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<br />from 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. and that business is generally pretty <br />light from a traffic point of view. Mrs. Goldman also stated that <br />she felt she could park 3 to 4 vehicles in front along with 3 <br />vehicles on the side. She also stated that the structure itself <br />had been improved from the prior rental use and that additional <br />work would be done. Signe Nicholson asked if the alley adjacent <br />to the property was one way and the response was yes. <br />The next person called by Attorney Stovall was Clio Biviano. <br />Mrs. Biviano gave a history of the structure through the past <br />thirty years which consisted of the use as a pizza shop until that <br />business ceased and she rented the property. The prior tenants <br />had damaged the premises and at this time it would take her $8,000 <br />to $10,000 to renovate the rental. She advised that Faye Goldman <br />did have her consent and written authority to proceed with this <br />rezoning. <br /> <br />Joe Neal was then called as a witness. <br /> <br />He stated that the <br /> <br />building was originally erected for a business use by Emory Welch. <br />At that time it was used for an electric shop. After that it was <br />used for the pink Front Laundromat, a bike shop, a motorcycle <br /> <br />shop, a boxing club, a restaurant, and then the pizza shop. Mr. <br /> <br />Neal stated that the property had gone downhill and that it <br />reached its worse condition when used as a rental. He felt that <br /> <br />the local business use would be desirable and an asset. <br /> <br />Faye Shumate then spoke. She stated that she worked for Mrs. <br />Goldman on occasion and that the nature of the business was such <br /> <br /> <br />that only 2 to 3 people at the most would be present at one time. <br /> <br /> <br />Signe Nicholson then inquired why the property had never been <br /> <br />-2- <br />