different governing body and one does not typically respond to another. He  
					had requested this Item be removed from the Consent Agenda as racial  
					equity has no jurisdiction. He said he perceives the values of the Village  
					Board are to walk a path of racial equity which are being done through  
					action--hiring a Chief DEI Officer; funding a community-wide racial equity  
					assessment; implementing a racial equity analysis on future Board  
					policies; and committing time from staff, consultants, Trustees, and funding  
					to build a more racially equitable Oak Park.  
					Diversity, inclusion, racial equity, and racial justice are core values of this  
					Board and this Village. He said it would be inconsistent with our Board  
					goals and actions and his personal values to grant $1M to an organization  
					that has created harm and is out of line with this Board's values.  
					Representation recognizes harm and uses its voice, platform, and power to  
					remedy it. Representation is not afraid to do the right thing, stand in  
					authenticity of the impact, and demand better. He said he is keenly aware  
					that he represents folks who feel marginalized, unwelcome, and have  
					experienced harm in this Village and they depend on his voice to express  
					their pain and outrage and create change to improve their experiences.  
					He said he is justifiably outraged by the actions that make his statement  
					necessary and he still seeks a restorative path forward. Until that happens,  
					he will not vote yes for this Item.  
					Trustee Robinson said she thinks there are parallel issues of addressing  
					the course offering and the appropriate response to the impact it's had on  
					the community, which is within the purview of PDOP; and this ARPA  
					request, which is within the purview of this Village Board. She read from the  
					ARPA report on the White House's website on the purpose of the ARPA  
					funds. She said she thinks it's critical to acknowledge that while we are all  
					facing the same storm, we are not in the same boat. She said she thinks  
					the Village Board needs to take some time with this decision and be really  
					thoughtful in light of the events over the past week, particularly with this  
					ARPA request that was steeped in racial equity language.  
					She said she thinks it makes sense to pause this decision and give space  
					to the community impact and harm; give PDOP some time for further  
					responsiveness if they choose; and spend time as a Village Board  
					assessing what our role may be with our DEI resources in support of  
					PDOP and be collaborative in moving forward with DEI goals which is part  
					of our own work.  
					Trustee Enyia agreed with Trustee Wesley's points based on what he has  
					heard from community members and his own feelings in trying to  
					understand where that statement came from and the double down on it. He  
					said it puts the Village Board in a peculiar situation because it shows  
					organizational missteps and how do you rebound from harming an entire