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From YouTube: Public Safety Forum 2022
Description
The City of Cupertino hosts the annual Public Safety Forum, recorded October 26, 2022 at the Cupertino Community Hall.
The event includes featured presentations from the Santa Clara County Sheriff’s Office, the Santa Clara County Fire Department, 988 Crisis Intervention, the Green Blocks Curriculum, Citizen Corps, and Block Leader Programs.
A
A
Hello
and
welcome
back
I
should
say
to
the
2022
Cupertino
annual
Public
Safety
forum.
It's
wonderful
to
see
all
of
you,
it's
wonderful
to
have
all
of
you
here
tonight.
We
are
so
thrilled
to
be
able
to
bring
back
an
event
like
this
in
Cupertino
I.
Believe
that
the
last
time
we
had
a
a
gathering
like
this,
it
was
well
before
the
pandemic
and
we're
very
happy
to
be
able
to
break
bread
and
share
safety
information
with
our
community
tonight,
I'd
like
to
thank
a
couple
of
my
fellow
city
council
members
for
being
here
tonight.
A
The
public
safety
Forum
has
long
served
as
an
opportunity
for
our
community
to
engage
in
conversations
with
our
Public
Safety
agencies.
Public
Safety
remains
one
of
the
city's
top
priorities.
That
was
true
before
the
pandemic.
It
was
true
during
the
pandemic,
and
it
is
true
hopefully
now
that
we
are
moving
on
from
pandemic
conditions.
The
public
safety
commission
remains
closely
connected
to
Public
Safety
officials
and
continues
to
make
valued
recommendations
to
your
city
council
and
so
we're
very
happy
for
the
work
and
the
input
from
all
of
our
commissions.
A
The
sheriff's
office
tonight
will
discuss
recent
crime
Trends
and
describe
the
community
policing
model.
The
fire
department
will
present
the
new
Wildfire
specialist
program
working
to
keep
Cupertino
and
the
West
Valley
prepared
for
potential
wildfires
and
Cupertino.
Our
community
gets
involved,
and
we
thank
you
for
the
impact
our
volunteers
have
made,
including
the
citizen,
Corps
block
leaders
and
our
youth.
Thank
you
all
for
every
single
one
of
those
groups,
the
block
leader
program,
will
highlight
the
new
neighborhood
lead.
A
The
green
blocks
curriculum
a
partnership
in
sustainability
and
emergency
preparedness,
and
so
you
can
see
a
lot
of
these
Trends
are
interweaving.
When
we
look
at
sustainability,
when
we
look
at
Public
Safety,
when
we
look
at
all
those
various
things
that
we
value
within
the
community,
our
citizen,
Corps,
your
city's
resident
responders,
will
feature
ways
you
can
get
involved
today
by
helping
your
family
and
neighbors
be
more
prepared
for
any
emergency
and
we're
at
such
an
inflection
point.
A
Aren't
we
socially
we're
able
to
bring
back
a
lot
of
these
types
of
mechanisms
that
we
had
before
and
hopefully
they
will
be
new
and
improved
by
all
the
looks
of
things
tonight,
we're
ready
to
go
forward
and
make
those
new
improvements.
We
welcome
the
County
Behavioral
Health
Science
services
to
showcase
the
availability
of
988,
which
is
an
Innovative
approach
to
serving
those
in
an
acute
Mental,
Health
crisis.
A
This
year's
Public
Safety
form
features
additional
partner
agencies
from
around
the
county
visit
each
table
around
the
room
for
specialized
Public
Safety
information.
The
American
Red
Cross
is
here,
Cadre
is
here
and
that
stands
for
collaborating
agencies,
disaster
relief
effort,
the
county
office
of
emergency
management
is
here.
We
also
have
several
Cupertino
departments
that
are
tabling
throughout
the
room
and
in
the
lobby
of
Community
Hall.
Today
we
have
our
office
of
emergency
management.
A
A
A
The
original
Emergency
Operations
Center
was
actually
in
the
original
city
council
chambers,
or
at
least
original
prior
to
when
we
had
the
city
council
chambers
here
and
when
we
were
talking
about
either
renovating
or
making
a
new
city
hall
potentially
having
the
EOC
in
that
large,
much
larger,
building,
much
more
expensive
and
so
city
council
decided
to
go
ahead
and
acquire
an
office
building
up.
Tory
here
also
very
close
to
the
Civic
Center
and
the
EOC
will
be
housed
there.
A
As
of
a
decision
made
by
Council
last
Tuesday
this
year,
Cupertino
will
see
even
more
advancements
in
Public
Safety.
In
my
opinion,
we
are
now
emerging
as
more
compassionate.
Our
standards
have
remained
as
high
as
ever,
but
we
have
had
time
to
think
about
how
we
Implement
successful
Solutions.
In
the
absence
of
mentalities
like
the
ends
justifying
the
means,
where
some
issues
at
least
get
pushed
back
and
exacerbated
no,
we
are
aspirational
and
we
are
working
together
to
achieve
in
this
context,
safety,
compassion
and
fair
treatment
for
everyone.
A
Nobody
ever
said
it
was
easy
and
we're
so
very
glad
to
have
many
capable
and
caring
partners
with
us
here
today,
I'm
not
very
happy
to
introduce
Public
Safety
commission,
chair,
Eric
Shan
is
completing
his
third
year
on
the
public
safety
commission.
Eric
is
a
native
of
Cupertino
who
values
community.
A
In
the
past,
he's
focused
on
contributing
in
a
positive
way
to
his
communities
in
school
and
professionally.
He
managed
volunteering
efforts
at
Berkeley,
as
well
as
co-chaired
judicial
efforts
at
Stanford
at
work.
He
has
continued
and
served
as
an
exec
sponsor
for
culture
and
well-being.
Eric
continually
strives
to
better
understand
feedback
from
our
community
and
help
shape
those
into
meaningful
values
and
programs.
Everyone,
let's
give
a
warm
welcome
to
our
representative
from
the
public
safety
commission,
chair,
Eric,
Shan.
B
All
right
well,
thank
you,
mayor
Paul,
as
as
the
mayor
mentioned,
I
am
Eric
I'm,
the
chair
of
the
public
safety
commission
and
so
wanted
to
welcome
everyone
tonight.
It's
great
to
see
so
many
folks
turn
up
for
this
I
have
the
honor
of
introducing
our
first
Speaker
from
the
fire
department
to
talk
about
evacuation
planning
and
Zone
Haven.
B
So
Chief
Lilly
began
his
fire
service
career
as
a
volunteer
firefighter
EMT
with
the
Cordelia
Fire
Protection
District
in
1999,
before
joining
counting
fire
in
2000..
As
the
deputy
chief
of
administration
and
planning,
he
manages
the
analytical
and
strategic
planning
services
to
support
the
organization's
continuous
Improvement
of
Service
delivery,
including
the
Department's
cfai
accreditation.
B
He
also
oversees
the
information
and
public
affairs
office
and
the
pre-fire
management
and
Wildfire
resilience
program.
Chief
Lilly
has
served
as
a
firefighter
engineer:
paramedic
fire
captain
Battalion
Chief
Battalion
Chief
of
operations
and
interim
deputy
director
of
Santa
Clara
County
9-1-1
Communications.
B
C
Well,
good
evening,
everyone
how's
everybody
doing
we're
good
outstanding,
well
I'm,
here
to
represent
the
Santa
Clara
County
Fire
Department,
to
speak
about
our
Wildfire
resilience
program.
As
mentioned
in
the
introduction,
we
have
several
arms
to
our
division.
This
division
really
deals
with
the
long-range
planning
laundering,
strategic
reporting,
and,
as
such,
we
felt
that
it
would
be
ideal
to
put
our
Wildfire
program
underneath
it.
The
response
is
just
a
small
piece
of
what
we
do.
C
We
talk
a
little
bit
about
pre-fire
preparedness
or
pre-wild
for
Community
Wildfire
preparedness.
Each
year
we
send
out
about
10
000
mailings
to
our
community
into
the
high
fire
severity
zones
and
the
City
of
Cupertino
receives
just
over
1200
of
those
mailings.
Now
here
we're
showing
a
map
of
the
city,
it's
not
the
entire
city
that
gets
it.
It's
those
areas
that
you
see
that
are
marked
in
yellow
and
red
that
denote
the
either
very
high
severity
fire
zones
or
the
high
severity
fire
zones
right
now.
C
Cal
Fire
is
in
the
process
of
updating
those
for
the
entire
State,
and
so
these
will
be
updated
as
well.
Those
mailings
they're,
not
just
a
flyer
that
says
hey
it's
that
time
of
year.
No,
they
include
information
on
fuel
reduction
programs
that
are
available
to
you,
property
inspections
that
are
available
to
you,
defensible
information,
defensible
space
information
and
links
to
educational
webinars
that
you
can
go
to
and
we'll
talk
a
little
bit
about
that
in
a
second.
C
Those
are
also
linked
to
our
website,
and
so,
if
let's
say
you
happen
to
miss
them,
you
can
go
to
www.sccfd.org.
You
can
go
to
our
Community
Education
section
of
the
page,
and
on
that
page
you
will
see
those
videos
of
those
webinars,
and
so
you
can
play
catch-up
for
what
you
missed
and
then
you'll
be
ready
for
this
coming
year.
C
C
Those
can
be
chipped
and
rebroadcast
out,
so
that
you,
if
you
have
a
fire,
you
have
a
much
lower
fire
intensity
and
so
all
of
that
work
it
doesn't
just
happen
one
time
it
doesn't
just
happen
overnight,
a
lot
of
times,
there's
a
lot
of
Maintenance.
That
has
to
be
done,
and
so
that's
what
a
lot
of
the
work
that's
happening
with
our
fuel
crew,
which
we'll
talk
about
in
a
second,
that's
what
they're
doing
they're
doing
those
strategic
or
shaded
fuel
breaks
that
you
can
see.
C
One
great
example
of
the
benefits
of
a
shaded
fuel
break
is,
if
you
happen
to
go
up,
Highway
17.
and
if
you
go
up
to
the
the
summit,
you'll
see
so
much
vegetation
has
been
been
cleared
away.
That
is
probably
the
the
clearest
Viewpoint
that
I
can
say
that
we've
seen
in
a
long
time
or
the
easiest
to
get
to
an
example
of
a
shaded
fuel
break
and
we're
working
on
those
in
the
community
evacuation
route
hardening.
C
It's
not
just
those
fire
trails
to
maybe
reduce
the
intensity
of
the
fire,
but
also
the
evacuation
routes
you
think
about
where
those
higher
fire
severity
zones
are,
what
do
they
all
have
in
common
they're,
usually
on
a
hillside,
they
usually
have
Lush
vegetation,
which
is
why
we
live
there.
But
what
is
one
of
the
main
commonalities?
Are
the
roads
super
highways?
C
So
you
have
lesser
fire
intensity,
so
you
can
safely
make
it
down
the
hill
one
of
the
things
that
that
we
try
to
educate
on
when
we
talk
about
evacuation
planning
and
when
we
do
those
evacuation
drills,
you
know
when
you're
driving
down
the
road
and
you've
got
your
headlights
and
everything's
clear.
It's
easy
to
make
all
those
driving
decisions.
Isn't
it
but
imagine
if
it's
Smoky
or
cloudy,
you
know
it's
hot
you're
nervous.
It
makes
it
a
lot
different,
more
difficult.
C
Doesn't
it
it
can
make
it
that
much
more
difficult
to
get
down
the
hill
and,
quite
honestly,
it
increases
the
risk
of
us
crashing
into
one
another.
Doesn't
it
and
so
making
sure
that
we
Harden
those
Escape
Routes
helps
to
lessen
the
risk
as
we,
the
community,
either
evacuates,
and
then
we
as
responders
make
our
way
to
the
fire.
C
Lastly,
like
it
says:
infrastructure
hardening
telecommunications
technology,
water
supply-
these
are
all
affected
by
fire.
Should
the
fire
impact
the
power
to
these?
Now,
your
water
supply
is
cut
off
now
the
power
to
your
home
you're
in
it
at
your
phones.
All
these
things
that
cut
off,
and
now
we
don't
have
the
information
or
the
water
to
help
put
out
your
fire.
So
all
of
these
things
are
how
a
community
helps
to
harden
its
infrastructure
and
that's
what
our
pre-fire
Management
program
does.
C
One
of
the
things
that
we
were
very
fortunate
to
to
receive.
We
received
a
passive
Grant
to
receive
monies
that
allowed
us
to
stand
up.
What's
called
a
fuel
management
crew.
Our
first
year
was
this
year.
We've
had
a
really
good
season
with
them.
We
were
able
to
hire
six
Personnel
to
help
with
this
work,
or
they
help
clear
vegetation,
and
we
have
one
supervisor,
a
company
officer.
We
call
them
a
captain.
That's
a
first
line
supervisor.
C
Quite
often
they
work
on
a
fire
engine,
and
now
they
work
for
for
vegetation
management
and
what
this
grant
funded
Workforce
has
done.
Is
they
they
help
to
cut
away
that
fuel
and
those
planned
strategic
fuel
breaks
that
we
talked
about
in
those
the
evacuation
routes?
Those
planned
projects,
many
of
which
ties
right
into
our
community
Wildfire
preparedness
plan?
With
all
of
that
work
that
happened
back
in
16
the
the
plan
that
was
published
and
is
now
under
revision.
C
There
are
projects
that
were
identified
that
this
fuel
crew
can
now
work
to
and
help
to
reduce
your
hazardous
fuel
in
your
environment.
Another
thing
that
they're
able
to
do
is
actually
help
in
emergency
response.
Again,
that's
a
very
small
portion
of
what
they
do
in
comparison
to
the
planned
work
that
helps
them
to
remove
miles
and
miles
of
hazardous
Fuel,
and
so
that's
really
what
their
focus
is.
So
we're
not
planning
to
deploy
them
on
every
single
fire
or
a
small.
C
You
know
50
or
100
foot
spa,
but
really
a
significant
incident,
because
their
main
focus
is
on
reducing
that
fuel.
Before
we
have
the
incident
again,
this
is
a
pilot
program
we're
trying
to
scale
it
we're
really
looking
on
expanding
the
program
as
time
goes
forward
and
we're
really
looking
at
trying
to
find
ways
to
have
a
consistent
and
long-range
funding
forward
so
that
we
can
expand
it
and
make
it
a
fully
functional
team.
So
that's
one
of
our
main
strategic
goals
for
that
program.
C
C
So
that's
a
brief
overview
of
the
pre-fire
management
program.
Again,
it's
Grant
funded
we're
looking
at
expanding
it.
We're
looking
at
bringing
on
a
community
Wildfire
specialist,
which
is
a
position
that
really
helps
to
plan
out
and
map
out
those
jobs,
those
those
different
fuel
mitigation
projects.
C
But
now,
in
these
last
few
minutes,
I'd
like
to
take
a
moment
and
talk
a
little
about
what
happens
when
the
mitigation
effort
fails.
What
happens
when
we
have
an
emergency
incident
and
now
perhaps
our
communities
at
risk?
Well,
there
are
ways
that
you
can
educate
yourself
in
ways
that
you
can
protect
yourself
and
one
of
those
is
by
using
Zone
Haven
and
what
it
and
we'll
talk
about
that
in
a
few
slides
as
well
as
alert
SCC,
which
is
an
alerting
platform.
C
These
used
in
conjunction
together
really
help
you
as
a
community
to
know
whether
or
not
your
community
is
affected
and
when
you
need
to
leave-
and
so
we'll
talk
about
that
now,
what
is
Zone
Haven?
Well,
we've
had
a
lot
of
education
on
Zone
Haven,
not
just
on
the
city
of
Cupertino
website,
also
on
the
Santa
Clara
County
Fire
Department
website
I
mentioned
those
videos.
C
The
videos
that
explain,
Zone
Haven
are
also
on
the
website
and
in
a
slide
to
come
right
next
you'll
be
able
to
scan
the
presentation
and
you
can
go
to
the
website
and
see
it
for
yourself.
Zone
Havens,
the
two
that
helps
our
communities
and
First
Responders
plan
communicate
and
executive
evacuations.
It's
GIS
based.
C
Maybe
an
evacuation
warning
or
an
evacuation
order
for
that
particular
area
or
sets
of
areas,
and
then
once
we
do
that
we
tie
in
with
our
personnel
there
and
OEM
and
with
our
communication,
Center
and
they're,
the
ones
that
activate
alert
SEC,
which
we
will
talk
about
in
a
second
again.
Evacuations
are
extremely
complex.
To
put
it
in
perspective,
what
we
used
to
do
in
the
past,
when
we
were
talking
about
evacuations,
we
will
pull
out
a
paper
map
for
well
I,
don't
see
any
kids
here,
but
they
probably
wouldn't
know
what
that
is.
C
C
So
I
can't
overestimate
or
talk
about
how
complex
it
can
be
and
why
we're
so
happy
to
have
it.
It
really
allows
you
to
see
where
your
community
stands
at
a
moment's
notice.
Now
one
thing
that
zone
Haven
doesn't
do
it's
not
going
to
take
your
phone
and
ping
it
and
say:
go
now:
it
might
email
you,
but
not
everybody
has
their
emails,
alerted
to
or
set
to
alert
you,
and
so
that's
why?
C
Having
alert
SCC
and
if
you
haven't
just
tell
me
if
everybody's
good,
if
you've
got
the
if
you've
pulled
out
the
QR
reader
and
everybody's
good
okay,
we'll
move
on.
That's
why
it's
so
important
that
we
have
alert
SEC
so
I
encourage
you
if
you're
interested
in
learning
about
Zone
Haven
go
to
the
Santa
Clara
County
Fire
Department
website
go
to
the
city
of
Cupertino
website,
you'll,
see
exactly
what
zone
Haven
does
and
how
you
can
use
it
and
how
you
can
receive
alerts
for
your
particular
Zone.
Even
down
to
your
address.
C
But
now
again,
as
I
mentioned,
does
nothing
if
you
can't
be
alerted,
and
so
that's
why
it's
so
imperative.
It
is
critical
that
you
sign
up
for
alert
SCC,
it's
right
here.
You
have
the
web
link.
This
is
the
Santa
Clara
County's
official
emergency
alert
system.
It's
free!
It
sends
you
alerts
for
us,
it
brings
out
fire
earthquakes,
crime,
Seville
weather
and
those
alerts
are
sent
directly
to
whatever
media
you
choose.
On
top
of
those,
we
do
have
wireless
emergency
alerts,
but
this
is
the
one
that
you've
opted
into.
C
That
gets
you
the
specific
specific
information,
and
so
we
implore
you
please
sign
up
so
that
you
can
be
alerted
just
a
brief
before
I
go
point
on
how
an
incident
can
progress.
We
are
hyper
Vigilant
to
fires
into
the
threat
to
our
communities
and
we
had
a
fire
the
other
day
that
escalated
very
quickly.
We
had
homes
that
were
threatened,
but
we
were
able
to
get
out
ahead
of
it
and
put
the
fire
out
pretty
rapidly
in
the
process.
C
The
Incident
Commander
was
able
to
make
the
request
to
put
a
Zone
Haven
Zone
in
an
evacuation
warning.
How
would
I
call
it?
You
have
your
normal,
your
phase,
we'll
call
it
a
phase.
C
Anyway,
we
put
it
in
an
evacuation
warning
and
which
was
exactly
what
we
should
have
done
and
in
the
process
of
going
from
evacuation
warning
to
alert
SCC
right
in
the
middle
of
that
we
were
able
to
contain
and
control
that
fire,
and
so
we
never
had
to
pull
the
trigger
on
the
alert,
SCC
notification,
and
so
even
though
some
may
have
seen
an
alert
or
a
Zone
Haven
changed
to
their
Zone.
They
never
got
that
notification.
We
never
got
that
far.
C
C
Now
I,
don't
really
know
what
that
term
means,
but
that's
because
I'm
over
40.,
but
I
can't
over
emphasize
the
importance
of
how
social
media
is
not
just
for
your
entertainment,
but
it
can
also
be
a
really
good
tool
for
you.
In
the
time
of
an
emergency,
you
can
get
really
up-to-date
crowdsourced
information
about
an
incident
of
fire
and
earthquake.
C
Just
like
that,
and
so,
while
your
social
media
consumption
is
really
a
personal
matter,
I
would
say
be
aware
of
the
different
points
of
Education
that
come
from
social
media
and
where
you
can
go
for
good
information.
We
have
a
few
listed
here
and
I
would
recommend
that
if
you
do
happen
to
use
social
media,
this
is
a
good
source
for
you
as
Citizens
here
and
so
again.
C
The
whole
thing
is
making
sure
that
you're
informed
not
just
of
how
we're
trying
to
mitigate
your
risk.
But
what
happens
when
that
risk
is
realized,
making
sure
that
you
have
yourself
tied
into
your
zone?
So
you
know
when
you
have
a
threat
and
also
knowing
or
being
able
to
be
alerted
quickly
so
that
you
can
react
quickly
right.
The
last
thing,
I'm
going
to
say,
have
your
go?
Bag
have
your
plan
just
the
other
day.
What
happened
this
super
computer?
C
My
pocket
went
off
immediately
with
my
Quake,
because
the
Earth
shook
we
weren't
moving
things
in
the
building.
The
building
was
moving
itself
and
so
we're
right
after
it's
October
it's
earthquake
season
for
us,
so
everybody
make
sure
that
you
have
all
of
your
things
together.
Make
sure
that
you
review
the
information
that
we've
provided
today.
All
these
things
help
you
be
a
more
educated
and
aware
community,
and
it
helps
us
as
your
fire
department,
better
serve
you
so
I.
Thank
you
for
your
time
and
I'm
open
to
I'm,
going
to
say
reasonable
questions.
D
Attended
a
number
of
the
meetings
with
Santa
Clara,
County,
Board
of
supervised
and
there's
a
number
of
property
owners
in
unincorporated
County
who
wanted
to
develop
their
properties
and
but
now
cannot
because
of
the
Bowie
and
evacuation
Etc.
And
there
seemed
to
be
some
issues
with
County
Fire.
The
state
Etc,
so
I'm
wondering
what
the
status
of
that
is
and
then,
more
importantly,
one
of
the
things
that
we're
seeing
in
all
of
our
communities
in
Cupertino
as
well
is
increasing
the
density
of
housing
on
individual
Lots.
C
That's
a
great
question
and
I
only
heard
part
of
it,
but
let
me
make
sure
I
got
this
right.
That
first
part
of
your
question
was
dealing
with
State
and
or
County
mandated
inspections,
and
how
access
has
to
be.
Is
that
what
you're
saying
well.
D
That
kind
of
segue
didn't
that
segwayed
into
the
into
the
into
the
more
local
issue,
because
you
know
having
been
gone
to
these
County
meetings
there.
You
know,
there's
Property,
Owners,
saying
hey:
I
can't
build
a
house
now.
I
could
build
a
house
before
and
now
I
can't
because
of
the
the
wui
and
the
evacuation
zones
and
whatnot
and
I
think
it's
great
that
the
fire
department
wants
to
keep
everybody
safe.
So,
but
having
seen
that,
how
does
that
segue
into
what
we're
seeing?
What
what's
going
on
here
locally
and
and
if
you.
C
I
appreciate
you
allowing
me
that
deference,
because
that
is
not
my
area
of
expertise,
the
the
issues
with
the
current
laws
and
how
they
affect
a
homeowner
and
how
they
maybe
have
to
provides
for
a
certain
amount
of
defensible
space
or
maybe
a
certain
type
of
roadway.
C
That
really
is
out
of
my
Lane
per
se,
and
it
doesn't
necessarily
affect
how
we
use
Zone
Haven
it
also
when
it
comes
to
City
Planning
and
the
density
of
your
city.
That
really
comes
down
to
the
to
the
planning
department.
I
can't
speak
to
how
a
city's
plan
speaks
to
the
density
in
a
high
fire
severity
Zone.
C
C
F
Name
is
Andy
got
a
quick
question
for
you
Chief
sitting
right
next
to
me
is
the
form
of
Public
Safety
commissioner
chair
commissioner
McCoy,
who
brought
the
postpoint
to
Santa
Clara
County.
Would
you
please
introduce
Paul's
point
to
all
the
audience
here
tonight.
C
Pulse
Point,
okay,
so
pulse
Point
respond
is
an
app
that
it
really
started
off
and
it's
focused
around
community-based
CPR
and
so
the
pulse
Point
app.
You
can
download
it
from
your
app
store
of
choice
and
you
can
sign
up
for
alerts
for
your
community
when
there's
an
incident,
that's
requesting
CPR,
it
will
alert
you
and
you
can
respond
safely
to
that
location
to
assist.
C
So
it's
using
your
geolocation
for
community-based
CPR
there's
an
additional
app
that
that
even
allows
you
to
it's,
not
the
pulsepoint
app,
but
it's
a
pulse,
Point
AED
app
that
allows
you
to
take
pictures
of
aeds
and
list
them,
and
then
they
show
up
on
the
map.
And
so
now
you
have
access
not
just
to
resp
community-based
CPR,
but
also
the
aeds
that
are
so
critical
when
doing
CPR.
So
you
can
download
that
different
organizations
can
choose
what
what
type
of
what
level
of
information
they
want
to
provide.
C
F
C
Depends
on
how
it's
set
up
per
organization,
some
organizations
only
show
medical
incidents.
Some
organizations
decide
to
show
any
and
all
incidents,
so
it
depends
on
your
organization.
So,
as
you
use
the
Zone
Haven
app
as
you
click
on
it,
it
will
show
those
different
evacuation
routes.
It
may
not
say
where
to
to
go
to
per
se.
It
would
depend
on
the
situation,
but
you
can
see
the
video
that's
on
the
website.
C
It
there's
a
portion
of
where
it
takes
you
from
kind
of
a
tutorial
side
to
where
it
actually
shows
you
what
was
going
on
live
at
the
Dixie
fire,
and
it
showed
that
it
was.
You
know
you
had
your
evacuation
order
zones
and
your
evacuation
warnings
and
then
the
advisory
sections,
and
so
in
all
of
those,
as
you
kick,
click
on
them
provide
the
pertinent
information.
C
For
other
incidents
as
well,
the
The
Incident
Commander
has
the
capability
to
put
an
evacuation
warning
in
for
for
anything.
C
So,
let's
say
hypothetically,
let's
say
we
had
a
swarm
of
bees
that
was
affecting
and
impacting
a
part
of
the
city,
and
we
needed
to
evacuate
it.
The
Incident
Commander
could
then,
as
identified,
highlight
that
zone
and
hey
they're,
heading
east
and
heading
east.
They
get
a
change.
G
G
C
Quite
honestly,
it
could,
as
far
as
an
advisory,
but
it's
it's
not
necessarily
a
setup
for
an
active
shooter
incident
or
some
other
violent
incident
which
is
kind
of
a
centralized
incident.
It
can
be
used
to
advise
but
you're
likely
to
get
more
information
out
of
the
school
out
of
your
alert
SEC.
That
just
says:
hey.
We
have
an
incident
parents.
C
I
Hello,
my
name
is
Bobby
Tota
and
I'm,
the
on
the
public
Cupertino
Public,
Safety
Commission.
Our
next
topic
will
be
on
the
998
crisis,
Suicide
Prevention,
lifeline
and
non-crisis
phone
list,
and
our
speaker
will
be
Santa.
Clara
County
he's
done
with
the
Santa
Clara
County.
His
name
is
Bruce.
Copley
Bruce
has
been
involved
in
system
design
for
Behavioral
Health
Services
for
more
than
35
years.
I
Before
coming
to
Santa
Clara
County,
he
was
the
executive
director
of
the
largest
Behavioral
Health
nonprofit
organization
in
Oregon
for
the
past
34
years
he
has
provided
executive
leadership
in
the
Department
of
Mental,
Health
and
substance
abuse.
His
Focus
has
been
in
developing
integrated
patient-centered,
evidence-based
Behavioral
Health
practices.
That's
a
mouthful.
I
He
has
also
served
number
of
for
many
years
on
the
executive
committee
of
the
California
alcohol
and
drug
program
administrator
Association.
Presently
he
is
the
director
for
the
county,
access
and
implant
services
division.
I
J
Thank
you.
Thank
you
very
much
for
asking
us
to
come
mayor
Paul
and
the
commission
and
Commissioners
also
I
want
to
introduce
Lan
Nugent,
who
is
actually
my
administrator
for
the
crisis
and
suicide
line,
and
if
there's
particular
questions
you
have
in
terms
of
how
the
crisis
suicide
works.
I'll
have
him
actually
answer
those
for
you.
So
as
as
it
was
explained,
we
are
here
to
really
talk
about
the
The
Suicide
Prevention
Lifeline.
For
many
years,
the
behavioral
health
department
has
had
a
a
local
number
for
suicide
and
crisis
Services.
J
Those
are
for
individuals
that
are
either
in
stress,
contemplating
suicide
or
having
family
members
that
are
in
stress,
and
we
have
a
24
7
team
that
actually
handles
those
calls.
Talks
with
the
individual
helps
to
de-escalate
any
any
stress
that
the
individual
has
and
also
offers
Community
Resources,
both
for
family
members
and
individuals
that
that
are
in
in
some
crisis,
Mental
Health
crisis.
J
So
what
what
we've
done
in
in
Santa
Clara
county
is
try
to
simplify
the
portals
for
individuals
to
have
access
to
suicide
and
crisis
services
at
the
same
time,
at
a
national
level
that
the
development
of
a
common
988
number
throughout
all
states
has
been
developed
and
actually
was
implemented
on
July
16th
so
anywhere
in
the
nation.
If
someone
calls
988,
they
will
be
routed
to
a
suicide
crisis
center
that
will
assist
them
in
whatever
the
issues
are
that
they're
having
in
our
department.
J
We
also
have
centralized
the
suicide
Mental
Health
crisis
teams.
We
have
two
teams,
we
have
a
youth
team
and
we
have
an
adult
team.
Those
are
individuals
that
work
in
our
department
that
go
out
in
the
community,
family
members
call
or
they're
individuals
in
the
community
that
are
in
some
Mental
Health
crisis,
appraises
the
situation,
offers
assistance
both
to
them
and
to
the
family
members
and,
on
occasion
actually
does
a
5150
brings
them
into
emergency
Psychiatric
Services
for
additional
Services,
if
they're
a
danger
to
sell
for
others.
J
The
majority
of
those
calls,
though,
we're
really
talking
with
the
family
member
or
the
individual,
assessing
the
information
and
referring
them
to
appropriate
services
for
mental
health
or
Behavioral
Health
Services,
either
in
our
department
or
other
resources
in
the
community
that
consist
the
family
or
the
loved
one.
That
is
under
a
crisis
situation.
J
So
we
have
two
two
numbers:
two
portals
to
our
system.
Now
the
crisis
line
which
is
988
and
a
non-crisis
line.
The
nine
non-crisis
line
is
for
beneficiaries
in
the
Santa
Clara
County
that
are
seeking
Behavioral
Health
Services,
either
Mental
Health,
Services
or
substitute
Services.
We
serve
two
populations,
the
medical
eligible
population
and
the
uninsured
population,
and
we
have
24
7
access
for
individuals
to
call
that
are
seeking
Services.
J
We
assess
them
and
we
place
them
in
appropriate
services
within
our
system
of
care,
which
includes
residential
outpatient
services,
family
counseling
and
Prevention
Services
through
our
prevention
unit.
If
it's
a
crisis
call,
they
will
go
through
the
98
number,
or
there
is
also
the
local
1-800
number
they
can
still
use,
which
is
the
original
phone
number
that
Lawns
group
has
been
using
for
over
20
years.
J
As
I
said,
the
National
Suicide
Hotline
designation
Act
was
implemented
in
October
2020
with
a
start
date
of
July
16th
in
California.
There
are
13
designated
suicide
crisis
centers
we
are
one
of
those
centers,
so
any
988
call
in
California
will
be
routed
to
one
of
those
centers.
The
the
system
allows
to
identify
the
area
code,
so
the
three
area
codes
in
Santa
Clara
County
will
route
the
individual
to
our
call
Center
for
other
individuals
that
have
that
have
other
area
codes.
It
will
route
them
to
where
the
particular
Services
is
within
their
area
code.
J
So
the
suicide
prevention
Lifeline,
as
I
said
the
previous
number
was
our
toll-free
number,
which
is
855-278-4204.
J
With
the
new
number,
we
now
have
the
988
as
I've
stated,
and
it
will
roll
out
to
All
Counties.
As
of
July
16th.
As
I
said,
we
are
also
supporting
several
other
counties
around
the
Bay
Area,
providing
them
the
suicide
Crisis
Support
as
well.
J
Services
are
24
hours
a
day,
seven
days
a
week,
as
I
said,
we
provide
direct
support
to
individuals
because
of
suicide
attempt
or
or
feeling
there
they
have
some
self-harm
injury
there.
They
may
initiate
also
provide
support
to
individuals,
have
lost
loved
ones
due
to
suicide.
J
The
emergency
department
Outreach
includes
survivors
of
suicide
support
groups
that
are
run
by
lawn,
and
he
can.
He
can
talk
more
in
depth
about
those
Services
as
well
as
a
number
of
calls
about.
20
percent
of
the
calls
are
for
individuals
seeking
other
community
services
within
Santa
Clara
County.
On
a
on
a
a
normal
day.
We
get
between
100
and
150
calls
somewhere
around
4
000
to
5
000
calls
per
month.
J
So
it's
a
very
active
up
operation
with
Lawns
group
lawn
has
both
County
staff
as
well
as
volunteers
that
provide
the
suicide
and
Crisis
Support.
J
We
have
What's
called
the
pert
team,
which
is
psychiatric
emergency
response
team.
These
are
clinicians
that
are
actually
associated
with
law
enforcement.
They
go
out
with
designated
officers
in
the
field,
provide
clinical
assessment
for
the
officer
to
help
the
officer
determine
what
is
the
appropriate
intervention
for
the
the
issue
within
the
community
that
they
are
providing
services
in.
We
also
have
the
adult
mobile
crisis
response
team.
That's
24,
7.!
J
And
finally,
we
have
a
mobile
response:
stabilization
service
for
youth
up
to
21
years
of
age.
Again,
it
is
a
outreach
program
that
works
with
families
and
loved
ones.
It
also
provides
a
crisis
stabilization
unit
for
youth
that
need
additional
support
to
stabilize
them
and
to
bring
them
back
into
the
home.
And
finally,
we
have
a
trust
program
that
begins
actually
in
November
and
that's
going
to
be
a
program
that
is
engaged
entirely
in
the
community.
J
J
J
We
also
have
the
local
number
still
the
800
number
I
would
write
this
down.
This
can
also
get
you
into
Lawns
group
if,
for
some
reason,
you're
not
able
to
ident
seek
somebody
from
our
988
system,
you
can
call
this
number,
and
this
will
route
you
directly
to
lon's
team.
J
The
non-crisis
team
number
is
800-704-0900.
This
takes
you
directly
to
our
screening
and
placement
team
that
addresses
the
caller
calls.
They
screen
the
individual
for
what
mental
health
or
substance
use
and
then
provides
them
a
an
appointment
within
our
system
so
that
they
can
begin
to
get
Immediate
Care
foreign.
J
Whenever
I
talk
to
individuals,
I
do
want
to
remind
all
loved
family
members
that
oftentimes
we
find
families
attempting
to
help
their
loved
ones
long
before
they
should
call
us
so
that
we
can
help
them
it.
It
we're
here
to
really
help
you
and
your
loved
ones,
and
the
earlier
you
can
engage
us
the
earlier.
We
can
begin
to
support
both
you
and
your
loved
ones
and
find
the
best
way
to
stabilize
them,
so
they
can
remain
successfully
in
the
community.
Let
me
stop
there.
London
is
here
to
take
any
questions
you
might
have.
J
J
So
so,
somewhere
between
35
and
50
000
calls
a
year
depending
on
the
depending
on
the
days
and
and
the
months.
So
it's
a
the
team
is
very
active
in
responding
to
callers.
K
We
do
have
a
number
of
bilingual
staff
as
well
as
volunteers,
because
the
operation
is
24
7.
If
you
call
it
a
time
that
our
bilingual
stop
might
not
be
available
because
it's
24
7,
we
use
a
language
translation
line
with
which
is
available.
24
7.
O
I'm
I'm
wondering
I'm
sure
that
you
get
calls
that
should
go
to
9-1-1
and
9-1-1
gets
calls
that
should
go
to
you.
How
do
you,
how
do
the
two
agencies
groups
interact
together
to
make
those
decisions,
because
some
of
them
might
be
needed
to
be
very
quick,
yeah.
J
So
that's
that's
a
really
good
question,
so
we're
and
in
in
the
county
there
are
a
number
of
dispatch.
Centers,
the
the
county
runs
one,
but
other
the
local
jurisdictions
also
have
dispatch
centers.
So
we're
still
in
conversation
with
them
about
what
would
be
their
decision
to
refer.
A
911
non-urgent
call
over
to
988
we're
working
on
that,
because
this
is
so
new.
We
haven't
gotten
there
yet,
but
that
is
definitely
something
we
want
to
look
at.
J
P
C
J
I
mean
they're
all
over
the
all
over
the
county,
so
the
there's
a
a
clinic
in
up
in
the
Palo
Alto
area,
there's
a
number
of
them
in
the
San
Jose
area,
South
County.
We
have
outpatient
services
throughout
the
county.
J
All
all
counties
in
California
have
a
mental
health
plan
for
the
safety
net,
so
each
County
operates
a
mental
health
and
behavioral
health
or
substance
use
service,
depending
on
the
size
of
the
county
and
and
the
the
revenue
they're
they're,
larger
and
smaller.
We
have
a
Board
of
Supervisors,
that's
very
supportive
of
our
services.
So
we
have.
We
have
a
lot
of
enhanced
services
that
many
other
counties
don't
have
to
provide
services
to
our
beneficiaries
and
uninsured
individuals.
C
And
just
to
speak,
to
dovetail
to
what
you're
saying
I
can
speak
to
the
the
dispatch
center
part
of
it.
When
the
Dispatch
Center
receives
a
call
transfer
from
a
988
sensor,
A
Center.
They
process
that
call
as
they
would
any
emergency
call
and
they
proceed
through
through
that
aspect
for
the
city
of
Cupertino.
C
K
I
also
want
to
stress
that
under
98
law,
either
a
b-98
within
California
or
federal
United
law
911
is
allowed
to
or
encourage
actually
to
divert
mental
health
related
Court
290
a
day
and
198
at
a
Constantine.
When
we
determine
that
the
nether
callers
is
at
risk
of
self-harm,
either
thinking
about
suicide
with
a
plan
or
harm
to
others,
then
that's
when
we
will
connect
2911
and
determine
or
request
that
a
that
they
need
to
be
a
welfare
check
from
law
enforcement.
R
So
I
would
like
a
little
clarification
on
that
area.
Code
statement
made
earlier
there's,
so
many
people
in
our
community
have
area
codes
from
the
East,
Coast,
etc,
etc.
It
made
it
sound
like
you
get
routed
to
like.
If
I
had
a
neighbor
that
had
a
New
York
area
code,
are
they
going
to
be
routed
to
someone
in
New
York
or
is
there?
Is
that
how
I
understood
that's
kind
of
what
it
sounds
like.
J
There
isn't
a
unified
consensus
in
the
other
12
suicide
crisis
centers
in
the
in
in
California.
The
pushback
is
well.
That
means,
then,
that
they'll
know
where
to
send
the
law
enforcement.
So
there's
there's
a
debate.
You
know
we.
We
believe
we
need
to
have
Geo
mapping
so
that
we
have
a
better
job
of
connecting
the
individual
appropriately
to
where
those
services
are
we're.
Not
there
yet
good
question
very
good
question.
J
S
Good
evening,
thank
you
to
the
public
safety
commission
for
allowing
us
and
giving
this
opportunity
for
us
to
be
able
to
speak
to
our
community.
My
name
is
Lauren
Kim
and
I
am
the
co-founder
of
way
Wildfire
Arena,
which
is
a
501c
3
non-profit
organization,
comprised
of
mostly
Monte
Vista
High
School
students.
T
Hello,
my
name
is
Arna
and
I'm
the
event
leader
at
way
and
I'd
like
to
talk
about
some
of
our
accomplishments.
One
of
our
accomplishments
is
volunteering
with
the
Santa
Clara
County
fire
department
and
organizing
around
400
disaster
kits
for
local
elementary
schools.
Additionally,
we
have
hosted
multiple
webinars
and
workshops
from
fire
safety
to
the
science
behind
wildfires
and
we
often
have
Santa
Clara
fire
department,
Santa
Clara,
County,
Fire,
Department
guest
speakers.
U
V
Hi
I'm
Marcia
Hovey
I'm,
the
executive
director
of
Cadre,
which
sits
that
long
name
collaborating
agency's
disaster
relief
effort,
we're
the
network
of
non-profits
in
Santa,
Clara
County
that
respond
to
disasters
and
tonight
I'm
here
to
share
some
really
good
new
free
information
about
earthquake
safety.
For
you
one
you
probably
heard
about
yesterday.
V
If
you
don't
have
the
my
shake
app
on
your
phone,
someone
around
you
did
and
so
we're
here
to
encourage
you
to
download
the
QR
code
and
put
that
on
your
phone
so
that
you
get
a
few
seconds
of
warning
before
the
earthquake.
In
addition
to
that
this
evening,
we're
giving
away
these
clear
plastic
zippered
bags
and
inside
there
is
a
shopping
list
of
emergency
supplies,
you
can
buy
at
the
dollar
store
and
all
of
the
supplies
you
see
in
these
bags
for
pets
and
people
we
purchase
at
the
dollar
store.
V
So
it's
just
a
way
to
get.
You
started
if
you
don't
have
a
kit.
Yet,
in
addition
on
our
website,
all
of
the
information
on
earthquake
safety
in
your
home
is
there
in
17
languages
so
that
there's
full
access
to
the
whole
community
and
we're
also
doing
a
raffle
for
a
fifty
dollar
roadside
emergency
kit.
W
Hi
I'm
Stuart
chesson
I'm
a
volunteer
for
Red
Cross
and
a
resident
here
of
Cupertino
yep.
So,
oh
sorry
about
that,
oh
and
we
have
all
sorts
of
preparedness
information.
Here
we
have
over
300
000
volunteers
in
the
Red
Cross
American
Red
Cross.
We
have
right
now
800
people
in
Florida,
helping
with
the
hurricanes,
and
we
want
you
to
be
prepared.
We
have
emergency
apps
that
are
free,
so
come
on
over
and
we
have
a
lot
of
things
to
show
you
on
that.
X
Good
evening,
everyone,
my
name-
is
Ruth
Darlene
I'm,
the
founder
and
executive
director
of
a
non-profit
called
women
of
Silicon
Valley
women
SV,
and
this
is
a
non-profit
that
focuses
on
more
subtle
forms
of
abuse
that
women
may
experience
in
Middle
to
Upper
income
areas.
Our
survivors,
our
doctors,
lawyers,
Engineers
CEOs,
their
perpetrators
are
doctors,
lawyers,
Engineers
CEOs.
We
like
to
think
that
domestic
violence
doesn't
happen
in
nicer
parts
of
town,
but
the
truth
is
we're
just
better
at
hiding
it.
So
what
we
do
is
we
offer
a
lot
of
different
resources.
X
We
run
a
helpline,
we
have
a
support
group.
We
connect
women
with
resources.
We
create
a
personal
relationship
with
every
Survivor
that
reaches
out
to
us
for
assistance,
and
we
have
survivors
from
all
different
races,
all
different
religions
from
all
over
the
world.
But
what
makes
them
all
sisters
is
this
common
experience
of
being
trapped
in
a
relationship
with
a
powerful,
sophisticated
abuser
who
is
one
face
in
public
and
another
very
different
one
behind
those
doors?
So
what
we
do
is
we
help
Empower
survivors
to
help
them
recognize?
X
What
early
warning
signs,
of
course,
of
control?
Look
like
what
more
subtle
forms
of
abuse
look
like
emotional,
Financial,
legal
technological.
We
connect
them
with
resources
and
lift
them
up
and
encourage
them
and
give
them
New.
Hope
We
also
do
presentations
out
in
the
community
like
this
one
tonight
and
we
also
train
providers
to
help
them
become
more
trauma
informed
in
dealing
with
the
domestic
violence,
survivors
and
middle
tougher
income
areas.
So
we've
got
our
table
tonight.
X
Y
Hi,
my
name
is
Marlon
I'm
with
the
city
of
cupertino's,
Transportation
division,
I'm,
an
engineer
and
I'm
here
alongside
my
colleague,
Shri
welkoviak,
she's
RC
frosting
school
coordinator.
We
have
a
table
outside,
as
I
said,
we're
part
of
the
transportation
Division
and
we're
highlighting
two
programs
that
we
have
for
the
city.
One
is
the
safe
routes
to
school
program,
as
well
as
our
neighborhood
traffic
calming
program.
The
neighborhood
traffic
calming
program
helps
Aid
local
neighborhood
safety
issues
such
as
speeding.
Y
Z
AA
Q
AA
AA
The
second
speaker
is
Victoria
Maureen
Outreach
coordinator
Victoria
is
our
Outreach
coordinator
for
sustainability
and
environmental
programs.
After
obtaining
a
degree
in
sustainable
program
design
from
UC
Davis.
She
went
on
to
teach
the
community
about
composting
and
the
importance
of
food
waste
production.
Victoria
started
with
the
city
of
Cupertino
in
2020.
AA
AA
L
L
Our
block
leaders
share
information
between
the
city
and
the
neighborhoods
where
they
serve.
They
serve
as
a
conduit
for
for
information
flowing
both
ways
and
they
host
events.
The
events
that
help
you
all
get
to
know
one
another.
If
you
don't
already,
if
I
didn't
start
out
by
saying
this,
I
apologize,
if
you
haven't
checked
in-
and
you
are
a
block
leader
tonight,
if
you
could
do
that
on
your
way
out,
that
would
be
great.
L
L
L
AB
Hello,
everyone
before
I
get
started
I'm
going
to
ask
for
some
audience
participation.
If
everyone
could
raise
your
hand,
who's
a
block
leader.
I
know
we
have
some
block
leaders
in
the
house
all
right.
Thank
you
so
much
for
coming,
that's
great
to
see
so
many
faces
and
you
guys
are
the
best
part
of
our
community.
AB
So
second
question
raise
your
hand
if
you've
had
a
conversation
with
a
friend
or
neighbor
in
Cupertino
about
solar
panels.
Anyone
who's
had
solar
panels
on
the
roof.
How
about
electric
vehicles
or
electric
charging
stations?
AB
How
about
the
drought?
Has
anyone
talked
about
the
drought,
With
Friends
yeah?
So
those
types
of
topics
are
what
are
green
blocks.
Curriculum
is
for
how
about
have
any
of
you
heard
about
our
climate
action
plan,
fewer
all
right.
So
this
climate
action
plan,
one
of
our
measures-
is
to
work
on
adaptation
and
Community
resilience,
and
the
green
blocks
program
is
a
direct
result
of
that
climate
action
plan
to
try
to
work
with
office
of
emergency
management
to
come
together
on
climate
disasters.
AB
So
in
a
nutshell,
green
blocks
is
a
train.
The
trainer
type
of
program,
City
staff,
including
myself
and
Marta,
can
meet
with
block
leaders
and
anyone
can
join
if
you're,
not
a
black
leader
already
and
we'll
work
with
you
on
talking
through
this
curriculum
having
custom
videos
that
we've
produced
workshops
and
so
much
more.
AB
AB
AB
So
this
is
a
big
program
problem
and
we
have
tools
and
lessons
for
climate
change
impacts
and
how
to
protect
ourselves
over
40
percent
of
our
greenhouse
gas
emissions
and
Cupertino
come
from
five
basehold
active
household
activities,
electricity
use,
heating,
our
homes,
Transportation
our
food
choices
and
the
waste
that
we
create
the
neighborhood
block
green
blocks
program
can
help.
You
take
a
look
at
these
actions
and
prepare
for
emergencies
together
and
doing
this
you
can
Empower
your
block
to
be
a
safer,
Greener,
healthier
and
healthier
and
better
place
to
live.
AB
AB
AB
We
recommend
between
every
two
to
four
weeks
and
you
go
through
this
curriculum
and
these
resources
that
will
give
you
all
in
a
packet
and
help
you
talk
through
it
with
these
Powerpoints
and
talking
points,
and
so
you
can
actually
be
the
leader
in
your
community
with
the
information
we're
giving
you
and
it
really
Fosters
a
sense
of
community
and
you
get
to
know
your
neighbors
and
work
with
them
to
help
install
their
solar
panels
or
answer
their
questions
about
electric
vehicle
Chargers.
AB
So
it's
a
really
great
program
and
it
really
does
have
options
for
everyone,
everything
from
Smart
thermostats
to
understanding
where
your
bus
stations
are-
and
you
know,
rebates
that
you've
gotten
for
your
electric
vehicle
and
it's
just
a
great
way
to
to
team
up
with
your
fellow
Neighbors
and
I
know.
This
slide
has
been
in
a
previous
presentation,
so
I
won't
spend
too
much
time
on
it.
But
one
thing
that
you
can
do
tonight
if
you're
not
already
there
is
to
text
the
zip,
your
zip
code
and
sign
up
for
these
alerts.
AB
AA
It's
me
again
this
time.
Next
topic
is
citizen
core
Network
to
talk
about
it.
Can
you
hear
if
we
have
Ken
Erickson
to
talk
about
it?
Ken
has
been
the
citizen
core
coordinator
for
over
15
years
and
is
a
resident
of
Cupertino.
AA
AC
Thank
you
and
it's
great
to
see
so
many
block
leaders
here,
like
it
was
mentioned
before
you're,
the
the.
AC
The
part
that
builds
the
community-
and
so
we
want
to
do-
is
continue
with
that
with
this
next
section
here
is
how
the
residents
respond.
This
is
something
that
we
all
particularly
you
know,
may
have
an
opportunity
to
address,
but
what
is
it
that
we
want
to
be
able
to
do?
As
as
you
are,
the
responder
I
think
if
we
look
at
something
that
happens,
and
this
is
kind
of
the
the
definition
of
an
emergency?
Has
anybody
had
one
of
these
maybe
had
one
or
two?
AC
You
know
that
type
of
thing,
and
normally
those
are
the
things
that
that
cause
us
to
action
to
act
and
when
we
want
to
do
that,
we
want
to
be
able
to
do
it
safely.
And
what
do
we
do?
How
do
we
do?
It
are
the
things
that
we
want
to
to
look
at,
but
here
in
our
area,
what
are
the
different
types
of
things
that
we
have
to
consider
for
an
emergency?
AC
AC
You
know
as
an
action,
and
the
big
thing
for
us
is
your
safety
is
number
one
there's
a
number
of
different
events
and
activities
that
happen
if
and
the
people
that
respond
sometimes
cause
more
injuries,
cause
more
issues,
I
think
if
you
talk
to
some
of
our
responders
and
that
you
talk
to
the
volunteer
responses,
and
we
want
to
be
able
to
do
that
safely,
okay,
and
to
be
able
to
work
with
our
our
partners,
but
to
be
able
to
assess
the
situation.
What
is
going
on?
AC
What
is
it
that's
causing
that,
and
is
that
something
that
could
affect
me
or
my
family
or
the
situation
that
I'm
in
and
then
what?
How
and
what
additional
resources
can
I
get
and
what
are
available
and
how
do
I
get
them
or
request
those,
and
so
we've
got
some
of
these
things.
These
have
happened
in
our
area.
There's
even
you
know,
just
a
little
picture
of
a
traffic
accident.
AC
AC
What
is
it
that
I
do?
What
can
I
do?
It
says
now
what
if
it's
a
pan
fire
if
it's
a
finger,
if
it's
a
car
accident,
if
it's
an
earthquake,
any
of
those
different
types
of
things,
there's
certain
steps
and
basic
training
things
that
you
can
use
that
apply
to
all
of
these
types
of
emergencies,
and
we
want
to
be
able
to
give
you
those
tools
so
that
you're
able
to
be
able
to
do
this
safely
and
a
lot
of
times
normally
day
to
day.
If
you
call
9-1-1
our
response.
AC
Time
is
a
few
minutes.
You
know
we're
getting
there
from
the
fire
department,
the
the
sheriff
or
EMS
is
those
people.
Are
there
pretty
quickly
and
you're
on
the
phone
with
them
and
they
can
walk
you
through
those
types
of
things
and
what
you
should
be
doing.
You
know
if
it's
a
medical
event,
they'll
tell
you
what
you
should
be
doing,
based
on
what
you
tell
them.
Okay
and
you
can
get
you
know,
they'll
tell
you
how
to
do.
Cpr
they'll
tell
you
how
to
stop
bleeding
they'll.
AC
Tell
you
how
to
put
the
person
into
a
different
position.
You
know
these
different
types
of
things
and
they're
trained
to
do
that,
and
the
thing
that
we
want
to
do
is
also
think
about
that
works
on
the
day-to-day.
But
if
something
happens
and
our
responders
are
delayed,
okay,
you're
on
the
phone,
but
now,
instead
of
a
few
minutes,
it
might
be
10
minutes,
it
might
be
15
minutes
or
if
we
have
an
earthquake
and
it's
an
original
thing,
it
might
be
ours,
okay,
so
those
are
the
types
of
things
that
you
need
to
know.
AC
How
do
you
take
care
of
yourself
and
what
resources
can
you
do?
But
what
we
want
to
share
with
you
is:
did
I
double
click,
but
basically
your
safety
is
number
one,
and
you
know
how
do
you
assess
it?
What
and
how
do
you
request
the
assistance
on
a
day-to-day?
It's
a
9-1-1
call
if
Communications
are
down
what
is
the
system
in
place
within
the
city
so
that
you
can
request
additional
resources?
We
have
a
system
out
the
city
so
that
you
can
report
your
situation.
AC
You
know
if
the
communication
system's
down,
we
have
a
system
to
work
with
that
and
get
your
9-1-1
call
to
the
Dispatch
Center
and
let
the
city
know
what's
going
on.
Okay,
but
all
of
the
training
that
we
have
and
things
that
we
do
to
make
sure
that
you're,
safe
and
your
family,
safe
and
your
neighborhood
is
safe,
are
all
free
trainings
that
we
offer
so
that
we
can
help
you
through
that.
AC
9-1-1
call
and
you'll
know
what
to
do
to
the
time
where
its
extended
response
from
an
earthquake
or
something
major
that
might
happen
or
might
be
impact
or
just
your
local
area.
It
might
be
a
delayed
response.
So
those
are
the
types
of
trainings
that
we
offer
for
for
you
and
to
communic
to
work
together
and
all
have
the
same
kind
of
training
and
same
kind
of
response.
The
city
knows
that
it's
all
an
organized
type
of
response,
our
responders
know
that
the
city
is
working
in
together
under
the
cities.
AC
Oop
I
must
have
double
clicked,
but
then
it's
a
coordinated
response
throughout
the
city
and
they
know
what's
going
on
and
how
we're
going
to
operate.
And
then
the
other
thing
is
that
it's
all
things
that
the
city
knows
that
that's
what
we're
going
to
do
so
we're
not
out
there
doing
things
and
the
city
hears
about
it
and
they're
going
you're
doing
what
you
know,
because
it
could
be
very
dangerous.
It
could
make
the
situation
worse
or
whatever
this
you
know
is
going
on.
AC
So
we
want
to
be
able
to
work
within
the
framework
of
what
the
city
wants
us
to
do,
and
the
kind
of
information
and
things
that
the
city
needs
from
us
as
residents
to
be
able
to
respond.
So
we
do
offer
this
training
it's
all
through
the
citizen,
Core
group.
We
do
these
things.
We've
had
excellent
resources
and
different
people
that
are
here,
sharing
the
information
that's
going
on
and
we
all
work
together
and
share
and
have
the
same
information
the
same
message.
So
those
are
the
things
that
really
help
our
partners.
AC
They
know
when
we
show
up-
or
they
show
up
and
they're
at
the
emergency,
that
we're
doing
the
similar
types
of
things,
we're
taking
care
of
medical
things,
we're
taking
care
of
the
the
situation
so
we're
not
making
it
worse
or
making
it
dangerous
for
ourselves
or
the
responders
that
are
coming.
So
those
are
the
things
that
we
offer
through
our
citizen,
Corps
and
there's
three
groups:
that's
a
cert
Neighborhood
emergency
response
that
happens
and
that's
all
the
organization
and
bringing
the
different
pieces
together.
AC
The
Medical
Response,
which
is
since
we
don't
have
a
hospital
in
this
area.
It's
one
of
the
things
that
we
need
to
be
able
to
address
over
a
little
bit
longer
period
of
time,
sometimes
until
we
can
get
people
to
a
hospital
and
then
the
amateur
radio,
that's
the
backbone
communication
that
we
have
and
it's
used
throughout
the
country
and
around
the
world.
So
the
systems
work,
don't
work
on
Communications,
we're
going
to
use
amateur
radio
and
that's
what's
here
and
it's
all
residence-based,
it's
your
neighbor!
AC
It's
a
person
across
the
street,
you
as
the
block
leader.
You
bring
these
things
together
and
it's
a
a
different
conversation
that
we
can
all
have
have
that
affects
us
all,
and
it
may
not
be
talking
about
garbage
cans
being
left
out
too
long,
but
it's
something
that
we
can
all
identify
with.
That
is
kind
of
a
neutral
thing
that
affects
us
all.
AC
Okay,
so
those
are
some
of
the
things
that
we
have
and
we
have
a
table
out
here
if
there's
any
other
questions
or
things
but
we'd
love
to
be
able
to
engage
with
you
and
it's
everybody
within
the
city
has
the
same
type
of
you
know
here:
okay,
any
questions
good!
AC
AE
Good
evening
everybody,
my
name
is
Louis
Tomah
I'm,
with
the
Santa
Clara
County's
office
of
emergency
management
and
also
a
county
fires
OEM
as
well
just
want
to
let
you
know
that
we
got
a
table
back
here
as
well
to
let
people
know
about
the
alert,
SCC
program
and
other
programs
for
Community
response,
engagement,
preparedness
and
we'll
be
happy
to
discuss
or
engage
any
member
of
the
community
that
would
would
like
to
to
join.
AE
We
definitely
want
to
say
a
big
thank
you
to
city
cupertino's
office
of
emergency
management
for
having
us
here,
it's
great
working
with
a
an
oem,
that's
so
proactive
and
so
robust,
and
thank
you
to
all
the
other
partners
here,
of
course,
County
Fire,
the
sheriff's
department,
American
Red,
Cross,
Cadre
and
all
the
other
Public
Safety
organizations
here.
So
thank
you
so
much
and
County
OEM
does
have
a
table
if
anybody
hasn't
already
engaged
would
like
to
do
so.
Thank
you,
foreign.
AF
Gerhart
I'm
here
with
the
gis
division
of
the
city
of
Cupertino,
Andy
and
I
and
ibadal,
and
we
have
a
table
in
the
front.
We
are
showcasing
two
apps
today.
One
is
our
service
finder,
which
is
kind
of
a
One-Stop
GIS
mapping,
Hub,
where
you
can
find
all
the
services
that
Cupertino
provides
everything
from
meetings
to
Parks
and
Rec
to
you
know:
crime
data
Hazard
data,
it's
really
the
whole
gamut
of
city
services.
So
please
check
it
out.
You
can
get
to
it
from
our
home
page
from
the
city's
homepage.
AF
AG
What's
great
about
our
311
app
is
it
gives
you
guys
a
direct
voice,
a
direct
link
to
City
staff?
It
is
tied
into
our
asset
management
software,
so
Public
Works
staff
can
react
and
respond
to
these
requests
as
quickly
as
possible.
The
great
thing
about
it
is
you're
going
to
stay
in
the
loop
throughout
the
entire
process
of
the
requests
that
you
submit.
So
we
are
out
here,
we'd
love,
to
give
you
guys
more
information
about
it.
We
have
QR
code.
AG
So
if
you
don't
already
have
the
app,
you
can
go
ahead
and
download
it,
and
we
just
want
to
get
the
you
know
get
these
apps
that
we
have
out
there
to
you
guys.
So
you
guys
understand-
and
you
guys
can
share
with
other
residents
and
let
them
know
some
of
the
awesome
stuff
that
the
city
Cupertino
is
providing
foreign.
AH
12
000
volt
diorama
back
here
and
show
you
how
the
live
electricity
works
on
your
house
and
it
comes
in
contact
with
the
car
if
it's
on
the
ground,
what
to
do
maybe
a
few
household
hip
chips
for
dealing
with
electricity
inside
the
house.
So
please
feel
free
to
come
back
and
give
you
a
live
demonstration
on
how
this
works.
AI
Good
evening
everybody,
my
name
is
Amy
Fonseca
I
am
with
Valley
Water.
We
are
the
flood
protection
stream,
stewardship
and
water
provider
for
Santa
Clara
County
great
to
be
here.
As
you
know,
we
are
in
a
drought
emergency.
So
not
only
are
we
asking
people
to
say
yes
to
saving
water,
but
also
to
get
flood
ready?
It's
actually
California
flood
preparedness
week
this
week,
which
is
a
Statewide
initiative
from
the
Department
of
Water
Resources
to
get
residents,
flood
ready
and
prepared.
So
today,
I
have
an
example
of
a
three-day
emergency
kit.
AI
What
you'd
want
to
have
it's
great
for
floods,
but
also
earthquakes,
I,
have
information
on
putting
together
a
family
emergency
plan
and
I
also
have
a
nice
giveaway.
It's
an
emergency
starter
pack
so
come
by
and
see
me
I'm
also
happy
to
provide
any
information
on
the
drought.
You
can
also
visit
our
website
valleywater.org.
If
you
have
any
questions.
Thank
you.
AJ
Good
evening,
everyone
I'm
here
to
introduce
Captain
Neil
Valenzuela,
who
will
be
speaking
to
us
on
crime
and
safety.
Captain
Valenzuela
began
his
career
with
the
Santa
Clara
County
Sheriff's
Office
in
2001,
and
has
over
20
years
of
law
enforcement
and
managerial
experience
throughout
his
career.
Neil
Valenzuela
has
worked
various
assignments,
including
Patrol,
where
he
worked
for
the
cities
of
Cupertino
Saratoga
and
Los
Altos
Hills.
He
later
worked
as
a
headquarters,
detective
investigating
missing
persons,
cases
and
child
abuse
crimes.
AJ
He
later
returned
to
the
West
Valley
division,
where
he
investigated
high-tech
crimes,
identity,
theft,
burglary
and
fraud
upon
his
promotion
to
Sergeant
Neil
Valenzuela
transferred
to
the
investigator
position
for
the
county
council's
office
investigating
incidents
of
high
liability
throughout
the
county
of
Santa
Clara
upon
his
promotion
to
Lieutenant.
He
was
the
assistant
division
Commander
for
West
Valley
Patrol
Neil
Valenzuela
was
then
transferred
to
lead
the
internal
affairs
unit
from
2015
to
2019.
AJ
in
2019
he
returned
as
the
assistant
division
Commander
for
the
West
Valley
division.
Alongside
of
Captain
Rich
Irina
in
2022,
he
was
promoted
to
Captain
and
was
assigned
as
the
sheriff's
liaison
for
Stanford
University
Department
of
Public
Safety
Captain
Valenzuela
Valenzuela
is
a
U.S
army.
Veteran
with
an
honorable
discharge,
holds
a
Bachelor
of
Science
degree
in
social
and
criminal
justice
in
associate
of
Arts
in
administration
of
justice
and
is
a
graduate
of
the
city
of
cupertino's
leadership
95014
program.
AJ
His
certifications
include
certificates
for
California,
post
Advanced,
California,
post
management
and
California
post
intermediate
Academy
instructor
Captain
Valenzuela
has
received
numerous
accommodations
throughout
his
career,
including
cupertino's
Chamber
of
Commerce
officer
of
the
year
De
Anza
Optimist,
Club
officer
of
the
year
city
of
Cupertino,
certificate
of
appreciation
and
a
Santa
Clara
County
Board
of
Supervisors
certificate
of
accommodation.
Please
welcome
Captain
Neil
Valenzuela.
AJ
AK
Good
evening,
everyone,
my
name,
is
Neil
Valenzuela,
as
you
guys
just
heard.
My
introduction
I
will
be
replacing
Captain
Rich
Serena
in
December,
as
your
police
chief
for
the
city
of
Cupertino
and
I'm
I'm,
eager
to
come
back.
I've
been
at
Stanford
for
the
last
year,
so
I
wanted
to
come
back
and
work
for
the
city
of
Cupertino.
AK
Hopefully,
we'll
have
some
time
for
some
q
a
at
the
end.
So
what
I
have
up
here
is
a
graph
or
chart
basically
of
the
crimes
that
we
have
in
the
city
of
Cupertino.
What
we
did
is
we
took
the
same
time
frame
from
January
to
September
just
compared
from
the
year
before,
to
what
we
have
now,
as
you
guys
can
see
in
robberies.
AK
We've
had
a
couple
more
than
we've
already
had
the
previous
year,
and
what
I
mean
by
robbery
is
the
crime
of
robbery
is
defined,
is
when
somebody
takes
something
by
force
or
fear.
Okay,
so
a
simple
theft
where
nobody
was
harmed,
or
nobody
even
knew
about
it.
That's
that
wouldn't
classify
as
a
robbery
and
I'll
go
a
little
bit
more
into
detail
when
we
get
to
the
robbery
section
of
the
presentation,
residential
burglaries,
as
you
can
see,
we've
had
five
more
this
year
than
the
previous
year
residential
burglary.
AK
What
that
essentially
means
is
when
somebody
breaks
into
your
house
and
and
takes
property
right
below
that
we
have
commercial
burglary,
commercial
burglary
is
like
businesses
that
are
burgled
overnight
or
when
they're
closed,
and
then
you
have
underneath
that
vehicle,
burglary
and
vehicle
burglary
is
when
somebody
breaks
into
your
car
and
takes
something
from
your
from
your
car.
As
you
can
see,
we've
had
a
significant
increase
on
that
in
vehicle
Brokers.
AK
Over
this
last
year,
Grand
Theft
is
defined
by
the
penal
code
as
as
anything
over
900,
and
so
anything
with
with
that
value
is
classified
as
a
grand
theft.
Anything
below
that
is
considered
a
petty
theft,
as
you
can
see,
we've
had
a
33
increase
from
last
year
to
this
year,
auto
theft
we've
had
one
more
auto
theft
from
in
this
year
than
we
did
the
previous
year
and
we've
also
crime
has
increased
in
vandalism
section
as
well
too,
when
it
comes
to
identity
theft.
This
is
this.
AK
Is
the
crime
where
somebody
takes
your
identity,
mostly
it's
a
financial
crime
they'll
either
access
credit
cards
or
bank
account
information
and
they'll.
Pretend
that
there's
somebody
they're
not
committing
a
theft
in
that
in
that
manner,
as
you
can
see,
we've
had
one
more
case
this
year
than
the
previous
year
domestic
violence.
We
had
45
from
January
September
2021
to
34
this
year.
There
is
a
significant
drop.
However,
you
know
these
are
things
that
are
sometimes
not
reported
as
often
so
we
need.
AK
We
need
to
be
better
about
reporting
these
to
us
so
that
we
can
investigate
and
prosecute
these
crimes.
We
have
underneath
that
as
assaults.
AK
This
is
simple
assaults
where
somebody
was
harmed
or
hit
or
hurt,
and
you
can
see
that
there
was
a
35
increase
from
the
previous
year
to
this
year
and
then,
lastly,
we
have
sex
crimes
which
are
there's
a
variety
of
of
crimes
that
fall
under
that,
and
if
anybody
has
any
questions
about
those
we'll
be
more
than
happy
to
talk
to
you
about
it
or
answer
any
questions
about
those,
and
we
see
there's
a
six
percent
increase
from
those
from
previous
years.
AK
This
chart
here
has
a
a
10-year
graph
of
robberies
in
the
city,
we're
going
back
to
2013
till
present
and
we're
only
using
the
data
that
comes
in
from
January
September
to
kind
of
compare
ourselves
to
the
previous
years.
As
you
can
see,
we've
gone
up
and
down
with
our
robberies.
Over
the
last
couple
of
years,
there
was
a
significant
decrease
of
an
all
crime
for
the
most
part
during
2019
and
2020,
because
we
were
mostly
home
during
the
pandemic,
and
so
there
was
a
big
decrease
in
in
that
specific
crime.
AK
AK
When
I
talked
about
robberies
and
when
somebody
takes
something
from
you
by
force
or
fear,
sometimes
there
could
be
a
weapon
involved,
and
this
chart
kind
of
breaks
it
down
a
little
bit
for
you
guys
to
see
that
that,
in
12
of
the
of
the
18
cases
there
was
no
weapon
involved,
there's
just
force
or
fear,
which
means
that
they
either
forcefully
took
something
from
somebody
no
weapon
involved
and
on
the
other
one
there's
a
six
cases
where
there
was
a
weapon
involved
in
the
robberies,
location
type.
AK
We
have
it
here
as
residential
and
Commercial
what
this
breaks
it
down
for
is
like
does
this
occur
around
the
residential
area
or
did
this
occur
in
a
commercial
area
like
a
shopping
area
like
Main,
Street,
Cupertino,
or
something
like
that?
Okay,
and
you
can
see
that
72
percent
of
them
occurred
more
in
the
commercial
setting.
AK
We're
talking
about
types
of
robberies
because
there's
several
types
of
robberies.
Obviously
you
guys
probably
heard
of
bank
robbery
and
that's
probably
the
one
that
first
comes
to
mind
and,
as
you
can
see,
we've
we've
done
pretty
well
on
this
in
that
region
to
keep
it
down
to
zero
when
it
comes
to
demand
or
fear,
we've
had
five
of
them
force
or
snatch
or
grab.
We've
had
13
of
those,
essentially
people
with
shopping
bags
or
purses
and
more
of
a
force
grab
or
a
forced
snatch
from
somebody.
Okay,.
AK
Well,
I
forgot
to
add
in
there
that,
as
of
October,
we've
solved
39
of
those
robberies,
our
detectives
work
really
well.
We
have
a
lot
of
surveillance,
that's
put
up
around
the
city,
and
so
the
the
check
surveillance
to
check
leads
and
and
make
sure
that
we
arrest
the
the
suspects
in
these
crimes.
AK
Talk
about
residential
burglaries
here
for
a
little
bit.
What
this
chart
does
it
kind
of
breaks
down
a
little
bit
about
what?
What
day
of
the
week
these
these
burgers
are
occurring
in
29
of
the
reported
burglaries
we
didn't
know
exactly
when
it
occurred.
It's
usually
when
somebody's
on
vacation
for
a
couple
weeks
or
over
the
weekend
and
their
house
was
unattended
for
several
days.
AK
You
can
see
that
out
of
all
the
days
during
the
week,
we
have
the
most
during
a
Tuesday
and
then
the
other
graph
down
here
below
kind
of
gives
you
a
a
screenshot
of
where
we're
at
and
with
burglaries,
as
you
can
see
from-
and
this
is
the
same
time
of
data
from
January
to
September
from
2013
to
present,
we
had
a
big,
significant
increase
back
in
2015
overall
we're
doing
okay,
but
we
can
always
do
better.
AK
One
of
the
things
I
want
to
talk
about
in
our
community
policing
is
how
we
try
to
curve
this
by
providing
some
resources
to
the
to
the
communities
and
the
residents
by
by
how
to
protect
themselves
and
not
be
victimized
from
burglary.
Okay,.
AK
This
chart
here
breaks
down
a
little
bit
more
granule
information
regarding
burglaries.
We
have
a
a
very
good
criminal
Analyst
at
our
substation.
She
takes
these
reports,
she
puts
this
data
in
and
she
is
able
to
put
this
information
out,
because
people
always
ask
us
when
does
when
are
these
occurring?
Are
these
occurring
at
night
time?
Are
they
occurring
during
the
daytime
during
the
weekend,
and
so
she
does
a
really
good
job
of
kind
of
breaking
down
each
crime
and
putting
it
down.
AK
So
you
guys
have
that
information
when
burglars
are
occurring
in
your
city,
as
you
can
see,
61
of
it
is
multiple
days
or
the
day
unknown.
These
are
again
when
people
are
away
for
several
weeks
or
maybe
a
weekend
early
morning,
you
can
see
that
we
have
some
from
12
a.m,
to
7
A.M.
We
have
about
five
percent
during
the
daytime,
7
A.M
to
5
p.m.
We
have
about
14
percent
and
in
the
evening
hours
we're
anywhere
from
5
p.m.
Till
midnight
about
20
percent
of
those
burgers
are
occurring
during
that
time.
AK
On
the
other
hand,
over
here
we
have
how
did
the?
How
did
the
people
break
into
the
house
and
that's
a
common
question
that
we
get
all
the
time
as
you
can
see
by
this
chart
here?
The
majority
is:
is
a
broken
glass
slider,
which
is
a
very
common
way
for
suspects
to
break
into
houses,
the
back
door,
broken
slider,
eyeglass
door.
You
can
see
that
there's
also
where
they
either
broke
or
cut
a
lock,
which
is
about
28
with
a
Forester.
AK
Kick
their
pride
opened
a
window
open
a
garage
door
or
a
window
break.
How
many
here
have
a
actual
alarm
system
installed
in
your
residence
and
show
hands?
Okay
and
a
moment
of
honesty,
though,
how
many
actually
turn
it
on
every
single
time
they
leave?
You
see
how
the
number
went
down
a
little
bit
utilize
that
alarm
system,
even
if
you're
just
going
to
go
out
for
a
few
minutes
or
you're
going
to
go,
get
dinner,
turn
it
on
and
and
if
it's
a
false
alarm.
AK
AK
If
you
ever
want
a
deputy
to
come
out
to
your
residence
and
give
you
some
recommendations
on
how
to
better
protect
your
home,
you
can
always
call
us
and
schedule
an
appointment
with
one
of
our
deputies
to
come
out
and
give
you
a
risk
assessment
of
your
residence
where
you
could
stall
camera.
If
you
wanted
to
an
alarm
lights
or
other
things
around
your
house
to
protect
yourself.
Okay,
this
map
over
here
is
where
we
had
our
residential
burglaries
over
the
last
couple
of
months.
AK
As
you
can
see,
they're
kind
of
sporadic
all
throughout
the
the
city
primarily
occurring
more
on
our
Central
Area
here
below
Stevens
Creek,
all
the
way
through
Lawrence
Expressway
and
coming
back
all
the
way
to
to
Foothill
for
the
majority
of
part
of
our
of
our
burglaries.
AK
All
right,
the
next
thing
we
talk
about
is
the
catalytic
converter
theft,
which
seems
to
be
something
that's
occurring.
A
lot
in
our
town
and
and
Crooks
are
doing
this
because
they
can
get
away
really
fast
and
they
can
sell
them
for
very
cheap,
usually
from
anywhere
from
150
to
200.
Each
and
the
people
that
buy
them
are
breaking
down
the
the
materials
inside
the
catalytic
converter,
such
as
Platinum,
which
they
can
get
from
one
of
those
catalog
converters.
AK
How
many
here
drive
a
hybrid
hybrid
vehicles,
are
the
the
most
targeted
vehicles
for
catalytic
converter,
thefts
and
that's
because
the
catalytic
converter
is
usually
cleaner
than
most
other
vehicles,
and
so
the
materials
inside
of
it
are
better
to
get.
How
many
here
drive
a
Tesla?
You
don't
have
a
catalytic
converter,
so
don't
worry
about
it.
AK
As
you
can
see
here
in
this
graph
I'm
going
to
show
you
what
how
they've
increased
over
the
last
couple
years,
starting
in
2018,
it
wasn't
really
a
crime
that
we
were
dealing
with
in
2019,
we
had
two
in
2020
we
had
41,
as
you
can
see
that
just
increase
and
increase
in
increase
our
deputies
have
caught
multiple,
multiple
people,
stealing
calorie
converters,
they're,
very,
very
quick
seconds
they're
in
and
out
and
they'll
take
out
the
catalytic
converter.
AK
We've
stopped
multiple
cars
and
arrested
people
with
like
five
or
six
catalytic
converters
in
the
back
of
their
cars
and
and
we
take
them
to
jail.
But
this
is
a
very
a
problem:
crime
right
now.
The
DA's
office
is
not
as
putting
in
charge
for
the
to
most
recycle
centers,
not
to
accept
catalytic
converters.
So
whoever
is
whenever
they're
stealing
them.
They
have
to
turn
them
to
some
other
place.
That's
breaking
them
down,
refining
them
for
their
for
their
natural
materials.
AK
So,
as
you
can
see
down
in
the
bottom
of
the
vehicle,
make
and
model
that's
most
targeted,
Toyota
Prius
is
at
46
percent.
The
Honda
Accord
is
a
37
and
then
other
vehicles
are
17
percent.
AK
AK
As
you
can
see,
there
was
a
significant
increase
during
the
pandemic,
because
people
were
not
checking
their
cars
and
leaving
them
out
there
for
very
long
periods
of
time,
and
so
that's
how
the
crooks
were
trying
to
get
things
to
steal
was
to
just
break
into
cars
that
were
left
out
there
in
front
of
people's
houses
so
we're
doing
better
than
we
were
during
the
pandemic
right
now.
But
again
we
can
always
do
better.
AK
AK
I
want
to
do
talk
about
a
community
policing,
real,
quick
and
just
the
things
that
we've
done.
We
do
have
a
program
called
lattes,
which
is
a
program
where
we'll
have
our
Squadron
briefing
at
a
coffee
shop,
and
you
guys
are
welcome
to
attend.
You
guys
can
hear
what
the
deputies
are
hearing
before
they
go
out
on
shift
and
you
guys
can
interact
with
our
staff
and
ask
questions
if
you
guys
want.
We
also
have
a
teen
Academy,
which
we
run.
AK
All
right,
our
West
Valley
substation
is
located
1601
South,
De
Anza.
There's
our
non-emergency
line.
Please
write
that
number
down.
If
you
dial
9-1-1
from
your
cell
phone
and
you're
on
the
freeway
you're
going
to
get
California
Highway
Patrol,
it's
going
to
go
straight
to
them.
So
if
you
want
to
talk
to
us-
and
you
want
the
Sheriff's
Office
to
come
out,
299
2311,
you
can
always
call
9-1-1.
AK
You
can
also
text
9-1-1
if
you
can't
call
on
9-1-1
and
then
our
administrative
offices
are
86,
868-6600
and
there's
our
address.
If
you
guys
ever
want
to
come
down
and
talk
to
us
and
interact
with
some
of
our
staff
there,
that's
all
I
have
for
you
guys.
Thank
you
very
much
for
your
time.
Do
we
have
time
for
questions?
Okay,.
AK
AK
E
Often
times
we'll
have
teen
Academy,
we
also
have
a
Community
Academy
Community
Academy
can
be
for
adults.
Teen
Academy
is
usually
those
that
are
in
high
school
about
to
enter
high
school
or
freshly
graduated
from
high
school,
usually
18,
19
and
below.
F
Hi
Andy
again,
could
you
comment
on
the
high-tech
crime
like
hacking
and
stealing
people's
identity?
Things
like
that.
AK
Yeah
I
could
go
on
for
hours
I.
That
was
actually
one
of
my
primary
Specialties
when
I
was
a
detective,
was
working
high-tech
crimes
and
they're
very
sophisticated
again,
it's
be
careful
with
these
emails.
These
text
messages
that
say
your
package
wasn't
delivered
and
you
and
they
asked
you
to
log
into
your
Amazon
account
or
they
say
you've
been
logged
out
of
your
bank
account.
Please
provide
your
PIN
or
your.
Your
card
number
be
careful
with
things
like
that
companies
don't
do
that.
AK
They
won't
solicit
information
from
you,
you
have
you
have
to
contact
them
and
then
they'll
ask
you
questions
about
your
bank
account
information,
so
just
be
careful
anything
suspicious,
don't
click
on
it!
Any
phone
calls
you
get
from
people
pretending
at
the
Sheriff's
Office
asking
for
money.
We
don't
do
that.
Okay,
that
happens
every
now
and
then,
especially
around
Christmas
time.
We
start
getting
phone
calls
that
you
may
have
a
warrant,
so
they
need
money
to
clear
it
up.
That's
not
the
way
the
system
works.
So
question.
Yes,
yeah.
AD
Hyman
here,
what
time
of
the
day
or
the
evening
do
vehicle
burglars
occur?
The.
AK
Vehicle
burglaries,
they're
occurring
mostly
correct
me
from
wrong,
but
when
I
was
here,
they
were
mostly
overnight,
especially
in
the
residential
areas.
They
will.
These
guys
will
just
drive
in
and
they'll
hit
a
bunch
of
cars
that
are
parked
there,
and
so
that's
why
it's
very
important
that
when
we
work
together
with
our
with
our
communities-
and
they
say,
if
you
see
somebody
suspicious
walking
around
looking
at
cars,
we
often
see
posts
on
next
door
where
they
say
this
person
was
checking
door
handles.
AK
AL
I
wanted
to
ask
a
question
that
I
know
is
maybe
not
quite
so
much
a
sheriff's
issue,
but
the
first
reaction
of
my
neighbors
is:
what
is
the
sheriff
doing
about
it?
There's
the
woman
who's
homeless
on
North
portal
and
Stevens
Creek
she's
been
there
for
a
few
weeks.
Now.
What
can
we
do
as
a
community?
You
know
about
this,
so.
AK
We
are
doing
something
about
it
and-
and
it's
not
necessarily
us,
but
the
city
along
with
the
county,
is
trying
to
provide
some
resources
for
her.
I
can't
go
too
much
into
into
detail
about
what
they're
doing
we
do
have
a
psychiatric
emergency
response
team
assigned
to
the
substation
in
Cupertino
I've
heard
some.
Some
people
say
that
sometimes
she
walks
around
the
traffic
or
she's
disoriented.
That's
the
time
to
call
us,
because
we
can
have
somebody
go
out.
There
immediately
assess
her
her
mental
health.
AK
AM
AM
Is
the
percentage
of
those
actually
arrested
and
you
know,
prosecuted
for
these.
AK
We
I
don't
have
those
numbers
in
front
of
me,
but
if
you
do
get
the
information
letters
from
Cupertino,
we
sometimes
publicize
when
we
do
make
a
a
large
arrest
on
on
a
burglar
or
somebody
that
that's
been
committing
residential
Burgers,
we'll
put
that
out
information
out
social
media
or
to
the
city
of
Cupertino.
Okay,.
AN
In
terms
of
high-tech
crimes,
is
there
a
way
that
you
can
have
some
information
on
your
website
about
how
to
have
device
security,
and
you
know
laptops
and
stuff,
like
that
or
many
other
kids
really
do
not
understand
it.
Of
course,
the
fishing
part
of
it
I
understand
I
mean
facing
is
a
completely
a
different.
This
thing,
but
just
minimal
kind
of
device,
security,
Yeah.
AK
We
actually
have
some
pamphlets
over
here
at
the
table
where
we
discuss
ways
to
prevent
your
yourself
from
becoming
a
victim
of
identity
theft.
There's
multiple
ways
of
victim
or
suspects
get
victim
information
simply
by
putting
a
skimmer,
sometimes
on
on.
You
know,
on
card
readers
that
could
be
a
way
that
they
get
the
information.
So
there
are
some
pamphlets,
some
information
over
there,
where
it
gives
you
tips
and
ways
to
prevent
yourself
from
being
a
victim
of
identity
theft.
Yes,.
F
Captain
first,
my
apologies
I
think
on
behalf
of
the
community
I'd
like
to
congratulate
your
promotion.
F
Thank
you
very
much
appreciate
it.
Welcome
back
to
Cupertino
and
follow
up
to
this
gentleman's
question
in
terms
of
high-tech
crime,
because
we
are
in
Silicon
Valley
and
we're
really
nervous
about
our
kids,
particularly
if
possible,
I'd
like
to
request
the
Sheriff's
Office.
Could
you
maybe
create
a
new
seminar
for
us
in
terms
of
not
only
prevention
but
also
like
if
my
kid's
phone
got
hacked
the
computer
got
hacked?
Can
you
help
us
some
recommendation
in
terms
of
cleaning
it
up
absolutely.
AK
Hacking
yeah
yeah,
we
could
we
could,
we
can
touch
base
offline
and
I
can
we
can
always
come
up
with
something
and
we
can
create
some
kind
of
a
presentation.
We
have
a
lot
of
high-tech
crime
detectives
assigned
to
our
age,
our
organization,
so
they
do
presentations
every
now
and
then
and
they
go
out
and
talk
to
the
community.
Do
you
have
something
to
add
to
that?
Okay,.
E
I
do
over
in
West
Valley
we
have
a
fantastic
group
of
sros
school
resource
officers
and
they
go
out
each
and
every
year
and
they
provide
presentation
about
presentation
not
only
to
schools
but
a
lot
of
times
to
the
parents
and
some
of
the
administrators
and
one
of
the
presentations
that
they
provide
on
an
annual
basis
to
just
about
every
student
and
a
lot
of
times
to
parents
is
on
high-tech
crimes
how
to
protect
yourself
on
social
media
internet
stuff.
E
T
G
AK
As
far
as
I
know,
it
stops
some
of
the
time
because
they're
they
want
to
be
there
a
few
seconds
so
yeah
I
think
the
future
is
probably
going
to
be
where
Auto
auto
mobile
manufacturers
are
probably
just
going
to
be
installing
those
from
here
on
out,
but
it's
a
good
way
to
prevent
it.
They
don't
want
to
be
in
and
out
in
seconds,
so
they
don't
want
to
waste
their
time
with
a
cover.
P
Hi
commercial
burglaries
increased
by
42
percent,
which
is
the
highest.
Can
you
comment
on
what
they
are
so.
AD
E
So
there
are
a
couple
different
ways:
a
commercial
burglary
can
occur.
It
can
be,
the
business
is
closed
for
the
night
and
somebody
can
break
in
maybe
looking
for
tip
jars
or
cash
registers,
but
they
can
also
occur
during
the
day.
It's
kind
of
a
technicality
on
how
a
burglary
occurs
versus
a
theft,
but
somebody
entering
in
with
some
kind
of
intent
is
still
something
could
also
be
classified
as
a
burglary.
Why
that
skews?
E
A
little
bit
is
because
a
petty
theft,
somebody
going
into
shoplifting
could
end
up
being
classified
as
a
burglary
because
they
brought
some
kind
of
tool
in
to
take
an
item
from
the
store
crime.
Trends
are
going
to
go
up
and
down,
and
maybe
one
year
it'll
be
vehicle.
Burgers,
maybe
one
year,
it'll
be
commercial
burglaries,
but
a
lot
of
it
has
to
do
with
kind
of
the
groups
that
are
centered
around
a
specific
area,
whether
it
be
within
Town
within
the
county
and
right
now.
What
we're
finding
is.
E
There
are
a
lot
of
people
going
around
breaking
Windows
of
burglaries
commercial
businesses,
maybe
making
entry
into
the
business,
maybe
stealing
a
tip
jar
with
13
worth
of
change
in
it
that
we
left
in
there
for
the
the
person
that
helped
us
get
our
food,
but
a
lot
of
times.
That's
it
and
they're,
leaving
now
that
may
sound
minor
to
a
lot
of
people,
but
at
the
same
time,
it's
very
serious
to
us,
because
it's
a
burglary
and
to
us
a
burglary
is
a
burglary.
E
E
But
while
the
same
token,
it's
not
that
we're
going
in
then
we're
stealing
everything
inside
it's
classified
as
a
burglary,
because
it
fits
the
penicot
section
and
the
elements.
But
it
may
not
be
the
typical
what
we
all
think
of
when
we
think
of
a
burglary
that
I'm
going
in
there
and
I'm
going
to
steal
a
bunch
of
money
or
I'm
going
to
take
everything
from
inside
and
maybe
something
minor
like
breaking
glass
going
in
there
and
even
getting
a
cup
of
soda
from
the
soda
machine
and
walking
out.
E
That's
still
burglary,
because
you're
taking
something
and
you're
entering
because
you're
entering
to
do
some
kind
of
felony.
So
we're
seeing
an
increase.
And
although
we're
seeing
an
increase,
we're
also
seeing
that
it's
for
things
like
just
breaking
glass
and
going
in
moving
some
things
around
and
leaving.
That
is
something
that
I've
noticed
in
this
year.
Is
that
we're
getting
a
lot
of
these
burglaries
that
aren't
your
typical
burglary,
someone's
just
going
in
doing
something
weird
a
lot
of
times
and
then
leaving?
But
it's
still
a
burglary.
AP
AQ
Can
you
hear
me:
okay,
I,
live
on
Blaney
right
near
Merit
Drive,
and
we
got
two
schools:
okay
right
over
there
and
the
cars
come
down
on
hell
off
of
this.
Is
the
freeway
Hill?
AQ
AQ
AQ
AK
Could
we
could
go
talk
to
the
the
offenders,
but
we
can't
issue
a
citation
unless,
unless
our
deputies
actually
physically
see
the
violation
occurring
in
front
of
them,
we
can't
go.
We
don't
go
off
a
video
and
then
and
give
people
tickets
for
that
we
have
to
actually
have
an
officer.
There
detain
the
person
and
issue
them
a
citation.
AQ
AK
We'll
have
a
well
I'll,
definitely
pass
that
information
onto
our
Traffic
Unit
and
they
and
they
will
they
use
a
centralized
enforcement
sometimes
and
they
go
to
certain
areas
and
they
try
to
mourn
educational,
but
sometimes
they
do
issue
citations.
So
any
other
questions.
Yes,.
I
AK
That's
the
so
we
do
have
a
Cadet
program
which
is
different
than
our
teen
Academy
program.
Sometimes
our
teen
Academy
members
do
become
Cadets.
They'll,
have
a
shirt,
a
white
shirt
with
our
patches.
They
will
attend
public
events.
Sometimes
they'll
go
help
us
out
with
the
Stanford
football
games
and
just
do
community
events
and
stuff
like
that,
but
that's
a
little
bit
different.
They.
They
are
volunteers
for
the
Sheriff's
Office
and
they
do
attend
more
training
and
more
meetings,
but
that's
a
little
different
than
the
teen
Academy.
AP
O
Yeah
I've
lived
in
the
community
now
for
47
years.
Actually
it
was
San
Jose
when
we
moved
in
and
then
it
became
Cupertino
in
all
of
these
years,
we've
seen
a
lot
of
reports
about
homicides,
some
in
our
community,
some
of
the
nearby
communities
now
and
everything
you
had
on
your
slides.
There
was
nothing
about
homicides
and
not
even
over
the
multi-year
time.
What
have
we
been
looking
at
in
our
community
and
nearby
when
it
comes
to
something
like
that.
AK
I,
don't
have
the
the
numbers
specifically
to
that
crime.
I
can
tell
you
that
my
time
working
out
here
over
the
last
couple
years,
we
have
had
some
but
they've
been
the
suspects
have
been
known
to
the
victims,
and
so
we
do
have
a
homicide
unit
assigned
to
the
Sheriff's
Office
that
investigates
those
types
of
crimes,
and
we
do
have
a
very
good
success
rate.
In
fact,
our
homicide
team
has
been
solving
homicides
now
cold
cases
from
several
years
ago
that
they're
going
back
to
solve
right
now.
AK
So
good
question,
though
I
don't
have
the
numbers
exactly
on
that,
though,.
AR
Yes,
so
so
going
back
to
the
gentleman's
question
about
car
speeding
near
the
school
area,
why
you
have
to
post
a
person
an
official
for
a
day
to
check
that,
because
that
is
a
fact
the
next
day,
they'll
all
be
back
to
the
same
action.
Why
can't
you
just
put
cameras?
So
now
we
are
not
dependent
on
a
person's
home
camera,
but
actually
your
official
cameras,
yeah
and
that
that
is
a
big
deterrent
I,
would
think
it.
AK
Is
and
I
think
the
law
has
changed
a
couple
years
ago,
where
cameras
can't
you
can't
issue
a
citation
off
of
a
camera
anymore
and
that
that
was
a
change
in
law
several
years
ago.
So
it
has
to
be
actually
physically
witnessed
by
a
deputy
and
the
person
has
to
be
stopped,
detained
and
issued
the
citation
and
that
I
forgot
when
the
law
changed
on
that.
AS
AK
You
talking
about
the
license
plate
readers,
those
are
different
yeah.
We
can
always
use
those
tools
for
investigating
and
following
up
on
leads,
if
we
have
a
burglary
in
a
neighborhood,
we
can
review
those
video
that
video
to
see
what
cars
drove
through
that
area,
and
sometimes
even
those
cameras
are
hooked
up
to
some
of
our
systems.
So
if
they
see
a
license
plate,
that's
stolen
it'll,
automatically
alert
us
to
that
area
and
we
can
go
out
there
and
and
detain
that
person
a
stolen
car
or
stolen
license
plate.
AK
AD
AK
AS
Yeah,
my
house
got
burglarized
recently
and
my
neighbors
three
out
of
five
immediate
neighbors.
Their
houses
got
burglarized
over
the
last
few
years,
so
I
saw
the
graph
about
the
trend
going
down,
but
still
like
me
fresh
case,
I
feel
unsafe
here
and
I'm
wondering
what
the
city
or
the
sheriff
can
do
more
like
to
deter
like
patrolling
at
night.
Do
you
consider
that
or
is
it
done?
No.
AK
No,
we
we
and
and
didn't
mean
to
minimize
the
number
up
there
of
having
just
a
raw
number
on
there,
because
each
one
of
those
it's
a
violation
of
your
privacy.
It's
a
violation
of
your
safety,
each
one
of
those
is
one
too
many,
and-
and
it's
not
we're
just
trying
to
say
that
overall
in
the
city
of
Cupertino
that
that
crime
has
gone
down.
But
that's
still
one
too
many.
AK
We
do
have
a
lot
of
programs
that
we
offer
where
we
will
come
out
again
and
and
do
more
Community
awareness
we're
finding
that
oftentimes
and
I'm
not
specifically
talking
about
your
situation
but
oftentimes.
We
have
situations
where
people
don't
activate
their
alarms.
They
they
leave
doors,
unlocked
and
those
are
the
kind
of
things
that
we
need
to
be
more
mindful
about,
so
that
we
don't
allow
people
to
do
that
and
they
can
move
on
and
and
go
somewhere
else.
AS
So
in
my
case,
I
have
alarm
system
I,
locked
the
backyard,
and
the
doors,
of
course,
were
locked.
There
are
eight
cameras
around
the
house.
None
of
that
helped.
So
the
alarm
system
activated
when
they
exited
the
house,
not
when
they
entered
they.
They
are
professional.
They
were
clothing
which
will
prevent
the
motion
sensor
from
activating
and
so
to
me
all
that
did
not
help
I
see
the
footage
the
faces
they
are
masked,
so
none
of
that
will
help.
AK
Yeah
and
now
you're
more
than
happy
to
talk
to
you
specifically
about
your
case
and
what
our
detectives
are
doing
right
because
we're
getting
out
we're
getting
some
Trends
where
it's
actually
their
their
group
of
people-
they're
not
just
targeting
here
but
they're,
also
in
in
Sunnyvale,
our
detectives
get
together
with
all
the
other
cities.
Monthly
I
discuss
cases
that
they
have
because,
most
of
the
time
the
crime
doesn't
just
stay
in
a
certain
area.
It
moves
around
and
the
same
suspects
commit
the
same
crimes.
AK
Here
then
they'll
go
to
Sunnyvale,
then
they
go
to
Palo,
Alto
and
and
then
maybe
some
of
those
detectives
have
some
lead,
like
maybe
a
license
plate
or
something
like
that,
and
we
share
that
information
and-
and
that's
where,
with
our
detectives,
are
networking
all
the
time
and
they're
they're
trying
to
solve
these
cases
in
the
large
scheme
of
things,
because
it's
not
just
one
house
we're
breaking
into
when
they're
professionals
like
that
they're
breaking
into
several
homes,
and
so
already
Texas
is
working
around
the
clock
trying
to
solve
this,
because
it's
not
just
a
a
group
of
kids
breaking
into
the
house.
AK
They're
professionals
off
oftentimes
out
of
the
area,
not
from
Cupertino,
not
from
even
this
County
Sometimes.
They
come
from
different
counties
to
combat
these
crimes.
So
I
can
talk
to
you
more
about
your
specific
incident
and
and
let
you
know
if
there's
any
potential
leads
or
anything
like
that.
I
just
don't
have
the
report
in
front
of
me
right
now.
So
thank
you.
Q
AK
We
we
do
have
a
neighborhood
watch
program,
we
can
send
a
deputy
or
either
Lieutenant
brown
or
myself
can
attend.
We
will
provide
a
lot
of
crime
prevention
tips
depending
upon
what
the
neighborhood
watch
wants
us
to
talk
about,
whether
it's
speeding,
whether
it's
burglaries
and
we
can
provide
some
information
to
each
one
of
those
we
just
go
out
to
every.
Whenever
you
want
to
host
one.
You
put
yourself
in
contact
with
the
city
and
and
they'll
schedule.
AK
AK
Right
and
we'll
hang
out
here,
if
you
guys
have
any
other
questions,
and
you
want
to
talk
to
us
or
ask
us
something
else
or
we'll
hang
out
here,
but
thank
you
very
much
for
your
time.
You
guys
have
a
good
evening.
B
All
right,
I
do
want
to
thank
you,
Captain
Valenzuela,
I,
know
crime
and
crime.
Stats
is
always
a
Hot
Topic.
Thank
you
big,
thank
you
to
all
of
our
speakers
tonight.
Thank
you
to
our
mayor.
Our
council
members
who
are
in
attendance
I
want
to
thank
my
fellow
Commissioners.
B
If
you
want
to
wave
and
if
you
anyone
has
any
ideas
for
what
they
want
to
see
next
year,
please
come
by,
and
let
us
know
if
there's
topics
you're
interested
in
I
want
a
big
thank
you
to
the
agency's
organizations
and
volunteers
at
all
the
tables,
the
the
content
is
awesome
and
there's
some
free
swag,
so
please
do
check
them
out
and,
lastly,
thank
you.
Everyone
here
for
for
taking
some
time
tonight
to
come,
join
us
sounds
like
a
lot
of
our
block
leaders
represented
tonight.
So
thank
you
and
good
night.