►
From YouTube: Shelter Better Task Force - Meeting #6
Description
This video has been edited to redact some parts of the presentation in collaboration with neighborhood leadership. For additional information, please contact the Our Path Home Program Manager, Casey Mattoon, at cmattoon@cityofboise.org.
A
A
Just
as
a
reminder.
As
usual,
we
are
recording
this
meeting.
We
have
a
couple
of
folks
who
are
zooming
in
with
us
today.
Members
of
the
task
force
so
be
black,
serena,
hinojosa
and
rebecca
lemons,
so
welcome
to
all
of
you
online,
I'm
going
to
turn
things
over
for
a
welcome
from
courtney.
Washburn.
B
Awesome
thanks
everybody
and
good
morning.
I
have
a
couple
things
to
cover.
First,
welcome
everyone.
This
is
week,
number
six.
Am
I
right?
B
We
have
this
meeting
a
meeting
on
thursday
and
then
our
final
meeting
on
monday,
what
we've
done
to
be
able
to
ensure
that
we
heard
the
concerns
and
feedback
from
the
community
and
the
task
force
is
kind
of
rearrange
our
schedule
just
a
little
bit
so
today,
we'll
hear
from
neighborhood
leaders
and
task
force
members
about
their
thoughts
on
better
shelter
and
the
proposed
location
and
then
on
thursday,
we'll
take
a
deep
dive
into
the
land
scan
and
then,
on
monday,
we'll
work
to
finalize
recommendations.
B
B
B
B
I
find
it
disrespectful
and
not
great
folks-
did
not
sign
up
for
this.
They
signed
up
to
serve
on
the
task
force,
so
my
apologies
on
behalf
of,
however
that
happened.
Lastly,
I
think
we
will
move
as
fast
as
we
can
after
today
to
get
you
an
agenda
for
thursday.
I
would
expect
that
would
come
out
late,
tuesday,
wednesday,
as
we're
working
through
this
information
in
real
time
and
then
as
soon
as
we
can
after
thursday's
meetings.
B
A
Thanks
courtney,
so
one
more
quick
update,
but
before
I
turn
things
over
to
our
neighborhood
leaders,
who
I
will
ask
to
introduce
themselves,
you
will
all
remember
that
you
were
invited
to
suggest
folks
who
should
be
interviewed,
maybe
who
weren't
adequately
represented
on
the
task
force.
Those
interviews,
I
believe,
are
complete.
Yes,
yep,
I'm
getting
the
nod.
They're
complete
you
as
a
task
force,
will
get
sort
of
the
summary
results
of
that
interview
process,
probably
with
the
summary
of
today's
meeting.
A
Okay.
So
that's
coming
your
way
soon.
Another
way
to
to
get
community
input
all
right.
As
courtney
said,
the
bulk
of
today
is
going
to
be
about
hearing
from
our
neighborhood
leaders
on
their
perspectives
on
this
process
and
on
proposed
shelter
sites
in
boise.
I'll
turn
things
over
to
you.
D
D
All
right,
you
got
it
all
right
good
morning.
Can
everybody
hear
me?
Okay,
perfect.
My
name
is
jennifer
godoy,
I'm
one
of
the
neighborhood
leaders
and
we're
getting
ready
to
talk
to
you
a
little
bit
about
the
neighborhood
view
of
this
okay
figure
out
how
to
do
this.
D
D
There
we
go:
that's
it.
We're
done
no
okay,
katie
decker,
who
is
our
veterans
park,
neighborhood
association,
president
hillary
takahashi,
who
is
our
collister
neighborhood
president
tom
helmer,
who
is
the
sunset
neighborhood
president
and
then
annie
mccutchen
and
myself
as
neighborhood
residents.
D
During
this
presentation,
we
would
like
to
give
you
a
viewpoint
from
our
diverse
viewpoints
where
the
shelter
might
be
considered.
We
also
understand
what
we
understand
from
our
test.
D
The
time
on
this
task
force,
what
we've
learned
during
those
last
few
weeks
and
then
also
maybe
make
some
suggestions
for
moving
forward,
we're
going
to
start
with
just
a
little
bit
of
an
overview
of
what
we
view
as
our
impacts
from
our
lens
and
then
we're
going
to
move
it
over
to
some
focus
on
the
specific
neighborhoods
from
veterans
park
in
collister,
and
then
tom's
gonna
finish
with
some
thoughts
from
the
sunset
and
then
we
will
finish
with
question
and
answers,
and
I
understand
that
the
cards
are
available
to
write
your
questions
on
all
right.
E
I
am
a
neighborhood
resident
and
I
kind
of
like
to
just
start
by
introducing
myself
and
why
I'm
part
of
this
task
force,
I
have
lived
in
the
veterans
park
neighborhood
my
whole
life
35
years,
I've
grown
up
in
that
neighborhood
and
when
I
was
initially
asked
about
being
on
the
task
force,
I
think
I
brought
a
unique
position
in
that
I
hadn't
really
decided
yet
I
came
into
this
with
an
open
mind,
hoping
to
consider
different
viewpoints
and
so
I'll
kind
of
go
through
what
the
experience
has
been
like.
E
I
will
say
this
first
presentation
was
put
together
and
agreed
upon
by
the
five
of
us,
so
this
was
really
something
that
we
worked
together
to
come
up
with
and
bring
to
you
today.
So
first,
I
want
to
kind
of
start
with
a
thank
you
to
the
task
force.
I
think
this
was
something
that
the
city
didn't
need
to
do,
that
they
did
and
brought
all
of
us
together
to
come
to
some
sort
of
compromise,
and
so
I
thank
you
all
for
being
here.
E
I
know
that
this
has
been
something
that
you've
all
had
to
dedicate
your
time
to
and
we're
all
busy.
So
I
just
think
that's
an
important
thing
to
recognize
as
we
go
through
this
process.
Also
the
composition
of
the
members.
I
know
there's
been
a
lot
of
talk
about
that
and
I
found
this
to
be
an
open
process
where
we
have
all
been
able
to
communicate
and
to
share
ideas.
Even
when
we
don't
necessarily
agree-
and
I
think
that's
an
important
thing
in
any
contentious
issue-
which
I
think
this
has
become.
E
I
think
it's
also
important
that
we
came
into
kind
of
a
mess.
This
is
a
hot
issue
right
now
and
we
came
together
to
try
to
work
through
it
and
figure
out
a
solution.
E
I
kind
of
want
to
also
speak
to
the
neighborhood
leaders.
Here.
I
think
it's
obvious
the
association
presidents
why
they
were
picked,
but
you
know
we
don't
all
agree
and
we
haven't
throughout
this
process,
and
so
even
today's
presentation,
this
one
that
I'm
here
presenting
right
now
was
something
we
had
to
come
together
and
work
on
and
it
took
us
hours.
E
I
also
really
want
to
thank
ifs
for
participating
in
this.
I
think
it
gets
lost
in
this
process
that
they
didn't
have
to
do
this,
that
they
volunteered
to
come
and
be
open
about
this
process
and
to
take
into
consideration.
E
What
has
been
positive
and
negative
feedback?
I
think
that's
an
important
thing
for
all
of
us
as
community
members
to
remember
another
positive.
You
know
I
was
talking
about
this
before
communication
within
the
task
force.
This
has
been
a
place
where
we
have
brought
up
tough
questions
where
we
have
asked
tough
questions
where
we
have
been
respectful
of
ideas
and
viewpoints
that
don't
necessarily
completely
align
with
our
own,
and
that's
a
really
tough
and
admirable
thing
to
do.
E
I
also
think
you
know
I
kind
of
talked
about
living
in
the
neighborhood
for
a
long
time
and
coming
into
this
with
an
open
mind-
and
I
think
I
have
learned
and
gained
a
lot
of
specialty
knowledge,
and
I
think
we
all
have
throughout
this
process
something
that
I
wish
there
were
more
of
in
the
community
as
a
whole.
E
You
know,
as
I
was
creating
this,
I
put
positives
and
concerns,
and
even
looking
at
it
this
morning.
You
know
this
has
been
a
difficult
thing,
I'm
not
even
sure
that
that
completely
aligns.
I
think
our
goal
was
to
be
honest
about
what
this
process
has
been
like
and
hopefully
to
create
at
least
some
thinking
points
for
this
task
force
and
for
sheltering
and
boise
and
processes
like
this
in
the
future
and
one
of
the
things
we
talked
about
as
a
group
was
that
it
has
felt
a
little
bit
unclear
what
our
goals
are.
E
It
seems
like
that
changes,
sometimes
it's
the
particular
site.
Sometimes
it's
what
shelter
looks
like
in
boise?
Sometimes
you
know
it
feels
like.
There
hasn't
been
a
clear
and
concise
goal.
E
One
of
our
concerns
was
communication
from
ifs
as
someone
who
lives
in
the
neighborhood,
I
didn't
know
about
the
building
until
it
had
already
been
bought,
and
I
understand
this
isn't:
let's
rag
on
ifs.
That
is
not
what
we
want
to
do.
This
is
a.
How
can
things
be
better
for
finding
shelter
and
for.
E
This
process
in
the
future
it
seems
like
there
was
knowledge
that
there
would
need
to
be
a
conditional
use
permit
and
part
of
that
requires
neighborhood
feedback,
and
so
we're
not
saying
we're
not
saying
anything
about
ifs,
we're
saying
in
the
future.
It
would
be
really
helpful
to
engage
the
community
at
an
earlier
stage.
E
E
We've
done
a
lot
and
part
of
our
specialty
knowledge
that
we've
acquired
is
that
community
engagement
and
is
very
important
and
integral
to
the
process
and
the
shelter
better
info
that
we've
learned
that
really
helps
with
getting
a
neighborhood
on
board.
E
This
is
a
new
process,
so
we're
learning
along
the
way
and,
like
I
said
these
are
these
are
things
we
hope
will
be
considered.
We
have
found
it
a
little
bit
different
with
a
little
bit
difficult
with
public
feedback.
It
hasn't
always
been
clear
where
emails
should
go.
What
is
an
appropriate
way
to
contact,
and
I
think
that
has
led
to
you-
know
art
all
of
us
getting
emailed
and,
and
that
just
might
be
something
to
be
more
clear
in
the
future.
E
E
E
It
felt
a
little
strong-armed
in
that
this
was
something
we
had
to
do,
or
else
it
was
on
us
that
ifs
closed,
and
that
was
really
hard
to
hear
and-
and
I
think
that
this
is
a
serious
thing
and
I
think
we
do
need
to
help
site
a
location,
and
I
also
think
that's
a
lot
to
put
on
a
task
force
that
was
just
created
for
an
eight
week
period.
Another
concern
is
the
impact
and
the
impact.
That's
a
really
difficult
thing
to
measure.
It's
a
really
difficult.
E
I
think
this
task
force
has
been
designed
to
kind
of
give
us
some
knowledge,
but
there
are
some
questions
that
we
still
have,
and
there
are
some
questions
even
in
the
presentations
and
in
the
homework
assigned
where
it
doesn't
always
feel
like
the
overview
or
the
agenda
matches
what
we
are
seeing,
and
so
that's
something
like
I
said
all
this
is
just
things
to
think
about,
and
process
observations
from
our
time
on
the
task
force.
The
last
one
is
community
response
and
this
isn't
a
concern.
E
So
this
is
an
old
slideshow.
So
this
one
says
both
on
mine,
there's
been
a
lot
of
community
response
and
our
ultimate
questions
at
the
end
is:
what
does
compromise
look
like?
We
were
able
to
compromise
for
this.
There
have
been
compromises,
but
what
would
an
acceptable
compromise?
Look
like
to
the
neighborhood
associations
and
to
ifs
and
and
we're
still
a
little
unsure.
E
I
think
another
concern
for
us
has
been
the
misinformation
that
has
been
circulated
throughout
our
community
and
throughout
our
neighborhoods.
It's
been
disheartening
and
it
doesn't
do
justice
to
either
it
doesn't
do
justice
to
anyone
in
this
process.
Really.
On
a
positive
note,
I
think
this
process
has
all
really
engaged
us
in
our
community,
something
I
wish
there
was
more
of
and
I've
gotten
to
meet
five
new
people
in
in
my
community
that
all
really
care
about
where
they
live,
and
that's
incredible
and
I
think.
E
G
F
F
I
think
it's
important
that
we
acknowledge
that
there
are
many
parts
of
our
society
and,
more
importantly,
this
is
opportunity
for
us
to
give
back
for
me
to
get
back
for
all
of
us
to
give
back
to
those
people
and
help
them
out.
F
In
addition,
it's
important
to
have
workforce
training
and
the
needed
skills
needed
skills
will
help
for
the
labor
the
needed
people
to
fill
the
labor
needs.
I
guess
there
are
a
number
of
businesses
throughout
the
city
on
state
street,
especially
that
need
people
right
now.
F
F
But
there's
a
lot
of
concerns
that
we
have
as
well,
and
I
think
that's
expected
for
some
for
something
like
this:
I'm
not
going
to
go
through
all
these.
We
want
to
write
them
all
on
here,
though,
just
to
make
sure
they're
in
the
public
record,
but
things
like
loitering
and
proper
disposal
of
paraphernalia
and
drugs,
human
waste,
litter,
nighttime,
departures
from
the
shelter
noise,
property
values
going
down.
Our
property
value
is
going
up.
We
don't
know
loss
of
impact
of
businesses
and
a
concentration
of
poverty
in
these
neighborhoods.
C
Hi,
I'm
I'm
hillary
so
for
the
probable
neighborhood
response,
and
this
would
be
pretty
much
any
site-
location
selected
for
a
shelter,
the
closer
to
the
proximity
to
site
the
more
potential
for
opposition
with
this,
and
this
was
apparent
in
veterans
park,
sunset
and
collister.
C
We
had
to
put
together
ways
to
directly
engage
our
community,
get
feedback
all
within
a
few
week
period
and
possibly
prepare
for
planning
and
zoning
presentations,
so
improvements
on
this
area
could
be
made
which
we
could
have
also
reached
out
to
the
city
for
support,
but
some
city
support
like
surveymonkey,
you
only
get
40
responses
and
then,
like
you,
have
to
start
paying
for
more
stuff
after
and
as
volunteer
neighborhoods.
C
We
just
necessarily
don't
have
those
resources
on
hand
to
be
able
to
adapt
so
going
forward
between
the
neighborhoods
and
the
city
and
the
shelter
they
should
work
to
really
gauge
the
residents
as
far
as
their
commons
concerns
and
considerations
for
the
area
so
state
street
specific
quickly.
This
does
meet
much
of
the
vetted
criteria
that
we
have
been
given
over
the
course
of
this
task
force.
It
is
on
the
access
to
buy
lines,
transportation
on
the
green
belt
banks,
grocery
stores
parks.
C
That
being
said,
we
do
realize
that
terry
riley
will
have
some
type
of
presence
in
this
facility,
so
that
is
not
something
that
we
are
contesting.
H
C
All
right
so,
additionally,
so
katie
and
hillary
we're
gonna,
do
a
little
more
focus
on
the
our
neighborhood
and
so
we're
gonna
shift
between
general
site
and
more
site
specific
to
the
potential
impacts
for
the
proposed
state
street
location.
C
Obviously,
thank
you.
None
of
us
had
to
be
here,
and
we
all
chose
to
take
time
to
come
here
and
nothing
in
this
presentation
should
be
construed
as
lack
of
compassion.
We
just
believe
we
need
to
truly
identify
those
good
and
bad
impacts
to
be
able
to
create
fundamental
solutions
for
the
communities
and
surrounding
site
locations.
C
All
right
so,
first
off
residential
buffer.
So
for
those
who
aren't
aware,
the
current
city
planning
and
zoning
code
is
going
through
a
rewrite
process
to
be
released
in
october
of
2022
in
this
proposed
draft
module
released
this
past
april.
There
is
a
specific
guideline
that
shelter
may
be
not
be
located
within
300
feet
of
a
residential
area.
C
I
am
not
sure
what
guided
the
city
to
this
conclusion,
I'm
not
privy
to
their
research,
but
based
on
what
the
research
they've
done,
the
city,
the
city
planners
and
officials,
deemed
it
important
enough
to
address
so
with
this.
The
city
has
an
opportunity
to
actually
codify
potential
shelter
site
criteria
during
this
code
rewrite
and
the
task
force
is
working
on
establishing
some
of
those
site
criteria.
C
C
Okay,
so
a
quick
overview,
you
can
see
some
buffers.
The
reno
nevada
site,
I
just
want
to
say,
is
a
congregate
style,
shelter
with
rows
and
rows
of
bunk
beds,
but
the
average
buffer
was
404
feet
and
the
proposed
ifs
facility
would
not
have
a
buffer
for
the
residents
all
right.
So
here
in
red,
you
will
see
shelter,
site,
green
multi-family,
residential
blue
would
be
single-family
residential.
There's.
None
on
this
slide
and
pink
is
permanent.
C
And
in
this
case
this
north
carolina,
it
does
appear
to
abut
the
this
multi-family
residential,
which
is
collegiate
housing.
But
once
we
zoomed
in
and
had
a
closer
look,
there's
actually
a
large
parking
and
green
space
areas,
which
has
an
approximate
300
foot
buffer.
H
Another
thing
that
we
gleaned
from
doing
that
exercise
and
looking
at
that
data
were
the
various
capacities
versus
building
sizes
of
the
shelter.
So
in
this
graph
in
this
chart,
we've
normalized
that
to
a
building
area
per
shelter,
guest
and
again,
we
see
nevada
that
704
bed
congregate,
shelter
being
an
outlier
with
very
little
space
per
guest,
but
otherwise
it
was
typical
to
provide
two
to
three
hundred
feet
of
space
per
guest
and
the
proposed
facility
would
be
136..
C
C
So
we
went
through
a
little
methodology
process
and
we
did
some
mapping
to
show
some
call
call
types:
okay,
so
theft,
burglary
and
or
alarm
this
red
circle
that
you
see
is
the
right
aid
at
15th
and
state,
but
other
than
that
there
is
a
congregation
done
by
the
ifs
facility
combined
alcohol
and
narcotics
is
going
to
be
next
so
up
to
10
of
those
who
are
shelter,
avoidance,
state
drug
culture
as
one
of
the
reasons-
and
we
have
spoken
with
neighbors
who
live
in
our
neighborhood
and
who
were
formerly
experiencing
homelessness
and
one
of
the
things
they
were
happy
to
be
distanced
from
was
this
this
drug
culture
at
the
shelter
sites
and
they
were
concerned
about
it
now
coming
into
their
neighborhood.
C
C
So
again,
we've
got
violent
crime,
so
there's
proposed
site
versus
current
site.
H
I
just
want
to
follow
up
and
say
we'll
be
submitting
the
full
set
of
detail
maps,
so
you
can
peruse
at
your
leisure
later,
but
many
people
have
said
well,
let's
look
at
the
source
of
our
data.
Why
should
we
trust
the
way
that
you
split
that
data
which
call
types
are
included
in
each
category
as
shown
on
the
maps?
H
So
here
they
do
the
top
10
call
types
of
the
city
and
then
go
ahead,
and
then
they
talk
about
what
facilities
have
the
most
repeat
calls
they.
This
is
within
the
shoreline
urban
renewal
district
specifically,
but
the
report
did
state
that
interface,
sanctuary
and
corpus.
Christi
christie
are
consistently
in
the
top
10
addresses
for
calls
for
service
in
boise
each
year
they
typically
receive
about
one
police
call
per
day
at
interface,
sanctuary.
H
H
So
a
foundational
comment
here
is
that
calls
for
service
is
a
reactive
response.
Once
a
problem
has
occurred
and
we
would
prefer,
as
a
community
to
proactive
solutions
that
prevent
problems
from
occurring
and
also
you
need
to
ask
the
question
of
what
that
calls
for
service
looks
like
in
the
community.
This
is
a
residential
area,
so
the
increase
in
noise
pollution
and
emergency
traffic
could
be
considered
impacts
on
their
own
good.
Oh,
the
scepted
also
reviews
fire
and
ems
calls.
This
was
similar
to
our
own
data
as
well.
H
C
Okay,
so
in
wrapping
up
with
some
of
the
police
calls,
is
there
enough
public
service
infrastructure
and
capacity
already
located
within
this
neighborhood,
so
fire
station,
it's
about
at
the
corner
of
sycamore
and
state.
C
It
currently
doesn't
already
meet
a
240
second
response
time
and
there
are
no
ems
crews
in
the
area
that
can
either
our
library
facility
is
a
very
well
utilized
facility,
and
so
do
we
have
enough
to
accommodate
the
excess
gas
and
will
there
be
other
infrastructure
considerations
made
for
that
location,
and
then
we've
got
a
few
other,
but
we're
going
to
keep
moving
along
here.
C
So
unless
we
look
at
the
good
and
the
bad
of
all
possible
impacts,
we
can't
possibly
come
to
concrete
and
real
solutions,
and
so,
although
that
we
saw
on
cooper
court
a
few
days
ago,
in
the
ifs
presentation
or
a
week
ago,
this
was
taken
a
few
days
later.
And
although
we
realized
that
this
would
be
part
of
a
weekly
cleanup
plan,
we
also
have
to
acknowledge
that
detritus
does
exist
and
it
could
be
spread
out
into
the
surrounding
areas.
C
C
So
we
looked
at
the
slc
salt
lake
city,
shelter
report
about
this
specifically,
and
they
have
some
concerns
that
they
are
violence,
offenders
being
dropped
off
by
police
at
locations,
and
so
we
just
really
need
to
acknowledge
that
it
is
a
potential,
so
we
can
come
up
with
a
proper
solution
for
wherever
the
site
may
be,
and
then
the
pov
and
missoula
is
often
used
as
kind
of
this
successful
example.
So
we
got
some
data
from
their
west
side,
neighborhood
association
and
you
can
read
the
quote-
I
mean
no
matter.
C
H
H
The
most
relevant
data
and
studies
found
significant
increase
in
property
crime
in
residential
areas,
up
to
56,
increase
within
300
feet
and
some
impact
observed
through
1300
feet
in
a
commercial
area,
the
effect
was
actually
in
the
opposite
direction
and
the
other
study
we
found
addressed
property
values
which,
for
a
site
in
within
500
feet
of
one
shelter
and
a
thousand
feet
of
a
second.
You
could
see
a
property
value
impact
of
up
to
25.
H
So
looking
specifically
at
our
neighborhood,
the
aggregate
poverty
level
in
veterans
parks
around
28,
my
part
of
veterans
park
is
closer
to
37
city
of
boise
as
a
whole
is
13.
H
So
this
is
one
of
the
less
advantaged
places
in
boise,
it's
one
of
seven
to
ten
areas
in
boise,
with
the
over
50
of
households
being
designated
as
low
income.
H
All
of
the
data
shown
here
was
collected
before
copen,
so
it
wouldn't
reflect
more
recent
problems
and
then
the
the
veterans
park
neighborhood
has
is
the
eighth
most
diverse
neighborhood.
In
boise
we
have
a
23
minority
population
which
I
believe
is
similar
to
what's
currently
observed
in
the
emergency,
shelter
community
zooming
out
a
little
here's
another
lens
to
look
at
the
income
level
in
our
community.
H
We
do
host
another
shelter
in
our
community.
We
host
a
permanent
supportive
housing
facility.
There
are
multiple,
low-income
developments
in
our
community.
We
are
currently
working
with
the
city
of
boise
on
the
design
details
of
the
arthur
street
project,
where
we
expect
about
75,
low-income
units,
and
we've
also
heard
that
on
the
edges
of
our
community,
we
expect
additional
low
income
housing
coming
soon.
H
H
If
we
cite
all
of
the
low-income
housing
in
one
area,
then
people
don't
have
that
choice.
I
think
a
similar
argument
for
that
could
be
shelter
right
now,
we're
looking
at
moving
a
shelter
from
the
only
neighborhood,
with
multiple
shelters
to
the
only
neighborhood
with
one
other
shelter,
so
it
doesn't
increase
housing
choice
for
that
community.
H
H
And
another
view
of
that,
this
is
number
of
housing
and
shelter
options
offered
within
each
neighborhood
association,
boundary
normalized
per
square
mile,
so,
as
you
can
see
on
the
left
veterans
park
is
currently
the
second
highest.
H
C
H
So
these
are
pretty
technical,
we're
we've
linked
the
paper,
so
you
can
look
at
it
later,
but
the
first
half
we're
basically
talking
about
peer
influences
role,
model
selection.
This
is
something
that
I've
seen
in
my
children
linked
to
exposure
to
violence.
We've
had
low-income
children
visiting.
H
So
we,
you
know,
we
tried
a
lot
of
time
outs.
Let's
calm,
everybody
down
move
back,
but
we
don't
want
to
send
you
home,
because
we
don't
know
that
you
have
a
safe
place
at
home.
We
don't
know
if
you're
eating
at
home.
We
don't
know
what
you
have
access
to
and
it's
clear
that
you
want
to
be
here.
But
when
I
started
seeing
my
five-year-old
then
display
those
behaviors
to
a
local
toddler
that
he'd
always
interacted
with.
Well,
it
really
brought
home
what
the
concentration
of
poverty
means
to
me.
H
He
was
in
a
supervised
environment,
we'd
had
talks
about
how
we
are
helping,
but
at
the
same
time
it
still
brought
additional
violence
into
my
family,
physical
surroundings.
That
can
be
things
like
noise.
We've
established
that
noise
can
be
an
issue
we've
established,
so
I
think
that
a
lot
of
the
opposition
that
you're
seeing
from
our
neighborhood
specifically,
is
part
of
a
gut
response
that
there's
a
carrying
capacity
for
any
given
neighborhood
and
that
our
neighborhood
has
already
reached
this,
and
the
research
does
support
that
conclusion.
F
So
I
didn't
have
much
time
this
week.
I
didn't
have
any
time
this
week
to
put
together
a
fancy
slideshow,
but
I
planned
on
putting
lots
of
pictures
of
my
dogs
and
cats
on
here
and,
unfortunately,
you
won't
see
them,
but
why
don't
melons
get
married
because
they
can't
elope.
F
Let's
try
to
light
the
mood
a
little
bit
here.
So,
first
and
foremost,
I
want
to
thank
everybody.
I
know
we're
short
on
time,
so
we're
going
to
cut
some
of
the
parts
out
of
what
I
was
going
to
talk
about,
but
thanks
katie,
jennifer,
annie
and
hillary
for
spending
so
much
time
with
us
in
the
last
few
days.
We
definitely
don't
see
eye
to
eye
on
all
the
issues,
but
we
had
amazingly
good
conversations
and
even
when
things
could
have
potentially
gotten
very
tense,
they
didn't.
So.
Thank
you
very
much
for
that.
F
Also
casey
courtney,
rachel
and
jen.
For
all
your
help
you
put
into
this
has
been
great
and
everyone
on
the
task
force.
We
really
appreciate
it,
so
I'm
the
sunset
neighborhood
president,
president
neighborhood
association
for
the
president.
Whatever
I
just
said,
we
have
three
thousand
residents
in
the
in
the
sunset.
We
are
located
about
two
thousand
three
hundred
feet
from
the
proposed
iffs
shelter
between
the
north
end
and
callister
neighborhoods.
F
I
like
to
say
that,
like
while
things
are
falling
apart
in
the
north
end
and
everyone's
suing,
everybody-
and
then
this
is
going
on
over
in
calstr
I'm
kind
of
down
here
hoping
everything
goes
in
my
head.
Unfortunately,
it's
not.
I
first
heard
about
this
and
I
actually
heard
about
november
someone
randomly
emailed
me.
I
thought
it
was
misinformation,
but
then,
when
the
official
announcement
by
ifs
came
out
in
january,
it
was
pretty
obvious
right
off
the
bat.
F
There
was
going
to
be
a
significant
neighborhood
opposition
to
this
and
a
lot
of
strong
feelings
on
both
ends.
So,
immediately
immediately
that
week
the
neighborhood
leaders,
the
presidents
and
the
people
on
the
neighborhood
associations
got
together
for
a
zoom
call,
I
think
katie
you
were
on
that
call
and
we
decided
to
start
start
a
dialogue
to
talk
about
both
sides
of
the
issue
and
how
we
could
approach
interfaith
sanctuary
in
the
city
about
it
pretty
quickly
that
dialogue
went
negative.
F
We
started
in
interfaith
sanctuary
facebook,
page
discussion
group,
which
pretty
quickly
went
to
interfaith
sanctuary.
Hater
group,
I
guess
clearly
there's
a
lot
of
different
opinions
and
misunderstanding
of
the
process
from
the
people
within
those
group,
and
one
thing
I
felt
very
strongly
is
that
there
wasn't
an
ability
for
the
people
who
were
in
support
of
of
those
groups
that
really
say
much
because
as
soon
as
they
did,
they
were
drowned
up
by
people
who
were
adamantly
opposed
to
it.
F
Quick
background
on
me
by
the
way
I
moved
here
from
oregon
about
six
years
ago,
when
I
lived
in
springfield
oregon,
I
lived
four
blocks
from
one
homeless,
shelter
and
five
blocks
from
a
warming
center,
not
a
shelter
by
the
way.
In
addition,
next
to
a
high
school-
and
so
I
was
in
in
oregon-
there's
a
lot
more
obvious
homelessness.
Every
day
my
bike
ride
to
work
or
drive
to
work.
You
know,
we'd
see
it
in
the
side
of
the
road.
F
So
for
me,
it's
important
for
us
to
to
be
really
a
part
of
that
solution.
So
anyways
looking
back
and
we
had
this
reactions
negative.
This
loud
negative
reaction
from
the
neighbors
from
the
people
neighborhood,
and
I
think,
there's
really
a
number
of
reasons.
Why
there's
a
lot
of
fear
of
the
unknown
a
lot
of
fear
in
general?
There's
a
lot
of
anti-homeless
rhetoric.
F
That's
been
going
on,
there's
a
big
misunderstanding
of
the
processes
that
the
city
have
with
these,
and
I
also
think
that
there's
some
poor
outreach
by
interfaith
sanctuary
right
in
the
very
beginning
kind
of
kicking
this
off.
I
think
if
we
all
had
a
chance
to
do
it
over,
we
probably
would.
But
here
we
are
today
while
there's
a
very
loud
anti-ifs
contingent
in
the
neighborhood.
F
I
don't
know
if
it's
the
majority,
it
might
be
the
majority
it
might
not
be
for,
for
those
who
are
those
who
are
for
the
shelter
stopped
engaging
in
the
process
because
especially
online,
because
there
is
so
much
negative
against
them
in
the
sunset
neighborhood
we're
a
little
further
away.
We're
2
300
feet
away
from
the
shelter
I
have
received.
How
many
emails
have
I
received?
F
Eight
I've
received
eight
emails
against
it.
That's
it.
I've
had
two
folks
come
to
our
meetings.
One
person
comes
every
single
month
to
it.
I
had
a
neighborhood,
and
so
there
are
legitimate
concerns
in
our
neighborhood
but
they're
relatively
small,
compared
to
other
places.
F
I
had
a
neighbor
pull
me
aside
last
week,
who's
on
who
know
him
on
the
task
force
and
she
said
to
me:
there's
lots
of
us
not
just
in
the
sunset,
but
also
in
palestine,
neighborhood,
who
are
very
supportive
of
this
shelter.
Please
make
sure
our
voices
are
heard.
So
I
want
you
to
know
that
so
I'm
going
to,
I
have
a
couple
asks
and
I'm
going
to
wrap
this
up
pretty
quickly.
I'm
going
to
ask
one
thing
of
the
neighbors
who
are
opposed
to
it.
F
I
want
you
to
take
a
step
back
and
help
us
find
a
middle
ground
here
by
just
saying
no
you're,
not
necessarily
trying
to
find
a
solution.
You're
just
saying
no
to
it.
The
emails
that
were
getting
sent
aren't
helping
every
time.
I
see
one
of
those
emails,
it's
kind
of
discontinued.
It
makes
the
whole
process
look
poorly
and
it
doesn't
help
help
out
the
situation
and
then
the
online
c.
It
means
things
like
that
that
are
really
negative.
Aren't
helping
either
they're
not
going
to
do.
F
For
you
make
you
look
kind
of
bad,
so
what
I'm
saying
is
to
those
folks
like
come
to
us,
have
a
conversation
but
like
with
the
negativity,
interfaith
sanctuary
for
you
guys.
F
F
It
shows
that
you're
willing
to
work
with
the
community,
but
I'm
going
to
ask
you
something.
This
is
my
one
chance.
I
can
do
this.
Take
a
look
at
the
business
model.
I
know
you've
seen
it.
This
is
our
business
model.
This
is
what
we
do.
This
is
what
it's
going
to
be.
I
have
a
background
in
the
non-profit
world.
I
work.
I
was
an
upper
management
nonprofit
for
years.
I
understand
grant
writing.
I
understand
fundraising.
F
I
would
like
you
to
take
a
look
at
your
business
model
and
talk
about
doing
smaller,
shelters,
multiple
ones
around
the
state
around
the
area
and
to
find
a
better
solution
along
those
lines.
It's
going
to
cost
more
money,
you
need
more
trained
staff,
you're
going
to
need
more
partnerships,
but
start
with
this
shelter,
maybe
and
expand
it
to
other
places,
something
along
those
lines.
So
look
for
that
middle
ground.
If
you
can
so
and
then
finally
to
the
city,
I'm
going
to
ask
you
to
make
this
task
forth
worth
something.
F
Someone
yesterday
in
our
last
meeting
said
to
us.
We
were
meeting
last
night,
so
one
of
the
people
said.
I
hope
this
isn't
just
a
city
trying
to
check
off
a
box.
So
I'm
asking
you
to
listen
to
us
and
take.
We
have
to
say
into
account
five
years
from
now.
I
want
to
look
back
and
say
I
was
on
that.
Nothing
happened
so
so
in
the
end
there's
a
solution.
F
A
A
You,
okay,
a
couple
of
questions
came
in
while
you
were
presenting
neighborhood
leaders
and
there
may
be
a
few
more
and
if
we
have
time
we
can
also
open
up
to
live
q
a
to
folks
in
the
room
and
online.
So
the
first
one.
I
think
this
is
probably
for
katie
and
hillary,
so
this
is
around
crime
and
safety
and
the
question
is:
won't
there
be
more
sort
of
crime
and
safety
considerations.
A
A
Okay,
thank
you
any
follow-up
to
that.
Okay,
this
one's
for
you
annie.
Do
you
mind
popping
up,
so
I
think
this
was
just
a
question
asking
you
maybe
to
elaborate
a
little
bit
more
about
that
impact
bullet
point
is
that
is
the
concern
impact
to
the
neighborhood
or
impact
to
the
shelter
or
both
yeah.
E
So
when
we
were
kind
of
talking
about
it,
that's
why
I
said
the
impact
bullet.
I
should
have
written
more
after
the
impact
bullet.
I
think
both
of
those
things
are
concerns
that
we
talked
about.
We
were
talking
about
safety
for
the
guests.
We
were
talking
about.
E
Being
really
there's
a
lot
of
talk
about
what
might
happen
and
honestly
when
it
comes
right
down
to
it,
we
don't
know
exactly
what
the
impacts
will
be,
and
so
I
think
it's
a
reasonable
thing
for
that
to
be
a
concern
how
we
handle
that
concern,
I
think,
is
open
for
discussion.
A
For
that
clarification,
so
this
is
really
for.
I
think
the
presidents
of
the
neighborhood
association,
so
interfaith
sent
a
good
neighbor
agreement
for
neighborhood
association
leaders
to
review.
Did
you
have
a
chance
to
review
that,
and
do
you
want
to
say
anything
about
it?.
A
C
H
My
only
guess
is
that
maybe
it
could
be
from
the
beginning
of
the
process,
in
which
case
it
would
have
been
perceived
as
a
draft
of
the
existing
agreement
downtown
when
we
did
ask
to
collaborate
on
conditions
of
approval.
We
were
said
that
the
good
neighbor
agreements
and
those
types
of
policies
would
be
generated
after
the
cup
went
through.
So
it
was
my
understanding
that
that
wasn't
really
open
to
a
discussion
at
this
phase
of
the
process.
A
Katie,
I
might
just
have
you
stay
up
there
if
that's,
okay,
I
think
this
one's,
probably
for
for
you
and
or
hillary.
How
did
you
consider
or
account
for
your
own
implicit
bias
when
you
were
talking
about
unhoused
people,
sort
of
as
being
mostly
violent
or
drug
users,
for
example,.
H
It's
certainly
not
my
intention
to
imply
that
most
people
are
violent
or
drug
users.
It's
my
intention
to
show
that
there
are
accumulations
of
these
calls
to
service
at
this
facility.
The
data
is
indicating
that
this
is
a
very
small
percentage
of
the
overall
population,
but
I
think
we
need
to
still
look
at
this.
H
If
you
have
a
thousand
people
coming
through
the
facility
each
year,
if,
for
instance,
the
I
think
the
violent
crimes
maps,
the
maximum
point
size
was
about
45
or
50
crimes
indicated,
and
that
was
over
the
period
of
two
years
and
two
months.
So
it's
on
the
order
of
one
to
two
crimes
per
month.
A
Okay,
thank
you
for
that
clarification,
so
the
two
of
you
also
presented
some
of
the
buffers
that
are
around
other
cities.
Shelters.
Could
you
talk
about
what
types
of
buffers
exist
maybe
a
little
bit
more
and
what
that
might
look
like
in
boise.
So
I
think
this
is
asking
for
a
hypothetical,
but
maybe
you
could
just
reflect
on
what
that
could
look
like
here.
I.
C
Mean
so,
due
to
our
time
constrictions,
we
didn't
look
into
the
specific
construction
and
structure
of
buffers,
but
from
apparent
visualizations,
there's
anywhere
between
green
space
to
concrete
streets
parks,
parking
lots,
and
I
think
I
don't
know
that
we
can
answer
what
a
buffer
would
potentially
look
like
for
the
city
of
boise,
but
I
think
part
of
the
additional
sighting
criteria
of
community
concern
and
response
that
we're
asking
for
that.
That
buffer
should
be
addressed
and
explored
more
as
a
as
a
whole.
A
Okay,
thank
you
for
that
katie,
this
one's
for
you,
let's
see
if
I
can
put
this
in
a
helpful
way,
so
you
had
at
the
sort
of
vignette
vignette
where
you
reflected
on
the
interaction
between
your
child,
and
I
think
I
don't
know
what
language
to
use
here,
a
child
from
a
low-income
background
and
that
felt
like
it
had
some
negative
effects
for
you,
and
I
think
there
was
some
reaction
from
someone
online
to
that.
A
I
wonder
if
you
could
talk
a
little
bit
more
about
whether
or
not
it's
fair
to
to
base
your
reactions
about
the
shelter
on
that
kind
of
personal
interaction.
H
So
to
be
clear,
that's
not
the
only
engagement
that
we've
had
that
particular
child
doesn't
live
on
my
street.
He,
since
I
believe,
was
living
doubled
up
with
grandparents
and
has
since
moved
on
to
different
housing,
but
other
I've.
H
I've
had
similar
instances
where
I'm
overhearing
other
children
telling
my
children
about
their
aunt,
went
on
a
date
and
as
soon
as
she
got
there,
she
got
out
of
the
car
and
got
shot.
I've
had
instances
where
a
child
who's
been
at
my
house,
playing
with
my
kids
every
single
day
for
months,
showed
up
unannounced
to
thanksgiving
dinner
and
told
us
that
he
was
moving
that
day
to
a
different
location.
There's
just
a
high
level
of
instability
and
exposure
to
trauma
in
the
population.
A
Okay,
thank
you
for
elaborating,
so
this
question
is
for
both
of
you
representing
veterans
and
collister.
C
You
know,
that's
actually
a
question
that
I
posed
to
my
neighborhood
association
board
on
wednesday
evening.
Is
that
is
there
room
for
compromise
in
our
community
and
what
would
the
feedback
be?
I
think
part
of
the
overarching
issue
is
that
concentration
of
poverty,
that,
regardless
of
the
type
or
any
facility
in
there
in
and
for
shelter,
setting
inherently,
is
going
to
affect
those
populations,
regardless
of
the
compromises
that
may
be
made
for
some
of
the
safety
and
crime
or
loitering,
etc.
C
Statistics,
and
so
it's
hard
to
get
past
that
one
that
one
point,
regardless
of
any
other
type
of
compromises
or
solutions
that
could
be
made
or
found.
A
A
Okay,
well,
I
want
to
give
katie
a
chance
to
respond
because
it
was
directed
to
you
to
her
and
then
annie
you
can
follow
it.
E
We
were
talking
about
how
we
don't
all
necessarily
agree
in
this
process,
and
I
think
it's
important
to
make
it
clear
that
katie
and
hillary
are
representing
the
neighborhood
assort
association
and
that
does
not
necessarily
represent
the
diverse
views
of
the
neighborhood.
I
think
it's
important
to
put
that
in
there.
Okay.
Thank
you.
A
All
right,
I
have
a
question
from
online
from
b
black
who's,
a
member
of
our
task
force.
So
question
about
this.
The
call
for
service
analysis.
When
you
look
at
the
calls
for
service.
How
do
you
know
that
it
was
interface,
sanctuary
guests
that
were
caused
that
causing
the
issue
since
the
day
shelter
is
located
there
as
well
as
catch
offices?
A
H
Calls
are
categorized
by
address
of
call,
so
there
is
a
specific
dot
for
interfaith
sanctuary
and
specific
thoughts
for
corpus,
christi
day
shelter
and
specific
dots
for
catch
that
wouldn't
necessarily
come
through
and
review
of
the
graphs
just
know
that
they
are
centered
on
those
locations.
I
I'm
happy
to
also
provide
the
excel
database
for
upload.
If
people
want
to
look
at
it
more
specifically.
A
Great,
thank
you
so
much
and
then
just
a
nice
comment
from
somebody
watching
we
want
to
thank
you
again
for
all
the
work
you
did
in
your
presentation,
preparing
your
presentation
today.
All
right.
I
think
we
have
time
for
one
more
question
before
we
move
on
to
our
next
activity.
Any
in-room
questions
for
our
presenters,
andy.
K
I
I
don't
have
a
question
as
much
as
speaking
from
my
position
from
my
board
the
work
that
this
group
did.
I
do
think
that
you
worked
to
try
and
take
out
implicit
bias
that
you
try
to
present
facts
and
data,
and
we
want
to
hear
what
you
have
to
say.
So
we
we
get.
You
know
a
lot
of
the
work
that
that
you've
done
and
we
want
to
hear
you
know,
continue
to
hear
that
and
there's
no
perfect
way
to
to
to
help
people
who
are
in
need
in
a
larger
community.
K
We
get
it
and
it
sounds
like
you
also
understand
that
you've
tried
to
represent
it.
I
know
the
one
thing
you
said
is
the
hardest
thing
to
do
is
to
overcome
the
idea
of
having
poverty
people
experience
poverty
living
in
your
neighborhood.
That
is
difficult
because
there
they
will
have
to
you
know.
Poor
people
will
be
part
of
wherever
we
go,
and
so
that's
that,
I
think,
is
the
nut
that
we're
all
trying
to
crack.
K
But
I
I
do
appreciate
the
attitude
that
I
heard
from
expressed
across
these
leaders
of
you
know
we're
not
all
monolithic,
we're
all
you
know.
People
with
families
living
in
neighborhoods
and
our
neighborhoods
are
not
all
monolithic.
We're
all
trying
to
you
know
join
together,
though,
to
find
solutions.
So
we
want
to
work
with
all
of
you.
We
want
to
find
a
place
with
the
we
know.
The
time
grows,
shorter
and
shorter.
K
The
costs
go
higher
and
higher
everything's
getting
more
difficult
in
in
urban
settings
to
be
able
to
to
do
this,
but
we
are
absolutely
committed
and
convinced
and
optimistic
and
meeting
with
my
board
members
that
we're
going
to
come
to
a
solution
that
our
community
as
a
city
as
a
you
know,
as
a
larger
group,
will,
we
believe,
support
and
will
help
us
to
continue
to
be
a
place
where
we're
not
marginalizing
or
ignoring
or
pushing
to
a
very
unacceptable
place,
people
that
want
to
grow
out
of
a
difficult
situation.
K
H
Thank
you.
I
just
wanted
to
say
thank
you
for
that
andy.
I
appreciate
it
and
also
in
response
to
the
prior
question
about
what
other
compromise
would
you
accept.
I
think
that
part
of
that
would
be
interfaith
is
trying
to
make
a
solution.
A
Yeah,
let's
do
one
more
question
and
then
I
we
need
to
move
on
and
please
introduce
yourself
for
folks
who
are
watching
on
zoom.
G
Hi,
I'm
penny
beach,
I'm
representing
healthcare
and
hospitals,
but
one
of
my
questions
about
the
the
multi-site,
which
I
think
is,
I
think,
really
is
really
an
attractive
alternative
in
a
lot
of
ways.
I
have
some
questions
about
costs,
but
my
question
about
it
for
the
community
members
is
won't.
Then
we
have
10
neighborhood
associations
up
here.
You
know
saying
some
of
the
same
objections
that
you
all
have
brought
up
and
wouldn't
that
even
be
harder
to
get
through
with
community
groups.
C
I
mean
absolutely
that
is
a
potential,
but
hopefully
part
of
this
task
force
is
going
to
create
this
studying
criteria
and
work
with
the
city
as
an
opportunity
with
plenty
in
zoning
to
see
what
would
be
acceptable
going
forward.
C
So
hopefully
we're
here
to
alleviate
some
of
that
future
concern
for
other
neighborhoods
and-
and
we
do
want
to
reiterate-
we
do
believe
we
need
another
meeting
specifically
devoted
to
citing
criteria
for
the
community
and
there
would
be
whatever
metrics
we
decide,
but
that
hopefully
going
forward,
have
a
process
in
place
for
open
communication
with
other
neighborhood
leaders
and
neighborhoods
associations,
depending
on
a
multi-site
solution,
as
well
as
look
at
some
of
the
planning
and
zoning
guidelines
about
where
that
citing
solution
should
be.
A
A
I
appreciate
all
of
you
so
in
the
time
we
have
remaining,
I
know
it's
not
enough
20
minutes,
but
in
the
time
we
have
remaining,
I
want
to
just
give
members
of
the
task
force
who
haven't
had
a
chance
to
present
yet
to
the
task
force
either
today
or
in
another
meeting
a
chance
to
comment
or
you
can
ask
a
question,
I
suppose
if
you
like,
and
if
you
don't
have
anything
to
say,
that's
okay,
too,
but
I
think
now's
a
good
time,
maybe
to
take
out
your
journals
or
your
scratch
paper,
wherever
you're
taking
notes
and
just
take
a
moment
and
reflect
on
sort
of
where
your
thinking
is
at.
A
A
A
L
Thank
you.
So
I've
been
pretty
quiet
the
last
couple
of
weeks
on
purpose.
I
really
wanted
to
listen.
I
realized.
L
City
council
really
wanted
to
thank
both
interfaith
sanctuary
and
the
neighborhoods
for
the
presentations
the
last
couple
of
weeks.
I
think,
for
me
very
insightful,
clearly
heartfelt
a
lot
of
work
in
both
of
those
those
of
you
who
know
me
know
I'm
sort
of
the
big
picture
thinker
and
well.
Our
task
is
the
shelter
it's
hard
for
me
to
separate
that,
from
all
of
the
other
things
that
that
need
to
be
addressed.
L
L
We
know
that
half
the
people
who
are
served
at
alamba
today
really
need
to
be
in
recovery
and
they
have
nowhere
to
go
after
they're
released.
To
do
that,
we
need
more
space
for
those
who
are
chronically
homeless,
but
not
medically
fragile
and
so
there's
there.
They
need
different
services
than
medically
fragile
they're,
not
all
the
same.
They
don't
need
all
the
same
services,
but
their
service
need
is
different,
as
I've
talked
to
the
service
providers
and
so
whether
it's
on
the
current
side
of
new
path
or
in
another
location.
L
L
I
personally
think
that
all
of
us
would
be
better
off,
including
those
being
served
if
we
could
figure
out
a
way
to
do
that
in
a
separate
facility.
Even
if
it's
nearby,
I
know
that
there's
a
coalition
and
family
homelessness
and
they
have
a
goal
of
300
housing
units.
L
L
M
L
A
I
I'm
sarah,
the
things
that
are
really
that
have
really
sort
of
stood
out
to
me
that
are
kind
of
rattling
around
as
we're
moving
forward,
are
the
the
real
need
for
increased
capacity
for
day
shelter
and
all
of
the
services
that
that
provides,
including
around
inclement
weather
and
things
like
that,
and
whether
that's
in
a
shelter
site
or
not.
But
I
think
that's
just
a
need.
That
really
leaves
me
thinking
about
how
we
make
sure
to
include
that
in
some
of
our
considerations.
I
And
then,
after
after
your
presentation
today,
which
is
really
deep
and
wonderful,
and
thank
you
so
much
for
all
the
effort
you
put
into
that.
I'm
really
struck.
I
think
I
just
want
to
echo
like
what
does
compromise
look
like
and
and
how
do
we?
N
I'm
stephanie
day
with
catch,
and
I
think
reflecting
on
everything
that
was
said
today
and
over
the
last
five
weeks.
I'm
really
kind
of
echoing
some
things
that
have
already
been
said,
but
really
hoping
that
this
process
can
be
well
developed
for
future
need
because
we're
continuing
to
grow
and
the
economy
is
continuing
to
fall
apart.
N
And
I
think
that
this
is
going
to
be
an
ongoing
issue
and
concern,
and
I
really
hope
that
we
can
find
a
process
that
works
for
our
entire
community
to
address
this
need,
as
it
continues
to
grow
and
also
I
don't
know
that
you
guys
even
want
to
hear
this,
but
because
it
might
not
be
entirely
related,
but
just
the
need
for
community
education
and
continuing
to
like
bridge
gaps,
because
you
know-
I
probably
say
this
too
often,
but
like
only
one
percent
of
us
will
ever
experience
homelessness.
N
So
if
we
don't
have
lived
experience,
it's
very
hard
to
understand
and
if
we
don't
understand
something,
then
it's
scary
and
so
just
like
continuing.
Hopefully
I
know
people
have
mentioned
enjoying
this
process
and
feeling
more
connected
to
their
community
and
more
engaged
and
hopefully
finding
ways
that
we
can
continue
to
do
that
beyond.
Just
this
task
force.
O
O
O
We've
named,
we
were
we're
better
at
naming
other
people's
implicit
biases
and
their
unwillingness
to
compromise
than
our
own,
and
we
heard
some
really
great
list
of
huge
strategic
needs
that
a
seven
week
task
force
with
potentially
unclear
goals,
has
no
ability
to
address,
and
so
I
just
have
a
my
heart
aches
for
the
the
fact
that
we
will
feel
rushed
to
come
to
impossible
conclusions.
A
Anybody
I
know
we
have
b
and
serena
online
rebecca
just
want
to
make
sure
you
have
a
chance
to
weigh
in
if
you
want
to.
J
Thank
you
for
that.
I
just
want
to
really
appreciate
again
all
the
work
and
time
and
effort
formulating
some
thoughts
that
I
I
will
share,
but
I
I
don't
feel
like
I
have
them
put
together.
Well
enough
in
the
time.
That's
left
so
happy
to
see
that
time
to
others
who
may
have
it
already
formulated.
A
M
Go
ahead,
I
do
definitely
want
to
thank
the
task
force
and
the
very
thoughtful
presentation
and
the
ability
for
not
everyone
being
on
the
same
page
but
being
able
to
sit
at
the
table.
I
think
that's
super
admirable
and
gives
me
hope.
M
When
I
wrote
my
thoughts,
I'm
I'm
feeling
frustrated
because
there's
just
so
much
that
all
of
you
don't
know
in
this
process,
and
so
it
feels
we're
so
misunderstood
and
there
was
an
early
reach
out
to
veterans
park,
neighborhood
association
in
november
before
the
announcement
happened
and
we
were
invited
to
participate
in
a
board
meeting,
and
there
was
a
meeting
that
was
supposed
there's,
there's
so
many
things
that
were
supposed
to
happen
that
because
of
the
opposition,
we
were
unable
to
do
because
of
the
dangers
of
covet.
M
We
are
focused
on
making
sure
that
anyone
who
wants
shelter
can
have
a
bed
and
the
that
addresses
the
concerns
about
crime
and
load,
loitering
and
other
things,
because
if
you
have
a
place,
it
removes
the
need
to
have
survival
crimes.
If
you
don't
have
a
place
you
wander
and
you
try
and
figure
out
how
you're
going
to
go
about
day
to
day,
and
so
it's
really
important
to
consider
those
who
want
shelter,
because
that's
who
ifs
serves
and
the
other
thing
to
consider.
M
Well,
they're,
just
they're,
just
human
beings
like
us
and
they're
our
neighbors,
and
if
given
the
chance
and
in
the
right
neighborhood
our
volunteers
make
up
a
huge
part
of
how
we
do
our
work.
And
I
welcome
a
time
where
we
could
talk
about
what
that
would
look
like
with
this
neighborhood,
because
there
are
a
lot
of
supporters
that
will
bring
gifts
to
the
shelter
and
to
the
guests.
M
A
B
I,
in
addition
to
some
of
you,
are
trying
to
figure
out
how
we're
going
to
get
from
here
to
where
we
need
to
be
on
monday.
B
So
just
know
the
staff,
and
I
and
jen
will
put
our
best
brains
together,
but
if
anybody
has
any
suggestions
or
heartburn
or
would
like
the
opportunity
to
talk
more
about
their
concerns
associated
with
the
final
recommendations,
please
reach
out
to
me
we're
trying
to
design
a
comfortable
process
that
both,
I
think
in
tom's
words,
makes
the
work
count
but
doesn't
drive
the
conversation
in
a
direction
that
isn't
particularly
meaningful.
B
B
L
A
Me
as
well,
thank
you
so
much
for
that
all
right
everybody!
Thank
you
again.
As
we
already
indicated,
things
are
probably
going
to
come
a
little
later
than
usual,
we're
going
to
try
to
keep
homework
minimal.
We
know
you
don't
have
as
much
time
as
usual,
but
we
will
see
you
on
thursday.
Take
care.