TOWN COMMISSION REGULAR MEETING MINUTES TUESDAY, AUGUST 27, 2024 OAKLAND MEETING HALL 7:00 P.M. CALLTOORDER: This meeting was held in-person and livestreamed as a Zoom webinar. Mayor Taylor called the regular meeting to order at 7:00 p.m. This was followed by the Pledge of Allegiance and Invocation by Marilyn Mack. ROLLCALL COMMISSIONERS PRESENT: Commissioner McMullen Commissioner Polland Vice Mayor Satterfield Mayor Taylor Commissioner Ramos COMMISSIONERS ABSENT: PRESENTATIONS: Proclamation - West Orange Healthy Selfie Day - September 20, 2024 Mayor Taylor read the West Orange Healthy Selfie Day Proclamation announcing September 20, 2024, as West Orange Healthy Selfie Day. On behalf of Healthy West Orange, Krista Carter received the proclamation and took a selfie with the Town Commission. Proclamation - National Preparedness Month = September Mayor Taylor read the National Preparedness Month Proclamation announcing September as National Preparedness Month. Proclamation - Labor Day = September 2, 2024 Mayor Taylor read the Labor Day Proclamation announcing September 2, 2024, as Labor Day. Proclamation - Hispanic Heritage Month - September 15- October 15, 2024 Mayor Taylor read the Hispanic Heritage Month Proclamation announcing September 15- October 15, 2024, as Hispanic Heritage Month. Presentation - Oakland Nature Preserve (ONP)Annual Update ONP Managing Director Jennifer Hunt provide the 2023-2024 FY update on Oakland Nature Preserve activities. Please see attached presentation for more details. Highlights of the presentation included the following: Visitors Changed to online visitor registration Estimated 30k-40k No exact numbers available Innovative Montessori Ocoee 4-6 grades Each student visits 4 times 873 student days Oakland Avenue Charter School K-5 All classes visit - 499 students Homeschool Series (expanded) Age 6-16 285 student days Additional Fieldtrips = 456 students 6weeks - 144 campers Filled to capacity Visits from: School eldtrips/Homescnoo Classes - over 2000 students came to ONP this year Summer Camps Bat Conservancy Avian Reconditioning Center Orange County History Center Beekeepers And many more! Participated in HWO Splash Challenge Other Programs Florida Master Naturalist Program - through the University of Florida Adult Certification Program 32 Scouts badge work Firefly hikes Blue Hikes 3000+ over several nights Thank you to OPD for traffic assistance! 54 participants /61 hikes Story Time at the Preserve 100+ children & adults 2 Events Nature Fest Est. 1000 38 vendors / partners Pumpkin Glow Jack-o-lantern Trail 2n nights /1 1675 visitors Oakland Heritage Festival Pours at the Preserve 132 tickets sold 189 individuals and 14 groups Elementary through senior adults 8E Eagle Scout projects 1000+ native plants and trees planted East side prescribed burn Now shifting into a 3-year burn rotation ONP's Facebook page: Volunteers 6000+ hours Assisted with restoration, events, animal care, data entry, Museum Docents; Eco Interpreters, project construction Scouts Restoration Social Media 10,095 followers, increase of 11% Average page visits per month are 325 Average page check-ins per month are 12 Page has maintained its 4.7/5-star rating ONP's Instagram page: 3411 followers Average number of accounts engaged is 1725 per month Have requested funding assistance from Orange County EPD Projects Briley Farm Outdoor Education Space Youth Climate Project 20k in scholarship funds to local HS students Funded by local foundation, administered by ONP Students completed research and created a 3-5-minute video 5p public school students, 1 homeschool students 6scholarship recipients This was the final year of the project Upcoming Events Nature Fest at ONP Celebrating ONP's 25th Anniversary! September 21st 10-2 Sponsorships being accepted 3 Pumpkin Glow October 25th 5:30-9 9:30 Sponsored by HWO C Oakland Heritage Festival Managing Director Transition January 25th,2025- Speer Park Final week last week of September following Nature Fest Nicole O'Brien - Incoming Director Loss of space due to school fencing Challenges Hope to locate funding for the cleanup and creation of an outdoor education space on Briley Farm property Event Parking Town Commission discussion was as follows: Mayor Taylor thanked Jennifer and Nicole and said we really appreciate them. Mayor Taylor said he has always said the nature preserve for 25 years has been the gem in town that people forget, and it is just right down the street. He said every time you go there, there is always something new and different to do which makes you want Commissioner McMullen said that the last presentation that was given focusing on the Oakland Nature Preserve's Environmental Stewardship Award to the Florida League of Cities was a great presentation. He said that when he got to the Florida League of Cities Conference, one of the first people he sat next to in one of the meetings was a commissioner from Mount Dora and they looked at his name and saw where he was from and mentioned the Oakland Nature Preserve. He was impressed and will be reaching out. Commissioner McMullen said that when Jennifer thanks him for supporting them, it is easy to support when we have been SO blessed and SO lucky to have Jennifer and all the volunteers to put together a product. He said all he is doing is just showing off what we have here as a jewel of the town. Commissioner McMullen wants to thank Jennifer and then of course, we got the award, and everybody was talking to them about it. He said that he wanted Jennifer to know the Florida League of Cities, even the staff, are very proud of what we have Commissioner Polland said thank you to Jennifer. He said the Oakland Nature Preserve has come a long way in the last seven years. Commissioner Polland said it might not seem like it, but under Jennifer everything has gotten a lot more organized. He said we have made a lot of progress on a lot of things, and it is all because of Vice Mayor Satterfield in the very beginning, they were building this boardwalk and they said we are going to go all the way down to the lake with it and he said no, no we are not, we will never make down that far. He said they were maybe like a quarter of the way down and he was working with Jack Hayman. Jack said, "Mike get down to go back. here in our town. Jennifer. 4 there and I'm going to hand you this beam." " Vice Mayor Satterfield said he looked at Jack and said, "There is not a way in the world I'm going to get down in that swamp. I'm the above ground guy." He said Jack looked at him and pushed him over the edge and he just went down. Vice Mayor Satterfield said he must have been the second person to walk on water, he just popped right up. He said Jack must have laughed for twenty minutes and he will never forget that experience. Vice Mayor Satterfield thanked Jennifer and said good luck to her. PUBLIC FORUM: Public comments were as follows: Sarah Maier, 402 E. Vick Avenue - Sarah brought a visual aid that she passed out, please see attached. Sarah said she was here a few months ago expressing some concerns about speeding drivers on the road she lives on, which is a dirt road. She said iti is one of the yellow highlighted roads on the visual aid she passed out and she had requested to work with the town to get some more signs put up about slow down, children playing. Sarah said she invited the Police Department to come out and use her side yard as a place to sit and catch people speeding. She said she doesn't know what, if anything, has come of that request that she had a few months ago. Sarah said she doesn't see any new signs and she doesn't know if the Police Department has ticketed anyone but about a week and a half ago, her husband was almost run over in the street in front of her home SO she is back again to ask if they could work together to come up with a plan. She said there are a lot of cut throughs going through there, especially on Vick Avenue, it is a direct connection between Oakland Park and Tubb Street. Sarah said in speaking with the police officers that came to her house about a week and a half ago when she reported the incident, it was brought to their attention that there is no posted speed limit on those yellow highlighted dirt roads anywhere. She said there are some around the area which she labeled on her visual aid, they are about twenty-five or twenty miles an hour and those are on paved roads which have two travel lanes. Sarah said: some of them have sidewalks, some of them have curbs, but they are a lot bigger than the dirt roads she lives on. She said they were told that if it is not posted and it is a local residential road that the law says it is twenty miles an hour. Sarah said that is way too fast for that road or for any of those roads in there and then furthermore, they cannot ticket or fine anyone for going up to five miles an hour over that speed limit sO they could potentially go twenty-five miles an hour down their road without being pulled over and given a ticket. She said that is extremely dangerous for anyone who lives around there SO her request would be to have a ten mile per hour posted speed limit at the three intersections where the pavement this the dirt and that is it, the two ends of Vick and the southern end of Vandermeer at the West Orange Trail. Sarah said that way, you have some flexibility to go up to fifteen miles an hour without getting pulled over and getting a ticket. She said the reason that she thinks ten miles an hour is appropriate is because iti is a dirt road, it is narrow, and there are no sidewalks. Sarah said kids, including her own, run around on bikes with fishing pole and soccer balls, 5 there are pets that roam around and then on top of that, if they are going slow enough, the dust would actually be less. She said she knows that a big complaint that some people have about the dirt roads is the amount of dust and dirt that gets kicked out from speeders and then on top of that she said they just like the quaint, quiet neighborhood atmosphere that the dirt roads give them SO that would be her justification for the ten miles per hours. Sarah said that she has suggested some signage down at the bottom of her visual aid that talks about local traffic only or no cut throughs, slow down kids and pets at play and then you could even do a historic looking sign that would maybe fit with the character of Oakland, which is the green slow down, these roads are our sidewalks, which is true for our area. Sarah said that she knows that we have a vision zero plan that was done for the roads in Oakland and it was very thorough and well done but it does not address dirt roads at all. She said she did not read every word of it, but it did focus more on the major thoroughfares where there is significant statistical data for incidents, SO she understands. Sarah said she feels it could be up to the town on how to handle the situation and she doesn't mind speed bumps, she said she doesn't want to speak for her neighbors, and they are not here representing themselves, but that is why she would love to have another chance to meet with the people who make the decisions, have a conversation, she what we could come up with and work together. She said she has concerns every time her kids go out playing SO she just wants to put that back on the front of everyone's minds and then additionally, there are dump trucks that go up and down Starr Street she is assuming to Oakland Park that have just blown through the three-way stop at Vick Avenue and Starr Street right in front of her and her kids walk through there, everybody walks their dogs down Starr sO that isj just another concern. Sarah said that if she had the tie and wasn't on her way to work, she would have tried to follow up with whoever their contractor was, but she Donna Reed, 100 Vandermeer Street - Donna said that she was just thinking about this because she has sat out there many mornings and she has contact Public Works Director Parker a few times about the dump trucks starting at 7:30 in the morning or before, when they are only supposed to start at eight. Donna said there was a car sitting at the stop sign on Vick this morning and they just started to pull out when a dump truck probably going thirty or thirty-five miles an hour just went right on through it and all she heard was laying on the horn. She said she has videos of these dump trucks just running through it but that not the only thing because right behind the dump truck are the cars that are flying through these stop signs. Donna said she sits every single day and watches the stop sign in front of her house on Vandermeer and they don't stop at that. She said some of them do a rolling stop, some of them just don't really care and they just keep going. Donna said she knows when Oakland Park was starting and they did all the traffic studies, it was oh, nobody is going to use these roads, they are going to go this way, they are not going to go this way and both her and her husband stood up here and said they know people are professionals at traffic studies, but they are crazy and they are not even fully residential over there now. She said they are not even fully living there now, and the traffic is absolutely wasn't able to do that and should have to do that. 6 ridiculous. Donna said if she stands out there with her phone and they know why she iss standing there, they will start stopping and if she walks inside and closed her garage door, there they go again She said she has videos of these guys just going through the stop sign because they just don't care. Donna said when she says it is the dump trucks, she knows that going to be over soon, but it is not just the dump trucks that are driving thirty, probably forty miles an hour up and down the roads. She said not to mentioned all the golf carts that drive up there, she has seen the person driving the golf cart, that is six years old with their parents sitting in the passenger seat steering it around the corners. Donna said she knows it is hard and the Police Department only has a limited amount of resources on that, but it is just terrible and that accident that happened on the edge of Winter Garden in Oakland Park, somewhere over there with the golf cart, she can see that happening and somebody getting hurt or some big accident happening. CONSENT AGENDA: a. Minutes - 8-13-2024 Town Commission Regular Meeting b. Approval of Oakland Vision Zero Safety Action Plan . Approval of OACS Safety & Security Requirements = Reunification Plan e. Approval of Dispatch Agreement with Winter Garden PD Mayor Taylor announced the items on the Consent Agenda. d. Approval of OACS Internet Policy f. Manager's Report MOTION was made by Vice Mayor Satterfield, seconded by Commissioner Polland to approve the Consent Agenda. AYE: McMullen, Polland, Satterfield, Taylor NAY: None OTHER POLICY MATTERS Appointment ofAuditor. Selection Committee Finance Director Leon said that on August 13, 2024, it was announced that the Town would need to have a selection committee for our RFP for Financial Auditing Services. The Town opened a committee seat to residents via application process and was seeking one (1) We received several applications, and all were reviewed carefully to ensure that they met the appropriate experience or knowledge. The Florida Statute states the committee must be comprised of at least 3 members which needs to include one (1) member of the governing body and at least two (2) members of the community. The Finance Department recommends selecting 5 members to participate in the selection committee. This would bring the member to add to the committee. 7 selection committee to a total of 6 members which include Mayor Taylor and the 5 resident members. Staff would like the Town Commission toi formally appoint the following individuals to the Auditor Selection Committee: Steve Stanford Kenneth Bresnahan Lewis Karua Scott Gordon John P. Geoghegan The RFP officially closes on August 29th, 2024, and the selection committee will begin reviewing proposals the first or second week of September depending on how many MOTION was made by Vice Mayor Satterfield, seconded by Commissioner Polland to accept the six members as relayed by Finance Director Leon including the mayor to be the Auditor proposals we receive. Selection Committee. NAY: None AYE: McMullen, Polland, Satterfield, Taylor Motion passed with a vote of 4in favor; 0 opposed. Health Insurance Provider Change HR Director Oliver said that the Town is currently contracted through the Florida Municipal Insurance Trust (FMIT) for all Health Benefits. For FY: 24-25, FMIT presented the Town with a ten percent (10%) increase in employer benefits cost with the existing plan which was previously adopted in the tentative budget presented to the Town Commission in June. In mid-July, the Town was notified of an increase to the Town's Fire Services agreement and therefore, has since had to re-examine all expenditures to reduce the tentative millage rate of 6.9. Our current Town Purchasing Policy states that "Waiver 1.5. The Town may, when deemed in its best interest and not inconsistent with law, waive any or all requirements or provisions set forth in this Policy and proceed thereafter to take whatever action is deemed On behalf of the Town, Mullings Insurance Agency obtained quotes from Florida Blue, CIGNA, and Aetna. After reviewing the Town's options, Florida Blue presented the best cost savings while still maintaining similar coverage for our employees. Mullings Insurance Agency has experience in obtaining quotes for public agencies and non-profits. to be in the best interests of the Town." Comparison of Proposed Employer Cost Current Provider: Proposed Provider: Total Employer Cost Savings: FLC-L United Healthcare: Mullings = Florida Blue: $1,015,448 $ 883,956 131,492 8 The Town would also be required to change Dental coverage from Delta Dental to Principal Insurance and Vision Insurance from United Healthcare/Spectera to Principal/VSP. These are both employee cost benefits, with the change in providers you will see in the provided information that the coverage is comparable to past benefits and the cost is the same or Staff is recommending approval to change health insurance providers from Florida Municipal MOTION was made by Commissioner Polland, seconded by Commissioner McMullen to approve changing health insurance providers from Florida Municipal Insurance Trust (FMIT) less than current providers. Insurance Trust (FMIT) to Mullings Insurance Agency. to Mullings Insurance Agency. AYE: McMullen, Polland, Satterfield, Taylor NAY: None Motion passed with a vote of 4 in favor; 0 opposed. TOWN MANAGER/DEPARTHENT HEAD REPORTS: Town Manager Stewart said that we have been working on the budget, SO we'll be doing our first and second hearing for the town's budget in September for those two meetings. Community Outreach Director Lovejoy said last Friday, we had the grand opening of the Lake Apopka exhibit that some of you attended and thanked everyone for attending. She said we are having a presentation from Wei-Shen Chin on September 12th at 6:00 p.m., he's an international award-winning bird photographer, and SO he's going to be with us that evening to explain how he captures these really amazing images. She said if you can't make iton the 12th, be sure to stop by the center, we are open this Saturday as well and check out the exhibit. Mayor Taylor said that he and Commissioner Polland attended Friday night, and he was impressed how many people showed up there, it is a really good exhibit. Chief Esan said that tomorrow is Walk and Talk Wednesday if it is not raining and that he would be glad to discuss the 264 traffic stops that the officers have made in the past 60 days. He said they can't catch them all, but they will catch them. Chief Esan will start at Briley and Tubb at 6:00 p.m. and walk until his shoes fall up or until his wife calls him and Outside of that, the town keeps moving forward, and all is good. tells him dinner is ready. 9 COMMISSION REPORTS: Commissioner Polland - nothing additional. Commissioner McMullen said he went to the Florida Cities conference, and he highlighted a couple of items he looks at that he attended and some of the things he brought back. He said he still owes Community Outreach Director Lovejoy a presentation around engagement. Commissioner McMullen said that homelessness is still an issue statewide. He said Jacksonville is not the only city that has an encampment, but they spent $13 million to try to address the homeless issue. Commissioner McMullen said this is still an issue and that law goes into effect really soon as far as that relates to them being moved and then the police have to figure out what is going to happen with them if someone was to call or complain. He said a couple of things coming down the pike, he knows this is all over the world, is AI. AI is coming into municipalities, and it is already here, and it is a good thing, it helps with coding, code enforcement, or just contracting. Commissioner McMullen said AI is here to stay and we just want to make sure that we do use it in a smart way, and he knows that the state legislature is going to start looking at that as well to ensure that we have a good policy around that as it related to safe and accurate information. Commissioner McMullen attending a great presentation on citizen engagement which talks about engaging citizens, it is really giving a comprehensive approach on how to make sure you are engaging your citizens ini the best way, so he wanted to give that presentation to Community Outreach Director Lovejoy to help with sharing information. He said not only is it about getting the citizens involved, it also talks about having special events. Commissioner McMullen said we do a great job with the museum and the special events that we have, it gives a sense of community. Commissioner McMullen said there was a focus on advocacy on a state level, talking about things like affordable housing. He said there is a lot of talk about making sure they are going to come up with all the policies and all the different challenges we may have. Commissioner McMullen said there are a lot of new state legislators going to Tallahassee, some come from local government, most don't, and they are really just asking as many elected officials and citizens to be involved as possible because as we know, there are a lot of changes going oni int the county and in Tallahassee and we don't know what their thoughts are. Commissioner McMullen said we will be getting a lot of legislative priorities that have been pushed out to us and just like the homeless issue, there is no budget for it. He said affordable housing was an issue it was a concern, there many cities and towns affected. Commissioner McMullen said that we signed our ordinance at the last meeting about this issue and we don't have that much land but, in some cities, and towns, they are really dealing with that issue. He said of course we want to make sure we have affordable housing for our workers in the state, but we are going to have to figure out how that is going to Vice Mayor Satterfield said that Commissioner Ramos did finish his commitment on all the election stuff and the money he had left over, he did donate $1,000 each to both the preserve and to the Oakland Avenue Charter School which is what he said was what he was going to do. He said if you look at the front of the school, the school used the donation for happen. landscaping. 10 Mayor Taylor said that the town received notice last Friday, for the resignation of the town attorney SO town staff is going to begin an RFQ process for a replacement firm. There have been some discussions going back and forth on utilizing the school parking lot as public parking on the weekends, or maybe when school is not in session for church groups since there are some parking issues that are happening at Lakeside. He said the only caveat he would have on that is not allowing any type of overnight parking or anything at the school and the other things is that it has to be outside the gate on the concrete because at this point, if we open it up, that opens up the hardening of the school. Mayor Taylor said that he attends Lakeside Church, and he knows that when he goes to the 9:00 a.m. service, there are a lot of cars that pull into that ball field area. He said looking at the amount of cars that are there, it would probably fill up the parking lot of the school. Mayor Taylor said that he does know that the church is looking at adding an extra service SO that will do one of two things, it will either decrease the parking issue, or it will increase the parking issue to four times a day on Sunday. He said the town is trying to work on something to help with that. Mayor Taylor said he has been getting calls and texts and emails from town residents because everybody's starting to receive their TRIM notices in the mail for their property taxes and just keep in mind that when you look at that number that is the worst-case scenario as we looked at back in July when we had to set that millage rate because of the Orange County fire increase. Mayor Taylor said that was a worst-case scenario, SO the town staff has been looking at ways to try to bring that down and cut, HR Director Oliver today just showed one example, there's $130,000 savings right there. He said there's other avenues that we're looking at; we're all residents here we don't want to have to pay if we don't have to, sO you know we're trying to do this where we are not cutting or sacrificing, needs of the town. Mayor Taylor said that he has had discussions with Mayor Demings on working through issues. On September 5th is Orange County's vote to approve and adopt a higher millage rate SO some of those discussions with Mayor Demings is for relief or an option to maybe build it up over time or renegotiate our interlocal agreement with Orange County Fire Department sO we are continuing those conversations as well. He said to keep in mind that when you look at your millage rate, the town itself did not raise what services they have, it's raised because of the fire at Orange County is what's raised it. Mayor Taylor said that the town itself, if you break out the number, 2.3 of that is fire, and the rest of iti is the town, SO the town has not raised, it was the fire. Mayor Taylor said that the last thing he wanted to bring up, and it was mentioned two weeks ago at the meeting, was apartments and multifamily moratoriums. He said we really need, as a commission, to get working on amending the comp plan because that's the only way you're going to regulate what gets built in the town, and what you want to see in the town. Mayor Taylor said that when you do a moratorium, we're just kicking the can down the road for a few months, and you're back to square one again, SO if we're really serious about trying to lay out a plan, we need to ask staff to start with the comprehensive plan and we can start kind of coming up with some ideas of what we need to do to alleviate that because the moratoriums don't work. He said it is just not the right way to go SO if it's something that we say we don't want it in town, then we need to stipulate it in town and then that should end that. 11 ADJOURNMENT There being no further business, Commissioner McMullen adjourned the meeting at 8:03 p.m. TOWN OF OAKLAND: r ATTEST: Slwikl ELISE HUI, TOWN CLERK 12 OAKLAND NATURE PRESERVE 2023-2024 FY UPDATE Visitors Changed to online visitor registration Estimated 30k-40k No exact numbers available School Fieldtrips / Homeschoo Classes Innovative Montessori Ocoee 4-6 grades Each student visits 4 times 873 student days Oakland Avenue Charter School K-5 All classes visit - 499 students Homeschool Series (expanded) Age 6-16 285 student days Additional Fieldtrips - 456 students Summer Camps 6 weeks - 144 campers Filled to capacity Visits from: Bat Conservancy Avian Reconditioning Center Orange County History Center Bee Keepers And many more! Participated in HWO Splash Challenge Summer Camp In Session Other Programs Florida Master Naturalist Program - UF Adult Certification Program 32 Scouts badge work Firefly hikes 3000+ over several nights Thank you to OPD for traffic assistance! Blue Hikes 54 participants 16 hikes Story Time at the Preserve 100+ children & adults Events Nature Fest Est. 1000 38 vendors / partners Pumpkin Glow Jack-o-lantern Trail 2 nights / 1675 visitors Oakland Heritage Festival Pours at the Preserve 132 tickets sold Volunteers 189 individuals and 14 groups 6000+ hours Assisted with restoration, events, animal care, data entry, Museum Docents, Eco Interpreters, project construction Elementary through senior adults Scouts 8E Eagle Scout projects Restoration 1000+ native plants and trees planted East side prescribed burn Now shifting into a 3 year burn rotation Social Media ONP's Facebook page: 10,095 followers, increase of 11% Average page visits per month are 325 Average page check-ins per month are 12 Page has maintained its 4.7/5-star rating ONP's Instagram page: 3411 followers Average number of accounts engaged is 1725 per month Projects Briley Farm Outdoor Education Space Have requested funding assistance from Orange County EPD Youth Climate Project 20k in scholarship funds to local HS students Funded by local ouncaton.adminstered by ONP Students completed research and created 3-5 minute video 6scholarship recipients 5p public school students, I homeschool students This was the final year of the project Youth Climate Preject Leaders Encouraging ofthe the Next Environmental Generation Upcoming Events Nature Fest at ONP Celebrating ONP's 25th Anniversary! CELEBRATING September 2/th I0-2 Sponsorships being excepted Pumpkin Glow October 25th 5:30-9:30 Sponsored by HWO Oakland Heritage Festival OAKLANDNAIURE FRESERYE 1999.2024 January 25th 2025- Speer Park Managing Director Transition Final week last week of September following Nature Fest Nicole O'Brien - Incoming Director TANDNA Challenges noisian Loss of space due to school fencing Hope to locate funding for the cleanup and creation of an outdoor education space on Briley Farm property Event Parking Questions and Comments Vandermeer Ave 20 mph Dirt Roads Vick Ave Oakland Park VEwEyD Considerations: 1.Reduced Speed Limit 2.Posted Speed Limit 3.A Additional Signage 4. Speed Bumps W-orange Trai SPEED LOCAL 1 SLOW LIMIT 10 DOWN 5 KIDSANDPETS ATPLAY SLOW DOWN THESE ROADSARE OUR SIDEWALKS.. TRAFFIC ONLY Gulley Ave