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Making a Public Comment

Council welcomes public comment before regular council meetings. Fill out the online form below for your chance to make a public comment at the next regular Monday Council meeting.  Please read the revised rules and procedures

Registrations can also be submitted:

* In person at Cleveland City Hall, Room 220, 601 Lakeside Ave. NE. Paper forms are available to register.

* If you don't want to fill out the online form below, you can download this form and fill it out, and email it to publiccomment@clevelandcitycouncil.gov or drop it off at Council offices. (Parking at City Hall on the upper lot is free on Mondays after 5 pm when Council is meeting.) If you need assistance, language, or disability, go here to make a request (at least 3 days in advance.) 

Make a Comment in Person

Registrations to speak up to 3 minutes at a regular council meeting can be submitted between noon Wednesday and 2 pm on the Monday before a regular 7 pm council meeting. (Early, incomplete and false registrations are not accepted.) Only the first 10 are accepted.  


Make a Comment Online

If you don't want to speak at a Council meeting, please submit your written comments below. 


Public Comments

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Tanisha Law
s a country and as a state, we must do more to protect and support people living with mental illness. I will never understand why the response so often becomes violent and aggressive. While I recognize the urgency and the dangers officers may face, the senseless killings have to stop. I support this law because it aims to change how we treat and care for individuals with mental illness—approaching them with compassion, understanding, and the dignity they deserve.
Ariel Rhea
Tanisha's Law
It is imperative that the City side's with the option that is supported by Tanisha's family that would create a new department. Mental Health department is a necessary addition to the City of Cleveland. Creating this path will allow other neighboring city's to learn and follow suite. Thank you for your time.
Lara Bobel
Tanisha's Law
I support Tanisha's law.
Brian S Hall
Tanisha’s Law
I am in support of enacting the full breadth of Tanisha’s Law to create a new department of community crisis response. People in our communities experiencing a mental health crisis should be supported and offered medical assistance rather than policing, and police officers shouldnt be asked to perform mental health services that they are unqualified for.
Emma Janssen
Tanisha's Law
Please vote for Tanisha's Law, which would create a new Department of Community Crisis Response to coordinate non-police responses to people having mental health crises. If our city had this Department when Tanisha Anderson died, she might still be alive today. The police should not be the first responders in mental health emergencies!
Martha Grevatt
YES to Bus Lanes on W. 25th
Dear City Council Members,

I'm Sara, a concerned citizen of Cleveland Heights. Thank you for your service to the city of Cleveland and all the folks of surrounding areas who are impacted by your leadership. I am reaching out because I want to voice my support for the bus lanes on West 25th Street as part of RTA’s 25Connects BRT project.

As you may already know, the West 25th corridor is one of the busiest corridors in the city, and transit time for buses is often slow as buses must continually weave in and out of parked cars in an already congested area. A dedicated bus lane will improve transit time through this corridor.

Quick and reliable public transit is important to me because good transit brings economic and health benefits to communities, reduces road congestion, reduces gasoline usage and air pollution, and it makes Cleveland a more attractive place to live.

Young people especially prefer walkable communities over suburban sprawl, seeking to live among robust transit, shops, restaurants, libraries, parks, and a mix of housing options. Ohio City is already one of the most vibrant, walkable, livable neighborhoods in Cleveland, but it is lacking in effective, quick, and reliable transit. Filling this transit gap would not only make Cleveland a more desirable place to move to, but would make young Clevelanders more likely to stay instead of moving away in search of a more transit-rich city.

I recently moved back home to Cleveland after living in Chicago, where public transit is effective and well-funded, and it's been a grief to return to using my car to get around, waiting in so much traffic. I hope the W. 25th bus lane will be the first of an increase in funding and investment for our RTA system which serves so many and has the potential to serve so many more!

Thank you for reading my comment and hearing my perspective as a concerned Clevelander.

Sincerely,

Sara Pekar
Sara Pekar
RTA's 25Connects BRT Project
Dear City Council Members,

I live in Cleveland Heights, but I rely on public transit to move throughout the area. I used the 51 route for many months to get to work in Parma Heights.

I am reaching out because I want to voice my support for the bus lanes on West 25th Street as part of RTA’s 25Connects BRT project.

As you may already know, the West 25th corridor is one of the busiest corridors in the city, and transit time for buses is often slow as buses must continually weave in and out of parked cars in an already congested area. A dedicated bus lane will improve transit time through this corridor.

Ohio City and Cleveland will be better off with better transit, and bus lanes on W 25th will be a good start. I know a few business owners are upset about losing a few parking spaces, and I find this hard to understand. Cars usually only bring one person to a business at a time, and once the car is parked in front of a business, it prevents anyone else from accessing the business via that parking spot for as long as the car is parked there. But a bus could bring 50 potential customers to the business every time the bus passes by, and the bus doesn't park in front of the business like a car does, preventing others from accessing the business. Furthermore, there’s a gigantic parking lot right behind the West Side Market.

I love Ohio City, I love the local businesses in Ohio City, and bus lanes will help these local businesses, not hurt them. The city can support these businesses by promoting them on social media, and the businesses themselves could promote themselves to transit riders through targeted signage and by offering specials to transit riders.

Cleveland is long overdue for more effective public transit. As it stands now, it’s almost always faster for me to drive than to take public transit. I choose to take public transit whenever I am able, but as a newly married person, it can be difficult to justify long transit times when my wife and I are both active people who work full time and have limited time just to be with each other. I shouldn’t have to choose between taking public transit or spending quality time with people I love. In cities like Chicago, DC, Boston, or New York, people don’t have to make that choice. And I’ve seen so many people leave places like Cleveland for places like Chicago for this reason. It’s time to move Cleveland forward and connect our city once again. We need bus lanes on West 25th Street as part of the 25Connects BRT project, and we need a lot more than that. Let’s get started making Cleveland a transit-friendly city it once was and can be once again!
Adam Rossi
Frustrations with the cost water and sewer utilities
Hello,

I have a concern I would like to bring to your attention in the hopes that your administration can figure out the best solution to address the issue. Namely, the cost of water and sewer in Cleveland is by far the most expensive water/sewer bill I've ever experienced in my adult life. I have rented and owned homes elsewhere, including in cities like Tampa, FL, and my water and sewer utilities have never costed me more than $18 - 35 a month total.

Using my most recent bills as an example, I am being charged $64.31 by Cleveland Water and $81 by Northeast Ohio Regional Sewer District for having used 0.5 MCF. That's $145.31 for 0.5 MCF of water used. Compared to other Great Lakes region cities like Chicago, Detroit, Milwaukee, and Buffalo, Cleveland's water and sewer rates have been found by independent parties to be much higher. Additionally, Cleveland has the 2nd highest concentration of lead pipes in the U.S., with an additional 43% of the sewer pipes being over 100 years old. Why are we paying so much when the American Society of Civil Engineers gave Cleveland and Ohio's water and sewer infrastructure a "C" grade? I understand that there is a lot of investment needed to improve our water and sewer infrastructure - but why pull the majority of the costs of these upgrades from the pockets of everyday citizens? Why not from Federal dollars provided by the Infrastructure bill that passed under Biden, or through taxes on large businesses and corporations like Amazon that utilize way more water and create more wastewater than Cleveland households, or other funding sources whether private or public?

What's even more ridiculous, is that both Cleveland Water and NEORSD bill residents for the exact same services related to cleaning the water/pollution control and waste/sewage collection or cleaning. Why are they both charging me for the same things? That is duplication of services and even after speaking with representatives of both Cleveland Water and NEORSD, it is unclear how anything they are doing is different than what the other entity is doing and charging for.

With costs of living growing rapidly, every dollar counts. Honestly, I am frustrated and concerned that I am paying so much for so little and for what are clearly duplicative services. I welcome a chance to speak further and would encourage the administration to consider hosting town halls to get feedback, concerns, and suggestions for improvement from Clevelanders. So many of my neighbors and friends are struggling with this exact issue as well and I know they would welcome a chance to learn and to find an equitable solution. We Clevelanders are proud of our city, but to remain proud we need to be able to afford to live here and have infrastructure that allows us to live and thrive here.

Sources:
1. https://www.cleveland.com/metro/2019/02/why-have-cleveland-area-water-sewer-bills-doubled-in-a-decade.html
2. https://uswateralliance.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/An-Equitable-Water-Future-Cleveland_roadmap_final.pdf
3. https://neorsd.medium.com/report-ohios-infrastructure-is-mid-but-our-regional-work-is-major-d3cbdb36d08d
4. https://www.asce.org/publications-and-news/civil-engineering-source/society-news/article/2025/06/25/ohios-infrastructure-grade-improves-to-a-c-grade
5. https://www.news5cleveland.com/news/local-news/researcher-says-40-of-cleveland-water-mains-more-than-100-years-old
Joshua Swift
Homelessness/asking for money
Dining at Flannery 's the afternoon of Saturday January 10th, we were met my many people asking for money, one sleeping on East 4th St. So much garbage in the small area from East 4th parking to the restaurant. Leaving, groups of people approaching asking for money. A friend parked further away and encountered a man, naked waist down, "gratifying" himself. These people need help. Also this is Cleveland's lovely entertainment district which was not so lovely that afternoon.
Leslie McCafferty
ELIMINATION DOWNTOWN FREE PARKING
I've been driving nearly 50 years and it has ALWAYS been free to park Downtown on evenings, weekends and holidays. The text on the meters has always been the same, forever. It is an OUTRAGE that the city will now charge for Downtown street parking, 7 days a week. I intentionally do not own a smartphone and am now effectively prohibited from ever parking on a Downtown street. The city will make chump change off these meters while creating an inconvenience for citizens.
Jay Ryan