO 1p I111f1 I(1 III N lfl Y1 N N mH M C W W C y1 yl yl dl dl ylWhrhhrHHHH hm q1 W m a v� o000000MMMMMWWWW mW W W W W W 0000000000000000 �L o0 0 0 0 0 0 0000000000000000 U rl .-I N .i .i U U MM M M M M M MMMMMmMMMMMM MYhMM HH H H H e-1 H HHHHHHHHHHHHriHHH op h cx w r h NO N O O N N 00000WWMMMMMoOoo OOOOOOOHHHHHNNNN O 01 O o 0 ga H OH O ri r{ O 0 O 00001mmmmmOl000coo O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O O MID III III N N <N W M M O r r N N 0000000000000000 IIIM . C C m m C yl Ilf 1(I M 0 0 M II1 II1111 If101lI IOo 0 oltlo0o mo 0 ON W W H H W W r h h m III M M . . . . . . . . . . . . . . NdIW TCd TlOmmhe-ICmOC mM ri H m m H H W W M r h dI C N MWM HlnmNmNMN d� III W M M W W o H H N N dl a1 U N M H � > SI a w ro n ro m C U aw aaa a a aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa m awa tia y H H H C H H E p H F 0FFWqH H F N a M M r-I M M O M U M M M JJ M M M M M M M M M m M M M M M M N •H �z+ W ZE N Fz m -.>1 LI mw Ez, >. zF n1 £al al w�a p me Ida p Sl P tiw P �nwwwwwwwwacaa.ra HH O H U 0H 0 O O d/qH 0 -HH O �+ri e-100N000000000H0 00 U WO U -Ha U -1H iWN U U)HO U -HO4N U }i0000000000000000 N N U N U J! N V M U m N U A N U ro N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N �r a C a a u m a o w a m a 5 -.�i .ol A u a a Ha o a a O w o ° ao u° H WWmWmel min of lllhm H71 tD IFl O11I1r IOWMrMdl ri Up1 O\Itfh Nr7M MhMWNN ro Omm01NNN001010M H M M W M W W W r h h m m $ m I 1 1 A l I I W W WCdIW WCsM dIW SF a" o O O -H 0 o O m m m m m m m m W m W m H a 0\ H N a o O r N N N N N N N N N N N N O O M M O N O O O O O O O O O O O O RIM N N 01 N INNNNNNNNNNNN OU CI I11 lO NM O1 NOI MI tll Mror H O O W h h M N O I I I 1 1 M I M 1 N N W O1 O H> w o 0 0 off OH 0 HWWM H '7z. V O am O 00 00 O MMMM UH H 4111 ON ON 0d1 ON Dryry O vvv`W — MO 01M OM 00 OH Ow 0(.1'I o mmmm \ mrl 1 M I III I M I a 1 UJ 1 NNNN VI ri N OIN OlM 01 dI OH a, O anon ,IH mm 'PH OH mH Oa on 0 NNNN O M M M 0 0 O N IH I I V U U U U U U U U U U U u u V u U O a m OH OH o o Wo M. Ina Wa Wa Wuuuuuuuuuuvuuuou E H£ .-I r.G H3 .-1 H _Izzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz N PQ N aH 0 o N rl r7 N H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H M m Inw m Inz mz m a ai as a a a a a a al a al a s as al \ 1 E�1d I 1 0 1 0 10000000000000 oa H zz aL 0£ 0 00 aE+ of Ip�10� OrN NNia1 >I >I i+il it ilWil 71 >+>I a H H H Wz H H H a H a T'la a a a a a a a a a a a a a a a N FH a HH 2H NZ Ifl offer' NH NM Oz �z NFFFFFEEHFFHEEHFE N I"1 Q 0 1994 Oz 1 Ina 1 1 a In'7+ 1 O W%I I Q MIb 000 YWW 0� IA Ib W 14 IA W QJ I O as O ojd o Om oW naaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa W .+ H a as ME-mU m mH IllW mH NH Ill mH Inqg N r]u7 \ as N � cvw Waaiwa� mi3IMm Na N N N" N I W I In m aim m 1 0101010101 O1 OI QI 0101 O\ 6101 OI O1 O\ N N p' h r O N o N O r W O dI O C .0000000000000000 \m O MM -IM HI-1 Hp HHO HO HIIIW IIIWmminmm1n 111N Nm mltl m rl U 0 0 I N 1 0 1 0 O 1 -1 I H 10000000000000000 'III U HH OH OH OH MOH off OHHHHHHHHHHHHH.IHH \-H a 00 00 0 0 O O moo o 0 0 00000000000000000 O O O O 00 0 O H H H H HH '1 H Agenda Item 136-10 P U 0 R a UM H 0 OH Ha al w OU NO HD UH O A g0 U a aw aaQlaal -H-H-H H-Hwwww -.+ H w u \\ \\\\\ Id 0 ro ro ro\\\\ Id ro NN mvmmmmmm aaa""MMvv ql am -HH m 0 HHH Hr HHH rororodlroromro dl d1 dl dl d1 Hr aaaaa mro 0 a dIH am H dl wo l] -H H HH S+}+3-IHH HH-H-H 1+HN YI Haa LIP !I -Hi }aH RD C µ' W d1 dlN dl d)d)d) 4)Nd1 W vww 001 W dl d) OI mId W YYYYYYYY YYYYYHHrCYY Y YY r Y F q Id Id M ££££££ £££££�S££ £ ££ q9 q y Morro lro rH� P��'^P��v'(ro 0 0 M M M m rdN rw�� w H H H H H H H H H H H H H X UX fG A.Q AAAAAA AAAAA WWAA A AA O 00 w 0 •H-H-H-H-H-H-H-H - 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U aHJ J-� UURIW 1 v LZ UUw OHHHHH"H-H Q 00-H-H -H M-H -H -H -H HH -H-HH w aaaa aaa 7. ❑Oaaa Coz as a Waaa Waa wmbtp wmm b VVNNN mM NN v MHvv WWN N m m m m m 0 0 v r r r r r v v m m r vmwwwwvv O avvvv OM MM v r'Ivrr HHr I(11f M M M m t w It1 1(11(1 m b N M W l0 10 V1 v11111(1 vl Ill w N 00000000 O 00000 00 00 0 0000 000 HHHHHHH H H HHH' H Hei HH H HHHH HHH M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M MM M M M M M M M M HHH�HHHH H HHrH H HH HH H HHHH HrH MOOOOO� b MMrrr WO rr M mM00 WWO HNNNNNNN O HHNNN ON NN H OHNN OON 01MMMM0 Mm m MMmmm MM MM M MMMM MMM 00000000 0 00000 00 00 0 0000 000 MMMMWWQw m y m m mO.H'HW M M MN m wM m m 0000 O 000 m r O W M mrim . m N m m M O M W m . . . M M v m M m m m m O N N N N m O m mlD r W V O M m r M M . . O O M M V 0 0 .. . m N .. H Mr r m . . . . M V N N r . . . r H r MmloMmmHM M H MWMMM 0 O MM r NN M m MrMw H MMW N v N V mH HN m m M H N M M 'H N aaaaaaaa �a as wa a aaaa aaa oaaaaa On Momn E E N F 0 M M M M M M M M U M H M M M M M M M MM M M M M M M M M E 2 C rovvvvv �EyH y vvvvvvvv P vv v vvav vvv 0 0 0 —H O H H O lHH H H H 0 0 00000000 0 0 0 0 U o 0 U 0 0 0 0 OOOOOO V 0 0 0 Ooo Oo O 000 0000 O ce 000 NNN"NNao N NNNNNNN u r❑gINNNNN Ua -HHNN NN N NNNN NNNN NNN XN � O O w A W 00 H M Mw MM M H NH H r MM MN M �p 00 l0 r Mr v0 m M om M N Mm mH m r HM r H mm rm M � v � rHo I v N rr rr M O m O V H O m H V V r r r M N r m V O N m r r m m 00 O H H H O 00 rN r rN HH r r n m o vi Mm vl ne rNr Hmm w I M Mm b MMOei MH O 0 wmv O N NN M M M V V N M H O O V M N O N v m NW m N m r H V M H a 0 H O M 0 M M N NN m m m V H v N M O 0 M v M 0 m N r MM r vmmrrmm I vvv N mm rr m M M M M M M M O O N v V O O ww r rrrrrr O O .HHH O N ww rr ri O 0 0 H H H H H H H l U i i U U X X pp »»pp O 0 O 00 aaaaaaaa NU N NUU 00 UUVV w w w W w w w w N z N N z z w w a a a a MMMMMMMM OH 0 OHH QO aaaa uuu Maa HH HHH >H bl>1>- N>. yI SH Imna i0 um, iUZU l00 as s ` ` �EJ ZUU H H H H H pq [�aaa[S5G'' w w w w M W w W N a H N a a wa�d wsw a E 00 M M w www 0 0 P .H7aaaaaaa NE NWW�7jjW NEE Oo gQQQ www mOM mHHHHppH MWM EE EH WWWW ££ xxx rggggrdd 0000 WW WW 00 000 00 MzzzµX` Mp�7 MpMM MM aaa4 OzzzzW rtrl�G EJU Q WEJU 'byµ' H HHHHHHH mPi m00000 mpq [4 WW z aaaa tK N N N IOMO 'M 1 mmmmm i mm mm HHHH 000 ,IwwwwMMM M M M M M M M M 00 O OlO m m HH V v M M M M m m m MWM0MMMM H m eI O H00� M M H mlll 0 M m 0 0 m m m 00000000 O H H H H H H H H H H H 10 0 00 O 0 0 0 0 0 0 000 H HHHHHH H OH O H H H H H O H H HH H HHHH H H H 00000000 00 000000 000 00 O Coco 000 O O O H H H Agenda Item 1313-15 1, 0 a M 0 H N Q0 NM \F GCPq E) U 14 El U w WI/1 N N N w w MMMMM O m �.7 ar-]H rIH rW� m QQQQQrom0 a Q 7 o MMWmmmaa iH H ['. HHN H-H-NA H a mmmmrnrnQQwmrom CCCCCCH b ww w 10 bro wFwFamI N ✓au F ri NHHEwwwmmw amIYm U Q-V a a W UUUUUQEFX U£xEE wo a A ❑ aU YINNN U V zsUN a a 04 P4>N>1 Yr uouou0 ° 11 Oo Oo oW -M-�A -M-Eri •M-A iV iM ro No NmtlmNNwCW wo 'SWd w oaroa m w w.roi�t AroSi Aro aaA.ro a5A sa ° >qaaaa >f »> aH 414 rrbbbbbbbbl0 �o lob w w H rrrrrbbbbblab a wrrrrrHHHNgima WM o o m avawarHHHdI VFW ooMMMM MIObI�bMMM mr w m In 00000MbbbMMM I( IIf11lIl(tlttl( Ill I(Irllb b b b N I(IU11I b b n o O O O O O O O O O O O O O O o n O O O 0 O 0 O 0 0 O O O O O O O O O O O O 0 0 0 0 H H H H H H H H H H H N H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H MMMMMMMMMMMMMM MM M M M MMt"IM i"IM MMMMMM H H H H N H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H N H H H H b IOMMMMMOOOOrrr MO M M r 40 bIO lO IOM000rrr O OHHI-Ir-I .iNNNNNNN N OOOOOe-INNNNNN m mmmmmrnmmmmmmm MM M M m m mmmmmmmmmmmm 0000000000000o no 0 0 0 000000000000 O m ri l(Im NfINm01l10 MNrdI ei Ml O O O M O mblObrmeMN rl dl Nlll o m mbmMMbMMmNNulrr a mM M o o m r �-Imulw in lorbMclmm b N OMIllO Mrm'-1M ooMmr r(f 'i Yl r Ill O C N O�Ommy�r lllCmtllo er m M ONNHorrmNmMOMH N HN b N C b Mmm HNC mInMHm H r M N H HHN VI M HNN r C M N H H wawaaaaaaaaaaa aw a a w aaawaaaaaaaw EO H H N H H H N N H H H H H H H H H H H H H E. M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M H M M M M M M M M N M M M O U aamwwael dlm.na mm� ac a a a rowwccca�rawawm O V H H H H H H N H N H H H H H r0000000000000o H H Oo H 0 H 0 N o o U a H H H H H H N H H H H H 000000000000 UQ N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N UQ O N N N N N N N N N N N N � £ i 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 r M M 000000 Illb OOHMN r rl r- MMm NI H WWMNVX M Ommbbo r r V N N N m N O O b m V H r M OOMM"VM H m m MdHMON I MMWHMMV N O O I MMONll M ONNHNNNN H nmoHHHH m n EEEE"EE WEEENEEE r r yI o00000o el I lllbNmomm M HrWoOOO I ONO O w OO m Nm oMvw Mww M O MHblmm M ov1mNwO O wMo OOI NmrObbb NwMOON NNNMMNN N H I N N N M M M O N N N N N N N H H N O N N N N N N o £££££££ m a o £E££££ O o I U U U V U U U V U U U U U U I U U U U U U U V U U U U 0 0 NUUUU4UVUUUUUU UU VE;ZU 'U NZZ NNjUz ZUZUzUzVzUz OHHHHHHHHHHHHHH H NU2?U HH HHHHH 1 N M a a a a a a a a a a a a a a E ��-1I In a a a a a a a a a a a a 10000 000000000 oaal.�I.� aaaaa aarraa ww w N 2 18000000SO000 o DI YI Y+YI NNYIN YI�NYI� N QQ Q Q QQ Q QQ Q Q Q Q Q WwWp F O a oNN�YI YI YI YINNNYI N EH EHHFHEFENFFE+ QQ FF £ W NQQQQQQQ q,'Q'Q'Q Q' �EEHFEEEEEFFF EL W IN W In .Gtjl((Iaws�N77�1I(a.�S E E a E w In W W �M [4 ��O ((`�sW77 WW [^�[...GN�� [�[...tty77l [a�xt'71i C�4�'11 {tuW7 �,ya]WYgayR SwwW ul. �WgayPN�/•C P� 0A ,[.Y�yiAM, I(1[i�ky�7 `WWI tGPN�F I[gCWwW{A Q Q Nrr��RG i2 rG FG 0.'iC r� IMMMM N O]lOw Clw 0.110 a0 [O ££ w F x f0l CommIA MPO N N m m m m m m m m m m m m m m b b r m I m m m m m m m m m m m m 00000000000000o wm m m H H 0000000000000 H Il1 Yl I11111 Ifl 1(5 VI Ifl I(I Il1N tl1 Ifl m I111(1 C C ul H m Ill11111 10 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 O O N N N 0 0 0 0 00 0 0 0 00 0 0 0 00 0 0 0 1000000000000 0 H 000000000000000 00 0H 0H 0H 0000000000000 o O H H N Agenda Item 136-16 Io AA A UU u HIS b1 c mmm OO 0 ww w w Ulm 00 w N w 0 m roro metromawm mw wet roromm w ro -H �': F O -H -H v r-H o"H-H giH HHH D H-H-H -H :> -H-H I>-H a p:H HPi aH ��HH a Q aro rororo ro roro IdwwW row wv vW w 'Fi HHH H OO HHOHFHt1 HF HJ� OO�.Iy F O 0 H 000 U U U 0 U 00 -H -H 0000 ro U U-H U £ o m £y. Comm 0 E+ WWW W i1v WW o 0 may££ M PS Ca M aauwrr� w>I 5�31 a a 000 0 .0i.Ui as 00ao m 0 m -u -UiNH as W III -.U1 a u WWv v WW W H W H PH FFrSww M rororo a OO roro WOMM4 rop! wA OOAA an O a °° 00aaaz>» > zz >a Na zz HHVI M HW �WWWbb VO bet WbMw o b wwb O1 NN bM m0 VV-1.-1 M O HHV H NN OOMMwwM vlh bV OObb M MMM M ww MMMMMwb MM MW WIMM n w m !G 000 O 00 0000000 00 00 0000 O O ei H H H N " H -1 H '1 W i3 M M M M M M M M M M M M M MITI M M M M M M M M HHH H HH HHHHHHr-1 HH HH HHHH H H wwm b bb wwmmoor MID or bboo o M o O H O 00 O O H H N N N -IN NN O O N N N H m m m M MCI M M M M M M M m m MIA M m m M M m Coo 0 00 0000000 00 00 Coco 0 0 S b m1� N O V l M N Mml vwHm H met m H bet W VI mWMN b M M b m m b O w Ow M w H M m m N m C MM M M M V C V b M m b M In MMM M M H Mm H -ImVIMNW� WW m M [mob C W [ MMN M V M O N N M M NM w N H H O H H M N VH M b NW M M M O N H O M M H H 1` H H IN b N N N H N H N Q q a>a apa aps MN A>, I p1aaa a as M a 'ya 7+2 pa z w ja ya ro22 pa pa pa paa 22222 zz w E'zZ a rri -'Htl2222 7. FH H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H HHH H H H O > 0 0 O �d El ElN El F a M M M M M M M M M M M M M MM M M MMM M M M a El ['��+ H O OG Cd�d� H H H d H O l "d� U r H CCd�WCsNd H H H H H H H Wd� H H i� O WCC £ H H i� O LVVCV U HHH H W H V H 000 O U -HOO 0000000 CC U oo U -H0000 0 0 >1 NNN N u aNN NNNNNNN NN 00 '+HNN UU aNNNN N N KC u z E z U 4 O F N MI,I 0000 N H H MHWMVM N M M H H M w b H M b H m u m Iq NNN cN WW MM1>0 N Ob H HCN O HH wVIWN N b Ii'H OON w mW cMOMM N M� NNN P 100 MOtVM I V" �? OH 0H HHH d' O H�Hy H H O mw OWN H17 MmM (NI m NIMi1W EEEE N NOO aW I>wM hNN OU I Nb H 0 N 000 �I Y10 1 Ht>N H I w NM M F W O M N M M O H H o M H M H U O W N M H O" H O MO UH H O Omw VI OHH 0 VM tM+l MID O M M O N O H M O W W V I NNM N Irw I NN N V+ O N N N H O M M O 00 H H o £E£ m 01�1> O NN M ID OI O N U U U U U U U U U O H H I UUU U O U NOM4: UUUUUUU N�a'P; NUVUU F Ia NSS3 'zzzzzzz NWw NZZ 24 Z 0 N O O H H H H H H H M M HHH H N n M V1 M aaa 9W V4 P4 MNj1 Maaa Pi m H www aaa x o o Iwa 000 O o0000 0 %1 00a0 oo �' ww as 1 P; o a Ioo 0 o?I O 4144 w N:H 'i1 4 4 < 4 4ri 4c 4 44 N w w N FC 4C 4C 4( a .0 H H 0 N FEE off HFFFFFF FF oHH oHHFE F N -e6 FFF V4 WIMM 'M W Q1[YQ�1 Ww FF Ma£a�?'Saaa�! IMn F pF i 9 AOQ rj I[pt�sG kJqKq QQa4 Np AA Mz E9 pw7 ��x1714wtw MtY�'64 �G� q 'z HH ££ M,H Inn i \ Lx PIw9P3M plw ££ NHH Nw99M £ F > [V'7.I IOWIO H I MM mMmmmMm b10 bw 1 Mmmm lP W V H �Cy7 i> sM a�<I M ot`t` OOOOCOO VV 'MM 00000 W O M M M w H V�V� M M M M M M M M w H w m H MMM M M H n H >I U 000 O I 00 0000000 00 I O O .0000 0 H i H U H H H H O H H H H H H H H H H H O H H O HHH H H H Coo 0 000 0000000 00 000 00000 0 0 > 0 0 0 i H H H Agenda Item 13B-17 U u FC a DI 0 F ri 0 H OH Hr7 aW OU H UH z O H F a Fi a U W Q W 0 a rIN W N NN OI ro HH U U UU v a w N ww W ro NN N N �-i r111 b£ U H Sa µH' E H H H N w £ w ww SI o� w U x" aaar��r a za" u a Hp I%1 -rOi -.Oi 0 14 C� q 0 q q 3 A m d! W -.i x W -•1 -.1-.1 -.i O.H 7 7 O H H H H H H H H oa ££ N a s as a as a tl� N 'd N H W b N N M N N yl N W M O O I(1 CC N 111 N m W rh M N N H ow 111 v1 lD M N MM N MN ul 00 O O O O O 00 O 00 O HH H 1-1 ei H H HH H HH H M M M M M MM H H H H H HH M M h o M o0 H H N N ei NN m a m m m mm 0 0 0 0 0 00 H O O 0 N h hH 0 0 0 0 0 O h W H M O O O M H W m0 C O O O C m NN O a a w Ea a as N IRj� I E ro M M M HM M MM E IN O a 0 o 0 a U \0 0 0 00 N N N U4 N NN 9N a a as '. . Q di W dl H H H 0 00 N N N N H ro H N N a a a a a �a q ��7C W jj pp jj p H z H H E aM WM M M M M E. H W Md P aw W W C •ll H q a o .-I iT C M m N M lD m YI b I(1 m h O o m O N N O m M M m N N 01 01 T mm 0\ I H H m 1 M 0 O 1 N O Ol Ol I O I N r N N O O Oyu O N M O OH 'y O O N I(1 h r 00 C I(1 M Ri r O N H N M N o h r h h o r hN h h a a h wo w a a o � a oe MM o 0 o .7 Oh ylm o 0 0 m 0 01 O 0 1 I W rl 1 5N W I O 00 bb o 0 O 0 0 0 0 0 oU O HH j oam 0 O o z off m zPZF a.7 F 22 Na No FFy! ,UU uFiW�j N 7. 10 a�k'I 0 PEP NF 14 U O H 44Ta H OHH N F� O fA Oil NFy W W NW H UU HH Op�j NM 00 NH H W o N C] H - of N H 1.7 '7w ,7� N 40 (A {4 OH M Q O MN }� 5 H F NHH 1 a s (Yi o F N z M. O O N N arm as w I W[[] m O I An N W C7 z Oa as OZ OW P W H uaa utW W I '�'� w Q '� k U u E m to I KKK N z WW F F w w W E. Ww C7 Q nH N1.7 l nE NH m M d H z�y N00 N (j' F 14 3 u1W H as Fri WW 0 In£ 1 NW W M a a W 14 o £ N N N N 1 m m r m W 1 m b 4I1 m P O O I� 1 r r O b M O b b O1 OI rl .0 M sN dl N m m O r O M d� 1(1 b r H O O C N H m v1 Itl N Ill d yl H O ei W N Ill N dl 1 HH N N N 1 0 O 00 O N" I H 1 0 O O H N OHH H H H OH H HH H HH OH OH H H H H 000 O O O 00 O 00 0 00 00 00 O O O O O O O O H H H H Agenda Item 138-18