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From YouTube: Public Safety Forum 2021
Description
The City of Cupertino hosts the annual Public Safety Forum, recorded live on Thursday, October 21, 2021 at the Cupertino Civic Center Plaza.
Presentations include...
* Public Health: COVID-19 Overview and Outlook (Dr. Jeff Englander)
* Evacuation Planning: ZoneHaven (Fire Chief Mortenson/Capt. Ingram)
* WAI: Wildlife Awareness Initiative (Kennedy Middle School Students)
* WomenSV: Domestic Violence Prevention (Ruth Darlene)
* Sheriff's Office Overview on Crime and Safety (Capt. Rich Urena)
Cupertino Mayor Darcy Paul provides opening remarks.
A
A
A
So
everyone
welcome
back
to
the
city
of
cupertino
public
safety
forum,
it's
just
so
wonderful
to
have
everyone
here.
I'm
mayor,
darcy,
paul,
I'm
joined
today
by
a
few
of
my
other
council
members,
or
at
least
a
couple.
We
have
council
member
kitty
moore
here.
Thank
you
for
being
here,
councilmember
moore.
We
have
councilmember
hungway
as
well,
and
I
want
to
thank
the
public
safety
commission
for
hosting
this
event.
A
The
commission
has
paid
special
attention
over
the
last
year
to
recognize
the
toll
that
coven
19
has
taken
on
all
of
us
by
acknowledging
both
the
mental
health
awareness
and
domestic
violence
awareness.
So,
thank
you
very
much
for
being
very
aware
of
how
the
sheltering
in
place
and
all
the
various
impacts
of
kovid
have
potentially
adversely
affected
our
social
situation
on
our
domestic
situation.
I
want
to
thank
the
entire
public
safety
commission
for
being
here
tonight.
A
A
So
wonderful
work
that
you're
doing
please
keep
up
the
the
great
efforts.
The
public
safety
forum
has
long
served
as
a
venue
for
our
community
to
connect
directly
to
our
public
safety
heroes,
and
we
are
incredibly
grateful
for
the
work
of
our
sheriff's
office
and
our
fire
department.
I
see
our
sheriff's
captain
is
here
today.
Let's
give
a
big
wave
to
captain
urina
and
we
have
members
of
our
fire
department.
A
Thank
you
for
being
here
tonight
with
us
as
well
and,
of
course,
you're
bringing
forward
a
lot
of
topical
conversation
to
our
community
this
evening,
and
we
thank
you
for
that.
Public
safety
remains
one
of
the
city's
top
priorities
and
the
city
council's
top
priorities.
If
you
can
see
in
everything
that
the
council
is
doing
we're
trying
to
ensure
that
we
have
safe
bike
lanes,
for
instance,
we
announced
the
mcclellan
road
improvements.
A
Lately
we
want
to
make
sure
that,
no
matter
what
we
do,
we
do
it
honestly
and
with
integrity,
and
a
lot
of
that
is
grounded
in
public
safety
concerns.
So
I
think
that's
really
something
that
people
from
the
outside
look
in
on
cupertino
and
whether
they
acknowledge
it
or
whether
they
don't
explicitly
acknowledge
it.
A
They
realize
that
we're
doing
that
work
so
thank
all
of
you
for
putting
that
forward
in
cupertino,
our
community
gets
involved,
and
we
thank
you
for
the
impact
our
volunteers
have
made,
including
the
citizen
corps,
the
block
leaders
and
our
youth
in
various
areas.
I
was
very
pleased
to
be
able
to
have
the
crest
awards
here
last
week,
where
we
gave
a
lifetime
achievement
award
to
jim
oberhofer,
one
of
our
many
citizen
volunteers
that
give
of
their
time
to
make
sure
that
we
have
a
safer
community.
A
So
this
is
just
a
wonderful
conglomeration
of
effort
and
so
excellent
job
done.
The
last
18
months,
of
course,
have
been
trying
for
all
of
us,
as
we've
made
sacrifices
to
help
protect
our
families
and
to
protect
each
other
cupertino.
In
fact,
when
you
look
at
the
rates
of
covid
per
100,
000
people
actually,
by
a
fairly
significant
amount
from
start
to
right
now,
has
had
the
very
lowest
rates
and
we've
had
some
of
the
highest.
A
If
not
the
highest
rates
of
vaccination
in
santa
clara
county,
I
think
that
it
also
very
much
speaks
to
the
ethos,
the
values
and
the
approach
of
people
in
our
community.
So
tonight
I'm
very
pleased,
as
mentioned
before,
to
have
a
couple
of
guest
presenters
from
both
the
sheriff's
office
and
the
fire
department.
So
thank
you
very
much.
The
sheriff's
office
will
be
talking
about
recent
crime
trends
and
we'll
be
pre,
presenting
some
tips
on
personal
safety.
A
A
We
have
the
wildfire
awareness
initiative
or
wwai,
and
that's
a
group
of
middle
schoolers
from
kennedy
middle
school
who
are
making
an
impact
on
that
particular
aspect
of
public
safety.
And
finally,
we
have
the
santa
clara
county
public
health
department
to
provide
an
update
and
outlook
on
covet
19.,
and
I
know
that
that's
something
that
of
course,
has
been
permeating
everything
that
we've
been
affected
by
for
the
last
year
and
a
half
and
hopefully
knock
on
wood.
A
And
for
that
I
think
that
we
should
acknowledge
the
work
of
assembly,
member
evan
lowe
in
making
sure
that
the
west
valley
cities
have
that
funding
and
the
wherewithal
to
be
able
to
proceed
on
those
grounds.
So
thank
you,
assemblymember
low
for
the
very
extensive
amount
of
effort
and
lobbying
that
he
did
to
increase
that
amount
of
funding
to
the
very
significant
funding
amount
that
we
have
in
the
west
valley
for
each
and
every
one
of
our
cities.
I
think
originally
it
was.
A
It
was
a
much
lower
amount,
something
more
in
the
low
six
figures.
We
will
support
our
small
businesses
in
preparing
for
the
next
disaster.
Just
like
we
prepare
all
across
the
board
to
be
prepared
for
any
number
of
disasters
and
they
might
be
able
to
cross-coordinate,
for
instance,
and
we're
going
to
try
to
make
sure
that
we
have
coordination
between
the
west
valley
cities,
and
so
this
funding
from
the
state
is
not
just
funding
for
cupertino
it's
7
million
in
funding
for
all
of
the
west
valley
cities.
A
So
it
really
works
quite
effectively
together
should
a
wildfire
or
any
any
type
of
disaster
occur.
Cupertino
will
have
the
capability
to
coordinate
that
regional
response.
So
it's
a
good
idea
to
start
thinking
not
just
about
doing
well
within
our
community,
but
about
the
interconnections
that
we
can
create
with
the
other
west
valley
cities
for
us
campbell,
saratoga,
los
gatos
montessorino.
But
of
course
there
are
a
number
of
other
ways
that
we
can
interconnect
with
other
agencies,
other
non-profit
organizations
and
other
of
our
neighbors
and
finally,
the
city
of
cupertino
values.
A
The
fact
that
each
and
every
one
of
us
have
been
working
together.
I
look
out
here
and
I
see
volunteers
who
have
put
in
countless
hours.
I
see
people
that
are
interested
in
the
community
and
doing
more.
I
see
people
interested
in
learning
more
about
what
we
can
be
doing,
and
so
I
do
thank
all
all
of
you,
each
and
every
one
of
you
for
all
the
efforts
that
you
make.
It
truly
is
what
makes
our
society
singular.
A
Dare
I
say
great,
it
is
something
that
we
should
cherish,
cherish
and
value
and
nurture
it.
It's
truly
not
easy
to
do
as
you
can
see
in
virtually
any
social
context
when
you
try
to
inject
the
idea
of
more
diversity
of
more
more
free
expression
of
opinion.
Inevitably,
what
you
get
a
lot
of
the
times
is
is
tension,
and
it's
basically
precisely
these
types
of
events
that
help
us
kind
of
hash
out
these
ideas
in
a
calm
forum.
So
so
thank
you
again
for
all
that.
A
You
do
without
any
further
ado,
I'd
like
to
introduce
the
chair
of
the
public
safety
commission
to
introduce
the
first
speaker.
Ladies
and
gentlemen,
hyman
and
nalor
chair
of
the
public
safety
commission,.
B
Thank
you
mayor
for
a
wonderful
welcome,
note,
appreciate
you
being
here
and
being
engaged
with
this
community
with
so
today
we
have
with
us
dr
jeff
englander,
who
is
a
representative
of
the
santa
clara
public
health
department,
and
I
have
a
brief
bio
about
him.
I
want
to
read
out
to
you
and
he's
going
to
talk
to
us
about
kovit
19
overview
and
the
outlook
and
a
little
biography
about
dr
jeff
englander.
Dr
jeff
englander
is
a
board
certified
in
internal
medicine
and
physical
medicine
and
rehabilitation
abbreviated
as
pmr.
B
B
Since
his
retirement
from
full-time
work
at
scvmc
in
2012,
he
has
volunteered
for
the
environmental
volunteers,
san
francisco
bay,
bird
observatory,
jewish
family
services,
san
jose
public
library
and
the
osher
lifelong
learning
institute
at
santa
clara
university.
He
enjoys
bicycling
gardening,
yoga
and
traveling.
With
that,
I
would
like
to
invite
dr
jeff
englander
onto
the
podium
and
talk
about
kobe
19
overview
and
the
outlook.
Thank
you.
C
I'm
going
to
take
off
my
mask,
so
you
can
hear
me
better.
I
don't
have
such
a
great
voice
as
mayor
paul.
He
has
a
wonderful
voice
boy.
I
guess
that's
why
you
can
be
the
mayor.
You
can
have
a
good
voice
anyway.
My
connection
with
cupertino
is
actually
long-standing.
My
kids
both
played
in
little
league
here
and
I
was
a
coach
or
or
a
manager
of
little
league
for
probably
15
years.
So
I
played
on
all
the
fields
around
here
or
I
didn't
play.
C
My
kids
did
and
enjoyed
that
quite
a
bit
and
I
live
in
right
by
lindbergh
high
school.
So
I'm
a
san
jose
resident,
but
cupertino
is
my
neighbor,
so
we're
here
tonight
to
talk
about
colvin,
19
and
where
we've
come
all
these
months,
and
if
you
have
questions,
please
feel
free
to
answer
them.
I'm
not
a
epidemiologist,
as
you
heard,
I'm
just
I'm
a
doctor.
I've
practiced
for
a
long
time.
C
I
and
I've
had
the
experience
of
working
in
the
vaccine
clinics
since
we've
started,
so
we're
going
to
have
a
little
bit
of
update
on
where
we've
gone
with
covid
and
where
we
still
have
to
go
because
we're
in
the
middle
of
it.
As
you
can
see
here.
These
are
the
cases
that
have
happened
in
our
county,
and
you
know
our
big.
C
We
did
not
have
another
spike
other
communities
you
hear
about
them
now
in
alaska
and
montana,
in
in
some
of
in
arkansas
and
some
of
the
cities
in
the
south,
where
people
have
not
gotten
vaccinated,
they
had
a
peak
that
was
even
bigger
than
the
first
peak,
but
we
have
not
because
of
all
the
precautions
that
we
as
a
community
have
taken.
So
thank
you
for
doing
that.
C
This
looks.
This
is
a
chart
of
the
vaccination
curve
and
the
vaccinations
were
just
beginning
to
be
available
in
last
december
january
for
health
care
workers
and
then
frontline
workers
and
then
older
people
and
then
gradually
all
people
became
all
people
18
and
older
became
eligible
and
then
just
the
last
few
months,
children,
but
between
the
ages
of
12
and
18,
were
allowed
to
or
were
encouraged
and
allowed
to
get
the
vaccination
and
hopefully,
in
the
next
month,
we're
going
to
hear
about
younger
children.
C
So
we
can
push
this
even
higher,
so
our
our
vaccination
rate
in
the
in
the
whole
counties
about
73,
that's
pretty
good,
that's
good!
That's
very
good
we'd
like
to
be
higher
than
that
we'd
like
to
be
over
80
percent.
That
would
make
all
of
us
much
happier
but
we're
we're
on
our
way
there.
So
if
you
haven't
been
vaccinated,
please
get
vaccinated,
that's
the
biggest
message
for
tonight.
If
you're
eligible
for
a
booster,
you
should
get
that
too.
So
we'll
talk
about
that.
C
As
as
we
go
along
vaccination,
vaccination
vaccination
is
the
number
one
thing
that
we
can
do
to
prevent.
The
prevent
us
from
getting
super
sick
and
loading
up
our
hospitals,
that's
the
most
important
thing,
but
masking
indoors
is
super
important
masking
in
schools
to
prevent
the
spread,
especially
amongst
children,
who,
who
are
not
yet
eligible
for
the
vaccination
is
terribly
important
us
meeting
outside
is
a
way
instead
of
inside.
This
is
a
much
safer
venue
for
us
right,
so
ventilation
is
what
we're
doing
right
here.
C
Testing
is
widely
widely
available,
very
easy
to
get
in
our
community.
Thank
goodness,
and
if
you
have
any
question
about
any
symptom
that
you
have
coughs
sore
throat,
low-grade
fever,
you
should
get
tested
because
that's
that's
what
we
need
to
prevent
from
spreading
around
okay
and
there
are
treatments
for
covet
and
then,
of
course,
social
disease.
C
I
notice
people
are
not
super
compacted
here
and
I
I
worry
about
the
people
that
went
to
the
giants,
games
and
the
49ers
games,
because
that's
they're,
pretty
close
and
they're
not
wearing
mass,
so,
but
here
we're
we're
able
to
do
that.
So
thank
you
for
taking
that
precaution
as
well,
so
who
should
get
the
vaccine
pretty
much
everybody?
I
mean
there's
very,
very
few
individuals
who
are
not
eligible
for
the
vaccine,
even
if
you're
pregnant,
even
if
you're
thinking
about
getting
pregnant,
it's
okay
to
get
vaccinated.
C
It's
there
are
no
more
miscarriages
of
people
who
are
vaccinated
during
their
first
trimester
or
before
they
get
pregnant
than
there
are
afterwards.
It's
not
a
risk
covet
is
not
a
risk
factor
for
for
achieving
safe,
successful,
pregnancy
and
and
if
you're
breastfeeding
as
well,
it's
it's
safe,
so
it
makes
it
even
safer
for
your
infant
to
that.
The
parents
are
vaccinated.
C
There's
a
lot
of
myths,
a
lot
of
talk
about
why
you
shouldn't
get
the
vaccine.
You
know
young
people
think
they're
strong
and
healthy,
and
they
don't
need
it
or
some
people
have
said.
Oh,
I
had
covet
already
and
I
don't
need
it,
but
you
can
get
covet
again.
It's
not
like
certain
other
diseases
like
measles
or
chickenpox,
where
it's
very
hard
to
get
it
again.
C
You
can
get
it
and
the
covet
virus
has
changed
as
we
know,
change
from
the
alpha
variant
to
the
delta
variant
and
the
delta
variant
can
get
you
even
if
you
had
the
alpha
variant,
some
people
think
are
worried
that
the
vaccine
is
going
to
make
them
sick.
C
They
may
you
may
have
some
side
effects
from
the
vaccine.
How
many
of
you
have
had
side
effects
from
the
vaccine
a
little
yeah
anything
that
you
would
prevent
you
from
getting
it
again
or
getting
a
booster
shot?
No!
So
yeah!
I
had
a
sore
arm
for
a
few
days
and
the
I
had
a
little
bit
of
a
headache
but
much
much
better
than
being
sick
and
and
sick
by
yourself
in
the
hospital,
because
when
you
have
kovid
you,
you
can't
have
visitors,
it's
it's
a
miserable
way
to
get
sick.
C
C
This
is
just
brand
new
information.
Who's
eligible
for
booster
doses,
we're
going
to
probably
hear
from
the
cdc
director,
dr
walinsky
in
the
next
couple
days
that
pretty
much
everybody
who's
been
vaccinated
before
who's,
65
and
older
is
eligible
to
get
a
booster
pfizer's
been
already
been
approved
for
over
a
month
or
about
a
month.
C
I
got
my
pfizer
booster
at
the
on
25th
of
september,
but
if
the
folks
that
have
gotten
got
moderna
or
got
the
jnj
vaccine
are
going
to
be
eligible
if
you're,
65
and
older
to
get
it
also,
if
you're
working
in
the
front
lines,
if
you're
a
public
safety
officer
a
firefighter
a
police
officer,
somebody
who
works
in
a
grocery
store
in
food
preparation
if
you're
a
health
care
worker.
Of
course,
you
can
get
a
vaccine,
you
don't
have
to
be
65.
C
if
you
have
underlying
medical
conditions
that
make
you
at
risk
for
getting
very,
very
sick
with
kovid,
you
can
get
a
booster
shot
so
and
the
requirement
for
moderna
and
pfizer
is
that
you,
the
booster
shot,
is
at
least
six
months
after
your
second
shot,
but
with
the
jnj.
You
can
get
it
within
two
months
after
two
months
and
they're
probably
going
to
say
that
the
j
with
a
j
and
j
you
can
get
either
pfizer
and
moderna
as
a
booster.
C
It
might
be
an
advantage
to
do
that.
What
about
our
children
and
we're
you
know?
A
lot
of
us
are
worried
about
our
kids
that
are
less
than
12.
at
the
end
of
this
month.
In
another
week
the
fda
is
going
to
be
reviewing
the
data
from
it's.
It's
all
going
to
be
pfizer
at
this
point
to
make
their
recommendations.
C
The
cdc
will
meet
soon
after
that
within
a
week
after
that,
and
we
hope
that
before
thanksgiving
that
our
our
young
children,
between
five
and
and
11
will
be
able
to
get
the
vaccine
and
they
will
need
two
doses
for
safety
reasons,
the
the
dose
is
going
to
be
lower
than
the
adult
dose.
It's
one
third
of
the
adult
dose.
C
There
will
be
two
doses,
it'll
be
widespreadly
available.
I
mean
if,
if
people
have
pediatricians
that
they're
comfortable
going
within
that
that
office
will
give
the
shots,
that's
it's
available.
There
it'll
be
available
in
pharmacies,
and
the
county
is
going
to
have
continue
to
have
multiple
clinics
available
for
children
to
get
them
to
get
their
vaccines.
So
I've
seen
a
number
of
of
teenagers
getting
their
vaccines.
A
lot
of
schools
have
they
haven't
required
it,
but
they've
strongly
encouraged
it
and
the
kids
do
just
fine
with
it.
They
don't
have.
C
They
have
fewer
symptoms
than
us,
older
folks,.
C
Now
covet
is
not
the
only
virus
out
there
and
of
course,
every
year
the
flu
virus
comes
around
and
and
makes
some
of
us
miserable
flu
vaccines
are
currently
available.
I
got
my
flu
vaccine
today
and
because
I'm
over
65
I
got
my
double
dose
and
I'm
fine.
I'm
here
doing.
Okay,
you
can
get
your
flu
flu
vaccine
and
your
covet
vaccine.
At
the
same
time,
you
can
get
your
flu
vaccine
your
covert
booster.
C
At
the
same
time,
there's
your
body
will
be
able
to
handle,
handle
it
and
you'll
it's
more
convenient
to
get
it
in
at
one
time.
C
I
am
not
going
to
make
a
prediction
about
mask
wearing
after
being
vaccinated
again
in
the
boosters.
There
are
going
to
be
conditions
in
which
we
got
into
we
got
into
in
june.
I
guess
it
was
for
about
a
month.
It
seemed
it
wasn't
very
long
that
we
were
allowed
to
go
without
masks
indoors,
and
our
county
has
been
very
proactive
about
everything.
C
From
the
very
beginning,
we've
been
so
fortunate
to
be
to
have
a
a
competent
public
health
officer
in
sarah
cody
and
and
her
connections
with
the
other
public
health
officers
in
the
in
the
all
over
the
bay
area
that
we
were
on
the
forefront
of
of
of
being
as
safe
as
possible
to
deal
with
this
virus
and
they're
continuing
to
do
that,
and
there
are
criteria
for
removing
the
mass
requirements
we
have
to
get
above.
C
80
percent
vaccination
of
the
whole
population,
not
just
the
eligible
people,
so
we're
we're
almost
there
from
that
point
of
view,
and
it's
possible
that
they'll
they'll
remove
the
mask
mandate.
Eight
weeks
after
the
covet
vaccine
is
is
authorized
for
use
in
the
in
children,
but
we'll
have
to
see
I'm
not
gonna
bet
on
any
of
these,
and
I
think
we
got
to
get
used
to
to
mask
wearing,
because
it's
going
to
happen
again.
C
We'll
have
other
viruses
that
come
along
that
make
us
that
make
it
more
safe
for
us
to
to
wear
masks,
and
I
know
that
the
countries
like
in
taiwan
and
australia
and
new
zealand
and
singapore
and
vietnam
did
a
better
job
in
terms
of
containing
the
virus,
because
people
were
used
to
wearing
masks
and
did
it
without
complaining.
So
much
like
we
do.
We
complain
a
lot.
C
It's
you
know
inconvenient,
there's
wide
availability
of
getting
both
tested
for
covid
as
well
as
vaccinated
for
covet
many
many
sites,
it's
very
easy
to
get,
and
even
if
you
don't
have
smell
you're,
not
good
on
your
cell
phone
or
you're
using
the
web,
you
can
call
a
number,
I
think,
there's
a
number
two
one
one
to
get
help
in
terms
of
getting
registered
to
get
a
to
get
a
vaccine.
C
So
you
don't
have
to
be
computer
literate
to
do
that,
because
it
could
be
daunting
to
go
through
all
the
different
websites
if
you're
not
used
to
it,
and
we
also
because
we
are
a
multi-ethnic,
multi-lingual
community.
The
information
is
is
available
in
english,
mandarin,
spanish,
vietnamese
and
tagalog.
C
C
And
the
question
is:
is
it
better
for
you
to
do
it
the
only
the
only
information
that
I've
seen?
That's
that
shows
that
it's
better
to
get
a
different
vaccine.
The
second
time
is,
if
you
have
the
jnj
vaccine,
which
is
the
one
dose
vaccine
and
that
you
get
a
better,
a
more
robust,
a
stronger
antibody
response
with
either
pfizer
or
morderna
modernity
even
gets
has
the
biggest
response.
Modern
dose
is
a
little
higher
in
terms
of
the
amount
of
of
mrna
that
you
get
in
the
in
the
vaccine.
C
So
if
you
had
the
j
j,
it's
probably
good,
it's
okay
to
take
the
moderna
or
the
the
pfizer
vaccine.
If
you
had
the
pfizer
up
until
now,
you've
only
been
able
to
get
the
pfizer
as
a
booster.
Now
you
can
we'll
see
tomorrow
from
dr
wolenski,
whether
she's
gonna
say
okay
to
to
for
people
who
had
moderna
to
get
pfizer
and
vice
versa.
C
It
is
not
harmful
to
mix
and
match.
Okay,
it
is
not
harmful
to
do
that.
It's
okay
to
do
it
and,
as
from
the
from
the
point
of
view
of
the
j
and
j
to
get
one
of
the
other,
the
mrna
virus
vaccine,
it's
you'll
get
a
more
robust,
antibody
response.
It
isn't
the
way
that
our
bodies
fight
the
virus
is
not
just
antibodies,
but
it's
the
front
line,
the
the
antibodies
of
the
front
line,
and
then
the
other
parts
of
the
immune
system
also
help
it's
just
harder
to
measure
that
impact
yeah.
D
So
if
you
have
the
j
vaccine
first,
the
one
dose
and
do
you
get
two
doses
of
pfizer
or
two
doses
of
magenta
as
a
booster
or
just
one
yeah.
C
E
Okay,
so
I
just
came
to
cvs
today
and
they
said
they
haven't
heard
anything
yet
so
will
it
be
announced
tomorrow.
I.
C
C
And
then
it's
up
to
dr
wolinski
and
she's
been
very,
very
prompt,
we're
lucky
to
have
her
she's,
wonderful
and
because,
when
the
pfizer
booster
came
out
only
for
with
the
recommendations
came
only
for
people
who
were
older
or
immunocompromised,
she
said
no,
frontline
workers
really
should
be
boost,
get
the
booster
shot,
we've
they've,
they
deserve
it
number
one
and
and
we
need
to
protect
them,
because
you
can't
just
replace
them
easily,
not
not
so
easy
to
train
a
nurse
or
a
doctor
or
even
somebody
who's.
C
You
know
a
really
good
person
in
the
grocery
store
or
firefighter
or
police
officer.
I
mean
the
training
is
long
and
rigorous,
so
we
need
to
keep
those
people
healthy,
we'll
see
what
dr
wolinski
says
so,
yes,
pay
attention.
F
Hi
good
evening,
everybody
thank
you
doctor
for
the
presentation
it's
very
valid
yesterday
or
or
a
couple
of
days
ago,
cdc
actually
made
the
announcement
that
mixing
of
the
boosters
between
the
vaccine
shots
are
okay,
so
it
should
probably
be
prevalent
with
the
entire
population.
But
my
question
to
you:
do
you
have
any
news
or
any
more
information
with
the
delta
variant
ay42
that
is
recently
increasing
in
the
uk
and
cdc
announced
that
they
have
noticed
few
cases
in
the
us
as
well.
C
Variant,
a
new
variant
yeah,
so
I
I
asked
yeah.
I
asked
that
very
same
question.
I
mean
I've
been
worried
about
the
lambda
variant
because
that
was
in
peru
and
so
far
there's
no
big
concern
about
a
new
variant,
but
I
wouldn't
be
surprised
because
we
had
the
delta
variant
we
weren't.
We
were
kind
of
surprised
about
that
one.
C
So
we
have
to
be
aware
and-
and
that's
why
I
said-
I
think
we
really
have
to
get
used
to
the
masking,
because
you
know
a
month
from
now
they
might
say:
oh
we've
got
enough,
people
vaccinated
in
our
county,
80
are
vaccinated,
you
can
take
the
mask
off
and
then
they
might
you
know
we
can.
We
might
get
another
variant.
C
Viruses
are
very
adaptable.
They
are
able
to
change
their
their
proteins
and
and
adapt
and
and
mutate
a
little
bit
and
to
stump
us.
That's
why
we
have
a
flu
vaccine
every
year,
a
new
one,
because
the
flu
va,
the
influenza
vac
virus
changes,
and
even
it
changes
a
little
bit
it.
It
makes
it
more
powerful.
H
Okay
yeah.
My
question
is
that
how
necessary
is
the
booster
okay
so
in,
in
other
words,
yeah?
How
bad
is
the
deterioration?
After
six
months
of
my
two.
C
C
And
in
your
case
for
moderna
moderna
seems
to
be
have
have
more
sustained
effect
over
time
than
the
pfizer
did.
There
are
several
reasons
for
that.
One
is.
The
dose
of
the
mrna
was
larger
in
the
moderna,
and
also
the
interval
between
the
first
dose
and
the
second
dose
was
longer
so
the
moderna
was
given
at
least
four
weeks
apart,
whereas
pfizer
was
given
about
three
weeks
apart.
C
So
there's
that's
the
way
they
designed
their
studies
to
to
to
administer
the
vaccine
and
moderna
was
either
lucky
or
smart
in
doing
it.
That
way.
So
if
you
have
the
modern
vaccine
you're
much
more
protected
than
not
much
more
but
more
protected
in
terms
of
severe
for
hospitalization
and
death,
I
mean
the
rates
are
still
above
90,
whereas
the
pfizer
rates
went
down
to
like
80
75
to
80
percent.
C
So
but
you,
when
you
get
the
the
modernity
dose
the
the
next
dose,
I
don't
think
is
going
to
be
as
strong.
I
think
it's
going
to
be
a
half
of
a
dose.
C
The
people
that
I
know
that
have
gotten
the
the
booster
dose
of
moderna
and
they
got
the
higher
dose.
They
had
a
lot
more
side
effects.
They
had
several
days
of
feeling
crummy,
but
they
didn't
have
to
go
to
the
hospital
and
didn't
get
sick.
You
know
super
sick,
so
it's
a
personal
choice
and
and
depending
on
your
size,
your
other
risk
factors.
You
should
talk
to
your
doctor
about
it.
C
I
Hey
so,
given
that
the
vaccine,
just
effectiveness,
wanes
over
time,
yes,
should
we
expect
that
you
know
every
six
months
for
a
long
time,
we
should
be
expecting
boosters.
C
C
J
J
They're
going
to
talk
about
evacuation
planning
and
zone
heaven,
but
before
we
get
there,
let
me
introduce
both
of
them.
Chief
martinson
is
a
battalion
chief
with
the
santa
clara
county
fire
department.
He
has
22
years
experience
in
the
fire
service
and
is
currently
assigned
as
a
battalion
chief
in
the
training
division.
J
J
K
Good
evening,
thanks
for
having
us
I'm
here
with
captain
chris
ingram
and
then
we
also
have
jen
sonoa
from
our
community
education
and
firefighter
chelsea
brown
they're,
presenting
some
material
at
the
back
table,
so
we're
very
honored
to
be
here
and
present
this
topic
to
you.
We're
really
excited
about
it.
It's
a
great
platform
that
we're
going
to
be
implementing.
It's
already
implemented
that
we
can
bring
you
up
to
speed
on
here.
K
So
zone
haven
is
a
it's
an
evacuation.
What
is
zone
haven?
It's
an
evacuation
platform
that
we
can
use
in
the
fire
service
to
help
implement
evacuations
for
for
any
type
of
hazard,
wildfire,
flooding,
active
shooter,
any
type
of
event,
hazardous
materials
release,
and
it's
a
program
that
captain
ingram
first
got
introduced
to
and
saw
the
value
in
it
and
brought
it
to
county
fire,
and
so
now,
it's
being
utilized
currently
in
the
areas
that
county
fire
provides
fire
protection
too.
K
So
what
is
zonehaven
it's
a
tool
that
facilitates
our
activities
on
an
emergency.
You
know
and-
and
we
can
assist
the
communities
evacuate
in
a
more
timely
and
efficient
manner.
K
The
old
ways
of
of
you
know
an
evacuation
would
go.
You
know
from
the
incident
commander
the
first
and
you
know,
captain
or
battalion
chief.
We
would
be
communicating
to
county
communications.
K
It
was
a
sort
of
a
cumbersome
process
to
get
that
evacuation
in
the
end
out
to
the
citizens
who
we're
trying
to
protect
so
zone
haven
will
greatly
increase
our
capabilities
and
speed
up
that
process,
and
the
picture
here
is
actually
the
middle
picture
is
captain
ingram
on
his
incident
management
team
on
the
czu
fire.
So
zonehaven
is
a
product
that's
being
used
throughout
the
state.
It's
been
been
used
for
quite
some
time.
It's
kind
of
started
up
on
the
peninsula.
K
I
believe-
and
it's
grown
throughout
the
state
of
california,
and
it's
used
quite
often
and
so
it'll,
be
you
know
it's
something
that
we
brought
to
county
fire
to
to
you
know
using
the
areas
that
we
serve
it.
You
can
also
we'll
go
into
it
later,
but
it
also
allows
the
community
to
have
there's
a
public
facing
side
of
zone
haven
and
the
community
can
see
that
you
know
as
it
takes
place
as
we.
K
You
know
you
know
place
these
evacuation
orders
and
warnings
some
of
the
incidents,
as
I
mentioned,
that
it's
already
been
used
on
the
czu
lightning
complex,
the
gla,
the
glass
fire,
the
red
salmon
complex,
and
then
this
year
it's
already
been
used
on,
as
you
can
see,
dixie
antelope
mccash,
several
fires
up
and
down
the
state.
K
It's
a
webca
web-based
platform
that
sort
of
gives
us
and
you
real-time
data,
real-time
information
on
these
evacuations
that
are
taking
place,
not
just
in
our
community,
but
you
can
see
them
going
on.
You
know
up
and
down
the
state
if
you
want
to
log
on
to
this
this
website
and
we'll
show
you
how
to
register
and
all
that.
But
there
are
two
sides
to
zone
haven,
there's
zone
haven
evac,
which
is
the
the
law
enforcement
and
the
fire
side.
K
That's
what
we
use
on
the
operations
side
of
things
and
then
there's
zone
haven,
aware
zone
haven.
Aware,
is
the
public
facing
side
of
zone
haven
that
you
all
can
log
on
to
at
community.zonehaven.com
and
we'll
go
into
the
know
your
zone
campaign?
But
you
can
log
on
to
that
and
you
can
kind
of
look
look
through
the
platform
and
kind
of
play
around
with
it
and
there's
some
tools
to
use,
and
you
know
kind
of
see
how
it
works.
K
We're
live
in
the
portions
that
are
the
west
side,
they're
the
portions
that
are
served
by
santa
clara
county
fire
department
and
we're
going
to
be
working
on
more
areas
coming
soon
and
then
zone
haven.
It's
basically
like
I
mentioned
it's
an
evacuation
platform
where
fire
and
law
will
come
together
at
the
command
post
and
we
will
get
that
message
out
to
the
citizens
as
a
unified
command
team.
K
Whatever
the
incident
is
like
I
mentioned,
it's
all
risk
it
could
be
a
wildfire
or
a
flood,
a
hazardous
materials
release
and
we'll
go
through
kind
of
what
that
will
look
like
for
alerts
for
you
all
and
how
you
can
you
know,
tie
into
the
public
facing
side
of
it
as
well.
So
we're
really
excited.
We've
been
working
really
hard
with
the
sheriff's
office
in
this
area
to
sort
of
get
those
zones
built
and
you'll
see
what
I'm
talking
about.
K
You
know,
as
we
progress
through
the
slide
show,
but
we
kind
of
we
started
up
in
the
north
end
of
the
areas
served
by
county
fire
and
kind
of
worked
our
way
south
and,
as
we
went
through
these
zones,
we
built
them
out
with
our
our
area,
knowledge
with
the
sheriff's
area,
knowledge
and
how
we
were
going
to
collaborate
together
and
build
out
these
zones
in
order
to
most
effectively
evacuate.
Should
we
should
we
need
that
process.
L
L
L
The
events
also
require
more
coordination
with
law
enforcement,
fire
and
other
entities,
including
you
know,
the
cities
and
and
and
other
agencies,
whether
they
be
parks
et
cetera,
the
evacuations.
It's
crucial
that
they're
done
as
quickly
as
possible
zone
haven.
Actually
it
was
a
startup
company
after
the
campfire
in
paradise.
So
obviously
that
was
a
catastrophic
fire
that
they
just
couldn't
get
notifications
out
fast
enough,
and
that's
that
happens
a
lot
of
times
when
the
fire
starts
and
it's
a
wind-driven
fire,
that's
pushing
into
a
community.
L
So
a
couple
folks
in
the
tech
community
thought:
how
can
we
help
deal
with
this
issue?
That's
going
on,
and
so
they
they
were
able
to
reach
out
and
talk
to
some
folks
in
the
fire
service
and
in
the
community
to
to
ask
you
know:
how
can
we
help
and
how
can
we
build
a
platform
that
will
be
utilized
by
both
first
responders
and
and
the
community,
and
this
is
where,
where
we're
at
right
now,
you
know
these
evacuations
continue
to
be
hitting
larger
and
larger
populations.
L
Luckily
you
know
we
were
doing
it
in
anticipation
of
a
wind
event,
and
so
there
was
a
little
bit
of
time,
but
by
by
creating
these
zones
ahead
of
time,
we've
saved
a
ton
of
time
when
a
wildfire
strikes
and
then
there's
also
some
advantages
within
the
platform
that
takes
into
consideration
traffic
flows.
How
many
people
we're
trying
to
get
out
of
an
area
etc?
So,
if
it'll
help
us
make
those
decisions
on
okay,
we're
going
to
evacuate
this
zone
first
give
them
some
time
to
evacuate
out,
because
the
fire
is
not
anticipated
to
get.
L
L
So
let's
talk
about
some
evacuation
terminology
and
what
they
mean
so
within
zone
haven.
There's
several
different
statuses:
normal
status
is
everything's
a-okay
an
advisory
status
is
we're
just
trying
to
get
a
message
out
to
somebody.
There
might
be
a
gas
leak
in
the
area
that
could
be
a
safety
hazard
and
we
just
want
people
to
avoid
the
area.
So
we
might
turn
turn
the
zone
into
the
advisory
status
and
and
make
some
notifications
pass
advisory.
There's
an
evacuation
warning
which
then
allows
people
to
say:
okay,
there's
there's
something
occurring.
L
We
advise
that
you
should
probably
either
pack
up
and
maybe
get
out
if
you,
if
you
can
and
want
to,
but
definitely
stay
tuned,
because
when
an
order
comes,
you
definitely
need
need
to
get
out.
But
we
always
encourage
folks,
even
when
they're
under
evacuation
warning
to
to
evacuate
as
well,
then
there's
the
evacuation
order.
So
this
means
that
there
is
an
immediate
threat
to
life
and
property
in
that
area
and
that
we're
asking
folks
to
evacuate
at
that
time.
We
can
also
put
in
a
shelter
in
place.
L
This
is
typical
more
for
like
a
hazardous
materials
incident
where
maybe
some
sort
of
you
know
chemical
has
been
dispersed
in
the
area
and
we
just
want
people
to
stay
indoors.
L
While
that
event
is
being
mitigated
and
then
the
last
one
is
clear
to
repopulate
that's
once
once
the
fire's
kind
of
gone
through
and
we've
determined
that
it's
safe
to
allow
residents
back
into
the
area
and
repopulate
okay,
here's
just
some
some
graphics
that
talk
about
evac,
warning
and
order.
So
with
the
warning,
it
just
says
a
potential
threat
to
life
and
or
property,
and
then
evacuation
order,
like
we
mentioned
imminent
threat
to
life.
L
Okay.
So
now
that
we're
live
in
cupertino
and
the
rest
of
the
community
served
by
santa
clara
county
fire,
we
have
kicked
off
a
know,
your
zone
campaign,
so
that
the
public
can
find
out
what
zone
they
live
in
prior
to
the
incident
happening.
So
if
you
want,
I'm
not
sure
if
you'll
be
able
to
snap
the
qr
code
from
where
you're
sitting
now,
but
you
can
also
go
to
community.zonehaven.com.
L
And
so
in
five
steps
you
can
go
to
the
url
you
can,
then
you
click
on
the
highlighted
zone
or
you
type
in
your
address
and
we'll
we'll.
I
think,
there's
a
video
that'll
pop
up
here
explain
a
little
better
than
so
we'll
follow
the
video
here.
M
You
can
then
use
the
tooltips
to
see
the
different
functions,
including
search,
active
fires,
weather
legend
and
filters
once
you
understand
the
tool
tips.
The
first
thing
to
know
is
that
you
can
easily
pan
or
zoom
the
map
with
your
mouse
zoom
in,
and
you
can
see
that
each
zone
is
clearly
labeled
with
a
designator
click
on
a
zone
for
more
information.
M
M
M
M
Let's
toggle
the
view
back
to
map
and
zoom
out
and
take
a
look
at
an
area
under
current
evacuation
orders
and
warnings
we'll
navigate
up
to
the
dixie
fire
in
plumas
county,
to
see
an
example
of
what
an
area
might
look
like,
while
protective
actions
are
in
place,
you
can
see
that
as
we
navigate
into
the
area
of
the
2021
dixie
fire,
the
zone
status
is
indicated
by
different
colors.
You
can
find
a
key
to
these
colors
using
the
tools
in
the
upper
left
of
the
screen.
In
this
example,
some
zones
are
shaded
red.
M
These
zones
are
under
evacuation
order.
Other
zones
are
under
evacuation
warning,
which
are
shaded,
yellow
one
final
tip
for
using
zone
haven
is
the
ability
to
see
detailed
local
weather
directly
inside
of
the
application.
You
can
see.
Temperature
relative,
humidity,
rainfall,
wind
and
air
quality
index
always
double
check
that
you
are
looking
at
the
weather
for
the
correct
area
and
remember
that
weather
is
never
a
reason
to
ignore
a
protective
action.
M
Thank
you
for
taking
time
to
watch
this
tutorial.
I
want
to
remind
you
one
more
time
that
it
is
critically
important
that
you
either
sign
up
or
remain
signed
up
for
alert
scc
alert.
Sec
remains
the
best
source
of
information
for
local
santa
clara
county
alerts
and
will
advise
you
of
any
change
and
status
to
zone
haven
zones.
L
When
any
of
these
protective
actions
might
happen
as
well
as
you
know,
other
other
information
that's
pushed
out
in
addition
to
alert
sec
if
incident
is,
is
significant,
we're
and
we're
doing
evacuation
warnings
and
alerts.
You
will
get
what
we
refer
to
as
we
alerts
the
wireless
emergency
alerts.
L
You
typically
get
them
for,
like
amber
alert,
silver
alerts,
a
lot
of
times
it
just
automatically
comes
your
phone
that
information
for
an
evacuation
would
also
come
directly
to
your
phone
and
any
of
those
alerts
are
going
to
be
started
by
law
enforcement
and
the
fire
department.
L
All
right.
We
talked
about
going
to
community.zonehaven.com
to
check
out
what
zone
you
live
in
and
kind
of
make
a
a
mental
note,
because,
anytime
we
push
out
these
alerts,
we'll
also
list
what
zones
are
being
affected.
L
Perfect.
Okay,
here
we
talked
about
alert
sec,
social
media.
It's
important
that
it's
a
great
tool,
but
it's
not
the
only
tool,
so
we
obviously
recommend
you
to
to
sign
up
for
alert
sec,
but
also,
if
you
have
twitter
facebook
next
door.
Please
follow
your
public
safety
agencies
being
santa
clara
county
sheriff's
office
and
the
santa
clara
county
fire
department,
as
well
as
city
and
office
of
emergency
services,
and
here's
a
couple
handles.
L
You
can
also
follow
zonehaven,
but
that,
wouldn't
that
shouldn't
be
your
only
place
to
to
follow
all
right
and
just
a
couple
things
over
at
our
booth.
There's
additional
emergency
preparedness
information
to
help
your
family
create
an
emergency
and
escape
plan,
talk
about
items
that
you
should
have
in
an
emergency
go
bag.
L
What
you
can
have
in
a
vehicle
kit
in
your
car
and
then
try
to
create
a
plan
out
of
your
community
and
your
home
for
evacuations,
with
that,
we
are
now
to
the
questions
portion.
N
Yes,
what
what
kind
of
backbone
or
infrastructure
behind
the
scenes
is
there?
How
much?
How
robust
is
the
system
in
case
of
a
power
failure,
or
something
like
that.
L
L
That's
the
website
was
taken
down
with
too
much
traffic,
so
this
year
it's
managed
multiple,
extremely
large
fires
between
the
dixie
and
and
several
other
fires
all
at
the
same
time,
it's
managed
all
the
the
web
traffic
just
fine
they're
on
you,
know,
amazon
cloud
and
I'm
sure
most
of
you
know
more
about
that
stuff
than
than
I
do,
but
it
it
it
definitely
is
able
to
ramp
up
when
it's
being
hit
with
additional
hits.
L
As
far
as
communication
pieces
there's
other
things
that
are
available,
that
that
our
fire
department
has
access
to
if
the
cell
towers
go
down
et
cetera.
Obviously,
with
these
alerts,
we'll
also
be
working
with
the
sheriff's
office
to
be
doing
as
best
of
door-to-door
type
of
evacuations
in
the
areas
that
are
most
threatened.
But
if
all
communications
go
down,
you
know
we
have
the
ability
to
bring
in
some
other
equipment
to
help
bring
up
some
communications.
L
We've
got
two
what
are
referred
to
as
moses
units
within
santa
clara
county
fire
that
can
spin
up
some
some
bandwidth
to
help
push
these
alerts
out
and
still
make
it
to
devices.
But
you
know
I
I
would.
L
We're
working
we're
constantly
working
on
trying
to
have
backup
plans
in
place
in
case
we
lose
coms
all
right.
Everything.
K
O
K
Really
encourage
you
know
from
your
your
side
of
things,
to
receive
those
alerts
again
to
register
for
alert
scc,
not
just
your
landline,
which
is
always
a
sure
thing,
but
also
your
wireless
device
as
well,
and
so
from
the
end
user's
perspective.
You
can
also,
as
when
we
bring
up
to
speed
our
our
equipment,
to
send
those
messages
out
whether
that's
the
moses
unit
or
just
a
standard.
You
know,
zone
sonavn
platform.
You
all
have
the
capabilities
via
landline
wireless
alert
act.
K
K
L
K
Yeah
and
and
the
community
side
of
zonehaven
the
community
or
community.zonehaven.com
is,
is
it's
not?
You
know
we've
kind
of
talked
about
this
before
that
is
not
the
alerting
piece
to
you
all.
That's
definitely
a
great
resource
for
you
to
have
and
to
know
your
zone,
and
you
can
log
on,
and
you
can
see
that
that
a
zone
is
in.
You
know,
evacuation
order,
a
warning,
but
the
the
web.
The
website
of
that
is
more
of
an
informational
piece.
I
guess
it's
somewhat
passive.
K
The
real
alert
in
an
event
will
come
from
alert
scc,
but
but
the
web,
the
web-based
part,
is
you
know
it's
important
too,
to
know
your
zones
and
you
can
log
on
and
see
that
or
see
friends
zones
or
you
know
all
up
and
down
the
state.
So.
P
Thank
you
battalion
chief
mortensen
and
captain
mingren
for
your
presentation
on
zone
haven
and
also
for
all
that
you
do
for
the
community,
I'd
like
to
introduce
the
wildfire
awareness
initiative
or
why
the
y
organization
was
founded
in
early
2021
by
two
former
kennedy:
middle
school
students,
niranjana
and
lauren
y
is
dedicated
to
spreading
awareness
on
how
to
both
prevent
and
prepare
for
wildfires.
P
P
Today
we
have
four
y
leaders,
madeline
lauren,
neronjana
and
arna,
who
will
be
speaking
to
us
about
their
recent
initiatives.
They
are
currently
local
monte
vista
first
years
and
during
their
spare
time,
their
hobbies
span
from
playing
tennis
to
playing
violin.
P
Q
Hello:
everyone.
We
are
well
far
away
initial
initiative
or
way,
and
our
organization,
as
mentioned
earlier
by,
was
that
we
are
founded
by
two
middle
high
school
students,
niranjana
sangkar
and
lauren
kim,
and
we
were
founded
in
early
2021
and
our
goal
is
to
inform
youth
on
how
to
prepare
and
prevent
for
wildfires.
This
includes
informing
them
on
how
to
plan
and
what
to
expect
and
the
importance
of
passing
the
information
to
their
parents.
Q
Q
Some
of
our
accomplishments
include.
We
volunteered
at
santa
clara
fire
department
to
prepare
disaster
kits
for
elementary
schools.
These
disaster
kits
include
fun
flyers
on
teaching
the
youth
about
safety
and
how
to
prepare
for
wildfires
and
also
little
goodies,
such
as
pencils,
and
we
prepared
over
for
like
about
400
schools
locally,
to
send
these
disaster
kits
to.
Q
These
guest
speakers
would
present
a
short
presentation
on
ready,
set,
go
or
other
wildfire
topics.
Then
we
held
a
kahoot
like
just
some
questions
and
whoever,
whichever
audience
member
answered
the
questions
accurately
and
as
fast
as
possible,
would
receive
a
gift
card,
and
we
also
worked
on
a
thank
you
card
workshop
over
quarantine
for
firefighters
and
had
different
audience
members
write
little.
Thank
you.
Messages
insert
little
pictures
and
we're
going
to
send
that
to
the
firefighters,
and
we
also
presented
at
the
cupertino
teen
commission.
Q
These
two-
and
these
are
our
webinar
pictures,
the
kahoot
and
our
presentation,
and
these
are
also
some
of
the
meetings
we
had
for
the
thank
you
card
workshop
and
other
meetings
for
our
work
now
on
to
our
first
topic
of
wildfires.
Well
far,
statistics
just
in
2020
alone,
over
4
million
acres
have
burned
through
to
wildfires,
and
there
have
been
five
times
the
dot
toll
since
2016
and
2
000
more
wildfires
since
2016..
Q
R
R
S
Wildfires
tend
to
affect
minorities
with
much
greater
impact.
One
example
is
how
native
communities
tend
to
be
six
times
more
likely
to
be
wildfire
prone
as
they
live
in
areas
that
tend
to
have
more
wildfires.
Black
and
hispanic
communities
have
to
50
percent
greater
vulnerability
as
many
of
their
communities
lack
adequate
equipment,
and
this
means
that
wildfires
could
have
devastating
effects,
as
these
communities
cannot
fully
recover.
T
Bad
air
quality
some
effects
include
negative
responses
in
the
cardiovascular
system,
increased
risk
of
heart,
lung
and
lung
disease,
as
well
as
strokes
for
the
general
public,
as
well
as
an
increased
risk
for
people
with
asthma
and
respiratory
conditions
in
aquat.
Air
quality
index
is
the
measure
of
how
healthy,
clean
or
unhealthy
the
air
is.
T
An
aqi
below
50
is
generally
considered
healthy,
even
for
people
with
respiratory
conditions,
while
an
aqi
between
300
and
500
is
considered
dangerous
and
is
mandated
as
a
health
warning
for
emergency
conditions
and
may
even
be
caused
for
evacuation,
where
even
healthy
individuals
are
at
risk
for
respiratory
illness.
There
are
a
number
of
sites
on
the
internet
to
learn
about
the
aqi
in
your
city
and
state,
but
one
credible
site
with
reliable
information
is
erinol.gov.
T
What
are
some
simple
ways
that
we
can
combat
this
in
our
own
communities
by
ourselves
for
one
we
can
use
air
masks
and
filters
and
we
can
keep
track
of
the
aqi,
be
aware
of
what's
going
on
in
our
community
and
acknowledge
warming
warnings.
Recently,
last
month
lake
tahoe
suffered
from
the
kaldor
fire.
The
aqui
hit
694
in
tahoe
city,
the
worst
aqi
in
the
world
previously
compared
to
the
highest
aqi,
which
was
453.
T
The
smoke
was
so
thick
that
many
residents
reported
not
being
able
to
see
past
their
own
lots
and
some
struggled
to
keep
smoke
from
seeping
in
through
their
windows.
The
fire
started
on
august
14th
and
went
up
till
september
17th
and
lasted
for
49
days.
In
these
49
days,
three
counties
were
affected
and
the
cause
for
this
fire
is
still
under
investigation.
S
While
wildfires
may
seem
frightening,
there
are
many
ways
you
can
prepare.
What
ways
to
prepare
your
home
include
utilizing
zones
so
five
feet
away
from
your
home,
make
sure
to
remove
flammable
material
such
as
leaves
in
gutters,
five
to
thirty
feet,
away
from
your
home,
make
sure
they
trim
grass
and
don't
block
emergency
exits.
S
S
You
can
also
create
emergency
routes
and
emergency
contacts
with
members
of
your
household
and
always
make
sure
to
listen
to
authorities
when
they
issue
alerts.
These
alerts
can
come
through
radio
or
tv,
as
that
is
the
general
natural
disaster
alert
or
you
can
choose
select
alerts
such
as
the
scc
alert
app
wildfires
are
on
a
trend
of
becoming
more
and
more
frequent,
and
the
best
way
to
be
ready
for
them
is
to
prepare.
S
Q
If
anyone
has
any
questions,
then
you
can
ask,
and
if
you
want
to
also
subscribe
to
our
mailing
list
for
weekly
wildfire
updates,
you
just
go
to
that
link.
Tinyurl.Com,
slash,
wildfire
like
that
that
thing
and
alerts
and
you'll
be
able
to
sign
up
for
our
weekly
welfare
alerts
and
also,
if
you
have
any
questions,
that's
our
email
and
our
instagram.
Q
Okay,
no
one
has
any
questions,
then.
U
Thank
you
why
that
was
great
hi
everyone.
My
name
is
yvonne,
and
today
I
have
the
pleasure
of
introducing
ruth
darlene
executive
director
of
women
sv
ruth
arlene's
educational
background
includes
a
master's
in
english
literature
and
teaching
credential
in
california,
state
certification
and
domestic
violence,
advocacy
at
stanford
center
for
research
and
disease
prevention
worth
worked
as
a
teacher
and
curriculum
writer.
In
a
study
designed
to
raise
awareness
about
eating
disorders,
she
adapted
their
research
model
to
create
her
own
program
in
2011
to
address
domestic
abuse
in
upscale
communities.
U
Under
the
fiscal
sponsorship
of
los
altos
community
foundation,
she
launched
her
own
non-profit
in
2011
called
the
women
of
silicon
valley
or
women.
Sv
woman
sv
became
an
independent
501c3
nonprofit
in
2017
and
has
served
over
a
thousand
survivors
of
domestic
violence
and
coercive
control
in
the
past
10
years.
U
Ruth's
program
helps
survivors,
address
the
risks
and
challenges
of
being
trapped
in
a
relationship
with
a
powerful,
sophisticated
abuser.
She
also
offers
professional
training
to
assist
providers
such
as
therapists,
physicians,
law
enforcement,
attorneys
and
teachers
in
becoming
more
trauma
informed
in
working
with
survivors
who
are
involved
with
a
powerful,
sophisticated
abuser.
This
type
of
abuser
not
only
engages
in
physical
and
sexual
violence,
but
often
uses
other
tactics
to
coerce
and
control
their
intimate
partner.
These
tactics
don't
always
rise.
U
The
level
of
police
intervention,
woman,
sv
steps
in
to
fill
this
gap
in
services
and
offer
strategies
to
address
physical
and
sexual
violence
and
more
subtle
forms
of
abuse
such
as
financial,
legal,
technological
and
emotional
ruth
also
does
trainings
for
providers
gives
public
presentations
to
the
community
and
works
with
the
media
to
raise
awareness
about
the
impact
of
domestic
violence
in
middle
to
upper
income
areas.
Welcome
ruth.
V
Thank
you
so
much
yvonne
and
thank
you
for
that
very
thorough
introduction.
I
almost
feel,
like
you
gave
my
talk.
You
said
so
many
wonderful
things
and
very
thorough,
and
thank
you
for
that.
V
It's
a
pleasure
and
honor
to
be
here
with
you
all
tonight,
and
thanks
so
much
for
coming
out
tonight
and
enjoying
this
fine
weather
before
the
atmospheric
river
hits
us
so,
let's,
let's
enjoy
enjoy
it
while
at
last,
as
yvonne
mentioned,
I'm
the
executive
director
and
founder
of
women
of
silicon
valley,
women,
sv,
a
non-profit
that
focuses
on
more
subtle
forms
of
abuse.
We
do
address
physical
and
sexual
violence,
but
our
real
area
of
expertise
is
in
the
more
subtle
forms
that
yvonne
mentioned
emotional,
financial,
legal
technological.
V
So
tonight
I'm
going
to
tell
you
share
with
you
a
little
bit
of
what
I've
learned
after
working
with
over
a
thousand
women
about
what
domestic
violence
and
covert
abuse
and
coercive
control
I'll
define
that
in
a
moment
what
they
all
look
like
in
our
lovely
community,
but
first
starting
with
some
troubling
statistics.
V
I'm
sorry
to
have
to
share
with
you
tonight
that,
according
to
the
world
health
organization,
one
in
three
women
on
the
planet
will
be
severely
beaten
or
raped
during
her
lifetime,
one
in
three
in
the
united
states,
one
in
four
and
one
in
seven
to
one
in
nine
men,
so
men
can
be
victims
of
domestic
violence.
It's
important
to
acknowledge
that
too,
but
according
to
the
department
of
justice,
85
percent
of
victims
of
domestic
violence
are
female.
So
that's
our
focus
at
women
sv
and
that's
our
area
of
expertise.
V
25
of
female
patients
who
go
to
the
er
are
therefore
domestic
violence,
related
injuries
and,
unfortunately,
physicians
are
not
getting
the
training.
They
need
to
recognize
the
difference
between
falling
down
the
stairs
and
being
pushed
down
the
stairs.
So
that's
one
of
the
things
I
do
is
go
out
and
and
do
trainings
for
physicians
last
week.
It
was
for
valley,
med,
ob,
gyns
and
the
week
before
that
kaiser
physicians,
to
help
them
become
more
trauma
informed
in
dealing
with
domestic
violence.
Survivors.
V
V
So
our
mission
is
exactly
as
yvonne
was
talking
about
to
empower
survivors,
to
raise
awareness
in
the
community
and
to
do
trainings
for
providers
so
to
become
more
trauma-informed.
We
dream
of
a
day
when
every
man,
every
woman,
every
child
can
live
in
peace
and
safety
in
their
own
home.
It's
a
fundamental
human
right
and
it's
violated
every
time.
There's
an
act
of
domestic
violence.
V
Our
services
we
went
over
direct
client
services,
we
run
a
helpline,
we
run
a
support
group.
We
work
one-on-one
with
our
ladies
for
as
long
as
they
want
we're
in
it
for
the
long
haul,
and
we
have,
ladies
from
all
over
the
world,
all
different
races,
religions,
cultures,
backgrounds,
but
all
united
as
sisters,
because
they
share
that
common
bond
of
being
involved
with
a
powerful,
covert,
sophisticated
abuser.
V
Here's
our
fabulous
team,
multicultural
multilingual.
Well,
I'm
the
only
one
that
speaks
one
language,
but
all
the
rest
of
them
speak
more
than
one,
I'm
just
delighted
and
honored
to
have
them
all
working
side
by
side.
With
me,
10
years
we've
been
around
and
served
over
1
000
women
and
we're
still
going
strong
serving
over
a
thousand
women.
Now
and
last
year
alone,
it
was
216
survivors,
216
from
our
immediate
area,.
V
Most
of
the
survivors
we
serve
are
in
santa
clara
county,
but
they
do
come
from
other
counties
as
well
and
in
fact
we
get
calls
from
all
over
the
united
states
and
why?
Because
we're
the
only
non-profit
in
the
united
states,
that's
focused
on
coercive
control,
covert
abuse,
women
in
middle
to
upper
income
areas
dealing
with
a
powerful
sophisticated
abuser.
I
was
on
the
megyn
kelly
today
show
a
few
years
ago
before
it
got
cancelled.
V
I
don't
think
I
had
anything
to
do
with
that,
but
while
I
was
on
just
before,
I
went
on
the
show
that
I
was
talking
to
the
producer
and
she
said
that
she
scoured
the
country
looking
for
a
non-profit
focused
on
the
demographic
that
we
were
about
to
address
in
on
megyn
kelly's
show,
and
she
said
you,
women
sv
were
it.
I
spoke
with
her
last
year
and
I
I
reminded
her
about
what
she
said
and
she
said
yes
you're
still
it.
V
So
we
have
a
long
way
to
go
to
educate
our
country
and
the
world
that
domestic
violence
doesn't
just
involve
broken
bones
bruises.
It
also
can
involve
more
subtle
forms
of
abuse
that
damage
you
and
threaten
you
and
put
your
life
at
risk.
V
We
are
so
blessed
to
have
these
partnerships
with
a
powerful
providers,
men
and
women
who
use
their
power
and
credentials
for
good,
thank
god
for
the
good
men
and
women
out
there,
I'm
so
blessed
to
have
really
an
army
of
supporters
protecting
us,
as
as
we
work
to
protect
our
survivors.
V
Our
clients
at
women
is
fee.
We
call
them
our
ladies,
because
because
we
establish
that
personal
relationship
with
them
that
lasts
for
as
long
as
they
want
it's,
not
a
one
and
done
do
you
need
a
restraining
order
or
a
shelter.
It's
we
are
here
for
you
for
as
long
as
as
you
want
us
to
be.
So.
Our
ladies
are
engineers:
doctors,
lawyers,
psychologists,
entrepreneurs,
ceos,
religious
leaders,
stay-at-home
parents,
their
partners,
their
abusive
partners
are
engineers,
doctors,
professors,
lawyers,
psychologists,
entrepreneurs,
ceos,
religious
leaders,
stay-at-home
parents.
V
So
that's
our
focus
on
these
more
subtle
forms
of
abuse,
emotional,
financial,
legal,
technological
and
other
forms,
of
course,
of
control.
I
keep
using
that
term.
What
does
it
mean?
It's
a
pattern,
not
a
one-off,
because
it's
hard
to
prove
it's
a
pattern
of
controlling,
isolating
and
threatening
behavior.
V
We
mentioned
some
examples:
the
emotional
abuse
it
ranges
from
everything
from
gaslighting
getting
inside
your
partner's
head,
trying
to
convince
them
that
they
didn't
hear
correctly
what
you
actually
said
trying
to
make
them
doubt
their
memory,
their
perception
of
what
happened,
their
perception
of
reality
over
time,
causing
them
to
doubt
their
own
sanity.
So
that's
at
one
end
of
the
spectrum
that
emotional
abuse
gaslighting
and
it
ranges
from
that
all
the
way
to
non-fatal
and
fatal
strangulation
and
here's
another
disturbing
fact
over.
V
35
percent
of
our
survivors
that
we
work
with
at
women
sv
have
experienced
non-fatal
strangulation
at
the
hands
of
their
intimate
partner.
Their
doctor
psychologist,
religious
leader,
therapist,
intimate
partner
coercive
control
is
a
lethality
risk
right
up
there
with
owning
a
gun
and
ending
the
relationship.
It's
a
liberty
crime.
According
to
evan
stark
dr
evan
stark,
who
wrote
the
book
coerce
of
control,
how
men
entrap
women
in
personal
life,
because
coercive
control
tends
to
be
a
gender-based
crime
that
doesn't
mean
women
can't
be
controlling.
V
V
Why
does
evan
stark
call
it
a
liberty
crime,
because
it
robs
an
individual
of
their
fundamental
human
right
to
live
in
peace
and
safety
in
their
own
home,
and
I
call
it
the
ultimate
form
of
identity
theft
because
it
robs
them
of
who
they
once
were
before
getting
into
this
relationship,
their
sense
of
spontaneity
freedom,
happiness,
creativity,
everything
comes
under
attack
and
gets
worn
away
over
time.
The
good
news
is
that
was
a
lot
of
bad
news.
Here's
the
good
news.
V
You
can
look
it
up,
look
it
up
online
and
we
can
thank
senator
susan
rubio
for
creating
a
law
to
protect
survivors
from
coercive
control,
and
it
can
be
grounds
for
a
restraining
order
which,
if
violated,
can
become
a
criminal
act.
So
god
bless
senator
susan
rubio.
God
bless
domestic
violence,
survivor
senator
susan
rubio.
V
Family
code
6320,
you
can
look
it
up
and
here's
the
language
in
the
law
online.
It's
what
it
does
is.
It
expands
the
definition
of
domestic
violence
by
expanding
the
definition
of
disturbing
the
peace,
to
include
things
like
unreasonably
interfering
with
a
person's
free
will,
and
thank
you,
dr
stark
personal
liberty,
by
isolating
the
other
partner
from
friends
or
the
other
party
from
friends,
relatives
or
other
sources
of
support,
cutting
her
off
from
her
her
friends,
depriving
her
basic
necessities
hiding
the
car
keys.
V
So
she
can't
get
to
work
hiding
her
medications
so,
especially
if
she's
got
a
chronic
or
life-threatening
illness
controlling
regulating
monitoring
her
her
partner's
movements
you'll
see
the
gen.
It's
not
the
gender
isn't
referred
to
in
this
in
in
the
law,
and
that's
so
they
could
get
the
law
passed.
V
They
took
the
his
her
out
of
it,
but
according
to
dr
stark,
we
do
want
to
acknowledge
that
it's
primarily
a
gender-based
crime,
but
this
controlling
behavior,
making
her
facetime
on
the
way
to
work
face
time
during
her
lunch
and
facetime
all
the
way
home.
So
he
can
be
sure
she's,
not
fooling
around,
with
with
somebody
else
at
work,
micromanagement
of
activities
that
are
related
to
duties
around
the
house,
the
way
she
cooks
the
way
she
cleans
the
way
she
looks
after
the
children.
V
One
of
our
ladies
has
a
10
page
document
on
how
to
do
the
laundry
it's
a
form
of
human
trafficking.
It
involves
force,
fraud
and
coercion,
those
three
elements
of
human
trafficking
and
it's
it
can
be
deadly
when
a
woman
tries
to
escape
from
a
relationship
like
that
when
all
the
financial
control
has
been
usurped
by
her
partner.
V
Coercive
control
also
involves
financial
abuse
and
that's
the
reason
why
we
don't
charge
for
our
services
at
women
sv,
because
so
many
of
our
survivors
have
experienced
severe
financial
control
and
abuse
and
when
they
leave
the
relationship,
their
partner
is
still
living
a
fine
life,
while
she's
struggling
to
put
food
on
the
table
and
keep
a
roof
over
our
head.
V
V
According
to
susan
weitzman
clinical
psychologist,
who
deals
with
survivors
in
this
population
and
who
wrote
the
book
not
to
people
like
us,
the
more
money
the
community
had,
the
the
that
would
belong
to
the
husband
and
wife,
but
really
she'd
lost
control
of
it
in
most
cases,
but
the
more
money.
The
partnership
had,
the
more
worried
she
was
of
being
killed
in
if
she
ever
left
the
relationship,
if
not
by
her
partner
directly
than
perhaps
by
a
paid
third
party.
V
A
reminder
of.
What's
happened
to
our
ladies,
so
who
are
the
covert
abusers?
It's
the
therapist
who
gets
inside
his
partner's
head
and
starts
to
convince
her
that
she's
losing
her
mind,
who
calls
the
police
when
he
wants
to
show
her
who's
boss
and
gets
her
put
on
a
5150
psychiatric
hold
after
she
says
she
wants
a
divorce.
It's
the
ceo
that
hides
his
income
and
takes
money
out
of
the
community
funds
and
pretends
it
came
from
another
source.
V
We
have
terms
like
embezzlement
and
fraud
and
forgery
and
money
laundering
out
in
the
business
world.
But
what
do
you
call
it
when
it
happens
in
an
intimate
partner
relationship?
It's
harder
to
prove
and
it's
harder
to
get
justice.
It's
the
cyber
security
expert
who
puts
hidden
cameras
in
the
light
fixtures,
one
of
our
ladies,
a
hidden
camera
in
the
faucet
in
her
the
shower
head
in
the
bathroom.
V
It's
the
physician
who
threatens
to
kill
his
wife
terrorizes
her
by
saying
you
know
how
I'm
going
to
kill
you
I'm
going
to
inject
you
with
a
poisonous
solution
between
your
toes
in
a
way
that
the
coroner
won't
even
think
to
look.
I
sit
on
the
domestic
violence,
death
review
team.
I
know
what
the
ultimate
act
of
domestic
violence
looks
like
and
I
ask
the
coroner:
is
that
possible?
Can
you
do
it
and
do
that
and
he's?
And
she
said
yes,
so
what
does
an
abuser?
Look
like?
What
does
a
covert
abuser?
V
Look
like
you
can't
tell
they
look
like
regular
people.
We
have
this
idea
that
an
abuser
looks
like
the
guy
with
the
red
frame
around
him.
That's
our
stereotypical
notion
of
what
an
abuser
looks
like
and
what's
he
wearing
do
you
know
what
that's
called
a
wife
beater
right
with
a
bottle
of
beer
and
watching
football
and
the
fists
raised,
but
all
of
these
other
men
all
but
him
have
been
found
to
have
committed
domestic
violence
and
some
the
ultimate
act.
V
A
silicon
valley
engineer
in
january
of
this
year
showed
up
at
the
police
department
and
confessed
to
killing
his
wife,
and
when
the
police
went
to
the
home,
they
found
that
not
only
had
he
killed
his
wife,
but
he
had
killed
their
11
year
old
daughter.
It
happens
here
even
in
our
wonderful
educated,
safe
community.
V
V
V
So
that
is
a
lot
of
bad
news,
but
I
want
to
focus
on
the
good
news
and
the
hope
that
we
are
building
a
village
of
supporters
of
very
strong
allies
who
are
focused
on
this
issue.
I've
got
a
wonderful
relationship
with
the
los
altos
police
department.
I
was
privileged
to
speak
with
to
mayor
darcy,
paul's
city
council
a
little
while
ago
at
the
public
safety
commission,
I'm
so
glad
to
build
the
partnership
with
cupertino
as
time
goes
by.
V
We
build
more
and
more
partnerships,
because
that's
what
it's
all
about
our
community,
our
town,
our
county,
our
country,
our
world,
banding,
together
to
recognize
that
domestic
violence
knows
no
boundaries.
It
can
happen
to
anybody.
It
could
happen
to
you
or
someone.
You
know
someone
you
care
about.
If
there
is
someone
that
you
care
about
after
what
I've
said
tonight,
please
join
us
over
at
the
table
here
and
talk
to
masha
or
sarah,
our
wonderful
domestic
violence
advocates.
If
there's
someone
you
care
about,
we
can
give
you
some
brochures.
V
W
All
right
ruth
thank
you
for
that
moving
presentation
and
for
everything
you've
done
for
women
in
need
in
our
community.
All
right.
I'm,
commissioner
shan
for
our
last
topic.
It's
an
overview
on
crime
and
safety,
and
I
have
the
distinct
honor
of
introducing
someone
who
is
a
staple
of
the
public
safety
commission
as
well
as
a
staple
in
our
community
captain
rich
arena.
X
Good
evening,
how's
everyone
doing
this
evening,
excellent.
So,
first
of
all,
before
I
get
started,
I
wanted
to
thank
the
public
safety
commission
for
all
their
work
and
putting
together
this
awesome
presentation,
even
though
you
guys
are
just
here
tonight,
you
dedicate
yourselves
every
month
to
this
topic,
and
so
we
want
to
thank
you
for
bringing
us
together
this
evening,
all
right.
So
what
are
we
going
to
talk
about
this
evening?
Well,
we're
going
to
talk
about
some
crime
totals.
One
of
the
questions
I
get
asked
often
is:
how
are
we
doing
in
cupertino?
X
X
Unfortunately,
property
crimes
in
cupertino
is
our
number
one
type
of
crime,
and
so
what
we
look
at
is
our
residential
burglary
rate
and
the
data
associated
to
that,
and
I
think
what
you'll
see
here
is
a
lot
of
good
information
that
can
help
mitigate
some
of
these
thefts.
We'll
look
at
grand
thefts
as
they
relate
to
the
catholic
converter
epidemic,
we're
having
and
I'll
talk
about
what
a
catalytic
converter
is
and
you'll.
I
think
you'll
be
shocked
at
the
statistics
we
have
here
in
the
city
of
cupertino
the
communication
with
the
sheriff's
office.
X
There
there's
some
miscommunication
out
there
in
terms
of
how
we
get
information,
and
so
I
want
to
go
over
kind
of
the
best
way
to
get
a
hold
of
us.
What
we
don't
monitor
next
door,
we'll
talk
about
that,
we'll
talk
about
alert
scc
as
well.
I
know
our
fire
partners
talked
about
it
earlier
and
I
do
have
a
very
nice
video
short
video
that
they
put
together
that
I
think
really
highlights
the
reason
why
you
want
to
sign
up
for
alert
scc.
X
Hopefully
you
can
see
this,
so
I
have
another
slide
as
well.
That
kind
of
gives
this
information
in
a
different
format,
but
we
can
start
at
the
top
so
robberies
we
have
had
this
year,
15,
robberies
and
what
does
that
mean?
Well,
a
robbery
is
a
crime
where
somebody
uses
force
or
fear
to
take
something
from
you
right.
So,
for
example,
let's
say
that
you
leave
your
purse
on
a
seat
you're
seated
in
now
you
walk
up
to
get
something
to
to
drink
and
you
come
back
and
it's
gone.
X
That's
a
theft
right
now.
On
the
other
hand,
if
you're
seated
and
somebody
comes
up
to
you
and
says
hey,
if
you
don't
give
me
that
purse,
I'm
going
to
beat
you
up
or
worse
yet
points
a
gun
at
you
and
says,
give
me
your
purse,
that's
a
robbery
and
that's
what
we
call
a
personal
crime,
that's
a
serious
crime,
and
so
we
we
track
that
every
year
to
ensure
that
we're
doing
the
best
we
can
to
minimize
robberies.
X
X
So
in
terms
of
how
we're
doing
in
robberies
for
the
last
three
years
we're
about
at
rich
back
in
2019,
we
saw
eight
residential
burglaries
again,
we
do
measure
that
closely-
and
I
have
some
more
some
more
data
here
that
will
kind
of
give
you
a
breakdown
of
how
these
are
being
committed
in
this
city.
We
have
51..
If
you
compare
that
to
last
year,
we
had
82
again
we're
talking
about
january
through
september.
As
you
see
there
on
the
graph
we
had
82
last
year.
X
It's
amazing
because
last
year,
right
many
of
us
were
home.
We
stayed
home,
and
so
last
year
we
actually
saw
a
very
low
rate
at
the
end
of
the
year,
so
it
started
off
last
year
with
the
small
increase,
but
then
towards
the
end
of
the
year,
it
really
dropped
off
because
we
were
all
staying
home
right.
If
you
remember
march,
is
when
we
all
decided
to
stay
home
because
of
covid,
but
this
year
at
51
is
actually
really
good,
really
good.
X
What
we
know
is
that
if
we
capture
one
or
two
of
these
guys,
they're
probably
responsible
for
the
significant
portion
of
the
ones
that
are
being
committed
in
town,
so
I
would
say
out
of
these
51,
we
probably
have
a
handful
of
people
that
are
doing
this.
So
if
you
capture
one
or
two
we're
going
to
see
a
dramatic
drop
in
crime,
commercial
burglaries,
those
are
our
business
establishments
that
have
been
burgled
you'll,
see
that
we
had
53
this
year.
X
Last
year
we
did
see
an
increase
in
this
category.
A
lot
of
businesses
shut
their
doors
because
of
kovid
and
early
on
right
around
march
april
may
of
2020.
You
know,
unfortunately,
we
did.
We
did
see
some
businesses
being
victimized
again
because
they
knew
no
one
was
inside,
and
so
they
took
advantage
of
that
opportunity
and
ended
up
stealing
items
from
from
our
business
community
vehicle
burglaries.
Now
here's
the
big
one
in
2019
320
of
these
right.
X
They
continue
to
occur
in
our
shopping
centers
and
then
in
2020
we
saw
155
well,
you
know
our
businesses
were
closed
right
and
so
the
crooks
had
nowhere
to
go
to
break
into
cars
because
we
weren't
grouping
ourselves
together
in
shopping
centers.
So
what
we
started
to
see
is
crooks
actually
driving
in
the
neighborhoods
and
breaking
into
cars
in
the
neighborhood
and
again,
as
I
said,
about
90
percent
of
the
vehicle,
burglaries
in
2019
were
in
shopping.
X
We
have
some
strategies:
we're
deploying
out
there
to
try
to
curb
this,
we'll
continue
to
work
on
that
grand
thefts
126
already
this
year
and
you'll
see
what
that
really
looks
like
here
in
another
couple:
slides,
auto
theft.
That
means
cars
were
stolen
in
the
city
49.
X
Many
of
these
are
because
when
we
get
burgled
the
crooks
take
the
keys
and
take
your
car
at
the
same
time
right,
and
so
it
is
important
that
you,
you
secure
your
keys
when,
when
you're
not
at
home
and
you're,
leaving
your
car
at
home,
you
put
them
in
a
drawer
or
something
like
that.
Don't
make
it
obvious,
because
you
are
seeing
crooks
that
are
breaking
into
a
home
and
after
they
take
jewelry
laptops,
electronics,
small
electronics.
We
are
seeing
that
they're.
X
Looking
for
car
keys
to
pick
the
car,
that's
in
the
driveway
vandalism
we
saw
65
identity
theft,
fraud
and
95.
A
good
portion
of
the
id
theft
and
fraud
is
related
to
mail
theft.
So
please
I
ask
that
if
you
aren't
picking
up
your
mail
soon
after
it's
delivered,
please
do
so.
Please
do
so,
especially
as
we
get
into
the
holiday
season
here
right.
X
Many
of
us,
I
can
tell
you
my
wife
orders
from
amazon,
probably
three
or
four
times
a
week,
and
we
get
packages
at
home,
and
many
of
us
do
that
as
well,
and
so
it's
important
to
make
sure
that
you
pick
up
that
package.
The
mail
as
soon
as
you
can,
because
there
are
crooks
out
there
that
are
driving
around
looking
for
the
opportunity
to
take
a
package.
X
Some
advice
on
that
is,
if
you
have
a
neighbor
that
you
communicate
with
frequently
let
them
know
hey.
Can
you
pick
up
that
package,
or
at
least
can
you
put
it
in
the
backyard
or
hold
on
to
it,
or
I
have
a
plan
for
that
because,
towards
the
end
of
this
year,
we're
going
to
see
an
increase
in
that
crime
and
again
we
are
working
on
some
covert
operations
that
hopefully
will
bring
that
category
down,
but
domestic
violence.
Well,
we
did
see
45
this
year,
assaults,
20
and
then
sex
crimes,
16.
X
the
category
sex
crimes
is
really
anything
and
everything
from,
let's
say
child
pornography
case
to
somebody
who
gets
sexually
assaulted.
I
will
note
that
these
crimes
are
all
between
people
that
know
each
other.
We
don't
have
somebody
running
around
committing
a
sexual
assault
on
on
residents,
so
these
are
crimes
that
have
been
brought
to
our
attention
where
either
relationships
went
sideways
or
there
was
some
kind
of
relationship
between
the
victim
and
the
suspect.
X
Here's
another
way
to
look
at
it
so
again
january
through
september
2020,
you
compare
that
to
january
september.
2021.
robberies
were
down.
Six
percent
residential
burglaries
were
down
38
percent.
We're
comparing
apples
to
apples
here
right.
What
we're
saying
is:
hey,
listen,
the
the
end
of
the
year
is
not
here
yet,
but
for
now
this
is
what
it
looks
like
our
commercial
burglaries,
38
drop
from
the
same
time.
X
Last
year,
vehicle
burglaries,
9
36
drop
grand
theft
there
it
is
97
percent
increase,
auto
theft,
26
percent
increase
vandalism,
27
percent
increase,
and
then
you
look
at
the
rest
of
those
categories:
identity,
theft,
12
percent,
decrease
domestic
violence,
13
percent
decrease
assaults,
44
decrease
sex
crimes,
11
decrease.
X
So
if
you
kind
of
take
a
snapshot
of
this,
you
know
the
city
of
cupertino
continues
to
be
a
safe
city,
and
even
so,
by
looking
at
these
numbers
and
comparing
them
to
the
year
before
cupertino
residential
burglary
data.
X
All
right,
so
we're
gonna
look
at
the
data
so
that
we
have
a
sense
of
who's
being
victimized
more
so
this
is
just
based
on
data.
So
what
we
know
is
that
the
detached
single
family
structure,
so
a
home,
if
you
will,
we
had
23
of
those
incidents.
We
had
six
town
homes
that
were
burgled.
We
had
22
apartments
for
condominiums
right
the
day
of
the
week
that
these
occurred,
and
this
is
the
data
that
we
know
is
friday.
We
had
10,
which
is
the
highest
number
monday.
None
right,
I
will.
X
I
will
note
that
this
is
only
the
data
that
we
know.
For
example,
if,
if
somebody
went
on
vacation
for
a
week
left
on
a
friday
came
back
friday
after
and
said
hey
somebody
broke
into
my
house
took
my
stuff,
then
we
start
asking
those
questions
right.
When
did
you
leave?
When
was
the
last
time
you
saw
your
your
items.
When
did
you
get
back
and
we
tried
to
narrow
it
down,
but
sometimes
we
can't
because
again,
there's
no
information
other
than
I
left
friday.
I
came
back
friday.
X
X
Again
time
of
day,
so
one
of
these
occurring
early
morning,
12
a.m
to
7
a.m.
20
of
the
time,
the
multiple
days,
time
of
day,
unknown
41.
X
That
is
again
we're
going
on
vacation,
we're
going
for
a
week
two
weeks,
maybe
a
weekend,
and
we
come
back
only
to
realize
that
we've
been
burgled
and
so
we'll
try
to
pinpoint
that
timeline.
It
becomes
difficult
for
us
because
we
just
don't
don't
have
that
information,
the
method
of
entry.
This
means
how
are
folks
crooks
coming
into
our
homes.
X
X
It
does
mean
that
we're
leaving
our
garage
doors
open
right
and
we're
inviting
people
to
come
into
our
garage
and
take
our
bicycles,
because
that's
probably
the
most
common
thing
that
the
crooks
are
going
to
take
at
night
bicycles,
items
that
are
small
of
value.
That's
in
your
garage,
and
so
I
can
tell
you
from
personal
experience
when
we
see
our
deputies
see
those
garage
doors
wide
open.
We
try
to
contact
the
owner.
We
do
knock
on
the
door,
but
we
don't
knock
in
a
way
that
startles
the
homeowner.
X
So
I
guess
what
I'm
saying
is
we'll
try,
but
given
that
it's
two
or
three
or
four
in
the
morning,
we
want
to
make
sure
that
we
don't
startle
you
which
does
happen.
But
that
is
a
category
that
you
can
help
us
with
make
sure
that
when
you
go
to
bed,
you
close
your
garage
door.
You
secure
your
windows,
your
doors
turn
on
your
alarm
right.
If
you
have
a
home
alarm,
you
can
certainly
turn
it
on
to
engage
the
sensors,
but
maybe
not
the
motion
detector,
the
motion
detector
inside
the
home.
X
X
So
here's
the
map
of
where
these
residential
burglaries
are
occurring
this
year
and
what
we
typically
see
is
that
these
occur
near
highways
or
main
roads.
Don't
get
me
wrong,
they
do
occur
in
in
the
neighborhood,
but
typically
we
see
these
right
off
the
highway,
obviously
near
the
highway.
It
makes
it
easy
for
them
to
get
off
get
into
the
neighborhood
get
into
the
area,
commit
the
crime
and
jump
right
back
on
the
highway,
and
so
let
me
share
a
little
secret
with
you
guys.
X
We
do
concentrate
our
patrol
efforts
in
areas
that
we
believe
crooks
are
coming
in
from
right,
and
so
sometimes
you
see
us
on
homestead
stevens,
creek
boulevard
right.
The
ends
are
the
main
arteries
to
the
city,
but
this
is
a
really
good
map
to
look
at
because
one
of
the
things
we
do
is
we
try
to
understand.
If
there
are
patterns
right
and
as
you
can
see
here,
there
really
aren't
any
real
real
patterns
other
than
maybe
the
east
part
of
cupertino
just
east
of
de
anza.
X
You
know
there
east
of
stings
creek
indiana,
perhaps,
but
there
is
no
real
pattern.
X
X
X
The
cot,
the
type
of
vehicles
that
are
being
victimized,
are
primarily
toyota,
prius
right.
Why
does
anybody
know
why?
Well
you
have
to
understand
what
the
catalytic
converter
does
right.
X
We
got
one
gentleman
in
the
back.
Sorry
about
that.
What
we're
recommending
is,
if,
if
you
have
a
toyota
prius,
just
be
extremely
careful
because
again,
that's
the
number
one
vehicle
we're
seeing.
Please
park
your
vehicle
inside
your
garage.
If
you
can
lower
your
garage
door,
okay
park,
it
in
your
garage
make
sure
that
you
put
it
in
the
location
in
your
car,
if
you
can't
put
it
in
the
garage
where
it's
hard
to
get
under
the
vehicle,
so
maybe
next
to
some
some
bushes
perhaps
put
another
car
next
to
it.
X
The
crooks
are
lazy,
so
they're
going
to
look
for
the
vehicles
that
are
easy
to
get
under.
If
you
have
a
motion
sensor
light
it's
good
to
park
your
vehicle
under
that
motion
sensor
light.
There
are
some
after-market
devices
out
there,
where
you
can
spend
about
500
bucks
to
have
that
cali
converter
reinforced
so
that
it's
difficult
for
the
crooks
to
steal.
X
But
again,
if,
if
you
give
them
the
opportunity,
they're,
certainly
going
to
get
under
your
vehicle
to
steal
that
device
here
is
the
map
for
catalytic
converter
thefts
so
far
this
year
and
again,
what
we
do
look
at
is.
Is
there
a
pattern
here?
Are
we
looking
at
something
where
these
crooks
are
coming
into
a
specific
neighborhood
to
steal
these?
And
you
know
you
could
argue
that
perhaps
the
west,
the
bub
area,
maybe
we've
had
a
little
cluster
there,
but
you
know
not
really
not
really.
X
I
can't
tell
you
how
many
times
a
deputy
is
parked
behind
a
car
that
and
again
two
three
in
the
morning,
because
usually
this
happens
overnight:
deputy
parks
behind
a
car,
because
the
car's
driver's
door
is
open
because
somebody
is
working
on
a
car
late
at
night
only
to
realize
that
they're,
actually
in
the
process
of
stealing
the
catalytic
converter
and
soon
before
we
even
make
contact
with
that
driver
that
person
jumps
in
the
car
and
takes
off,
and
so
it
is
important
that
we
do
everything
we
can
to
try
to
curb
that
that
crime
communication
with
the
sheriff's
office
a
couple
of
things
here,
a
lot
of
information
in
this
slide,
but
our
non-emergency
number
is
299-2311-408.
X
Emergency
number
is
9-1-1.
You
could
also
text
9-1-1
county
communications
has
done
a
really
good
job
with
being
responsive
to
this
request,
and
so
certainly,
if
you
have
a
circumstance
where
you
cannot
call
us,
please
text
9-1-1.
Our
administrative
offices
are
located
here
in
cupertino
off
at
the
end
zone,
prospect
next
door.
X
So
the
way
the
nextdoor
works
is
we.
We
don't
have
access
to
the
conversation
that's
occurring
in
your
neighborhood.
So
if
somebody's
posting
a
video,
a
photo
of
something
suspicious
out
there,
we're
not
going
to
know
that
unless
somebody
calls
us
same
thing
goes
for
the
city
of
cupertino
right.
So
if
you
post
information
in
there
making
reference
to
something
in
the
city
of
cupertino
they're,
not
going
to
know
that
unless
somebody
lets
them
know
it's
a
closed
system
and
then
we
talked
about
alert
scc,
I'm
going
to
show
a
real,
quick
video.
Y
Most
important
thing
during
a
large
disaster
large
wildfire
is
for
the
public
to
be
informed
so
that
they
can
make
the
right
decisions.
So
we
are
going
to
work
to
get
that
information
to
the
public
as
quickly
as
possible,
but
we
can
only
do
that
if
people
have
registered
for
alert
scc
alert
scc
is
the
communication
system
that's
used
in
santa
clara
county
for
all
agencies
to
get
information
to
the
public,
irrespective
of
where
they
are
during
a
large
wildfire.
We're
going
to
communicate
with
you
using
both
low-tech
and
high-tech
tools
so
low-tech.
Y
The
the
sheriff's
office
law
enforcement
will
be
driving
door
to
door
if
necessary,
using
loudspeakers
to
notify
the
public,
we'll
also
be
using
high-tech
tools
like
emergency
alerts,
sent
directly
to
your
mobile
devices
and
we'll
also
be
using
reverse
911
technology
to
make
calls
to
your
traditional
landline
telephone.
In
addition
to
posting
things
via
social
media
and
via
our
website,
we.
X
It
is
extremely
important
that
we
sign
up
to
get
alerts
from
alert
scc
anytime.
We
are
involved
in
a
critical
incident
where
we
have
to
shut
down
roads.
Maybe
we're
doing
an
active
search
for
someone.
We
will
send
out
information
on
alert
sec.
We
commonly
use
that
platform,
so
we're
asking
that
if
you
haven't
already
signed
up
for
alert
sec,
please
do
so.
This
one
is
possible
so
that
we
can
get
you
the
information
that
that
you
need
to
continue
to
keep
yourself
safe
and
help
us
keep
you
safe
with.
X
That
being
said,
I
thank
you
for
your
time.
Do
we
have
time
for
questions
excellent?
Before
I
start
taking
questions,
I
do
want
to
introduce
lieutenant
neil
valenzuela
who's
to
my
right
he's
going
to
help
me
answer
some
of
these
questions.
He
helps
me
manage
the
west
valley,
patrol
division,
and
so,
in
my
absence
he
he
takes
over
go
ahead.
AA
AA
So
the
the
phrase
that
they
have
is
calling,
when
you
can't
text
when
you
can't
so,
if
you
you
know
in
a
worse
situation,
you're
in
your
house
and
there's
somebody
in
your
house
go
lock
yourself
in
a
room,
start
texting
9-1-1.
The
first
thing
the
dispatcher's
going
to
come
back
to
you
and
ask:
can
you
call
9-1-1
if
you
say
no
they're,
going
to
ask
what's
your
emergency?
What's
your
location
after
that,
you
can
also
take
pictures
on
there
if
you
need
to
and
also
text
them
as
well.
O
X
Q
AB
Some
of
the
situations
that
we
have
people
like
wandering
around
our
neighborhood
opening
up
our
mailboxes
or
having
some
stranger
cruising
around
our
neighborhood.
So
usually
when
we
call
the
police.
What
would
they
do?
Because
you
really
cannot
hold,
because
you
can
only
see
them
from
the
video
from
the
home
security
system.
AA
Very
good
question,
so
we
would
love
to
have
those
kind
of
calls
so
that
we
can
get
there
when
the
crime
is
happening.
Mail
theft
is
a
very
common
crime
in
the
city.
The
crooks
use
that
information
to
then
commit
identity
theft.
They
open
up
credit
cards
under
your
name
or
they.
They
just
basically
steal
your
identity
with
your
mail.
AA
For
the
thief
okay,
so
we
have
arrested
groups
of
two
and
threes,
but
we've
also
arrested
individuals
who
are
out
there
with
a
jack
and
a
hacksaw
basically,
and
they
can
get
in
and
out
pretty
fast
within
seconds.
AA
F
Hi
captain
david
good
evening:
what
about
the
recent
law,
the
policy
change
where
everything
is
called
misdemeanor
people
could
just
have
like
the
walgreens
and
things
like
that
they
just
take
anything
under
750
or
250
dollars.
F
So
those
are
pretty
scary
if
you're
shopping
or
if
you're
in
that
area
and
they
get
away
and
there's
no
bail
policy.
Could
you
please
help
clarify
that
and
give
us
some
peace
of
mind.
X
Yeah,
so
so
the
category
would
be
a
misdemeanor
right
yeah,
so
I
can
tell
you
we
have
extremely
good
working
relationship
with
our
business
community
and
so
what
we
do
when
somebody,
because
it
does
happen
where
crooks
come
into
the
city
run
into
a
business,
grab
a
bunch
of
stuff.
You
know,
we've
seen
this
on
the
news
and
then
run
out
jump
into
a
car
and
take
off.
X
X
Has
that
made
a
difference?
I
can
tell
you
that
we've
arrested
the
same
people
over
and
over
for
some
of
these
crimes,
and
sometimes
it
is
a
little
disheartening,
but
our
staff,
their
true
professionals.
We
continue
to
chase
them
down
and
arrest
them
for
what
they
do
to
our
residents
and
so
by
and
large,
we
have
not
seen
a
problem
with
that
again,
it's
because
of
those
relationships,
and
it's
because
of
the
support
we
have
from
the
city
council
on
policing.
N
Sir,
on
the
catalytic
catalytic
converter
thefts:
can
you
target
the
fence
the
where
they're,
where
they're
taking
them?
Is
there
a
way
of
of
getting
to
the
bottom
of
that
so.
AA
That's
a
good
question.
We
find
out
that
they're
not
taking
them
to
like
a
legitimate
recycling
shop.
In
fact,
most
recycling
places
in
santa
clara
county
do
not
accept
catalytic
converters,
they're
breaking
them
down
for
the
raw
materials,
whether
it's
the
platinum
and
the
other
metals
that
are
inside
and
then
they're
selling
those
materials
as
bulk.
So
those
are
the
hard
parts
we're
trying
to
get
into
and
trying
to
find
out
where
they're
breaking
these
things
apart,
but
they're
not
going
to
recycle
shop
and
turning
them
in
so.
X
X
What
we've
learned
is
believe
it
or
not,
as
we
we
catch
a
group
buying
these
things,
another
group
pops
up
somewhere
else,
and
so
we
continue
to
work
on
that
problem
from
that
root
cause
issue.
There
yeah.
I
AA
We
use
it
a
lot
and
it's
extremely
useful
for
us
we'll
go
out
to
the
house
and
we'll
try
to
collect
some
other
kind
of
evidence,
whether
it's
a
fingerprint
or
dna
evidence.
AA
X
Yeah
also
add
that
the
video
that
you
share
with
us
again
we're
talking
about
a
crime
was
committed.
We
share
it
with
other
agencies
in
this
area.
Right,
I
think
we've
talked
about
the
fact
that
crime
has
no
boundary,
and
so
the
video
you
share
with
us.
We
share
it
with,
let's
say:
sunnyvale
police
department
los,
gatos,
san
jose
and
we
say:
hey:
does
anybody
know
who
these
people
are
and
that's
how
we
make
these
cases?
So
it
is
important
that
you
share
that
information
if
you
feel
comfortable
sharing
it
to
solve
that
crime,
yeah.
X
B
Right,
thank
you,
everyone
for
being
here
today.
I
want
to
thank
the
mayor,
the
council,
members,
the
speakers
and
everybody
who
put
up
the
booth
there
and
shared
information
with
our
community
and
not-
and
all
of
you
here.
You
know
this
evening
sharing
your
evening
with
us
and
learning
about
public
safety
really
appreciate
your
time,
and
I
hope
you
know
this
session
was
useful
to
you
and
if
you
have
any
questions,
please
shoot
out
an
email.