
Trevor Storrs
63:51 - 64:37
"I think we're in a much better position if a couple of things happen. One, if we try to develop certain partnerships like that, and I don't know what other one there could be, but to show both the mayor and the assembly, like, we're not just looking to you, we are also strategizing. And the other component is setting up that there's some strong data that shows why this— why we need to separate these dollars and go back to the school."
“I think we're in a much better position if a couple of things happen. One, if we try to develop certain partnerships like that, and I don't know what other one there could be, but to show both the mayor and the assembly, like, we're not just looking to you, we are also strategizing. And the other component is setting up that there's some strong data that shows why this— why we need to separate these dollars and go back to the school.”
So there's a lot of things that we need to look at to be able to do, and I'll connect with Christina to help with some of that and start seeing if we can position. Because again, I think we're in a much better position if a couple of things happen. One, if we try to develop certain partnerships like that, and I don't know what other one there could be, but to show both the mayor and the assembly, like, we're not just looking to you, we are also strategizing. And the other component is setting up that there's some strong data that shows why this— why we need to separate these dollars and go back to the school. And I'm working on that.
The ACCEE Fund board says two programs transferred from the alcohol tax now consume more than $2 million of its $5.2 million base, leaving too little for the operational grants and capital projects the fund was built to deliver. Board Chair Trevor Storrs plans a summer campaign to move both programs back.
