Lieutenant Peterson and grant consultant Laurie Adams presented the final report for the city's 2017 Community Development Block Grant (CDBG). Peterson said the grant funded three code enforcement officers and one technician, enabling a roughly 42% increase in case activity compared with prior staffing levels. Fiscal detail in the presentation listed approximately $500,000 in total project spending, of which $34,884 went to general administration and $465,000 supported code enforcement activities. Case counts presented were: Zone 1 — 1,195 cases; Zone 2 — 513 cases (1,708 total for Zones 1 & 2); Zone 3 — 704 cases.
Council moved to direct staff to submit required closeout documentation and the motion passed by unanimous vote. Grant consultant Laurie Adams said the 2017 funds and program income helped the city remove blight, illegal dumping and reduce fire risk by supporting vegetation abatement in collaboration with Lake County Fire Protection District.
During public comment the council also heard detailed complaints unrelated to the grant closeout. Kay Lopez alleged that a Lieutenant Peterson shelter investigation misrepresented eyewitness accounts about dog care and shelter conditions, named specific Health & Safety Code enforcement concerns, and called for an independent outside investigation. Andrew Kuykendall complained that the building department had denied permits for electrical reconnection on older properties by classifying pre‑1940 homes as new/unpermitted structures and described difficulties navigating appeal channels; he said he may pursue litigation. Patty Duke presented a code complaint that she said was filed in July and asked staff to review property maps and survey records.
Council and staff responded by accepting the grant closeout action, asking staff to follow up with the individuals who raised concerns, and by noting limits on immediate action for matters where litigation or administrative appeals were pending.