►
Description
No description was provided for this meeting.
If this is YOUR meeting, an easy way to fix this is to add a description to your video, wherever mtngs.io found it (probably YouTube).
A
Yeah
yeah
no
worries
the
there'll
just
be
some
extra
padding
at
the
head
of
the
recording
and
transcription,
but
it
is
ready
and
running
and
I
will
pass
the
Baton
to
Frank
and
Don
to
actually
convince
the
official
meetings.
B
B
Don't
see
any
hands
Louise
anything
tonight.
B
You
joining
us
anybody
I
saw
another
name.
Dylan
Lee
is
Dylan.
D
Hi
Mr
chairman
I'm,
here
to
learn
I'm
a
part
of
a
vendor
for
identity
security.
Hope
you
don't
mind
me
listening
in
and
learning
how
you
guys
conduct
your
business.
Okay,.
B
Very
good
well
welcome.
Thank
you
appreciate
it.
Thank
you,
okay.
That
brings
us
to.
Hopefully
a
brief
chairs
update
here
and
first
I
wanted
to
introduce
our
board
liaison
Libby
Garvey
is
joining
us
here
to
help
us
inaugurate
our
new
meeting
room
here.
B
E
B
B
B
G
My
my
name
really
is
Jim
Smith,
it's
not
with
SEC
or
anything
and
I
am
I've
lived
in
a
Harlingen
since
I
moved
out
of
my
Georgetown
College
digs
in
1976,
so
I've
been
in
Arlington
at
different
places
in
Arlington,
but
in
Arlington
County
for
a
long
long
time,
starting
with
Arlington
Towers
in
Roslyn.
H
G
But
I
live
in
the
Dover
Crystal
area.
Now
at
North,
Arlington
off
of
lorkham
Lane
and
and
Nelly
custis
I'm,
a
telecommunications
attorney
by
trade
I've
had
about
four
lives.
Really
I
was.
F
G
A
Communications,
Law,
Firm,
originally
doing
cable,
then
broadcast
and
finally,
telecommunications,
work.
I
then
went
in-house
and
was
president
of
a
National
Industry
Association
of
competitive
telecommunications
carriers.
It
was
called
comptel
at
the
time.
It's
still
around.
Now,
it's
known
as
Encompass
after
that.
I
was
vice
president
of
a
telecom
company
called
Excel
Communications
out
of
Dallas,
and
then
lastly
went
back
into
a
law
firm
for
about
15
years
before
retiring
from
the
law.
G
F
G
One
quarter
or
one-third
time
so
as
I
say
almost
lifelong
Arling,
jonian
and
decided
in
retirement.
G
You
know
volunteerism
is
a
good
thing
and
I
thought
there
was
a
Nexus
with
a
commission
like
an
advisory
commission
like
this
and
I
happen
to
know
Frank
jazzo
for
about
a
long
time.
40
years,
maybe
or
something
like
that,
and
so
I
learned
about
the
The
Advisory
about
the
itac
through
through
Frank
and
decided
to
volunteer
and
put
my
name
in
that
nice
to
be
here
all.
G
I
I
Yeah
I
like
to
have
been
in
multiple
places
in
Arlington
for
different
homes
in
Arlington,
County
I've,
been
here
for
about
26
years,
I
think
maybe
a
little
bit
more
than
that
I
Live
Now
in
the
Westover
area
and
I'm
a
product
manager
by
trade
I've
been
doing
product
for
many
many
years.
I
I
started
my
career
and
product
at
AOL,
which
I'll
just
tell
on
that
was,
and
I've
worked
at
several
of
the
the
local
Big
Wigs
Rosetta
Stone
in
Washington
Post
and
most
recently
in
the
MetLife
doing
which
not
liberal
but
doing
software
development
and
then
it.
What
brings
me
here
is
is
very
similar
also
to
Jim,
not
retirement
hoping
soon,
but
I
am
I.
I
B
Right,
okay,
welcome
to
you
both
glad
to
have
you.
It
gets
us
up
to
11
so
now,
in
order
to
have
a
Warren,
we
need
six
people
just
doing
the
math
there.
So
why
don't?
We
all
introduce
ourselves
quickly:
I'm
Frank,
Jessa,
I'm,
chair
again,
former
lead
Vice,
chair
and
chair,
and
then
Vice
chair
before
and
I've
been
on
for
a
long
time
back
when
it
was
the
cable
commission,
so
we
sort
of
morphed
over
the
years
and
what
we
do
has
changed.
B
But
I
am
now
about
in
Arlington
about
25
years
and
lived
between
northingham
middle
school
and
Stratford
Park,
the
Dorothy
M
being
the
former
H.B
Woodlawn
program
site
and
where
that
Stratford,
Junior,
High
and
and
I
am
a
retired
telecommunications
attorney.
I've
worked
for
the
now
rosalind-based
firm
of
Fletcher
Hill
in
the
hotel,
with
the
same
firm
for
35
years
and
and
been
retired
for
about
four
years
now.
So,
anyhow
Michael.
Why
don't
you
we'll
go
around
that?
One.
J
G
L
I
H
Hi
every
Wingo
I've
been
here
since
I,
moved
since
I
retired
from
my
Army
in
2017,
so
I've
been
in
the
area
six
years.
I
live
in
the
Falls
Church
I
am
currently
a
system
security
engineer
for
Lockheed
Martin,
an
agency
in
McLean
I
am
currently
a
doctoral
student,
also
at
Marymount
University.
B
In
Arlington
all
right
Jason,
you
can.
M
Go
now
if
you
want
all
right
so
Michael
Kuiper
I'll
be
speaking
today.
Sorry,
sorry,
if
Jason's.
M
Was
thinking
we're
interchangeable.
F
B
F
J
K
G
K
So
it's
nice
to
have
another
product
product
manager,
on
the
on
the
commission
and
my
day.
Job
is
with
the
federal
government.
L
Hi
everyone
Gary
there
like
Frank
I'm,
a
retired
Telecom
attorney
I
spent
most
of
my
career
at
Federal
Communications
Commission
did
a
stint
in
between
10
years
at
the
Trademark
Office
doing
intellectual
property.
The
last
job
was
back
again
at
the
Federal
Communications
Commission
in
the
public
safety
and
Homeland.
L
B
F
B
N
Sure
Jackie
Stelling
I'm
lived
here,
I,
don't
know
40
plus
years,
I
guess
at
this
point:
I'm
retired
FEMA,
where
I
my
work
did
include
emergency
communications,
cyber
security
and
privacy
standards,
but
I'm
also
active
in
Arlington's
Civic
things
and
currently
the
chairman
of
the
board
of
the
Arlington
Civic
Federation.
F
N
I'm
here
on
a
requested
and
approved
medical
connection
from
home
from.
B
And
Kevin
Robbins
is
as
a
medical
excuse,
but
he
is
not
attending
tonight.
May.
The
minutes
reflect
all
right,
so
I
think
that
brings
I
I,
don't
know,
Jason
got
a
chance
to
sorry.
Why
don't.
B
D
All
right
everybody,
my
name-
is
Jason
Keller,
first
Go
Army,
Beat
Navy,
since
we've
got
a
couple
Marines
in
the
room.
D
I
am
a
former
Intel
analyst
in
the
National
Guard
worked
with
Special
Operations
Community
spent
time
in
South,
America
and
Africa,
and
then
I
was
about
10
years.
On
the
FED
side,
I
worked
everything
from
managing
Intel
collection
on
the
Southwest
border
to
how
the
home
Department
of
Homeland
Security
manages
Intel
requirements
to
I
was
the
national
ESF
11
coordinator,
where
I
was
managing
how
the
US
government
responds
to
disasters
around
food
crises
to
include
cyber
threats
so
now
I
work
for
Vista.
D
My
full-time
job
is
with
the
U.S
agency
for
International
Development,
where
I
provide
cyber
security
support
services
around
the
globe
to
usaid
beneficiaries
ranging
from
journalists
all
the
way
up
to
National
governments
and
yeah
I'm.
Just
excited
for
this.
I've
lived
in
Arlington
about
three
years:
total
of
my
life
bouncing
in
and
out
I
think
it's
one
of
the
best
places
in
the
United
States,
so
I'm
honored
to
be
here.
Speaking
with
all
you
find
public
servants
today,.
M
Okay,
so
I
put
the
link
to
the
brief
in
the
chat,
so
you
can
either
follow
along
on
the
screen
or
you
can
open
it
up
for
for
further
ref
reference
I'm
here
today
to
talk
about
cyber
security
for
Arlington,
specifically
I
just
got
back
from
Ukraine
I
also
worked
for
vistent
and
and
helping
with
the
the
Cyber
development,
both
here
in
the
U.S
and
abroad
as
well.
M
M
M
I'm
going
to
start
out
with
a
little
case
study
so
in
Moscow
on
Thursday
May,
12
2022,
all
of
the
Uber,
like
Rideshare
Vehicles,
went
to
the
same
spot
in
Moscow.
So
what
it
did
was
cause
a
huge
traffic
jam
in
the
Kremlin
and
everybody
was
worried
about
this
traffic
jam.
At
the
same
time,
Ukraine
started
their
assault
to
to
clear
Russians
from
the
north.
M
M
F
M
F
M
G
M
A
prime
place
to
get
attacked
because
of
the
work
that
goes
on
here
because
of
the
industries
that
are
here,
we've
seen
some
some
attacks
recently
and
I'll
go
into
them
in
specific.
But
here
you
can
see
kind
of
a
word
cloud
you'll
see
on
the
peripheral,
some
of
the
attacks
that
have
been
happening
from
some
of
the
organizations
that
have
been
happening.
M
I'm
going
to
talk
about
some
of
the
different
types
of
attacks,
the
impact
of
these
attacks
on
Arlington
and
what
we
can
do
to
to
prevent
these
attacks
or
respond
to
these
attacks.
So
let's
talk
about
the
DC
area
here,
you'll
see
just
a
timeline.
I
picked
a
couple
of
examples
throughout
the
year,
the
years
that
have
shown
some
of
the
attacks
that
that
have
impacted
really
the
infrastructure
and
the
US
okay.
So
we
know
about
the
OPM
hack,
with
21
million
people,
personal
data
taken
and
then
sold
on
the
dark
web.
M
Capital
One
breach
also
exposed
a
lot
of
personal
data
and
then
in
2022
events
DC,
which
is
the
Premier
hosting
spot
of
a
lot
of
DC
Convention,
centers
and
sports
events.
M
Critical
infrastructure
is
at
risk,
so
these
are
actual
examples
of
attacks
that
have
happened
in
Ukraine
and
other
places,
specifically
power
grid,
water
treatment,
plant
and
transportation
system,
types
of
attacks
that
that
have
happened
and
when
I
answer
questions,
I'm
happy
to
go
into
some
details
of
these
attacks.
There.
M
M
This
is
called
the
black
energy
attack
and
this
was
done
in
Ukraine.
What
happened
was
they
did
a
phishing
campaign
to
some
people
that
worked
in
the
power
plant
and
it
was
one
of
those
campaigns
where
you
click
on
the
link.
It
was
a
spear
fishing.
They
opened
the
link
up
it
installs
a
program
on
the
computer
that
typically
causes
A
disruption
into
the
the
power
grid
management
system,
which
is
a
computer
run
system
in
the
power
grid.
M
M
The
number
of
successful
cyber
attacks
in
on
cities
and
the
the
really
the
six
major
largest
cities
in
the
U.S
and
the
five
past
five
years
are
are
here:
okay,
you
can
see
where
the
data
comes
from
the
national
cyber
security
Center,
and
you
can
see
these
are
successful
attacks
that
have
happened.
These
are
not
attacks
that
have
been
reported
and
they
are
just
going
to
keep
going
up
as
our
adversaries
try
to
try
to
attack
us.
M
So
what
are
the
trends
that
we're
seeing?
The
trends
that
we're
seeing
are
AI
is
really
big,
so
AI
is
being
used
to
not
only
enhance
the
attacks
and
be
able
to
do
more
attacks
but
make
these
attacks.
C
M
And
actually
write
code
for
some
of
these
attacks
to
to
manipulate
zero
day
attacks,
which
are
vulnerabilities
that
are
that
are
released
on
the
internet
and
that
needs
to
be
updated.
So
a
lot
of
people
use
those
zero
day
vulnerabilities
to
to
create
programs
to
do
a
tax
before
somebody
updates
their
their
stuff
cloud
computing.
So
a
lot
of
the
things
that
we
have
are
on
Amazon
they're,
on
Google
they're
on
all
these
Cloud
systems.
M
H
M
People
might
think:
hey,
that's
not
a
big
deal
if
they
know
where
I
live.
It
is
a
big
deal
not
only
for
personal
financial
reasons,
but
also
for
spear,
phishing
attacks
and
and
other
attacks,
and
then
data
security,
so
encryption
tools
and
access
control
when
we
think
that
two-factor
authentication
is
safe.
If
that
is
compromised-
and
we
have
a
expectation
that
this
is
a
secure
system
and
it's
not,
then
some
of
our
most
secret
things
could
be
at
could
be
vulnerable.
M
So
what
are
cities
doing
right
now
to
combat
the
attacks?
I
put
three
of
the
biggest
cities
here.
Some
of
the
measures
they're
doing
is
cyber
security,
training
for
city
employees,
they're.
H
M
Mandating
two-factor,
authentication
and
in
incident
response
plans.
Now
you
can
read
that
for
yourself,
but
what
I
want
to
highlight
is
those
incident
response.
Plans
are
pretty
robust,
and
that
means
that
you
need
to
practice
this
with
a
tabletop
type
exercise
and
we're
talking
about
at
the
smallest
level
possible.
With
these
tabletop
exercises
do
is
it
brings
teams
together
so
that
they
know
who
is
who
how
they
can
react
and
what
resources
there
are
available.
When
attack
happens,
communication
lines
are
are
going
to
be
compromised.
Tax
are
usually
coordinated
with
some
kind
of
other
event.
F
M
Response
team
will
be
dealing
with
something
in
addition
to
some
kind
of
cyber
security
emergency,
so
these
are
really
important.
M
So
the
Hague
did
something
very
interesting,
and
it
there
you
see
some
cities
doing
some
pretty
interesting
exercises.
What
they
did
was
they
did
hack
the
hay,
so
they
invited
Hackers
from
all
over
the
world
into
the
egg
to
actually
hack
their
system,
and
they
brought
up
124
different
vulnerabilities
that
the
system
had
from
this
convention
of
people
coming
together
to
try
to
make
the
city
stronger.
M
M
Okay,
so
let's
move
more
into
Arlington
and
how
does
this
affect
Arlington?
So
I
put
some
some
dates
on
here.
I
put
some
some
attacks,
some
of
the
companies
are
local
to
the
area
or
they
affect
this
area.
You
can
see
these
attacks
are
not
a
certain
time
frame.
They're
spread
out
throughout
since
2011.,
okay
and
they're
just
going
to
increase.
M
H
M
M
M
Are
important,
they're
becoming
increasingly
reliant
on
cyber
security
force,
cyber
security
resources
and
cyber
resources
to
make
the
cities
more
efficient
to
make
you
green
to
reduce
carbon
emissions,
but,
along
with
that,
there
are
vulnerabilities
that
are
open
so
as
Arlington
progresses
through
becoming
a
smart
city
and
becoming
the
leader
in
you
know,
in
the
world
of
of
some
of
these
Technologies
we
also
have
to
be
careful,
and
we
have
to
make
sure
that
that
we
keep
up
on
the
Cyber
side
to
to
protect
our
citizens
and
companies.
M
F
M
A
crossroad
of
some
of
the
the
best
cyber
security
companies
that
we
have
in
the
world
and
we
have
a
lot
of
resources
here
so
investing
into
the
Next
Generation
to
train
them
and
we're
not
talking
about
five
years
now.
We're
talking
about
10
15
years
out
is
super
important
and
we're
we're
not
really
harnessing
some
of
the
populations
that
we
can
harness,
but
cyber
security.
It's
not
important
to
go
to
a
four-year
college
and
get
a
master's
degree.
M
We
also
don't
see
a
lot
of
women
in
the
industry
in
proportion
to
men
and
if
we
invest
some
of
our
money
into
developing
this
and
inviting
some
of
these
really
Heavy
Hitters
and
some
of
these.
These
people
that
have
done
an
amazing
amazing
job
in
the
world
to
encourage
some
of
the
women
in
our
community
and
some
of
the
girls
in
our
community
to
take
up
cyber
security.
We're
going
to
increase
the
amount
of
people
that
are
that
are
exposed
to
technology.
We
can
pick
from
the
best,
so
we're
not
picking
from
the.
M
Ransomware
is
a
really
big
thing:
okay-
and
you
can
look
at
this
later,
but
you
can
see
the
different
industries
that
have
been
hit
by
ransomware
and
these
industries
are
our
government
Industries
they're
retail?
They
are
infrastructure,
it's
really
the
whole
Gambit.
M
M
M
Here
are
some
of
the
best
practices
that
we've
seen
in
the
U.S
and
and
overseas
to
increase
the
resiliencies
of
cities
so
education,
we
talked
about
that.
Cyber
insurance
is
really
important.
Some
businesses
don't
know
about
it.
So
if
you
have
cyber
Insurance,
just
like
any
other
insurance
you
get
hacked,
then
the
cost,
which
could
be
very
large
for
a
business,
could
be
spread
out
for
a
number
of
businesses.
F
M
And
they
understand
the
importance
of
having
people
that
are
ready
to
quickly
react,
have
the
practice
beforehand
the
training
beforehand
and
also
have
the
resources
to
to
do
what
they
need
to
do,
because
if
there's
a
response
team
without
the
actual
resources
that
are
tried
and
tested
and
worked
together,
then
it's
not
as
effective
grants.
So
I
will
get
into
that
in
a
second.
But
there
are
a
lot
of
grants
available
in
the
US
that
local
businesses
can
use
that
the
city
can
use
to
achieve
these
objectives.
M
M
Lot
of
money-
and
it's
a
continuous
thing-
it's
not
hey!
We
did
this
one
year
and
we're
good.
You
have
to
do
it.
You
have
to
get
experts
that
really
know.
What's
going
on
to
help
you
do
it
and
you
have
to
get
somebody
from
outside
your
agency
to
come
in
and
help
you
just
like
an
auditor
competitions.
We
talked
about
that.
Competitions
are
great.
We
have
the
NSA
every
year
puts
on
a
competition
for
all
the
service
academies
called
the
CDX,
which
is
a
hackathon.
M
That
would
be
a
great
thing
to
do
here
in
Arlington,
with
some
of
the
the
city,
schools
and
some
of
the
local
population
and
then
collaborating
with
technology
corporations
and
professionals
to
take
advantage
of
local
expertise.
Like
I
said,
Vista
has
many
many
partners
in
Arlington
that
are
leaders
in
cyber
and
really
capitalizing
on
some
of
these
incredible
Technologies
like
AI,
to
do
some
amazing
things
and
and
helping
them
and
having
some
kind
of
place
where
they
can
come
together
and
incubate
is
very
helpful.
M
Okay,
we
talked
about
grants
here,
so
this
is
from
from
grants.gov,
which
is
the
grants
website.
So
you
have
sam.gov
advance.gov,
and
these
are
grants
that
are
available
as
of
yesterday
for
for
governments
and
corporations
to
to
Really
increase
cyber
security,
and
right
now
is,
is
the
perfect
time
to
do
it
because,
as
we
know,
September
is
at
the
end
of
the
year,
so
they're
trying
to
use
a
lot
of
these
funds
this
year.
So
they
get
funds
next
year.
So
now
is
the
time.
M
Okay,
another
great
tool
is
USA
learning,
so
usalearning.gov
is
a
financial
vehicle
that
is
already
in
place
that
the
government
has
put
in
place
so
that
you
can
use
your
funds
for
training
they're
a
an
apex
type
program
that
has
a
lot
of
different
companies
together.
That
can
do
many
things
and
they
have
been
doing
many
things
in
the
country.
So
this
is
a
great
partner
that
Vista
has.
M
F
M
Partners
with
with
USA
learning
for
cyber
security
training,
these
are
some
of
the
things
that
we
do:
okay,
okay,
so
we
do
cyber
security
awareness,
training.
We
do
risk
management
framework,
we
do
tabletop
exercises,
we
do
threatened
vulnerability
management,
we
do
security
incident
handling
and
we
have
learned
from
the
many
companies
that
we
have
worked
with
and
we
have
learned
the
lessons
from
overseas
and
we
want
to
take
that
back
and
and
contribute
back
to
where
we
live.
M
All
right
so.
N
M
F
M
Great
website
to
look
at
another
great
website:
United
States,
computer
emergency
Readiness
Team
website,
so
it
has
alerts,
advisories
incident,
reporting
and
response
of
what's
going
on
real
time
right
now,
cyber
security
mentors
website.
So
that's
news
analysis.
M
It's
got
recent
topics
in
cyber
and
you
can
see
you
can
see.
What's
around
the
horizon,.
M
M
Now,
with
vistent,
what
I
like
to
do
is
really
to
anyone
in
the
audience
any
corporations
or
companies
that
would
like
for
Vista
to
come
for
free
to
do
an
assessment
to
help
write
grants
to
show
you
how
the
process
works.
We're
available
so
feel
free
to
contact
me
out
there
in
Arlington
or
doesn't
matter
if
you're
private
business.
If
you
are
a
government
organization,
we
really
want
to
help,
and
we
think
this
is
a
team
environment.
M
H
M
Contact
information
is
on
that
QR
code,
so
you
can
put
your
camera
up
there
and
it
will
actually
record
it.
You
can
take
a
picture
of
it
yeah,
but
that's
how
you
get
in
contact
with
me.
My
cell
phone
numbers.
There
I'm
also
going
to
open
it
up
to
Jason
my
partner,
who
right
now
is
in
South
America,
but
see
if
he
has
anything
to
to
add
real,
quick
and
open
it
up
for
questions.
D
Yep
I
just
want
to
thank
everyone
for
their
time
today,
as
Michael
touched
on,
the
problem
is
growing
on
a
regular
basis.
I
def
I
just
want
to
Circle
back
to
the
the
growth
in
ransomware
and,
what's
going
on
there,
if
you
all
don't
know,
there's
been
some
changes
in
recent
years.
It's
not
just
about
hey
we're
going
to
lock
down
your
data
and
get
a
price
for
you.
D
D
If
you
will
from
the
guy
at
the
bottom,
that
just
simply
gets
the
access
via
sending
you
that
annoying
fishing
email
he
gets
into
your
computer,
he's
passing
it
up
to
the
next
person,
that's
in
the
system
and
they're
getting
that
privileged
access,
setting
up
getting
into
your
administrative
accounts
and
then
boom
they're
handing
it
off
to
another
person,
who's
deploying
the
ransomware
doing
the
negotiations
with
the
affected
parties
Etc.
D
It's
really
catching
up
to
and
becoming
its
own
realm
of
advanced
persistent
threat
actors
where
they're
having
similar
or
same
capabilities
of
nation
states,
individual
people
out
there
in
the
world
so
and
then
Michael
touched
on
that
a
little
bit
with
what's
coming
along
with
AI
I,
actually
work
with
the
national
Ai
and
cyber
security
isow
as
well
and
there's-
and
we
see
it
all
the
time
so
I
look
forward
to
your
questions
and
I
hope
that
we
can
be
a
partner
in
any
way
moving
forward.
M
Thanks
Jason
so
I'd
like
to
open
it
up
for
questions
from
this
room
or
from
online
and.
K
Before
we
do,
that,
I
just
want
to
remind
everybody
that
the
reason
why
we
invited
these
wonderful
professionals
here
is
that
it's
in
a
public
forum,
so
we're
not
asking
any
questions
about
actual
Arlington
County
government
posture,
obviously
Lauren.
If
you
want
to
chime
in
you're
more
than
welcome
to.
But
that's
all.
M
M
F
M
Way
so
if
you
look
it
up,
it's
pretty
neat:
it's
called
beautiful.ai
AI
to
write
code.
It
can
replicate
things
you
can
make
different
AI
systems
talk
to
each
other
and
you
can
also
use
them
to
plug
in
to
scripts
that
you
write
with
python.
So
what
that,
what
what
adversaries
are
doing
is
they're
using
the
computing
power
of
these
AI
systems
and
they
are
doing
a
denial.
C
M
Attack
they
are
figuring
out
how
what
are
the
vulnerabilities?
What
kinds
of
attacks
can
you
do
think
of
it?
This
way,
AI
has
the
whole
internet
as
its
resource.
So
with
some
of
the
reasoning
pattern,
skills
that
it
has,
it
is
actually
able
to
pretty
effectively
figure
out
what
are
some
vulnerabilities
and
how
do
we?
How
do
we
take
advantage
of
them
and
it
never
sleeps
yeah.
J
I'm
going
like
something
like
chaos,
absolutely.
M
And
and
there's
some
really
like
interesting
ways:
people
have
been
using
AI
there's
a
company
in
Arlington,
for
example,
that
is
using
AI
that
has
a
lie:
detector
and
they're
they're
able
to
pretty
accurately
see
if
somebody's
lying
or
not
there's
another
one
that
uses
AI
to
get
news.
Agencies
like
Russian
media
agencies
and
what
they
do
is
they'll
chart
different
words
and
they'll
chart
different
things
and
say:
okay,
the.
M
Is
going
up
about
this
or
that
and
they've
actually
aligned
it
with
some
of
the
attacks
that
have
happened
in
Ukraine
and
other
places,
and
you
can
see
some
of
the
rhetoric
going
up
in
in
some
areas,
so
you
can
actually
pinpoint
and
figure
out
when
an
attack
or
when
something
is
going
to
happen
with
it,
and
then
you
can
see
it
with
some
of
the
things
that
are
not
attacks
like
you
know,
there's
news
about
the
stock
market,
lawyers
and
and
the
like.
M
F
M
That's
a
great
question,
so
the
question
was:
are
we
talking
about
individual
organizations
trying
to
protect
against
this
AI
threat,
or
are
we
talking
about
everybody
coming
together
right,
we're
going
to
be
stronger
if
we
come
together
and
we
share
what
the
attacks
are
now
it's
sensitive
because
you
know
like
the
reset
security
breach
if
you're
sharing
all
of
your
Intel
there
there's
a
threat
of
it
getting
leaked
out,
but
we're
going
to
be
stronger
together
if
we
share
it
so
really,
if
Arlington
has
some
kind
of
system
where
it's
a
reporting
system
or
some
kind
of
combination
of
companies
that
trust
each
other
that
say
hey
we
today
we
got
some
phishing
attacks
and
and
it's
within
our
kind
of
closed
Network,
that's
going
to
make
it
a
lot
stronger
and
more
resilient,
but.
N
Yes,
my
information
is
out
of
date,
but
I
used
to
participate
in
something
called
infraguard
and
they
had
a
very
sponsored
by
the
FBI
and
a
partnership
of
trusted.
Folks
who
did
report
to
each
other
about
cyber
attacks,
and
there
was
a
very
active
group
in
the
DC
area,
but
not
one
in
Arlington
and
so
I
wonder
if
that
is
something
that
might
be
a
vehicle
since
it's
through
a
trusted
partnership
for
bringing
Arlington
groups
together
for
improving
Mutual
notification.
D
I
would
say
that
also
I
suspect
that
Arlington
is
probably
related
to
the
multi-state
ISAC
in
some
regard.
Information
sharing
and
Analysis
Center
that
focuses
on
threats
to
local
and
state
governments,
travel
and
territorial
governments,
Etc
I,
believe
that's
hosted
out
of
the
center
for
Internet
Security.
That's
a
great
toolkit
as
well,
but
yeah
the
I
believe
DC
infraguard
has
the
largest
participation
of
Indians
regard
team
in
the
nation.
It's.
N
It
does
and
I
used
to
meet
with
them
and
I
was
always
surprised
that
we
didn't
have
our
own
Nexus
here
in
Arlington,
because
you
would
think
just
with
the
Arlington
business
population.
First
of
all,
there
are
some
differences
about
Arlington
from
the
rest
of
the
DC
area
in
terms
of
well,
there
are
lots
of
differences,
but
that
there
would
be
a
real
advantage
to
a
few
businesses
getting
together
and
and
forming
an
Arlington
infergard.
M
H
M
Know
what
resources
there
are?
They
don't
know
how
they
can
tell
so
even
a
workshop
with
local
businesses
to
say,
hey,
we
want
to
talk
about
cyber
security
and
make
it
stronger
and.
H
M
M
But
it
is
doable,
it
is
doable,
it
is
doable
and,
like
we
said,
Arlington
is
a
very
unique
place.
It's
not
DC,
but
it's
it's
a
crossroad
of
a
commercial
industry,
it's
kind
of
a
leader
in
a
lot
of
different
sectors,
and
then
it
does
overlap
in
a
lot
of
the
dod
state.
Department
and
agency
facets
as
well.
So
it
is
unique
and
it
would
be
helpful
for
for
companies
here
to
have
some
kind
of
support
network.
G
B
E
So
it's
a
little
tangential
I've
been
working
in
Workforce
Development
for
like
decades,
I've
done
three
major
ones
and
the
same
block
keeps
coming
up,
often,
which
is
the
lack
of
the
commercial
sector
actually
participating
and
most
recently
finding
you
know
internships
Europe
uses
them.
Incredibly,
it's
a
great
way
and
there's
a
company
here,
actually
that
trains
and
then
uses
interns.
They
cannot
get
businesses
to
actually
like
get
Bring
It
On
try
to
pay
the
interns
and
sort
of
participate
and
help
out
it's
sort
of
like
schools.
E
Do
it
you
do
it
government
that
you
just
you
just
give
us
the
people
and
they
complain
if
they
don't
get
the
people,
but
they
don't
seem
to
play
with
this
or
work
with
this
I.
Don't
know
nor
I,
don't
know
if
you're
seeing
something
I
did
I
just
keep
seeing
this
over
and
over
again
and
I'm.
Getting
older.
M
Well,
there's
there's
something
in
the
dod
called
the
skill
bridge
program
if
you're
familiar
with
that
and.
F
M
F
M
E
E
They
get
a
contract
when
they
come,
and
then
they
train
the
interns
and
so
supervise
they
do
every
parents
actually
do
the
work
and
but
the
contract
gets
paid
by
the
company,
but
they're
having
trouble
even
getting
and
I
think
the
students
are
bringing
pretty
well
and
these
stories
they
come
up
with
are
incredible.
The
talent
they're
getting
from
people
who
have
not
who've
got
this
incredible
talent,
but
just
haven't
had
a
chance
in
life
to
use
it.
E
It's
just
it's
an
incredible
resource,
and
it's
just
frustrating
me
and
I
at
that
part
of
the
reason
I'm
gonna
have
them
talking
with
other
jurisdictions
is,
but
that
it
it
helps
people.
It
helps
the
community
and
it
spreads
it
out
because
again
it's
a
very
diverse
group
that
isn't
usually
and
then
they
will
bring
insights
that
you're
not
going
to
get
from
their
usual.
B
It
is
there
that
yeah.
M
M
So
what
they
do
is
they
go
through
their
training,
it's
an
incubator
and
then
they
pay
the
the
interns,
basically
as
they
go
through
the
training
and
then
when
they
start
work
for
the
first
year
that
company
smooth
stack
gets
a
percentage
of
their
paycheck
and
then
after
that
year,
they're,
not
employees
anymore,
of
smooth
stack
and
then
they
their
employees
at
Microsoft.
They
get
their
full
paycheck
and
whatnot.
So
that
is
one
model
that
I've
seen
be
very
effective,
both
overseas
and
here
and
I'm
happy
to
give
you
the
contact,
yeah.
M
And
Washington
State
actually
has
a
very
effective
program.
They
use
some
Grant
funds
to
do
Workforce
Development,
so
it
might
also
be
worth
talking
to
them.
What
has
worked
for
him
and
obviously
it's
it's
a
different
part
of
the
country.
It's
a
different
culture,
but
but
I
can
also
lick
you
up
with
that
organization
as
well.
J
D
L
D
I
actually
use
used
to
work
for
the
U.S
Department
of
Labor
I
was
the
California
state
director
of
the
veterans,
employment
and
training,
Services
Agency,
so
I've
got
some
experience
on
the
workforce
side
and
the
workforce
Grant
side
it
it's
it's
definitely
a
challenge.
In
our
last
presidential
Administration
we
had
apprenticeships
as
as
a
priority.
You
know
separating
all
politics
and
every
other
thing
aside.
D
Apprenticeships
were
a
priority
for
four
years
in
the
United
States
and
we
did
miserably
I
can
think
of
a
couple
programs
that
I
know
that
have
already
collapsed.
D
They've
already
ran
out
of
funds,
they
didn't
get
off
the
ground,
so
there's
a
lot
of
challenges
there
and
it
really
takes
a
localized
effort
identifying
and
going
out
and
finding
the
people
that
need
to
need
work
need
to
be
trained
and
then
aligning
that
population
up
with
the
Federal
grant
system
Etc
and
doing
that
setting
up
Partnerships
of
small
and
medium-sized
businesses
that
can't
compete
with
the
the
big
dogs
of
Amazon
and
others
that
can
pay
50
to
100
000
a
year
more,
creating
a
shared
space
and
doing
those
things
it's
while
there's
some
great
blueprints
out
there
it
it
absolutely
takes
somebody
going
out
and
doing
those
things
day
in
and
day
out
at
a
local
level
and
bringing
the
bringing
the
ecosystem
together.
D
If
you
will
to
make
those
things
happen
and
we're
seeing
some
similar
issues
in
my
opinion
and
so
how
some
cities
are
challenged
on
creating
new
small
and
medium-sized
businesses
as
well
for
much
of
the
same
reasons.
So
just
something
I
wanted
to
highlight
there.
Yes,
ma'am
I,
think
you're
absolutely
correct
in
some
of
those
challenges.
D
I
absolutely
think
it
can
be
overcome
and
there
is
some
good
case
studies
out
there,
but
yeah
it
takes
a
plan,
it
takes
the
engagement
and
it
definitely
needs
the
resources
to
be
applied
to
the
problem
set.
I
Has
been
like
that,
people
would
want
to
hire
interns,
but
not
really
know
how
to
go
about
doing
it,
not
really
having
access
to.
I
E
Something
maybe
this
is
something
these
committee
wants
to
take
on.
Just
a
little
bit
and
I
I
mean
I
as
I
say:
I've
done
three
Workforce
one
for
the
state,
one
for
the
region
and
one
for
I
forget
the
other
group
was,
and
it's
just
been
incredible.
Culture
is
not
there,
so
in
Germany
or
other
places.
That's
just
what
you
do.
E
It's
all
set
up,
and
here
it's
just
it's
just
Gap
after
Gap
after
Gap,
because
we
just
don't
do
it
so
I
think
yeah,
they're,
just
and
I
have,
and
we
need
to
probably
build
a
culture.
Maybe
maybe
that's
something
we
could
do
regionally
actually,
because
this
would
be
the
reason
to
do
it
and
we've
got
Virginia
Tech.
You
know
going
there
anyway,.
H
B
E
E
E
C
E
J
The
board
for
the
board
boy
good
yeah,
so
we
already
did
one
for
the
elt
we're
going
to
be
doing
one
for
the
individual
departments.
So
it's
more
focus
and
there's
also
one
plan.
We
want
to
get
something
going
for
the
board.
M
E
B
Okay,
yours
will
be
real
fast.
Your
update
on
the
AED
collaboration
yeah.
D
K
Think
you
know
we're
scheduled
to
meet
with
the
ad
and
the
economics
development
commission,
Vice,
chair
and
chair
on
Friday.
We
I
mean
Laura
and
myself
to
go
over
kind
of
what
we're
planning
to
talk
about.
But
now
I've
got
like.
N
F
K
Generally
kind
of
running
them
through
our
kind
of
Mason
idea
about
about
streamlining,
pilot
approvals
or
proof
of
concept,
approvals
or
various
different
other
approvals
in
getting
the
policy
in
place,
so
that
AED
can
then
advertise
a
front
door
for
any
company
around
the
country
who
wants
to
come
and
bring
a
technology
either
at
early
stage
or
at
later
stage,
to
address
one
of
our
priorities
as
a
community.
K
There's
other
areas
of
collaboration
that
we've
kind
of
identified
in
terms
of
they're
working
on
an
update
to
the
to
the
tax
incentive
that
Arlington
County
has
for
technology
companies.
So
we
want
to.
We
want
to
be
able
to
potentially
opine
on
that
and
help
them
formulate
that
effectively
and
then
I
think
you
know,
we've
got
the
issues
that
we
just
identified
tonight,
which
is
how
do
we
get
the
business
Community
involved
in
cyber
resilience
for
the
community
at.
F
K
What
do
they
need?
What
was
their
perspectives?
You
know
economic
incentives
for
internship,
apprenticeships
or
removing
barriers
to
that.
So
those
are
consultant
areas,
but
also
just
opening
the
door
to
them
to
let
them
know
and
see
what
their
areas
of
collaboration
that
they
that
they
see
think
they're
very
interested
in
kind
of
the
municipal
Broadband
question
and
what's
going
on
in
National
Landing
from
a
smart
cities
perspective
and
their
main
issue
is
really.
How
do
we
feel
the
office
vacancies.
K
I
think
it's
I,
don't
know
if
I
mentioned
it
last
time,
but
Frank
and
I
had
an
opportunity
to
sit
through
the
AED
presentation
for
the
budget
work
session
because
it
was
right
after
ours
and
it's
we're
in
a
good
spot,
because
everybody
in
the
country
is
going
through
it
post
pandemic.
Most
urban
areas
have
very
high
office
vacancy
rates
and
they're
not
really
sure
how
to
do
it
and.
M
K
Were
making
the
case
that
the
new
director
was
making
the
case
that
the
the
people
who
act
early
and
boldly
will
be
kind
of
the
winners,
and
so
what
might
we
be
able
to
collaborate
with
them
on
how
to
address
office
vacancies?
I?
Don't
personally,
have
a
whole
lot
of
ideas
on
that
I.
Don't
think
we
have
a
whole
lot
of
Magic
Bullets,
but
anything
that
anyone
has
wants
to
send
along
we'd
appreciate
it.
K
I
think
I
think
there
was.
You
know,
one
item
which
was
related
to
the
NDA
that
went
across
the
board's
desk
a
couple
months
ago.
I
forget
exactly
when
around
exploring
Edge
Computing
locations
of
National,
Landing
and
I.
Think
you
know,
if
you
think,
if
you,
if
you're
not,
if
you
don't
have
people
in
the
offices,
could
they
be?
You
know
in
retrofitting
them
for
residential
is
not
economically
feasible
because
of
the
both
the
plumbing
literally
right.
B
K
B
F
K
So
you
have
to
have
the
compute
really
close
to
to
the
user
and
so
putting
some
Edge
Computing
in
dense
urban
areas,
probably
not
a.
F
B
Because
Big
Data
Centers
have
been
controversy,
Latin
and
loud
and
in
that
area,
just
because
they
are
I
mean
it's
become
a
huge.
You
know
Economic
Development
thing
for
allowed
me,
but
if
you're
a
neighbor
to
the
data
center
they're
loud
and
I,
guess
you
know,
take
a
lot
of
heat
forever.
Thanks
so
much.
L
Something
like
5,
000
megawatts,
there's
a
story.
It's
the
fifth
large,
the
largest
in
the
world
five
times
larger
than
the
number
to.
K
That's
fantastic,
I
think
one
of
the
one
of
the
issues
that
was
raised
by
AED,
of
course,
is
the
default.
Tax
right
is
the
the
personal
property
tax
for
businesses
that,
if
you're
dropping
a
lot
of
really
high
performing
Hardware
in
there,
the
value
on
that
is
pretty
high
and
the
tax
rate
on
that
is
really
high.
That
might
drive,
drive,
drive.
F
C
K
Need
to
look
at
the
taxes-
that's
currently
just
for
technology
companies,
expanding
Office,
Space
and
expand,
expand
the
incentive
to
cover
the
personal
property
of
those
businesses
and.
F
K
Got
me
thinking:
why
is
this
technology?
What
about
like
Advanced,
life,
biosciences
and
Labs,
like?
Could
you
put
Labs,
which
is
totally
outside
of
our
failure,
but
like
there
are
lots
of
really
expensive
pieces
of
equipment
for
some
of
these
Advanced
knowledge
base?
Industries?
K
So
things
to
look
at
things
to
look
at
no
conclusions
yet,
but
just
all.
B
Right
very
good
that
all
right
well,
I
I,
might
have
one
on
in
our
legislative
report.
Here
the
Biden
Administration
is
start
beginning.
The
plan
for
6G
Wireless
Communications,
so
maybe
6G
6G-
may
have
been
sickly
here
in
about
5G.
But
actually
last
week
the
White
House
met
with
experts
in
a
business
government
Academia
and
begin
developing
goals
and
strategies
for
six
jobs.
B
Related
to
Municipal
broadband
congresswoman
Anna
eschu
from
California
Senator
Cory
Booker
from
New
Jersey,
have
introduced
the
community
Broadband
act
to
improve
Broadband
access
by
removing
roadblocks
prohibiting
local
communities
from
deploying
their
own
Broadband
Networks.
The
bill
would
preempt
state
laws
that
restrict
or
prohibit
local
communities
from
building
their
own
Broadband
Networks.
Obviously,
it's
a
long
way
between
a
bill
being
introduced
and
it
passing
into
law.
But
but
maybe
there
is
something
there
so
anyhow
real
continue
to
file
that
one
on
Friday
April
21st.
B
On
the
6G
theme,
FCC
chairwoman,
Jessica
Rosen
morsel
gave
remarks
on
6G
to
the
National
Science
Foundation,
a
former
Arlington
I,
think
and
Alexandria
that
I
think
we
lost
NSF
to
Alexandria
right
next
to
our
friends
next
door
and
she
is
tasking
the
fcc's
technical
advisory.
Council
Street
and
the
FCC
has
identified
the
17
7
to
16
gigahertz
band
as
Prime
mid-man
Spectrum
for
6G,
which
is
anticipated
to
include
the
convergence
of
satellite
and
terrestrial
Communications
for
6G.
B
The
FCC
has
released
additional
information
on
helping
households
connect
to
Broadband
using
the
affordable
connectivity
program,
ACP
that
which
includes
the
30
a
month
discount
and
it
can
be
found
at
the
fcc's
website
at
www.fcc.gov
forward,
slash
ACP,
the
Metropolitan
Washington
Council
of
governments,
dog
and
one
media
3.0,
which
is
a
subsidiary
of
Sinclair
broadcast
group
owner
of
our
friends
at
WJLA
and
Roslyn
channel
7,
TV
they've.
A
B
Next
gen
TV
standard,
also
known
as
atsc
3.0,
to
disseminate
Advanced
emergency
information
and
the
pilot
program
will
provide
free,
over-the-air
redundancy
to
emergency
messaging
messaging,
currently
being
sent
by
local
governments
by
text,
email
and
social
media
and
the
advantage
of
the
HSE
3.0
or
next
gen
TV
standard
is
it
can
provide
enhanced,
Rich
Text
video
along
with
the
emergency
alerts,
so
it
really
has
great
promise
and
the
advantages
it's
an
over.
B
The
free
over-the-air
digital
IP
based
standard
which
can
really
help
greatly
enhance
emergency
alerts
and
looking
at
the
future
lasers,
are
being
used
to
meet
the
fixed
wireless
access
markets
need
for
high-speed
Last,
Mile
connections.
The
Centauri
25g
has
upgraded
bandwidth
to
25
gigabits
per
second,
using
laser
beams,
eliminating
the
need
for
fiber
optic,
cable
or
rf-based
connections
for
the
last
month.
B
J
Just
a
couple
updates:
I,
don't
know
if
you
caught
the
CIP
briefing,
we
did
the
CIB
briefing
just
a
couple
weeks
ago,
and
so
just
some
of
the
highlights
where,
as
far
as
the
scope
of
digital
Equity,
this
variety
of
communication
lines
that
we've
upgraded
them
from
one
gigabyte
to
10
gigabyte
lines
now
so
we're
still
that's
an
ongoing
project.
J
Having
those
upgrades
going
forward,
we've
also
awarded
a
contract
for
ucas
ccas
communications,
which
is
basically
multi-channy,
Albany
Comedy,
Channel
type
Communications,
where
everything's
cloud-based
for
our
call
centers
and
for
the
local
lines
that
we
have
within
the
facilities
with
the
Arlington
County
government.
All
right,
good.
B
Thank
you
at
our
May
meeting,
May
24th
I
think.
F
B
24Th
I
think
is
Melissa
McMahon,
who
is
with
the
Department
of
Environmental
Services.
She
is
I,
think
in
charge
of
the
Well
Park
and
pilot
program.
The
I
have
to
get
a
performance
parking
lot.
The
PPP
CPP
had
something
else
during
the
pandemic,
but
this
is
well.
B
Yeah
I
guess
there
are
a
lot
of
three
p's
yeah.
They
have
Melissa's
going
to
join
us
to
give
us
a
briefing
on
the
performance
parking
pilot.
The
PVP
and
I'll
get
her
full
title
by
then,
but
in
the
meantime,
if
we
have
any
questions
for
her
we'd
like
to
provide
them
in
writing,
so
if
you
can
provide
them
to
John
and
I
by
May
15th,
we
can
then
provide
them
to
Melissa.
So
she
has
time
to
prepare
her
presentation
to
take
to
incorporate
our
questions.
B
K
K
K
K
Yeah
the
goal
is
not
to
change.
The
pricing
frequently
like
there
would
be
some
level
of
expectation
of
of
a
stable
part
pricing
for
a
period
of
time.
That
would
make
sense
for,
like
normal
people,
not
like
you're
going
around
oh
where's,
the
lowest
price
spots,
a
day
kind
of
thing,
but
I
have
only
person
personally
reviewed
the
info.
So.
B
And
hopefully
it's
not
the
same
folks
who
are
doing
the
pricing
on
the
tall
Lanes
on
66
or
395
or
495.
B
All
right
so
anyhow,
May
15th
for
any
questions
on
the
PPP
performance
parking
pile,
got
some
housekeeping
to
take
care
of
under
good
of
the
order.
First
Actually
March
minutes
and
circulated.
Thank
you.
Mr
Corner,
Dr
Cornville,
sir
that's
cornfield,
so
I've
been
circulated
and
it's
using
the
I
guess
the
transcripts
that
were
provided
right.
So
it's
correct.
F
B
Very
literal
and
it's
I
think
no
I
mean
it's
basically
incorporates
the
conversations
we
had
so
well
I
digest.
Generally.
Yes,
you
did
but
yes,
yeah
and
then
I
digested
your
digest.
So,
okay,
good
so.
G
B
L
B
K
Right
and
Jackie
did
you
vote
to
approve
the
minutes.
Yeah.
B
F
B
C
B
B
Oh
yeah,
yeah
I
think
that
will
be
a
subject
of
a
future
meeting
for
it,
though
yeah
no
I
think
we've
got
it.
I
dress
it
at
some
point.
Are
we
ready
well
I
volunteers
for
volunteers
for
April,
any
any
volunteers.
B
Right
so
there's
a
kind
of
summarizing
from
the
transcript
great
all
right.
Well,
thank
you
for
the
new
okay
and
real
help
to
the
extent
yeah.
B
F
B
All
right
that
brings
us
to
Future
meetings,
July
versus
August
I.
Think
what
did
we
say?
We're
gonna
propose.
F
K
Of
the
year-
and
we
have
three
virtual
meetings
to
use-
we
use
one
of
the
virtual
meetings
for
November
because
right
around
Thanksgiving,
one
of
them
for
December,
because
it's
right
around
Christmas
and
New
Year's
we're
proposing
that
we
either
take
July
or
August
off
for
our
summer
meeting
and
have
the
other
one
be
virtual.
To
help
manage
around
people's
travels.
B
Week
right,
oh
yeah,
that's
right!
The
Kings
Dominion
rule
is
no
longer
in
it.
K
All
the
more
reason
not
to
have
a
meeting
that
that
that
week.
K
B
And
okay,
so
so
do
we
have
a
month?
Do
we
have
a
motion.
K
July
meeting
all
virtual
and
the
we
take
off
on.
B
Right:
okay,
we
got
you
all
right,
it
carries
all
right
and
I
guess,
while
we're
speaking
of
future
and
virtual
meetings,
our
November
meeting
would
be
the
22nd,
which
is
the
Wednesday
before
Thanksgiving
I,
think
that's,
usually
a
non-starter
I
think,
rather
than
moving
it
up
a
week.
We
go
to
November
29th
and
do
that
as
the
virtual
meeting.
That
would
be
my
proposal
for
November
and
it's
possible
I
may
be
traveling,
regardless
of
when
we
do
it.
I've
got
a
an
Australia
trip
in
the
office.
B
And,
and
so
that
would
be
another
another
of
our
virtual
meetings,
do
it
as
a
package
deal
or
actually
or
while
we're
doing
it,
maybe
I'll
combining
into
this
in
December,
rather
than
doing
a
virtual
meeting,
December
27th,
which
is
two
days
after
Christmas
I,
would
go
with
the
20th,
which
is
I,
believe
the
third
Wednesday.
B
Think
also
also
virtual,
so
so
that
so
my
proposal
is
November.
29Th
virtual
December
20th
virtual
do
I
have
a
second
second,
all
in
favor
aye
aye.
It
carries
Jackie
hi.
Okay,
with
that
I
will
enter
any.
A
I
have
one
item
for
you
all.
Okay,
Angela
is
working
on
getting
you
a
more
permanent,
larger
room,
but
there
is
some
availability
challenges,
as
the
construction
is
now
wrapped
up,
but
now
we're
getting
the
scheduling
working.
So
please
keep
an
eye
on
the
calendar
invitation
as
the
room
in
the
invitation
may
not
match
the
room
that
Angela
has
booked,
and
she
will
highlight
that
at
the
top
like
she
did
this
month.
A
So
just
keep
an
eye
on
that
in
case
we
have
to
move
to
a
different
location,
but
we're
doing
our
best
to
get
into
a
permanent,
larger
space.
Okay,.
B
B
H
K
Libby
Garvey
actually
interviewed
the
author
and
I
thought.
That
would
be
a
good
standing
feature
to
bring
back
if
we
can
make
it
happen.
So
what
we
need
are
one
if
people
think
that's
a
good
idea
and
two
suggestions
for
books
right
and
I
think
the
criteria
would
be
books
that
are
topical.
K
That
speak
to
something
that
we've
listed
as
one
of
our
kind
of
priorities
and
I.
Think,
most
importantly,
written
by
an
author
that
we
could
possibly
hope
to
get
to
show
up
at
the
Arlington
County
Library
to
discuss
it
with.
K
Look
at
the
office,
the
authors,
you
probably
get
a
sense
of
what
we
have
a
shot
and
then
we
would
work
it.
Ideally
through
Arlington
County
Libraries.
They
have
a
series
of
Meet
the
author
events,
so
we
haven't
approached
them
yet,
but
I
wanted
to
take
the
temperature
of
the
so.
B
K
Yes,
all
right
come
with
like.
M
B
B
Ppp
yeah,
John
and
I.
Well,.