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A
The
recording
and
thanks
so
much
for
doing
the
minutes,
wanted
to
see.
If
there's
any
public
comment
before
we
move
to
the
agenda.
A
I
don't
think
so,
so
we
have
we're
starting
off
the
new
year
happy
new
year,
everybody
2021
and
we
have
we
have
a
new
county
board
liaison
and
and
he's
also
new
to
the
board
newly
elected
in
november,
so
so
welcome.
We
really
appreciate
you
joining
us.
A
This
is
it's
great
that
you
could
make
time
on
your
schedule
to
to
meet,
even
though
it's
virtually
to
meet
the
commission,
and
we
thought
it'd
be
great
for
you
to
just
give
us
your
sense
and
and
how
we'll
work
together
in
the
coming
year.
B
Thank
you,
thank
you,
mary,
and
I'm
I'm
really
pleased
to
be
with
you.
This
is
one
of
the
priorities
that
I
had
for
myself.
I
have
to
to
to
tell
you
that
it's
not
that
just
the
newbie
got
the
you
know
the
this
commission
by
you
know.
By
default.
B
My
colleagues
were
gracious
enough
to
allow
me
to
do
this,
and
I'm
I'm
coming
here
with,
of
course,
with
open,
mind
and
and
receptiveness,
but
the
most
important
thing
is
I'm
coming
here
with
open
doors,
virtual
doors,
so
you
know
where
I
live,
and
you
can
always
reach
out
to
me
and
tell
me
what
you
think
should
be
addressed,
how
the
board
should
be
reacting
to
the
the
many
many
many
technology
related
challenges,
and
you
know
if
you
have
seen
the
board
reading
yesterday,
we
had
already
like
two
or
three
items
right
there
and
I
have
to
tell
you
I
consider
each
and
every
of
these
items
are
really
of
critical
importance
and
the
board
meetings
before
we're
not
very
different.
B
So
we
have
a
lot
of
work
and
I'm
excited
to
to
be
a
partner
and
companion
of
the
of
the
commission.
I
never
forget
that
this
is
a
commission
that
is
supposed
to
advise
the
county
board.
So
for
me,
one
of
the
most
important
functions
or
jobs
that
I
see
for
me,
having
is
to
make
sure
that
you
get
a
good
flow
and
reliable
flow
of
information
of
being
included
and
of
hearing
from
your
country
board.
B
What
we
want
to
be
advised
on
so
I
would
definitely
would
have
liked
to
have
itac's
input.
I
believe
my
colleagues
as
well
on
the
items
we
had
yesterday,
for
example,
so
that
is
something
I
wouldn't
like
to
see
repeating
and
etc.
So
that's
that's
one
thing.
The
second
thing
is,
we
think,
a
lot
about
our
commissions
about
how
to
open
the
arlington
way
to
even
more
linked
onions.
B
I
think
that
itac
as
well
is
a
is
a
place
where
we
can
invite
more
public
engagement,
either
directly,
as
you
know,
nominating
commissioners,
but
also
by
socializing
issues,
that
you
feel
that
need
to
be
socialized
with
harlingtonians.
So
I'm
game
for
that.
I'm
ready
for
this
and
I
I'm
really
excited
to
sit
down
and
listen.
A
Wonderful
good
good!
Well,
I
think
it'd
be
helpful,
probably
just
for
for
us
to
go
around
the
virtual
room,
so
you
could
just
hear
everyone's
voice
to
say
hello,
john!
You
were
the
first
one
on
I'll
I'll.
Let
you
take
first
and
then
we'll
we'll
go
around
the
around
the
room.
So
takas
can
hear,
hear,
voice
and
put
voice
and
and.
C
D
Hey
takas
good
to
see
you
takus
and
I
know
each
other
full
disclosure,
so
you
might
not
recognize
me
with
the
beard,
but
it
is
it's
my
covent
beard.
D
You
know
I'm
I'm
an
I.t
professional
during
the
day,
and
I
think
you
know
I'm
glad
to
hear
that
you
sought
this
out
because
I
think
there's
a
lot
of
some
items
that
we
have
been
maybe
trying
to
push
up
that
we
haven't
really
maybe
gotten
some
feedback
on
recently
with
all
of
the
all
of
the
work.
That's
been
piled
on
your
plates
with
covid
and
the
response.
So
you
know
just
looking
forward
to
working
with
you
over
over
over
the
next
year.
E
Sorry
I
was
on
mute,
jackie
snelling,
we're
delighted
to
work
with
utahkus
and
in
terms.
F
E
Retired
from
fema
preparedness
and
security
and
other
things
also
related
to
I.t
communications,
but
mostly
community
background.
F
E
G
You're
up
to
me,
kevin
brought
nurse
from
comcast
hi
takusa.
Thank
you
for
joining
us.
I
I
do
government
affairs
for
comcast
in
maryland.
Delaware
dc
virginia,
but
particularly
focused
on
arlington
and
glad
to
be
here
with
you.
H
I'm
louise
anderson
from
verizon,
I'm
the
fios
tv
franchise
manager
for
the
commonwealth
of
virginia
and
I've
been
working
with
itac
for
about
over
seven
years
now.
H
A
Thank
you
and
kevin
robbins
who's,
part
of
our
part
of
the
commission,
kevin.
I
A
J
J
C
Good
to
go,
thank
you
takas
for
your
introduction,
kevin
robbins.
I
have
a
product
of
the
county
public
school
systems.
I
do
federal
contract
work,
telecommunications,
space
and
I've
been
on
the
commission
now
for
a
minute
myself.
So
I
look
forward
to
working
with
you.
Thank
you
all
right.
That's
great!.
A
Ooh
yeah
mike
we
can't
hear
you
may
want
to
you-
may
want
to
come
out
and
come
back
in
yeah,
that's
tacos!
It's
mike
carlton
I'll!
Just
give
you
a.
He
was
cio
for
maybe
better
mike
you
back.
A
He
was
cio
for
hhs
arlington,
county
resident
ngsa
so
comes
from
the
cio
perspective
in
a
in
a
federal
perspective
and
is
we'll
we'll
see
if
we
can
get
him
get
him
back
with
a
good
audio
soon
and-
and
I
think
the
rest
are
from
jack
from
your
from
your
shop.
Do
you
want
to
which
would.
M
M
K
Attorney
I
work
for
the
federal
reserve
board
of
governors
on
cyber
security,
privacy,
national
security,
open
data,
all
sorts
of
stuff
like
that,
and
I'm
delighted
that
you're
here
that
you're
joining
us
virtually
and
I'm
I'm
loving
that
our
former
cios
and
leader
I.t
leaders
are
struggling
and
it's
just
it's.
This
zoom
thing:
it's
tough
on
everyone.
So
I'm
really
glad
to
see
you
look
like
you're
in
an
office
said.
I'm
I'm
impressed
with
that.
So
glad
to
have
you
here.
B
The
empty
mothership
of
arlington
county
government,
which
is
a
very
because
it's
empty,
it's
a
very
safe
space
to
be.
A
And
frank:
I
know
that
you're
you're
there
frank.
N
F
N
F
N
But
anyhow
good
good
to
see
you
again
takus
and
I'm
glad
you
could
join
our
meeting
this
evening.
Q
Good
evening
everybody
nice
to
be
here,
like
jack,
said
I
represent
the
public
schools.
P
P
It's
it's
that
citizen
input
we
get
to
hear
what
their
thoughts
are
and
over
the
years
they've
been
fantastic,
and
I
think
when
I
first
joined
the
commission,
tom
whipple
mary
market,
whipple's
husband,
was
in
charge
and-
and
he
held
me
accountable
and
said
this-
what
you
gotta
do
so
it's
been
that
way
since
and
frank
and
mary
and
the
commission
have
been
just
great
partners
with
us.
So
thank
you
so
much
yeah.
A
Good
and
you
and
jack
you
have
holly
will
be
speaking
later
and
david
hurley.
F
P
Which
is
an
evolving
issue,
which
we
really
need
the
commission's
guidance
on,
as
we
start
to
move
down
this
road.
You
know
what
does
this
mean?
Privacy
and
security,
so.
A
Great
great
all
right:
well
any
any
I'm
assuming
talk
is
that
you'll
take
take
a
few
questions
before
you.
If
and
if
you
want
to
depart
after
we
after
we
move
to
raja's
presentation,
feel
free,
but
I'm
sure
raj
would
welcome
you
staying
as
well
either
way
so.
B
I
will
stay
as
long
as
I
can.
I
have
a
meeting
a
little
bit
later
at
seven,
that's
a
housing
meeting
and
I
have
to
jump
into
that,
but
other
than
that.
I,
if
you
want
to
ask
me
things
I
am
here
you
can
do
that
now
or
you
can
do
it
anytime.
You
want.
A
You
know
all
right,
wonderful,
well,
we
we,
we
probably
do
have
I'll
I'll,
take
chair,
privilege
and
just
there
was,
at
the
end
december
frank
and
I
received
a
notice
about
how
the
board
was
looking
at
how
it
organizes
itself
and
one
of
the
things
that
particularly
mike
but
the
rest
of
the
commission
as
well.
B
Not
yet,
and
actually
the
not
I
mean
I
didn't,
have
this
conversation
with
christian.
Yet
that's
the
that's
the
accurate
answer
to
your
question
and
I
haven't
seen
any
with
my
colleagues.
We
haven't
touched
upon
that
and
to
date
also
with
staff,
the
you
know
the
directions
we
had
were
very
themed
and
very
on
topic,
and
we
didn't
really
touch
the
touch
up
on
that.
I
find
it
very
intriguing
and
very
interesting
to
to
go
this
way.
B
I
do
believe
that
in
all
the
challenges
that
we
see
this
year
with
all
these,
their
ramifications,
both
technological
as
well
as
social
and
socioeconomic
et
cetera,
and
suggests
that
this
is
probably
the
right
frame
to
do
to
to
approach
them.
It's.
It
begins
to
be
an
additional
layer
to
our
planning
and
to
the
to
the
comp
plan
to
the
comprehensive
plan
of
arlington
county,
and
since
you
have
mentioned
that
in
the
brief
meeting
we
had
you
know
at
my
inauguration
as
your
religion.
B
I
I
went
on
and
I
you
know
I
just
googled
it
and-
and
I
found
several
communities
that
actually
do
have
and
and
think
this
way
and
incorporate
that
as
a
as
a
study
layer
in
their
comp
plan.
So
I'm
very
open
to
the
idea
personally,
and
I'm
also
very
open
to
you-
know-
evolve,
develop
and
socialize.
The
idea
with
my
colleagues
with
you
know-
and
you
know,
work
with
county
staff
and
with
you
to
see
how
far
we
can
or
should
go.
B
Okay.
The
many
questions
that
we
had
these
months
would
have
a
easier
answer.
If
we
had
it
as
part
of
our
comp
plan,
yeah
questions,
you
know
what
kind
of
infrastructure
where
how
do
we,
how
when
etc?
We
should
be
lighting
up
the
dark
fiber,
and
you
know
what
are
the
sectors
that
we
will
be
giving
where
we
will
giving
priority
multi-family
versus
spread
universal
access.
A
All
right,
thank
you,
so
we
will
continue
that
we'll
we'll
continue
that
thread,
that
conversational
thread
and
we'll
make
sure
that
you
have
the
benefit
of
the
work
that
particularly
mike,
has
done
in
terms
of
the
the
framework
that
we
had
some
some
thoughts
around.
As
you
begin
to
to
think
about
how
best
to
incorporate
that
or
you
know
what
what
the
best
way
is
for
a
strategic
plan
to
have
a
digital
element
we'll
make.
B
You
know
security
events
handling
like
for
example,
emergencies
or
or
you
know
how
we
incorporate
a
smart
city,
type
sensor,
technology,
etc.
These
are
all
actually
parts
that
normally
with
analog
technologies,
we
we
are
part
of
our
comprehensive
plan.
You
know
we
we
basically
have
them
there.
So
if
we
digitize
them
and
apply
a
different
type
of
of
a
response
network,
then
you
know
we'll
have
the
appropriate
layer
for
that.
A
I'll
open
it
up,
so
just
a
a
few
more
questions
you
might
have
for
for
our
enthusiastic
county
board
liaison.
I
might.
A
Add
anyone
and
if
I'm
not
seeing
your
hand
raised
just
unmute,
I
know
somebody's
got
a
hand
up.
Let
me
see
I'm.
D
I'll
jump
in
mary
yeah,
not
not
so
much
of
a
question
but
just
further
reinforcement
of
the
topic
that
mary
raised
mike
and
since
he's
offline
I'll
speak
for
him,
because
I
seconded
the
motion
to
send
the
letter,
but
actually
identified
a
state
statute
requirement
for
us
to
work
to
develop
this
portion
of
our
comprehensive
plan.
D
So
I
think
that
decision
is
actually
going
to
be
easy
for
you
and
he
laid
it
out
really
nicely
in
the
letter
that
that
we
sent
to
the
board,
as
well
as
the
the
attached
strategy
briefing
on
some
considerations.
So.
B
A
B
A
That's
all
right.
It's
all
right,
there's
a
lot
a
lot
going
on
any
other.
Any
other
questions
I
do
I'm
holding
back
one
just
in
case
I've
got
I've
got
several
but
I'll,
just
open
it
up
to
the
floor,
any
other
questions
or
comments.
A
While
you're
thinking,
I
do
one
of
the
things
we
did
talk
briefly,
but
I
just
wanted
the
the
commission
also
to
hear
the
you
know,
frank
and
I
had
expressed
concern
about
the
equity
issue.
Not
only
and
raj
obviously,
you'll
be
talking
about
the
digital
equity
in
terms
of
schools,
but
also
access
to
the
vaccines
in
terms
of
people
being
able
to
register
and
do
all
those
things.
So
we
we
again
that's
up
on
our
radar
screen
in
terms
of
how
do
we.
A
So
when
we
define
digital
equity
in
the
county,
we
really
it's
it's
more
than
just
it's
more.
Obviously,
schools
are
important,
but
it
also-
and
it's
an
area
that
john
raised
and
we
we
forwarded
a
concern
around
because
when
john
registered
it
was,
it
was
all
online
and
access
and
all
those
things-
and
I
know
that
you
all
are
thinking
about
it.
I
know
jack
and
his
team
is
thinking
about
how
to
do
that,
but
we
just
wanted
to
raise
the
flag
on
that
that
we
know
that
that
is.
A
An
issue
will
continue
to
be
an
issue
as
this
rollout
of
the
vaccinations
occurs.
So
we
just
want
to
highlight
that
and
flag.
It.
B
So
across
the
nation
we
see,
for
example,
the
city
of
dallas
has
implemented
so-called
registration
hubs,
so
that
was
a
mix
of
basically
kiosk
applications
on
laptops,
and
you
know
essential
workers
already
vaccinated,
1a,
essential
workers
going
into
the
neighborhoods
and
and
taking
literally
walking
around
knocking
doors
as
encompassing
and
and
getting
people
names,
because
the
biggest
one
of
the
biggest
logistical
problems
here
in
our
country,
not
only
in
our
county
in
our
country,
is
that
we
don't
have
complete
comprehensive
lists
of
eligible
vaccine.
Philosophical.
B
I
was
having
a
long
argument
with
people
saying:
oh,
why
why
don't
you
do
it
like
israel
and
I
tried
to
translate
to
him.
It
was
a
gentleman
that
israel
has
actually
a
complete
list,
a
unified
medical
record
for
every
single
citizen,
israeli
citizen,
and
then
they
have
also
a
complete
list
because
they
have
a
emergency
management
list
that
they
that
they
have
for
obvious
reasons.
B
So
we
don't
have
that
and
we
have
to
beg
people
we
we
we
still
are
calling
medical
offices-
or
you
know,
physician
officers
to
to
give
us
the
the
list
of
their
actually
eligible
employees
in
these
offices.
You
know
the
individual
ones.
So
that's
a
that's
a
problem,
and
I-
and
I
ask
you
to
really-
if
you
have
ideas,
if
you
pick
up
signal,
even
some
noise,
just
don't
hesitate
to
push
them
to
us.
B
I'm
more
than
receptive
to
this.
The
second
big
thing
is
the
the
the
the
dissemination
of
appropriate
information
under
the
conditions
of
basically
a
denial
of
service
attack.
Right
now
on
on
anything
that
looks
like
government,
because
we
are
like
on
the
deck
of
a
of
something
that's
perceived
like
a
titanic.
It
isn't,
but
it
is
precipitation
and
everybody
has
only
one
questions.
When
do
I
get
my
vaccine
and
this
question
is
now
multiplying
every
day
by
340
million
americans
who
expect
a
vaccine
now
yesterday?
B
Actually
so
I
we've,
we
see
that
across
the
globe.
We
see
I've
seen
that
in
other
places,
I've
seen
brilliant
brilliant.
You
know
solutions,
technical
solutions
to
that.
One
of
the
best
that
I've
seen
today
is
actually
response
bots.
So
you
basically
send
people
to
a
google-like
website
and
they
write
in
their
question
and
siri
or
the
equivalent
of
siri
actually
answers
the
question
90
times.
90
correctly,
we
can
deal
with
the
10
that
will
freak
out
because
they
get
the
bogus
response.
B
But
this
is
a
level
of
response
that
we
haven't.
We
have
not.
This
is
a
very
small
county.
It's
logical
that
we
don't
scale
to
this.
You
know
like
that,
but
maybe
the
the
the
the
commonwealth
should
or
or
some
somebody
else
who
would
help
us
with
with
the
same
technology.
B
I
really
don't
know,
I'm
just
in
front
of
the
problem
of
trying
to
you
know,
push
out
messaging
that
fits
in
general,
but
also
there
is
so
many
individual
sub-sections
and
you
know
detailed
information
etc,
and
it's
very
very
difficult
to
you
know
to
to
service
to
provide
provide
answers
to
that.
I
think
it's
also
a
technological
problem,
but
it's
a
second
rank
problem.
A
Our
doors
good,
thank
you.
Thank
you
any
last
question
and
then
we'll
and
then
raj
will
we'll
we'll
move
we'll
move
to
you
any
any
other
question
or
take
us.
Thank
you.
O
Have
you
thought
about
reaching
out
to
some
of
the
faith-based
churches
related
to
some
of
the
community's
focus
for
digital
equity,
because
I
feel
like
sometimes
there
are
various.
You
know,
churches
that
they
have
different.
You
know
communities
of
interest
together.
I
know
as
much
there's
a
black
pastor's
council
that
meets,
and
maybe
that
could
be
an
avenue
for
the
dissemination
of
the
vaccine.
B
Yes,
the
answer
is
yes:
we
have
a
complete
vaccine
committee,
which
is
basically
a
carbon
copy,
old
style
technology,
a
copy-paste
version
of
the
of
the
complete
count
committee,
so
all
their
or
their
social
networks.
The
connection
to
the
to
the
churches,
the
faith-based
communities
to
other
social
agents
in
the
in
the
field
are
active
in
the
life.
B
We
were
very
lucky
actually
to
to
have
gone
through
the
census
this
past
year,
so
that
everybody
who
worked
on
that
is
still
warm
and
connected,
and
we
can
use
them
right
now,
but
I
know
for
a
fact
that
for
a
fact,
I
have
to
explain
to
expect
that
it
will
be.
There
will
be
a
point.
There
is
one
stage
of
outreach
that
has
to
do
with
come
and
get
vaccinated,
you're
eligible,
it's
free,
you
should
you
should
be
doing
that.
B
The
second
thing
is:
what
do
we
do
when
we
will
have
some
significant
uptick
in
vaccine
hesitation
as
I've
seen
that
you
know
globally
right
now
the
noise
comes
from
people
who
have
the
connections,
the
technical
expertise,
the
ability
to
navigate
any
given
system.
This
is
really
the
top
class.
Your
top
class
customers
they're
really
important,
and
they
can
they
can
do
that.
There
will
be
a
moment
when
we
will
have
enough
vaccine,
but
then
we
will
see.
B
You
know
we'll
begin
to
measure,
have
measurable
hesitation
to
take
that
where
we
will
have
to
to
educate
people-
or
you
know.
B
Deliver
them
from
a
lot
of
wrong
information
that
they're
getting
right
now
from
that
they're
getting
microchips
injected
to
that
it
is
a
genetically
modifying
medication,
and
you
you,
you
name
it.
So
all
this
will
be
happening
sooner
than
sooner
than
we
anticipate
it's
like
you
know,
the
famous
the
famous
etching
in
your
the
in
the
car
mirrors,
where
it
says
real
objects
are
actually
closer
than
you
see
them
on
the
mirror.
So
yeah.
A
Exactly
martha,
you
have
a
final
final
question
and
then
we'll.
I
Next
time
you
want
us
to
send
you
our
good
ideas,
should
we
go
county
board
at
county
board
or,
oh,
my
god,
my.
A
Great
thanks
martha
and
thanks
and
now
raj,
it's
not
your
first
rodeo
with
tech
commissions,
so
we're
so
glad
to
have
you
back
and
we
know
that
you
and
jack
have
been
doing
all
your
staffs
have
been
doing
miracles
really
to
to
do
what
you've
been
able
to
do
in
the
amount
of
time
you've
had
so
we're
really
looking
forward
to
hearing
what
the
what's
been
happening
and
what
some
of
the
hurdles
are,
but
before
we
really
we're
so
glad
that
takas,
you
could
be
with
us
and
delighted
you're
going
to
stay.
A
Q
Good
evening,
everybody
again,
as
I
said
like
you
know,
this
is
my
the
last
third
three
months.
I
think
this
is
my
second
opportunity
to
come
back
here
and
talk
about
it
because
of
the
timing
and
the
need
to
talk
about
connectivity
for
students.
What
I
did
was
I
pasted.
I
mean
I
kind
of
put
it
in
the
chat,
the
url
for
the
arlington
public
schools
internet
support
website,
because
we
still
continue
to
provide
those
four
different
prongs
of
approach,
support
for
students.
We
actually
are
talking
about.
Q
Historically,
we
here
we
talked
about
providing
comcast
sponsorship
for
families
that
qualify
thanks
to
the
county's
help
for
that
one,
and
also
the
partnership
with
with
comcast.
We
continue
to
do
support
that.
We
at
this
point
of
time,
have
about
925
students
actively
using
that
particular
program
on
a
day-to-day
basis.
So
obviously
that's
there.
Q
Then
we
actually
continue
to
provide
my
files,
because
comcast
still
has
a
challenge,
because
if
there's
multi-dwelling
units
for
families
sharing
a
home-
and
we
still
have
some
kind
of
needs
to
support
students-
and
we
continue
to
provide
my
fish
or
kind
of
mobile
viral
solutions
for
students-
we
actually
have
another
1200
students
taking
advantage
of
the
myfi
solutions
we
rolled
out
and
not
to
mention
the
hotspots
that
we
have
collaborated
with
the
county
and
actually
ensured
that
you
know,
students
would
be
able
to
latch
on
to
them
for
kind
of
not
for
the
general
like
in
a
one-hour
period
and
get
disconnected,
but
continuously
to
be
able
to
use
them
without
kind
of
interruption.
Q
As
long
as
they're
using
aps
devices,
you
know
we
kind
of
worked
out
and
engineered
the
solutions
with
the
county
as
well.
So
we
we
continue
to
do
all
of
that.
But
what
we
are
more
excited
about
is
to
actually
do
the
most
recent
one,
which
is
a
pilot.
Q
I
will
let
jack
explain
this
exciting
thing
because
it
says
kind
of
baby,
because
you
know
he
went
to
the
state
and
actually
got
some
of
the
the
you
know
the
funds
for
us
to
be
able
to
do
this
pilot
you're,
calling
it
connect
one
two
three
we're
using.
Obviously
you
know
the
we're
leveraging
the
unlicensed
share
spectrum
of
the
mid
5g
bandwidth,
like
you
know,
we're
calling
that
which
is
called
the
citizens
band
radio
service,
which
is
basically
what
we
are
piloting.
P
P
Thank
you
so
much
roger
I've
got
laura
slavin
here.
Lava
has
really
been
the
key
driver
for
this
law.
Do
you
want
to
take
it
from
here
good.
R
So
I
apologize-
I,
I
don't
have
the
map
that
I
wanted
to
share,
but
I'm
going
to
share
another
map
with
you
that
I
have
on
hand.
Can
you
all
see
that
yep,
okay,
perfect?
So,
as
raj
mentioned,
there
were
multiple
different
approaches
to
extending
broadband
services
to
students
during
this
pandemic
in
order
to
facilitate
online
learning,
and
one
of
those
efforts
was
what
we
call
one.
R
Two
three
connect
me
and
what
one
two
three
connect
me
is:
it's
really
the
county's
first
private
lte
network
using
the
cbrs
band,
and
so
it's
it's
meant
to
extend
broadband
services
to
arlington
public
school
students.
The
way
we
were
able
to
do
this
is
back.
In
november
we
applied
for
a
governor's,
fast
track
grant
and
we
received
that
grant
and
within
the
the
money
that
we
received,
we
were
able
to
set
up
five
nodes
along
columbia,
pike,
that's
approximately
1.3
miles
of
coverage
and
it
spans
from
south
greenbrier
to
south
monroe
street.
R
What
this
allowed
us
to
do
is
it
allowed
us
to
extend
broadband
services
within
the
students
homes
in
a
very
expedited
manner
and
and
a
manner
that
allowed
us
to
use
the
the
grants
so
within
the
grant
funding.
So
while
this,
what
we're
doing
is
we
set
this
up
on
december
23rd?
R
The
grant
required
us
to
get
this
set
up
by
december
25th
we've
already
done
extensive
testing,
with
our
it
team
and
with
our
partners
doing
ivmv
and
the
system
looks
extremely
promising,
so
we're
continuing
to
kind
of
look
tweak
this
network.
What
you
see
here
is
I
the
projected
coverage.
This
is
not
the
actual
coverage
as
of
today,
so
we're
working
on
getting
a
actual
coverage
map.
R
So
that's
why
we're
doing
extensive
testing
the
the
next
step
is
really
getting
we're
working
with
arlington
public
schools
to
get
teachers
and
teachers,
aides
and
eventually,
students
to
do
that
end
user
testing.
So
we
can
get
real
knowledge
of
you
know
what
this
system
looks
like
from
their
perspective
and
make
sure
that
they're
able
to
do
their
virtual
learning
properly.
R
So,
as
raj
mentioned,
this
is
a
a
pilot.
That's
been
set
up
specifically
for
student
use,
but
while
this
has
been
set
up
for
student
use,
this
also
really
lays
the
groundwork
for
a
lot
more.
As
you
know,
we
have
an
extensive
dark
fiber
network,
which
is
the
physical
infrastructure,
and
this
allows
us
to
start
having
a
wireless
network,
so
there's
there's
multiple
different
opportunities
within
that
network.
P
No,
I
think
it's
exciting
technology.
We
were
talking
to
the
the
chief
architect
of
google.
His
name
is
preston
marshall
and
he
was
telling
us
that
this
is
as
significant
to
google
as
the
internet,
and
the
cloud
were
think
about
that
in
a
second:
that's
how
significant
they
think
this
is,
and
it
allows
us
to
extend
wireless
connectivity
really
without
wiring,
and
so
we're
very
excited
about
it.
But
the
truth
is
as
raj
would
say.
What
we
need
to
make
sure
is
that
it
really
does
do
what
it
is
it's
advertised
to
do.
P
Does
it
really
enhance
the
virtual
learning
and
both
raj
and
I
are
working
as
close
as
we
can,
with
the
teachers
and
the
students
to
see
if
this
will
work,
but
this
has
great
impact
not
only
for
providing
broadband
connectivity
to
homes
residents,
but
also
it
has.
It
has
immense
opportunity
for
the
county
in
terms
of
saving
money
in
terms
of
how
it
might
do
voice
communications.
P
So
we're
very
excited
about
this
and,
as
you
know,
our
neighbors
at
national
landing
jbg
smith
invested
25
million
dollars
to
get
seven
bands
of
of
of
this
broadband
access.
The
architect
at
google
calls
it
something
interesting.
He
calls
it
the
people's
band.
P
He
said
this
is
going
to
really
revolutionize
how
we're
extending
broadband
connectivity
so
we're
very
excited
about
it.
But
again
it's
got
to
work
and
so
we're
working
closely
with
raj
and
his
team
and
we've
got
the
equipment
we
can
get
out
to
the
field.
We
just
want
to
make
sure
that
we
can
validate
it
does
what
it's
expected
to
do.
R
A
Pleasure
thanks
so
much
so
raj
is
there?
Are
there
hurdles
that
you
and
jack
see?
As
I
mean,
obviously
testing,
it's
got
to
work,
but
are
there?
Are
there
other
things
that
you're
seeing
that
are
really
challenging
ahead
in
the
road?
As
as
we
look
like
we're
going
to
stay
online
for
quite
a
while
with
school.
Q
Yeah,
I
I
think
the
let
me
go
back.
Actually,
I
think
martha
mary.
The
first
thing
that
we've
actually
seen
was
providing
access
some
part
of
connectivity
to
to
students.
Right
I
mean
that
is
what
we
were
in
march.
When
we
actually
said
we
needed
to
turn
this
on
overnight,
and
then
we
were
gone
kind
of
lights
out
and
we
wanted
to
support
it.
So
we
actually
went
through
the
rush.
We
did
actually
have
a
head
start
with
respect
to
devices
and
we
were
able
to
build
on
that
partially.
Q
My
fights
were
already
in
play
and
thanks
to
kevin
and
comcast,
we
were
able
to
expedite
comcast
plans.
We
still
today,
as
of
yesterday,
when
we
look
at
the
data
we
still,
we
see
that
99.3
percent
of
our
students
are
successfully
connecting
to
teams
on
a
regular
basis,
but
there's
still
that
point
seven.
Where
are
we
actually
missing
them?
And
we
are.
We
also
looked
into
each
case
by
case
basis.
Q
We've
developed
a
portal
for
each
school
to
actually
look
at
all
of
their
student
population
and
actually
see
how
much
time
are
they
actually
actively
engaged
on
the
different
platforms
that
we
set
them
out
for
support
for
instructional
exercises.
Canvas
is
the
learning
management
system.
The
device
is
the
other
one.
Q
How
long
are
they
spending
and
what
are
they
really
spending
on
an
aggregate
level,
not
at
the
individual
level,
so
that
we
can
understand,
but
the
schools
need
to
look
at
individual
students
to
understand
what,
if
there
are
situations
that
they
have
to
follow
up,
so
obviously
there
are
still
a
small
pocket.
We
need
to
understand
that.
Q
The
second
thing
we
are
also
seeing
is
they
are
able
to
join,
but
they're
not
able
to
join
for
long
periods
of
time
is
that,
because
of
the
kind
of
connection
that
they
actually
have
now,
that
is
really
the
second
thing
that
is
coming
into
play
and
we
are
starting
to
ask
those
questions
and
try
to
not
just
give
them
a
basic
connection
to
supplement
them
with
kind
of
plan
b.
That's
the
second
one.
Q
Kids
are
being
left
with
grandma,
grandparents
or
some
sort
of
caretakers,
because
you
know
the
parents
have
to
go
back
to
work
and
now
everybody's
kind
of
doing
that
kind
of
a
transition.
We're
starting
to
see
that
there's
expectation
to
support
them
outside
the
current
location.
Buildings,
then,
in
different
kind
of
places,
see
a
challenge
with
that
we're
trying
to
understand
what
does
that
mean?
And
how
can
we
support
that?
Q
Q
Our
goal
is,
at
the
end
of
the
day,
to
ensure
that
the
students
don't
have
to
leave
the
safety
and
security
of
their
homes
and
actually
are
able
to
connect
to
the
streets,
to
connect
to
the
systems
and
are
able
to
really
take
advantage
of
complete
instructional
exercises
without
the
bandwidth
or
the
capacity
being
a
problem.
That
is
really
the
focus
so
we're
trying
to
focus
on
the
fact
that
we
want
to
do
these
tests
inside
the
buildings,
with
kind
of
variations
of
the
styles
of
architecture
we're
talking
about
so
those
are
com.
P
Yeah
one
thing
that's
happening
too:
we
added
which
is
unusual
for
technology
project.
We
we've
engaged
a
behavioral
consultancy,
a
company
called
lift,
innovate
out
of
california
and
what
they
do
is
they
deal
with
fortune
500
companies
in
terms
of
technology
adoption
and
what
we're
doing
what
they're
doing
with
us
is
they're.
Looking
at
how
we're
extending
this,
so
you
can
put
a
technology
in
the
hand
of
some
kids
and
you
can
talk
to
the
kids,
but,
as
rogers
pointed
out,
it's
the
home
itself.
P
How
do
we
make
sure
that
the
parents
understand
what
the
child
needs
to
do
to
prepare
for
a
learning
lesson,
and
I
think
that's
so
fascinating
and
what
lyft
innovate
is
doing?
Is
they're
developing
like
for
mediterranean
psas
that
actually
have
advertised?
They
have
an
avatar
of
the
superintendent,
which
I
think
is
wonderful.
I
know
he
must
be
pleased.
He
looks
thinner.
P
But
what
they're
doing
is
they?
They
actually
introduce
this
to
develop
and
want
to
release
this
shortly
to
the
the
parents
to
say
this
is
what
you
need
to
think
about.
When
you
go
to
work,
you
know,
they've
got
they're
working
and
they're
leaving
the
kids
to
you
know
fend
for
themselves
and
what
they're
saying
is
you
got
to
make
sure
you've
had
something
to
eat?
P
You
got
to
sit
down,
shut
down
the
radio,
listen
to
what
the
professor
has
and
what
they
do
and
laura
certainly
and
raj
can
speak
more
to
this
than
I
can,
but
they
have
these
advertisers
that
come
in
and
say,
hi,
I'm
your
principal-
and
I
am
your
teacher,
and
this
is
what
you
need
to
consider,
and
this
is
how
long
you
need
to
study.
You
need
to
take
a
break
when
we
have
a
break,
go,
get
something
to
eat
and
come
back
and,
as
roger
said,
it's
we
don't
want
a
great.
P
Q
I
I
think
that
the
the
biggest
takeaway
we
we
wanted
to
do
was
like
the
I
was
talking
to
jack,
and
I
kind
of
I
also
brought
this
back
to
this
committee.
At
one
point,
the
thing
that
really
hurt
hit
me
was
when
somebody
said
we
are
grading
in
this
kind
of
an
environment
students
based
on
the
type
of
connectivity
they
have,
but
not
their
understanding,
because
of
the
opportunity
that
they're
able
to
do
so
many
more
things
with
a
better
connectivity
than
not
actually
so.
Q
Obviously,
that
is
what
we
want
to
take,
that
out
of
the
equation,
provide
a
very
high
quality
service
for
for
all
students.
Obviously,
that
is
the
challenge.
The
thing
that
jack
was
talking
about
lyft
is
actually
helping
us
with
two
messages.
Q
The
message
one
is
to
tell
the
families
the
importance,
because
not
every
family
understands
that
just
sitting
in
front
of
the
the
laptop
the
student
is
actually
really
engaged
or
not
or
like
what
type
of
challenges
they
actually
are
facing,
particularly
with
with
families
that
are
challenged
with
both
for
parents
having
to
work
and
not
understanding
the
the
importance.
Q
So
obviously
there
is
the
message
about:
why
is
it
important
to
have
a
nice
and
then
a
good
quality
connection
to
be
able
to
do
to
have
effective
instruction?
I
think
that
is
a
message
and
then
you're
also
talking
about
how
this
will
help
you
and
order
the
various
things
we
have
on
hand
to
help
you
with
that
particular
challenge,
so
we're
trying
to
go
with
that
message
to
all
families.
A
J
Mary,
I've
got
one
and
it's
this
raj.
Has
there
been
any
kind
of
survey
of
what
kind
of
equipment
the
kids
have
at
home
pcs
memory
other
capabilities?
What
kind
of
monitor
they
have
do?
They
have
a
printer.
Q
Q
I
think
all
the
high
school
kids
are
getting
a
macbook
air
and
middle
school
students
are
getting
an
ipad
with
actually
a
keypad
case,
so
that
they
can
actually
even
use
it
for
kind
of
documents
and
creation
of
those
kind
of
things
as
well,
but
pre-k
to
five
have
an
ipad,
so
obviously
a
device
is
provided,
but
we
do
want
to
know
more
because
the
state
is
also
asking
us
that
we
want
to
track
what
type
of
connectivity
do
you
have
do.
Q
I
have
a
high
quality
or
what
type
of
they
want
to
quantify
and
qualify
the
type
of
connection
they
actually
have
as
well.
So
as
part
of
our
exercise,
we
are
trying
to
use
your
voice
matters
survey,
which
we
annually
share
with
all
of
the
students,
and
we
also
use
it
for
kind
of
feedback
for
our
families
and
staff.
I
think
we
are
trying
to
work
that
process
in
to
collect
that
information
as
well.
D
You
had
more
requests
for
additional
information,
didn't
see
anything
on
either
the
county
or
the
school's
website
on
this
pilot.
So
if
you
could
share
any
publicly
available
information
or
reference
architecture
on
the
the
technologies
in
play
here,
so
we
could
look
into
it
a
little
bit
more
and
and
advise
the
county
board
on
what
might
be
relevant
for
this
that'd
be
helpful.
R
Yeah,
we
haven't
publicly
released
any
information
yet
because
we
haven't
had
that
final
end
user
testing,
but
we
will
certainly
be
doing
so
very
shortly.
Thank
you.
A
And
then
mike
had
a
question:
to
what
extent
are
the
end
user
devices
distributed
for
schooling
available
for
other
citizen
services.
P
Well,
we're
prohibited
from
we're
doing
this
pilot
because
the
state
said
we
could.
We
could
provide
broadband
internet
access
to
students
and
we're
prohibited
by
the
state
from
offering
to
others
saying
that
we'd
love
to
do
that.
We
see
some
great
opportunities
with
affordable
housing
from
the
county's
perspective
telehealth
to
be
able
to
reach.
You
know,
we've
been
talking
to
the
free
clinic
at
length
about
being
able
to
extend.
You
know
that
telehealth
capabilities,
those
people
who
can't
get
access
to
medical
care.
P
F
A
Okay,
all
right!
Well,
this
is,
I
mean
raj.
It
sounds
like,
although
it's
been
a
wild
ride,
it
sounds
like
you
and
your
teams
have
really
done
from
the
county
and
the
school
perspective
have
really
done
an
incredible
job.
Truly.
Q
Thank
you.
Thank
you
very.
I
want
to
take
this
opportunity
to
thank
jack
and
his
team.
Obviously
I
think
we
we
talk
every
tuesday
morning
and
thursday
morning.
We
actually
have
standing
meetings
on
a
bi-weekly
basis.
To
me,
this
is
this:
is
such
an
amazing
story
actually
of
collaboration
between
the
schools
and
the
county?
I
have
to
be
honest
with
you,
because
what
we
have
been
able
to
scale
up
was
because
of
the
support
from
jack's
team
as
well,
so
we
truly
appreciate
the
support
and
your
support
as
well.
A
A
A
And
feel
free
to
share
the
one
that
you
wanted
to
with
angela,
so
we
we
can
see
it.
A
C
Well,
yeah
you,
you
kind
of
addressed
it.
It's
about
the
technology,
if
you're
not
ready
to
release
the
information.
I
understand.
I
know
the
pipe
pretty
well
and
it
looks
like
it
for
those
five
antennas
is
a
big
coverage
area,
but
I'll
wait
patiently
until
there's
more
information.
Thank
you
so
much
for
the
for
the
introduction.
P
Just
a
vignette-
and
you
know,
of
course
it
changes.
It's
it's
spotty
based
upon
the
building.
You
know
where
you
are,
but
you
were
covering
1.3
miles
from
south
monroe
street
to
south
greenborough
street
and
will
provide
wireless
connectivity.
P
Think
about
that
in
a
second
that's
1.3
miles,
you
probably
get
a
hundred
feet
in
europe
in
your
house
and
we're
getting
that
type
of
wi-fi
connectivity.
We've
had
tests,
kept
largest
people
have
been
in
the
field.
My
people
we're
experiencing
at
the
apex
of
this
curve,
40
megs,
40
megabits,
down
25
up
that's
significant
and,
of
course,
that'll
even
get
better
and
all
we're
doing
is
we're
putting
up
five
towers.
Is
you
probably
heard
the
board
meeting?
P
There's
a
proposal
to
do
the
same
technology
at
the
gates
of
bolson
they're,
proposing
putting
in
13
towers
to
cover
an
area
about
a
quarter
of
the
size
of
what
we're
covering
on
through
the
columbia
pike
and
the
reason
for
that
is
it
was
a
prototype.
You
know
people
doubted
this
could
be
done.
There's
an
alliance.
If
you
get
a
chance,
go
look
at
the
cbrs
alliance
and
they
have
all
kinds
of
videos
and
what
out
there
and
they
will
show
they.
P
They
talk
at
length
about
what
the
possibilities
are
and
that's
where
you'll
find
google
and
others.
This
is
exploding
at
such
a
pace.
It's
amazing,
the
whole
bandwidth
was
made
available
in
2010
and
the
thought
was
this
would
take
this
would
take
years
and
years
to
develop.
It's
been
an
amazing
acceleration
and
by
the
end
of
2000,
and
I
believe,
21
every
cell
maker,
every
cell
phone
maker
has
agreed
they're
going
to
include
this
chipset
and
every
phone
they
put
out.
H
P
A
S
Jonathan
here
I
I'm
sorry,
I
don't
have
my
hand
up
because
I'm
moving
but
question
about-
and
I
missed
a
little
bit
here
but
about
towers,
you
said
you're
putting
up
13
towers,
sort
of
how
tall
are
those
and
who's
paying
for
them
is.
It
is
the
question
I
wonder
if
they
can
be
used
for
multiple
purposes,
and
maybe
we
could
attract
some
private
capital
to
pay
for
them.
P
P
Yeah
there
was
a
feasibility
study
that
was
presented
to
the
board
on
yesterday,
and
the
proposal
is
just
that:
here's
how
much
it's
going
to
cost
and
yeah
the
devils
and
who's
going
to
pay
for
them.
But
what
you're
talking
about
they're
the
size
of
probably
a?
I
don't,
know
pizza
box
right
and
they
strap
to
our
poles
and
they
can
strap
the
top
of
the
building
and
they
it's
a
clean
signal.
P
Jonathan,
it's
that,
as
you
know,
I'm
sure
you're
well
aware
of
it,
and
it
has
amazing
applicability
for
other
things
that
the
county
may
want
to
do
everything
from
performance
parking.
You
know
curb
management,
and
we
talked
earlier
our
friends
that
jbg
smith
invested
25
million
dollars
in
to
get
to
get
to
get
a
layer
of
that
french
of
that
of
that
connectivity
and,
as
you
know,
they
didn't
just
do
this
because
they
had
25
worth
of
money
they
want
to
put
on
the
table.
P
A
Right
jonathan
go
ahead
and
introduce
yourself,
we
have
a
new
county
board
liaison
who
volunteered
to
take
us,
as
tech
commission
actually
lobbied
to
have
us,
as
in
his
portfolio.
So
jonathan
go
ahead
and
introduce
yourself.
S
Well,
I'm
honored
yeah
jonathan
adelstein,
I'm
the
ceo
of
the
wireless
infrastructure
association.
That's
I
live
in
arlington
are
we're
headquartered,
we're
a
national
organization
in
washington
and
we
represent
the
companies
that
make
and
supply
that
kind
of
equipment
that
jack's
talking
about.
So
you
know
we're
I'm
in
the
wireless
industry,
former
federal
official
for
25
years
on
capitol
hill
and
commissioner
of
the
fcc
and
later
I
ran
the
royal
utility
service
and
we're
far
from
rural
here.
B
Hey
thank
you.
Thank
you
very
nice
to
meet
you,
even
if
it's
completely
virtual
and
via
telephone
line,
which
I
guess
soon
will
be
all
under
cbrs
and
it
will
you
will
snap
your
fingers
and
a
hologram
will
appear
right.
A
Well,
raj,
we
really
just
thank
you
and
thanks
for
thanks
for
coming
back
and
and
we
will,
we
will
definitely
keep
we'll
keep
watching
and
and
if
there's
other
things
that
you
want
to
raise
to
us
as
well,
please
please
feel
free
to
to
reach
out,
but
it
sounds
like
you've.
You've
really
you've
really
made
a
huge
difference.
Q
Thank
you,
ma'am.
Everybody
have
a
great
night,
we'll
talk
to
you
soon.
Q
A
Bye,
bye
thanks
all
right,
well
holly
over
over
to
you
giving
us
an
update.
This
is
just
the
night
for
updates
on
pilots.
T
I'm
not
talking
about
digital
equity,
but
it's
great
to
hear
everybody
else,
having
the
conversation
and
being
supportive
of
the
efforts.
So
thank
you
very
much
marianne.
This
is
kind
of
a
you
know,
a
last-minute
request,
as
I'm
going
through
the
the
process.
If
you
guys
remember,
I
came
in
back
in
early.
I
guess
late
fall,
late
fall
to
talk
to
you
about
this
effort,
and
it's
a
couple
of
things
that
I
walked
away
with.
T
Just
a
high
level
were
what
we
had
spoken
about
was
making
sure
that
we
were
in
communi
having
enough
communication
to
the
impacted
stakeholders
interested
a
little
bit
more
about
the
project,
details
and
some
of
the
outcomes
make
sure
that
we
have
enough
consideration
for
data
privacy,
and
you
know
understanding
a
little
bit
more
about
the
location
and
then
potential
for
future
expansion.
So
just
one
so
so
those
things
were
what
I
walked
away
from
the
last
time
we
spoke.
A
T
Right
so
I'm
going
to
go
through
what
I'd
gone
through
with
the
board
last
evening.
The
the
request
and
the
purpose
of
our
presentation
last
evening
was
for
the
board
to
accept
the
donation
of
goods
and
services
that
would
allow
us
to
continue
on
with
the
pilot
so
first
in
in
framing
of
it,
you
know.
F
T
You're
walking
down
a
road
and
you've
got
a
you're
with
a
group
of
people.
You
know
all
of
a
sudden,
you
see.
There's
you
see,
there's
movement.
Is
it
because
there's
a
sports
win
or
is
it
something
else
that
we
should
be
concerned
about
or
you're
by
yourself
and
it's
late
at
night
and
no
one
else
is
around
and
maybe
you
trip
and
fall
because
you're
looking
at
your
phone,
your
phone
flies
away
from
you.
You
have
no
way
of
getting
in
touch
with
somebody.
T
How
do
you
reach
out
or
who
can
help
you?
Who
would
know
that
something
is
is
amiss
or
suppose
a
fire
alarm
goes
off,
fire
alarms
go
off
and
sometimes
there's
a
fire
and
sometimes
there's
not
it's
either
a
different
emergency
or
a
different
reason.
How
do
you
know
what
kind
of
situation
that
you're
walking
into
so
we're?
Looking
at
you
know
the
question
of
being
asked
at
a
high
level
is
how
does
technology
assist
with
the
deployment
of
public
safety
resources?
T
So
as
we're
talking
about
what
we're
doing
you
know
the
we
had
an
opportunity
to
look
at
a
pilot
this
summer
and
really
going
through
some
refinement,
and
discussions
ended
up
talking
with
with
public
safety
around
what
were
their
needs.
What
were
the
things
that
they
were
looking
to
try
to
achieve
in
working
with
them?
T
You
know
knowing
that
something
happened
and
being
able
to
respond
with
the
appropriate
resources
or
from
a
public
safety
and
from
a
fire
perspective,
potentially
knowing
what
type
of
environmental
event
was
occurring
and
once
again,
not
necessarily
improving
response
times,
potentially,
but
knowing
hey
there's,
there
is
a
fire
or
maybe
there's
not
a
fire,
and
it
could
be
a
different
type
of
emergency
that
we're
walking
into
what
I
also
realized.
This
is
going
to
allow
us
to
do,
is
really
and
think
about.
You
know
what
what
are
the
the
near
and
long
term?
T
You
know
opportunities
for
the
county
that
we
want
to
consider
leveraging
this,
but
we
need
to
dig
in
a
little
bit
deeper
and
understand
we
really
are
focusing
on.
We
have
processes,
we
have
services
that
we're
providing
today.
How
do
we
make
sure
that
this
technology
is
focused
on
complementing
and
improving
those
services
and
then
thinking
about
what
other
sec
think
about
what
other
applications?
This
type
of
technology
can
have.
T
T
So
we
worked
with
public
safety
to
identify
those
four,
and
we
will
be
specifically
focusing
on
those
four
for
this.
This
pilot
right
now
we're
looking
at
some
things
that
there's
so
many
up,
there's
so
many
things
that
we
need
to
learn
going
through
this
from
understanding
the
implementation
of
the
technology
to
looking
at
the
data
to
refining
what
information
we're
getting
so
starting,
you
know,
small
and
in
a
relatively
low
risk
area
of
focus,
I
think
was
the
right
way
for
us
to
go.
T
So
what
does
it
look
like?
What's
the
what's
the
user
experience
going
to
be,
most
people
are
going
to
walk
under
a
light
and
nothing
is
going
to
happen.
There's
going
to
be
nothing
different,
that's
occurring
on
the
everyday
that
they
that
they're
doing,
but,
as
we've
identified
the
use
cases,
these
sensors
will
be.
T
You
know
looking
to
be
alerted
when
one
of
these
situations
we've
been
defined,
that
we've
defined
has
happened
at
that
point,
there
will
be
information
that
will
be
captured
that
will
flow
through
a
network
and
then
ultimately
end
up
on
a
dashboard
that
will
be
in
the
in
the
911
center.
So
it
will
be
available
to
those
people
who
are
taking
911
calls
for
the
ability
to
understand.
Well,
is
there
something
that
we
need
to
do?
How
does
this
incorporate
into
other
information?
Should
we
be
sending
somebody
to
respond?
T
T
It
is
something
that
is,
you
know.
I
keep
trying
to
make
sure
that
everyone
is
aware
of
as
we're
walking
through
everything
is
anonymous.
There
is
no
way
that
you
will
be
able
to
identify
any
aspect
of
a
you
know
other
than
there's
a
human
form,
unless
that
is
the
capture
at
a
text
level.
T
So
where
is
the
the
project
going
to
take
place?
It
is
occurring
on
the
2900
block
of
wilson
boulevard.
There
are
a
number
of
light
fixtures
that
exist
that
are
county-owned.
T
It
was
selected
because
the
those
are
actually
like
fixtures
that
we
ooh
sorry
it's
just
trying
to
get
the
the
admin
in
those
are
light,
fixtures
that
we
own,
but
we
were
also
looking
for
an
area
that
had
a
high
density
of
traffic
during
you
know
a
significant
portion
of
the
day
as
well
as
into
the
evening.
T
We
are
not
looking
to
be
in
an
area
that
is
more
of
a
neighborhood
setting,
because
we
need
the
the
data
that
could
potentially
generate
the
use
cases,
also
the
building
structures,
because
it
is
more
of
an
urban,
dense
environment.
That's
helpful
to
understand
how
the
signal
works
and
how
it's
communicated
and
then
the
other
piece
that
I
think
is
important
to
stay
is
it's
also
where
comcast
had
their
infrastructure.
T
So
being
able
to
work
with,
I
mean
I'll
talk
a
little
bit
more
about
our
partners.
Comcast
too
was
helpful.
The
the
project
is
going
to
be
12
months.
It's
divided
up
into
three
phases.
The
first
phase
is
for
us
to
kind
of
refine
the
use
cases,
but
also
to
have
the
light
fixtures
installed
and
then
for
us
to
test
out
what
what
we
expect
to
happen.
Based
on
these
use
cases
from
there
we
have
a
learning
phase.
T
This
will
last
for
about
six
months,
where
we
hope
to
capture
data
that
will
help
inform
us.
Is
this
helpful?
Is
this
making
an
impact
on
those
areas
that
we
identified
earlier
and
then
our
our
final
phase
will
be
an
assessment
phase
as
part
of
the
assessment,
it
will
be
our
responsibility
of
the
county
to
make
the
recommendation
to
the
county
manager,
where
other
areas
of
applicability
could
be
what
potential
scale
and
cost
could
include,
and
what
other
potential
considerations
we
might
want
to
think
about
from
the
county
perspective
to
to
include.
T
I
said
I
said
this
earlier,
but
I
want
to
go
back
to.
I
think
it's
important
to
be
honest.
With
where
we
are,
I
mean
you're
hearing
these
these
terms,
but
said
this
is
the
first
opportunity
for
us
to
really
you
know,
apply
them
to
our
existing
services.
T
I
think-
and
I
this
is
why
you
know
there
are
elected
officials,
and
I
am
not
one-
I
think
katie
crystal
said
it
very
eloquently
last
night
and
I
will
probably
not
say
it
as
eloquently,
but
the
reality
is
that
this
there
is
a
technology
aspect,
that's
being
integrated
into
everything.
We
do
the
same
reason
that
you
all
were
talking
earlier
about
making
sure
that
there
is
an
element
of
the
comprehensive
plan,
let's
go
forward
with
this
kind
of
in
control
and
better
informed
as
we
move
forward.
T
So
us
ignite.
They
are
a
non-profit
entity
that
work
with
a
number
of
different
partners,
community
partners
and
and
their
their.
Their
role
is
to
help
promote
smart
community
opportunities
and
and
make
sure
that
it's
being
driven
by
a
community
need
not
necessarily
by
a
technology,
need
they
will
be
working
with
us
and
they
will
be
the
service
of
project
managers
on
this
effort
because
of
their
experience
and
their
background
in
depth
of
other
communities.
T
They
have
a
wealth
of
knowledge
of
you
know
the
data,
privacy
and
security
they
also
before
even
u.s
ignite.
The
background
and
the
experience
of
the
individuals
that
are
coming
to
the
table
supporting
us
is
quite
impressive.
T
We've
also
partnered
with
a
commonwealth
cyber
initiative
cci.
So
that's
a
a
government
fund
governor
northam
funded
university
partnership.
So
all
the
public
universities
in
the
state
of
virginia
are
are
working
together
as
a
consortium,
and
what
will
happen
is
we
have
a
proposal
that
we
will
work
with
cci
to
find
professors
who
are
interested
in
assisting
us
through
this
effort?
There
are
two
different
phases
that
they
will
be
involved
in.
T
The
first
phase
will
be
on
the
initial
planning
and
assessment
and
then
as
we're
going
through,
they
will
stay
with
us
and
and
continue
to
make
sure
that
we
are
following
the
data
privacy
guard
rails
that
we
have
set
up,
but
also
providing
recommendations
as
we're
going
through
the
process.
T
Comcast
has
a
a
significant
role
in
the
light
fixtures
and
the
network
infrastructure,
but
also
they
have
a
data,
privacy
and
security.
You
know
it
is
their
hardware,
but
they
also
have
an
interest
in
making
sure
that
the
the
technology
that
they're
promoting
is
something
that
is
is
not
going
to
put
be
at
risk
of
people
as
they're
moving
forward
in
adoption.
T
Our
role
is
related
to
not
only
the
fixture
installation
but
the
creation
of
the
data
dashboards
themselves
and
making
sure
they
are
incorporated
into
the
processes
so
making
sure
that
if
there
is
an
alert,
what
does
it
look
like
and
what
does
it
mean
and
what
is
the
expectation
of
how
the
response
is
altered
and
then
also
considering
what
the
gathering
of
data
and
information
of
how
successful
is
this?
T
It
is
ultimately
our
responsibility
to
make
the
recommendation
of
what
is
moving
forward,
but
we
also
play
a
significant
role
related
to
data
privacy
and
security
guidance.
We
already
have
a
set
of
very
strong
dated
privacy
principles
and
we're
working
through
the
the
the
privacy
policy.
This
will
help
inform
as
we're
moving
forward
with
that
effort
as
well
so
talked
a
lot.
We
in
the
last
couple
slides
about
data
privacy
was
we
started
this
project.
T
We
worked
on
a
set
of
principles
that
would
help
inform
us,
as
we
were
moving
through
the
first
one
is.
You
know
I
mentioned
the
four
use
cases.
We
will
be
very
focused
on
data
related
only
to
those
use
cases,
so
we're
not
going
to
be
capturing
the
text
data
about
anything
else.
That
is
not
specifically
related
to
the
the
use
cases
that
we've
defined,
what
we're
doing
and
if
hopefully,
you've
gotten
a
sense
as
we've
walked
through
we're
doing
something.
It's
called
privacy
by
design
basically
work
con.
T
We
are
integrating
the
aspects
of
privacy
from
the
very
beginning
and
considering
how
that's
going
to
impact
what
we
will
be
doing.
So
one
of
the
examples
that
there's
no
image
data
that's
retained
and
that
everything
is
text
only.
We
will
also
make
sure
this
is
one
of
the
the
items
that
had
been
brought
up
last
time
related
to
community
engagement.
T
We
are
working
right
now
with
our
comms
person
to
create
not
only
a
website
a
project,
a
project
website,
but
also
an
additional
faq
document
that
will
allow
people
to
understand
and
be
better
versed
of
what
it
is
we're
doing,
and
what
we're
not
doing
in
a
little
more
detail
than
what
I
have
here.
It's
also
we
will
have
an
opportunity
for
people
to
you
know:
hey,
I'm
interested
to
be
able
to
keep
informed.
T
The
plan
is
now
that's
been
approved
by
the
board,
is
to
kind
of
take
this
on
a
little
road
show
the
same
conversation
that
I'm
having
here
will
be
happening
with
the
civic
associations
that
are
in
close
proximity
to
the
area,
as
well
as
with
clarendon
alliance,
initial
conversations
with
lion
village,
two
members
from
lyon,
village
and
the
clarendon
courthouse
civic
association,
as
well
as
clarendon
alliance,
we're
very
both
very
positive
and
supportive
of
the
effort
of
what
we're
doing
what
we're
not
doing
is
diverging
from
what
we
said.
T
We
were
going
to
do
we're
also
saying
once
again
we're
not
recording
and
retaining
any
images.
If
we
do
make
any
changes.
Is
it
I
talked
about
the
the
the
use
cases,
but
as
we
dig
into
what
the
use
cases
are,
maybe
things
are
going
to
come
up
that
are
going
to
to
a
question.
Maybe
we
should
consider
something
slightly
different.
T
What
we
are
setting
up
is
a
a
a
data
privacy
oversight
panel
specific
to
this
effort,
so
I
should
probably
call
the
safety
and
innovation
zone
data
privacy
oversight
panel.
That
will
provide
guidance
for
this.
This
effort,
the
thought
that
the
individuals
that
I
had
mentioned,
who
represent
the
organizations
on
the
previous
page,
will
be
representative.
T
I
think,
there's
a
consideration
for
making
sure
that
there
is
somebody
from
itac
who
is
part
of
the
panel,
as
well
as
with
the
internal
county
staff,
and
that
panel
will
meet
on
a
periodic
basis
to
make
sure
they're
reviewing
where
we
are
and
provide
guidance.
The
other
thing
we
had
talked
about
last
time
when
we
met
I
had
mentioned,
I
think
we
were
doing
a
privacy
impact
assessment.
I
think
the
question
was
raised.
T
Would
we
be
sharing
that
privacy
impact
assessment
and
I've
gotten
clarity,
and
we
will
be
sharing
that
privacy
impact
assessment,
but
also
making
sure
that
the
the
data
privacy
oversight
panel
reviews
and
provides
input
the
privacy
impact
assessment?
There
is
an
initial
one,
but
we
will
commit
to
reviewing
it
and
ensuring
that
its
additional
ideas
or
thoughts
as
we
promote
or
progress
through
the
project
are
included
and
shared,
and
then
on
the
on
the
give
up
data
give
up
the
management
of
the
different
data
types.
T
That's
something
that
the
the
county
will
maintain
ownership
for,
but
once
again,
if
something
comes
up
that
needs
to
go
through
the
the
safety
and
innovation
zone,
data
privacy
oversight
panel,
I
had
mentioned
very
quickly.
I
think
before
this
is
a
great
opportunity
for
us,
because
in
a
very
tight
budget
time
there
is
an
interest
in
you
know:
the
donation
of
goods
and
services,
our
our
financial
impact
outside
of
the
existing
resources
that
we'll
be
working
on
this
effort
is
minimal.
T
So
it's
really
for
the
installation
and
the
removal
of
the
lights
at
the
end
of
the
pilot.
Everything
else
is
being
donated
to
us,
and
so
I
think
the
the
learning
that
we
are
going
to
achieve
through
this
effort
to
me
is
a
significant
value
that
you
know
does.
T
Financially,
but
I
think
it
will
be
very
helpful
as
we're
moving
forward.
I
spoke
a
little
bit
before
about
the
engagement.
I
think
that's
an
important
piece
of
this
as
we
are
as
we
are
moving
forward,
so
this
isn't
informed
because
it's
an
internal
assessment,
but
it
does
not
absolutely
mean
that
we
are
cutting
off
communication
and
a
chance
to
discuss
what
we
are
doing
so
that
we
have
the
project
site
and
then
the
the
the
end
of
the
project.
T
So
we
will
be
providing
the
assessment
to
the
county
manager
for
the
decision
of
what
happens
after
this.
I
want
to
leave
you
with
just
going
back
to
the
the
data
privacy
aspect.
Again,
the
the
data
will
be
restricted
based
on
the
use
cases.
Anything
is
we're
doing
is
completely
anonymous.
There
are
no
images
or
methods
of
identifying
any
individual
that
will
ever
be
recorded
or
stored
by
a
third
party,
and
then
the
pilot
will
absolutely
be
following
the
county's
data
privacy
principles.
A
So
holly,
you
might
guess
you
have
generated
questions.
So
let
me
let
me
go
through
one
and
then
I
think
david
had
a
question
and
I
think
phil
had
a
question.
So
since
I'm
going
to
read
it
right
from
chat,
so
you
can
hear
it
the
best
practice
from
past
municipal
government.
Digital
tech
deployment
strongly
supports
clarity
about
government
policy
and
performance
objectives
before
installation
of
surveillance
devices.
A
A
T
I
I
I
strongly
feel
that
they
do,
but
this
is
also
why
we
are
taking
this
this
pilot
in
a
small
scale,
to
ensure
that
we
are
not.
You
know
either
addressing
areas
that
potentially
provide
more
opportunity
for
risk,
sorry
or
in
areas
that
provide
more
opportunity
for
risk.
One
of
the
things
that
I
mentioned
last
night
I
did
not
mention
today,
I
think
it's
it's
also
important
to
mention.
I
know,
there's
a
an
awareness
and
a
concern
of.
Are
you
responding
differently?
T
A
P
Yeah,
I
think,
if
I
could,
this
is
jack.
I
think
that
this
is
significant,
because
this
is
this
is
truly
a
public-private
partnership.
We're
relying
there's.
Always
this
thought
that
government
can
do
everything
you
can't,
and
these
ideas
of
setting
up
innovation
zones
across
the
world
have
happened
and
they
failed
examples.
I
mean
you
either
have
a
technology
company,
that's
coming
up
with
an
idea
and
they
put
it
in
and
then
they
leave.
P
They
can't
find
barcelona
an
example,
cisco
putting
as
much
money
in
bustle
and
now
they're
in
a
situation
they
can't
fund
what
they're
doing
or
you
got.
You
have
jurisdictions
like
stafford
county.
You
say
you
know
what
we're
gonna
do.
We're
gonna
take
this
mall.
We
don't
know
what
to
do
with
it.
We're
going
to
call
it
an
innovation
zone
and
we're
going
to
put
a
sign
up
and
we're
going
to
do
it,
but
this
is,
I
I
think
really
attractive
about.
P
This
is
that
this
is
groups
have
come
together
and
are
working
together
to
bring
their
knowledge,
their
background
to
be
able
to
create
an
environment
and
a
learning
laboratory
where
we
can
learn
from,
and
so
the
government
can
transform
from
being
boots
on
the
ground
and
that's
what
this
is.
These
tasks
that
we're
talking
about
that
are
going
into
emergency
management
really
boots
on
the
ground.
We
do
that
today
we
have
policemen
who
walk
the
streets,
they
see
traffic
movement,
they
report
back.
P
We
have
people,
citizens
calling
him
and
reporting
issues,
and
what
we're
doing
is
we're
trying
to
automate
that
so
that
we
have
really
an
artificial
intelligence
approach
to
this
we're
saying
we're
seeing
a
patent
of
behavior.
This
is
different,
but
what
comes
down
is
it's
a
human
decision?
What
to
do
next
and
that
human
decision
is
made
at
the
ecc
to
watch.
We
have
a
what
we
call
a
watch
desk
at
the
emergency
communications
office
and
what
that
does
it
dispatches
necessary
police
fire
sheriff
traffic
control
to
be
able
to
address
issues?
P
P
Out
of
comcast-
and
he
said
we
want
to
work
with
you
guys
to
develop
a
partnership-
that's
not
only
just
for
clarendon,
but
something
could
be
scaled
for
all
of
arlington.
It
could
be
scale
for
the
entire
country
and
too
often,
I
think
what
we
have
is
not
to
I'll
stop
talking
after
this
is
we
have
this
uneven
innovation.
P
You
know
if
you've
got
the
money,
you
want
to
put
something
up,
you
do
it,
and
so
you
go
down
in
dc.
You
have
a
block
in
dc.
That's
got
technology,
meanwhile,
the
rest
of
dc's
rotting,
because
it
doesn't
have
the
capabilities
that
they
need.
If
this
is
successful,
this
could
this
is
a
force
multiplier
in
terms
of
our
ability
to
provide
the
same
services
we're
doing
in
clarendon
on
columbia,
pike
or
to
put
it
on
put
it
in
areas
that
maybe
need
they
need
that
type
of
attention.
So
I
think
this
is
a.
P
T
A
And
that
really
phil
I'll
jump
to
your
question
and
then
we'll
come
back
david
to
yours
and
then
john.
I
think
you
had
a
question
fill
that
kind
of
segways
into
your
question
about
peer
cities.
Did
you
want
to
ask
it.
J
P
We
are
yes,
we
are.
We
have
u.s
igniters
connected
with
them,
there's
a
number
of
things
which
we
did
not
put
in
the
presentation
because
of
the
lymph
room
they
stretched
from
across
across
the
country
from
portland
to
san
antonio,
to
other
places.
P
Marietta,
georgia
yeah
I
mean
we've
got
the
comcast
comcast
folks
on
the
phone
I
mean
they
could
talk
about
some
of
the
things
that
if
they
want
to
but
yeah
no,
we
were
in
contact.
Some
of
them
have
done
things
differently.
P
P
I
don't
know
if
you
want
to
say
anything
from
a
comcast
perspective,
but
I
think
this
is
a
worthy
worthy
tip
and
we're
talking
about
a
year
project
we're
first
three
months
of
configuration
and
setup
and
then
last
and
then
we're
going
to
we're
going
to
have
to
go
through
a
process
of
ideation
what's
possible.
What
do
we
need
to
do
next?
And
but
that's
why
we're
putting
this
governance
group
together?
We
want
to
make
sure
that
it's
not
only
the
good
old
boys
that
are
on
this
group,
but
it's
that
the
community
is
involved.
P
That's
why
we'll
be
looking
for
a
representative
from
itac
and
epact,
probably
to
be
participating
in
this
kevin?
Do
you
want
to
say
anything?
I
I
don't
know.
I
know
doug
told
me
you
guys
you
guys
have
been
briefed.
G
Yeah,
I
mean
we're
pretty
excited
about
the
pilot
here
and
with
the
understanding
that
this
is
just
a
pilot.
Here
too,
there's
really
no
risk
on
the
county
side.
It
means
a
12-month
deal
and
they're
going
to
study
the
implementation
of
this
study,
what
they,
what
they
gain
from
this
and
decide
whether
they
want
to
expand
it
or
not.
So
I
mean
from
the
county's
perspective,
I
don't
I
don't
see
much
in
the
way
of
risk.
It's
really
all
upside
really.
I
know
we've
partnered
with
a
number
of
cities.
G
I
think
there's
one
down
in
charleston
they're
working
on
now
and
another
other
color
places
around
the
country
that
jack
just
mentioned,
but
they're
kind
of
in
the
early
stages
and
pretty
excited
to
see
if
arlington
would
seem
honestly
move
forward
with
this.
A
And
then
david
asks,
if
there's
going
to
be
civic
association
holly,
will
there
be
somebody
from
the
clarendon
civic
association
on
the
on
the
privacy
impact
committee.
K
K
Have
you
thought
about
making
a
data
privacy
oversight
panel
a
permanent
element,
because,
if
you're
going
to
do
stuff
like
this
and
build
in
privacy
by
design,
I'm
hearing
that
you
guys
have
done
this
for
a
year,
but
the
panel's
not
even
composed
yet
hasn't
looked
at
it
hasn't
been
evaluated.
There's
not
going
to
be
a
citizen
rep
on
it.
So.
P
It's
a
work
in
progress
david,
the
way
we
started,
I
don't
make
the
decision
for
the
county
manager
and
if
he
want,
if
that's
something
that
they
come
up
with,
and
they
say
that
we
need
to
do
this.
That's
fine,
but
we,
as
harley
has
said,
we're
focusing
we're
doing
a
razor
thin
focus
in
terms
of
this
particular
area
where
with
defined
requirements-
and
we
know
where
we
have
where
we
want
to
start
the
process.
So.
F
P
T
P
Right
and
I
I
got
to
point
out
that
that's
not
the
case
david,
you
missed
you
missed
speaking
in
this,
so
you've
we've
what
the
folks,
usa,
the
the
folks
in
the
usa,
have
been
looking
at
this
for
a
long
while
the
guy
louis
de
silva
is
the
most
is
the
leading
expert
on
cyber
security
iot
data
privacy
in
the
country.
If
not,
the
world
he's
been
contributing
to
this
comcast
doug
guthrie,
we'll
talk
to
you
about
the
fact
of
what
they've
been
doing
so.
K
I
I
think
it's
super
important
for
citizen
voices,
given
that
they're
the
taxpayers
they're
the
they're
the
people
going
to
be.
I
totally
hear
you.
I
have
no
complaint
about
your
business
process.
I
and
I
I
don't
want
to
be.
I
don't
want
to
be
like
a
negative
nancy
on
this.
I
think
this
is
great.
Actually
I
support
a
lot
of
this,
but
I
also
don't
want
to
sort
of
just
say
great
you've
done
a
business
case.
This
is
awesome
like
there
is
real
need
for
citizen
input,
even
if
it's
not
necessarily
as
expert.
K
A
Anyway,
well,
let's
yeah
in
in
the
so
let's
I'm
gonna
wrap
this,
I'm
I'm
assuming
that
this
will
holly.
If
I'm
looking
at
timeline,
it's
a
march
or
april
yeah.
T
I
would
say
that
you're
looking
at
the
the
hardware
to
be
installed
probably
said
late
spring
sometime
and
then
in
the
meantime.
As
you
know,
david
said
this
we're
going
to
really
start
diving
into
all
right.
Let's
really
define
the
use
case.
Let's
set
up
that
that
governance
structure
related
to
the
the
panel-
let's
consider
you
know
are:
are
we
looking
at
the
right
level
of
data
metrics
and
elements?
T
How
do
we
make
sure
we
incorporate
it
into
the
process
and
we'll
be
diving
into
that,
while
they're
they're
installing
the
the
hardware,
there
will
probably
be
a
little
bit
of
time
where
okay,
here's,
what
our
use
cases
were
here
with
the
hardware
inside,
let's
kind
of
test
against
it,
to
make
sure
what
we
expected
is
returning
the
results
and,
let's
refine
it
before
we
say:
okay,
now
we're
we're
ready
to
actually
have
this
in
the
learning
phase
of
how
does
this
work
and
how
does
this
inform
what
we're
doing.
A
Okay,
well,
we'll
you
know.
Obviously
I
I'm
in
the
interest
of
we'll
we
will
loop
back
we'll.
Obviously
we'll
want
some
more
more
information
on
how
how
this
you
know
kind
of
what
the
decision
frame
will
be
moving
moving
forward
and
how
we
engage-
and
I
know
you've
already
extended
a
a
spot
for
us.
So
I'm
I'm
in
the
interest
of
time.
I
know
we're
three
minutes
from
when
we're
supposed
to
end
and
we
get
a
lot
on
the
list.
What
I'm
going
to
do
is
david.
L
Only
briefly
budget
pro,
it's
that
fun
time
of
year,
it's
a
budget
we're
going
through
the
process
right
now,
everything's
looking
kind
of
flat-
I
guess,
is
what
you'd
say,
given
the
budget
difficulties
of
the
county,
so
we're
going
to
see
what
that
actually
means
and
go
through
the
process
with
county
manager.
L
That
budget
will
be
out,
I
believe,
the
end
of
february,
when
mark
will
finally
release
that
and
we'll
see
where
that
goes
in
terms
of
new
projects
and
what
we're
taking
on
that's
pretty
much
where
we're
at
with
that.
A
Do
you
think
we'll
get
guy,
you
think
we'll
know,
because,
obviously,
last
year
we
had,
as
you
recall,
we
had
24
hours
to
respond,
which
was
not
helpful.
So
we'll
we'll
figure
out
how
and
we'll
get.
L
O
A
L
No,
no,
we
do
not
so
we'll
keep
you
posted
on
that
date.
I
remember
from
last
year
about
that
right,
yeah
and
as
soon
as
last
year
was
difficult,
because
we
that's
how
we
got
it.
It
came
to
us
so.
A
Cut
may
be
substantial,
that's
why
I
want
to
make
sure
we're
this
team
is
ready.
So
let's
put
that,
let's
so
so
we'll
you
all
may
hear
something
before
we
meet
in
february,
because
it
we
don't
meet
until,
as
you
know,
the
last
the
last
wednesday
in
february.
D
If,
if
I
may
suggest,
maybe
we
should
draft
kind
of
a
statement
of
priorities
in
absence
of
what
the
budget
is
for
technology
spending
in
the
government
based
on
last
year's
budget
to
have
it
at
the
ready?
And
we
can
circulate
that
amongst
the
members
in
advance
to
have.
A
Something
a
good
idea:
yeah
good
idea,
yeah,
we'll
pull
out
the
and
dust
it
off
and
see
where
we
are
there.
There
might
be
some.
I
think
there
are
some
shifts
given
covet,
but
yeah
good,
good
idea.
I
would
like
to
get
the
minutes
david.
I
know
we
I'm
sorry,
we
we
didn't,
we
didn't
mean
to
drop
you
from
the
list
you
are
now
added.
Angela
has
taken
care
of
it.
K
Fine,
thank
you
so
much
and
and
one
last
question
I
just
typed
it
in
but
I'll
just
read
it
aloud
just
and
then
I
know
we
need
to
move
on.
I
just
want
to
strongly
encourage
briefing
the
civic
federation
on
this
project
before
it
goes
live
if
not
no
already
done,
and
then
two.
K
I
think
it
would
be
great
for
either
this
commission
or
for
the
county
to
conduct
or
for
you
guys
to
look
at
best
practices
for
data
governance
kind
of
like
county-wide
city-wide
worldwide,
because
I
think
this
is
an
area
that
is
ripe
for
peer
emulation
and
I
don't
want
to
come
out
and
say:
hey
I
dislike
this
or
oppose
it.
I
think
that
this
is
promising.
I
do
think
that
the
governance
is
a
really
important
step
and
I
would
encourage
our
commission
that's
a
way
where
we
can
be
helpful
to
you
guys.
T
We
are
the
there
is
a
roadshow
plan
for
the
civic
associations
and
then-
and
I
appreciate
the
assistance
too,
because
I
recognize
this
is
a
very
touchy
touchy
topic
that
we're
working
on.
So
thank
you.
A
A
I
think
the
underlying,
of
course-
and
there
was
another
question
there
about
the
priorities
holly
in
terms
of
you-
probably
saw
in
the
chat
in
terms
of
whether
we
go
with
commercial
interests
or
local
and
digital
transformations.
So
there's
this
pilot,
I
think,
has
brought
up
a
lot
of
a
lot
of
things
in
terms
of
what
what's
most
important
martha.
You
have
a
quick
question
or
was
that
an
old
hand,
you're,
muted,
martha,
okay,.
I
I'm
not
anymore
holly
david
was
asking
for
the
civic
federation.
A
All
right:
okay,
thanks
martha
for
the
clarification;
okay,
any
any
other
shifts
for
the
meeting
minutes.
We
know
any
any
changes,
any
anything
else,
frank
anything
else
that
you
saw.
N
A
J
A
Okay,
fill
seconds
frank,
moved
all
in
favor,
aye.
D
A
A
Is
there
any
any
nays
out
there
all
right?
We
have
an
adoption
and
again
angela.
Thank
you
so
much
for
doing
this.
I
know
that
you
listen
to
the
tape
and
you
put
it
on
and
and
when
I
read
it,
I
was
reminded
that
I
hadn't
sent
you
all
some
articles
that
I
promised
during
holiday.
Never
promise
anything
during
holiday.
You
completely
forget,
so
I
will
make
sure.
As
I
looked
at
that
I
thought.
Oh,
I
didn't
get
that
to
you
all.
So
I
will
I
will
circulate
around
the
commission
report.
A
I'm
going
to
move
right
to
you,
frank
in
the
interest
of
time,
because
we're
already
passed.
N
All
right,
I
will
try
to
keep
it
just
keep
it
fast.
Actually,
there
is
good
news,
the
coveted
relief
legislation
that
was
adopted
at
the
end
of
the
last
congress.
At
the
end
of
last
year,
seven
billion
dollars
was
included
for
broadband
affordability
and
accessibility,
including
98
million
dollars,
to
create
a
national
broadband
map,
3.2
billion
dollars
for
emergency
broadband
connectivity
and
also
250
million
dollars
for
the
fcc's
19
telehealth
program.
N
So
so
some
good
news
actually
they're
one
of
the
items
which
directs
the
fcc
to
give
some
60
days
to
implement
a
project
on
affordability,
and
it
includes
a
50
per
month
discount
for
each.
N
On
unser
person,
who's
that
who
can't
afford
it's,
basically
a
subsidized
broadband
for
unconnected
people-
and
this
is
goes
a
long
way
on
the
affordability
and
the
sec-
is
taking
comments
on
that
already.
N
In
addition,
back
to
one
of
our
favorite
topics,
robocalls
and
pursuant
to
the
trace
stack,
the
sec
is
now
imposing
a
three
call
per
month
per
residential
phone
line.
Robocall
limit,
which
I
don't
know.
Cars
must
also
be
able
to
opt
out
of
this,
but
basically
it
directs
the
carriers
to
basically
impose
these
limits,
and
these
would
be
across
from
commercial,
non-commercial,
nonprofit
organizations
and
second
sec
order
requires
terminating
voice
service
providers
such
as
verizon,
att
and
comcast.
N
Speaking
of
smart
cities,
cisco
systems
has
actually
stopped
sales
and
support
for
its
smart
city.
Soft
software
services
program
google
had
earlier
pulled
back
on
its
smart
city
plans
in
toronto.
So,
even
though
we're
going
forward
with
some
smart
city
elements,
there
is,
I
think,
a
lot
of
flux
in
the
in
the
marketplace.
N
From
providers
the
ntia,
the
national
telecommunications
information
administration,
has
launched
a
digital
inclusion,
web
page
information,
clearinghouse
for
federal
and
state
and
digital
inclusion,
inclusion
resources,
an
update
on
my
report
from
last
month
on
the
fcc,
as
predicted,
the
fcc
has
due
to
split
democrats
and
republicans
and
jessica
rosenwarso
has
been
named
the
interim
chair
until
and
we
won't
be
at
full
strength.
N
The
five
commissioners
until
the
president
appoints
and
the
senate
confirms
a
person,
and
it's
not
clear
who
you
know
it's
possible
jessica
could
become
the
permanent
chair,
but
but
there
is
a
vacancy
to
be
filled
and
given
the
new
unity
agenda
there,
I
wouldn't-
and
actually
I
think,
getting
the
cabinet
confirmed-
is
a
much
higher
priority
at
this
point.
N
Let's
see
and
back
back
to
back
to
robocalls
and
illegal
calls.
The
fcc
imposed
earlier
this
month
imposed
a
9.2
million
dollar
forfeiture
on
a
robocaller
using
caller
id
spoofing
to
send
threatening
and
xenophobic
messages,
while
attacking
attacking
a
series
of
people,
including
jurors
journalists
and
political
candidates,
so
the
fcc
hitting
hitting
the
bad
guys
with
some
hefty
fines.
I
Hey
mary,
that's
a
lot
hi,
martha
hi.
So
I
have
something
to
say
about
this
too,
and
I'll
just
write
up
a
couple
of
reports
and
send
to
them,
but
I
finally
got
mine
to
work.
Did
you
yeah?
I
had
verizon,
they
gave
me
a.
I
They
gave
me
a
number
to
call,
but
it
it
wasn't
the
first
one
that
I
was
given.
So
I
I
sounds
like
we've
got
some
new
new
tools
that
they're
going
to
make
available.
But
in
the
interim
I
have
something
that
mostly
works.
A
Wow-
and
I
know
louise
was
had
passed
it
on
louise,
do
you
want
to
just
briefly
when,
when
martha
had
raised
that
question
about
robo,
do
you
want
to
briefly
answer.
H
The
the
only
resources
that
I
have
were
what
are
on
the
verizon
website
and
there's
a
special
there's,
there's
there's
several
pages
about
spam,
for
both
files,
digital
voice
and
landlines,
and
for
cell
phones,
the
different
tools
and
there's
a
special
nomo
robo,
help
desk
page
specifically
for
verizon
customers.
I
That
page,
I
really
was
not
the
best
thing
to
use,
because
I
kept
trying
to
get
it
to
work.
You
know.
Digital
voice
is
different
from
landline
and
that's
one
of
the
things
that's
not
so
obvious,
but
I'll
just.
I
only
have
a
few
sentences
to
say
about
the
whole
thing,
especially
if
they're
going
to
redo
something
better.
P
Yeah,
I
think
this
is
going
to
become
a
real
issue.
Frank-
and
I
I
know
you
guys
know
the
fcc
is
looking
at
this,
but
the
way
we're
going
to
be
scheduling,
vaccinations
is
going
to
require
calls
to
take
place.
Those
calls
will
not
always
be
answered
and
we're
going
to
be
we're
going
to
finally
going
to
get
scammed.
I
was
talking
to
some
of
my
colleagues
in
florida
and
they
were
telling
me
that
the
heavy
scamming
taking
place
where
people
call
up
and
say
they
grab
the
number.
P
They
call
and
say:
hey
we're
from
the
manatee
county
public
health
department,
we're
trying
to
schedule
your
appointment.
I
just
want
to
remind
you
that
the
appointment's
taking
place
on
next
week,
as
you
know,
and
by
the
way
to
make
this
happen,
we
need
your
social
security
number
and.
P
Credit
card
because
there's
a
fee
associated
with
this,
and
so
this
is
going
to
become
big
issue
coming
forward
because
we
gotta
we
have
to
mobilize
to
get
people
to
get
vaccinated
and,
as
you
know,
what
happened
this
last
week,
the
governor
changed
the
rules
in
terms
of
who
was
getting
the
vaccines
and
virginia
hospital
center
set
up
almost
3
000
appointments
actually
12
000,
but
they
were
for
everybody
and
anybody
and.
P
Exactly,
and
so
it
was
designed
so
that
you
just
couldn't
walk
in
there
and
get
it
you
had
to
go
through
a
age
qualification
eligibility
that
type
of
thing,
so
we're
really
concerned
from
a
county
perspective
and
actually
louise.
I
think
one
thing
we're
concerned
about
from
verizon
perspective
is
that
you
know
companies
like
verizon
work
in
a
normal
manner.
So
you
see
a
lot
of
phone
calls
coming
out.
You
begin
to
wonder
whether
or
not
there's
somebody
trying
to
spam
the
system,
and
so
what
they're?
P
Finding
that's
happening
in
florida
is
the
verizon
and
others
are
slowing
down,
they're
blocking
the
call,
because
they
think
this
is
some
sort
of
spam,
and
what
this
actually
is
is
health
workers
trying
to
call
people.
So
I
think
this
issue
is
going
to
get
become
a
big
issue
in
the
next
few
months,
because
we've
got
to
get
the
vaccines
open.
A
N
The
yeah,
I
think
that
will
actually
go
to
the
comcast
and
verizons
of
the
world
when
they're
providing
that
service
and
it,
like,
I
said,
the
they're
they
need
to
have
the
fcc
implemented,
I
think,
by
february
or
march,
so
there's
a
real
short
turnaround
as
far
as
implementing
the
program-
and
you
know,
I'm
not
sure
how
I
mean
they're,
going
to
adopt
the
fcc
will
adopt
the
rules
and
put
them
put
them
in
place.
So.
N
I
I
I
still
think
there's
a
good
chance
that
the
rose
jessica
rosenmores
will
wind
up,
but
but
mignon
clyburn
who's
on
the
steering
committee.
If,
but
I
think,
if
she
wants
it,
you
know
there'd
be
a
strong
case
for
making
her
the
chair.
F
P
Well,
we're
implementing
an
account
we're
going
to
be
implementing
a
county
in
the
next
few
weeks.
Is
a
omni-channel
contact
center
cloud-based.
The
idea
of
omni
channel
is
that
normal
call
centers
except
voice,
but
they
don't
accept
text
or
they
don't
accept.
You
know
chat
that
type
of
thing,
and
so
what
we're
trying
to
do
is
implement
that
as
fast
as
we
can.
I
know
the
stage
is
thinking
of
the
same
thing,
but
yet
it's
all
about
communication.
P
It's
making
sure
we
get
the
communication
and
itec
can
really
help
us
with
that,
especially
when
you're
dealing
with
a
population
of
75
and
over
65
and
over
16
to
64
we've
got
the
health
conditions.
It's
you
know
they
may
not
be
the
best
equipped
to
understand
the
technology
and
anything
we
can
do
to
provide
that
guidance
would
be
helpful.
P
Yep,
looking
at
a
company
called
twilio
to
stand
that
up,
but
they
the
real
devil
in
the
whole
thing,
is
the
classes
behind
that.
You
know
it's
yeah,
they
call
you
you
schedule.
Did
you
get
the
first
appointment?
Do
you
get
your
second
appointment?
P
How
soon
making
sure
people
can
get
processed
so
yeah,
because
our
phone
system,
john,
won't
handle
thousands
of
calls.
This
is
the
problem.
That's
where
we
need
your
help.
Itech
in
terms
of
funding.
P
You
gotta
you
can't.
You
can't
walk.
You
can't
roll
in
a
a
combustible
engine
car
where
we
have
to
go
hybrid.
D
Well,
I
I
heard
a
media
report
on
npr
tonight
that
arlington
was
awarded
several
million
dollars
from
the
federal
emergency
management
agency
for
for
covered
response.
So
hopefully
that
will
help
with
funding.
N
And
the
county
does
have
regular
coven,
19
emails
that
are
going
out,
no
updates,
and
so
that
might
be
a
place
to
put
the
you
know,
put
messaging
on
the
phone
issue
in
there
as
well.
M
Oh,
I
had
another
question
you
made
me
think
of
it.
Oh,
if
we
could
post
also
in
the
civic
newsletter.
A
F
A
A
Okay,
okay,
get
to
holly,
so
you're
adjourning
the
meeting,
and
anyone
want
a
second
and
somehow
you're
getting
to
do.
You
have
her
email,
so
you
can
ask
her
the
question
I'll
send
I'll,
send
denise
I'll,
send
you
and
holly,
so
you
can
connect!
No,
I
haven't.
I
have
it:
okay,
good!
All
right!
Second,
there's
a
move
to
adjourn.