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Description
The City of Cupertino is currently preparing its Housing Element update, which covers the planning period of 2023 to 2031. The Housing Element is part of Cupertino’s General Plan and identifies policies and programs intended to meet the housing needs of the City’s current and future residents.
Your comments and input on the Housing Element update and the community engagement process is encouraged.
In order to learn more and stay informed on the Housing Element update go to engagecupertino.org where you can register to receive future meeting notifications.
A
Thank
you
for
turning
out
tonight,
for
what
is
the
second
community
meeting
on
the
housing
element
update?
I
hope
that
you,
a
lot
of
you,
probably
were
able
to
attend
our
may
23rd
meeting,
which
was
the
first
meeting
that
was
hybrid
held
at
community
hall
and
virtual.
This
is
a
virtual
meeting.
Only
and
tonight
we
will
be
focusing
on
the
perspectives
of
students
and
older
adults,
older
adults
and
their
challenges
related
to
housing.
A
We've
been
having
quite
a
few
meetings
related
to
the
housing
element,
but
again
this
is
more
of
a
focused
meeting,
a
community
meeting
to
really
share
other
people's
perspectives
and
hopefully
stimulate
conversations
through
breakout
rooms
that
were
utilized
in
the
first
meeting,
and
we
expect
to
use
them
again
tonight.
A
The
meeting
will
be
an
hour
and
a
half
in
length
and
we'll
try
to
move
through
it
pretty
quickly
and
effectively
for
people
who
are
new
to
this
process.
I
just
want
to
say
that
the
city
has
a
lot
of
information
out
there
on
the
housing
element
on
its
engage
cupertino.org
website,
and
we
will
be
regularly
having
meetings
there'll
be
another
meeting
unrelated
to
this
one.
A
A
monday
at
11,
it's
the
community
engagement
plan,
advisory
committee,
meeting
and
there'll
be
city
council
meetings
held
next
month
that
will
be
focusing
on
the
different
sites,
the
properties
that
will
be
included
in
the
housing
element
inventory
since
we're
following
a
tight
timeline.
I
just
want
to
wrap
up
my
comments.
I
will
be
handing
the
meeting
over
to
josh
silo
with
west
valley
community
services,
we'll
also
have
emc
planning,
who
is
a
lead
consultant
on
the
housing
element
update
on
hand
as
well.
A
C
Thank
you
so
much
luke
and
good
evening.
Everyone,
my
name,
is
josh
sellow
and
I'm
the
executive
director
of
west
valley,
community
services.
We
are
the
west
valley's
community
service
agency.
We
have,
over
the
last
almost
49
years,
delivered
basic
needs,
services
to
individuals
and
families
facing
food
and
housing,
and
security
in
the
west
valley
and
cupertino
is
one
of
the
cities
that
are
a
part
of
our
service
area.
As
the
executive
director,
I
spent
a
good
deal
of
time
doing
research
reading
books
on
food
and
housing
and
security.
C
I've
read
many
good
books
about
it,
but
I
I
saw
a
new
book
come
out
recently
that
I
had
to.
I
had
to
get
get
my
hands
on
and
it
actually
relates
to
tonight's
topic,
and
the
title
of
it
is
pretty.
Direct
homelessness
is
a
housing
problem
and
the
authors,
greg
colburn
and
clayton
paige
aldern
basically
say
that
we
can
talk
about
all
sorts
of
reasons,
contributing
factors
to
why
people
end
up
unhoused
at
the
end
of
the
day.
C
At
the
end
of
the
day,
it's
about
housing,
access,
housing,
cost
and
housing
policy,
and
that's
part
of
what
we're
here
to
talk
about
tonight.
We
have
an
incredible
panel
here
with
us
and
I'm
so
excited
for
you
to
hear
them
speak
and
learn
from
them.
I'm
also
excited
for
you
to
learn
from
each
other.
So
why
don't
we
go
to
the
next
slide?
C
You
can
see
our
goals
for
this
evening,
so
we
want
to
gain
a
better
understanding
of
the
unique
housing
barriers
and
challenges,
students
and
older
adults
in
cupertino
face
and
we're
going
to
hear
directly
from
our
community
we're
going
to
engage
in
dialogue
with
our
neighbors,
because
that's
one
of
the
best
ways
we
learned
is
in
dialogue
with
each
other
and
we're
also
going
to
invite
you
to
learn
and
get
involved
in
our
city's
housing
element
process
on
the
next
slide.
You
can
see
our
agenda
for
this
evening.
C
Oh
hello,
we
are
have
a
welcome
which
we're
doing
right
now,
we'll
be
doing
two
breakout
rooms.
We'll
spend
a
good
amount
of
time
in
breakouts.
We
have
our
panel
and
then
we'll
have
our
thank
you
and
next
steps
now
a
little
bit
of
housekeeping
before
we
get
started
and
I'll
get
to
community
agreements
in
a
second.
But
let
me
go
to
housekeeping
first.
If
you
want
to
change
your
name,
there
are
three
dots.
If
you
take
your
your
mouse
over
to
the
corner
of
your
picture,
you
can
likely
change
your
name.
C
You
can
add
your
pronouns,
whatever
you
want
to
do.
We
do
hope,
both
in
the
main
room
and
in
the
breakout
rooms
that
you
will
have
your
camera
on,
so
that
we
can
see
your
face
and-
and
we
can
engage
with
you-
certainly
in
the
breakout
rooms
when
you're
speaking
with
each
other
having
your
camera
on
is
ideal
and
you
also
have
access
to
closed
captioning
at
the
bottom
of
your
screen.
C
If
you
click
on
the
three
dots
either
it's
available
on
the
main
menu
or
if
you
click
on
the
three
dots
and
say
more,
you
can
access
closed
captioning.
If
you
need
that
service
as
well
and
lastly,
most
of
you
should
be
likely
muted,
while
we're
in
the
main
room,
but
when
we
move
into
the
breakout
rooms
you'll
be
able
to
take
yourself
off
mute
and
engage
in
the
conversation.
C
Now,
let's
talk
about
this
engagement
together
and
that's
where
we
get
to
our
community
agreements
and
we
share
the
slide
at
all
of
our
meetings,
because
we
want
to
create
a
space
where
all
of
us
feel
like
we
can
engage.
But
in
order
to
do
that,
we
need
to
make
sure
we're
all
on
the
same
page
as
it
relates
to
the
rules
of
engagement.
So
these
are
our
rules
of
engagement.
We
want
to
use.
I
statements,
step
up
means
join
the
conversation
step
back
means
make
room
for
other
folks
to
join
the
conversation.
C
We
want
to
learn
from
each
other
in
this
space
and
share
what
we
learned.
We
don't
want
to
attribute
what
we
what
we
learn
to
people
in
our
breakout
rooms
when
we
leave
the
room.
So
what's
said
here
by
specific
people
stays
here,
but
what's
learned
here
we're
going
to
take
away
and
share
with
our
neighbors
and
colleagues,
we
want
to
assume
best
intentions.
C
We
want
to
listen
and
don't
interrupt,
which
is
hard.
I
have
this
challenge
in
in
the
zoom
space,
but
give
space
for
people
to
finish
their
thoughts
before
you
jump
in
and
yes,
it
is
okay,
okay
for
us
to
disagree.
We
just
want
to
do
it
respectfully.
C
We
want
to
explain
ex
respect
everyone's
different
experience
with
different
subjects,
and
I
think
for
me
this
is
about
approaching
information
with
both
curiosity
and
humility,
and
so
I
leave
you
with
that,
and
then
we
want
to
uplift
each
other
and
check
in
on
each
other.
C
So
keep
these
in
mind
if
you're
good
with
your
community
agreements,
I
would
love
to
see
a
virtual
or
actual
thumbs
up
in
the
corner
of
your
of
your
of
your
picture
would
be
great,
and
I
I
can't
actually
see
you
right
now,
but
I'm
gonna
hope
that
I
see
lots
of
thumbs
and
this
will
help
make
sure
that
we
have
a
constructive
conversation
this
evening.
C
We're
actually
gonna
get
started
with
a
poll,
and
I
want
to
propose
the
following
question
to
you:
you're,
going
to
have
an
opportunity
to
rate
on
a
scale
of
1
to
10
the
following
question,
and
if
we
can
launch
that
poll,
the
first
question
is
on
a
scale
of
1
to
ten.
How
strong
of
a
sense
do
you
think
you
have
of
students
and
older
adults
experience
related
to
housing,
so
one
is
very
little
ten
you're
an
expert
so
go
ahead
rate
yourself.
We'll
give
you
a
little
bit
of
time
to
do
that.
C
C
So
you
can
see
here,
it's
a
really
a
range.
Are
we
sharing
the
results.
C
Yes,
there
we
go,
you
can
see,
there's
a
real
range
in
the
room
which
is
to
be
expected.
So
folks
approach
this
from
a
wide
variety
of
perspectives
and
experience.
Let's
go
to
our
second
poll
question.
C
C
Let's
see
there,
we
go,
I
think
it's
up
now.
Have
you
ever
experienced
housing
related,
such
as
housing
and
security,
trouble,
paying
rent
eviction
or
homelessness?
C
C
C
And
why
don't
we
go
ahead
and
close
that
poll
and
we
can
share
those
results,
so
you
can
see
this
is
pretty
divided
as
well
slightly
more
nose
in
the
room,
but
not
that
different.
So
there's
a
lot
of
folks
here
tonight,
who've
had
some
sort
of
housing-related
challenge.
Let's
go
ahead
and
move
on
to
question
three
here,
which
is:
how
often
have
you
joined
this
kind
of
public
meeting
about
planning
policy.
C
This
is
my
first
one:
I've
attended
some,
I
regularly
contribute
at
public
meetings
and
there's
no
shade
to
be
to
be
shown
to
anyone.
If
this
is
your
first
public
meeting,
thank
you
for
showing
up
tonight,
which
is
awesome,
okay,
and
why
don't
we
go
ahead
and
close
that
poll
and
share
those
results,
and
you
can
see
we,
the
majority
of
the
room,
have
attended
some
public
meetings,
but
it's
it's
not
that
far
different
for
about
a
third
of
the
folks.
C
This
is
your
first
one
and
slowly
last
and
the
third
are
regular
contributors,
which
is
great.
Maybe
for
those
this
is
your
first
one.
This
is
start
of
a
new
habit
which
we
would
love
to
encourage,
and
the
last
one
is
our
last
question
which,
if
any
of
the
following
groups,
would
you
consider
yourself
to
be
a
part
of?
Are
you
a
young
adult,
a
student,
an
older
adult
or
none
of
the
above.
C
And
we're
self-defining
older
adults
we'll
give
that
a
few
more
seconds
for
folks
to
weigh
in
okay
and
let's
go
ahead
and
end
that
poll
and
share
those
results.
We
actually
have
about
half
the
folks
in
the
room
self-identify
as
an
older
adult,
with
pretty
equal
divisions
between
young
adults,
students
and
none
of
the
above.
So
we
should
have
some
idea
of
who's
in
the
room
tonight.
Their
experienced
with
the
topic
at
hand
and
and
experience
engaging
in
public
comment
with
that.
B
What
brings
us
here
tonight
is
that
this
is
part
of
our
outreach
process
for
our
housing
element,
update
and
we're
all
here
tonight,
because
we
want
to
make
sure,
as
we
write
this
update
to
the
housing
element
that
that
it
reflects
our
understanding
of
the
housing
needs
specific
to
cupertino
and
the
surrounding
region
for
all
those
who
are
currently
living
in
cupertino
or
who
might
like
to
live
here.
B
At
the
end
of
this
meeting
and
there's
lots
of
ways
to
participate,
we've
got
some
activities
online
and
there's
going
to
be
more
in
the
very
near
future.
In
fact,
by
the
end
of
this
week
there
will
be
a
whole
lot
more
and
I
just
want
to
make
it
clear.
Basically,
what
we've
we've
been
tasked
by
the
state
to
make
sure
that
there's
enough
room
and
support
for
4588
housing
units
to
be
built
over
the
next
eight
years
in
cupertino
next
slide?
Please.
B
So
who's
responsible
for
building
housing-
it's
not
the
city
per
se,
although
there
may
be
opportunities
for
that
to
happen,
and
it
has
happened
before
we
have
been
working
with
staff
developers,
community-based
organizations,
commissions,
council,
members
and
the
mayor,
and
we
want
to
make
sure
that
everyone
has
access
to
this
process
so
that
everyone
can
help
affect
this
aspirational
and
visionary
plan
to
impact
the
future
city
of
cupertino's.
Future
housing
landscape
next
slide,
please!
B
So
where
are
we
right
now?
Well,
we've
been
working
hard
on
coming
up
with
the
sites
the
where
for
the
housing
element
and
we're
getting
close.
We're
meeting
with
the
council
twice
in
august
to
to
basically
have
workshops
to
go
through
each
of
these
sites,
as
we've
done
with
the
planning
commission
with
several
meetings.
So
keep
watch
on
this
website
sign
up
and
and
we're
happy
to
send
out,
updates
we'll
have
all
kinds
of
interactive
mapping
and
survey
opportunities
for
people
to.
Let
us
know
exactly
what
they
think
about
these
sites.
B
We
have
them
specified
and-
and
we
want
to
hear
from
from
everyone
throughout
this
process,
so
our
next
council
meetings
are
august,
16th
and
august
30th
and
we're
hoping
to
go,
live
with
our
new
map
and
and
surveys
for
the
sites
by
this
friday
and
it'll
be
august.
4Th
will
be
our
deadline
for
us
to
fold
in
all
those
comments
that
we
receive
from
you,
so
that
the
council
can
see
those
comments
firsthand
and
it
will
be
a
part
of
the
public
record.
C
Thanks
so
much
andy
in
a
minute,
we're
gonna
move
out
into
breakout
rooms,
and
this
gives
us
an
opportunity
to
get
to
know
each
other
and
learn
a
little
bit
about
who
has
joined
us
more
granularly
than
the
survey
we
did
at
the
top
of
the
program.
This
is
the
question
we're
asking
you
to
consider
in
your
breakout
rooms.
What
is
your
name,
and
why
did
you
choose
to
come
to
this
meeting
tonight
and
we're
going
to
drop
that
in
the
chat
as
well,
so
that
that
question
follows
you
into
your
group?
C
Each
room
will
have
facilitator
to
help
move
the
conversation
along
and
we
encourage
you
to
listen
and
speak
so
make
room
to
introduce
yourself
and
also
to
see
who
else
is
in
the
room,
because
we
only
have
10
minutes
together
for
this
next
section
with
that,
we
will
send
you
into
your
breakout
rooms
and
see
you
back
here
in
10
minutes
folks,
who
are
coming
in
welcome
back
we're
going
to
wait
till
everyone's
back
from
their
breakout
rooms.
C
To
begin
again,
I
see
some
smiles,
though,
with
folks
with
their
cameras
on
so
I
hope
that
means
you
had
good
conversations
in
your
very
quick
and
fast
breakout.
Room
folks
are
still
coming
back,
though,
so
I
want
to
wait
and
make
sure
we
get
everyone
here
before
we
get
started.
C
There
are
a
few
more
folks
coming
in
again
feel
free
if
you'd
like
to
keep
your
camera
on
during
all
during
the
main
room,
as
well
as
the
breakout
rooms,
we'll
be
happy
to
have
you
see
your
face,
you
can
also
again,
if
you
need
to
change
your
name
by
clicking
the
three
dots
in
the
upper
right
corner
of
your
own
square
on
zoom.
You
can
add
your
affiliations,
you
can
add
your
pronouns
if
you
like,
there's,
probably
a
character
limit,
I
don't
know
what
it
is.
C
It
looks
like
everyone
is
back,
though,
which
is
great
welcome
back
everyone
to
the
main
part
of
tonight's
program,
which
is
our
panel.
In
a
moment,
I
will
introduce
our
incredible
panelists,
but
first
I
want
to
welcome
a
few
people.
Tonight
we
have
two
council
members
from
the
city
of
cupertino.
C
We
have
council,
member,
moore
and
council
member
way
welcome
it's
good
to
see
both
of
you
here
with
us
tonight,
and
I
also
want
to
welcome
de
anza
president,
dr
lloyd
holmes.
Welcome
lloyd,
it's
a
pleasure
to
have
you
here
tonight
as
well.
Thank
you
for
joining
us
with
that.
We're
going
to
move
into
our
panel
there's
going
to
be
some
some
switches,
as
we
highlight
all
the
panelists,
so
I'm
going
to
introduce
them
while
they're
highlighted,
but
you'll
see
their
faces
pop
up
on
the
screen.
C
C
We
have
komala
rangachari,
an
older
adult,
wbcs,
client
and
bmr
resident
and
leslie
butler,
older,
adult
and
wbcs
client.
I
want
to
say
two
things.
The
first
is
I
am
in
awe
of
this
panel.
We're
asking
them
to
speak
on
things
that
are
incredibly
challenging,
especially
in
our
society,
where
we
have
a
very
fixed
sense
of
class
and
and
capacity
and
access
and
to
have
people
reveal
very
intimate
details
about
housing
challenges
they
have
faced
is
very
hard.
C
It
takes
a
lot
of
bravery
and
a
lot
of
conviction
and
I'm
in
awe
of
our
incredible
panel
for
making
yourself
available
tonight
to
share
your
story.
So,
thank
you
very
much
for
that.
The
second
thing
is,
I
indicated
some
affiliations
for
all
of
our
panelists.
I
want
to
make
sure
you
all
know.
That
is
not
how
I
identify
our
panelists.
C
That
is
how
our
panelists
identify
themselves.
We
work
very
hard
at
west
valley,
community
services
to
make
sure
that
our
we
invite
the
community
to
show
up,
as
they
themselves
wish
to
show
up.
So
I
want
to
clarify,
I
was
using
descriptions
that
they
had
provided
for
us
this
evening.
Now
it
looks
like
all
of
our
panelists
are
here
almost
all
of
our
panelists
are
here.
C
C
With
some
questions
you
all
can
jump
in,
as
you
have
an
answer
to
share
so
the
first
one
is
tell
us
a
little
bit
about
yourself,
maybe
one
or
two
things
you'd,
like
the
participants
to
know
about
you
and
why
you
agreed
to
take
part
in
tonight's
panel
and
komala.
Do
you
would
like
to
start.
D
Sure
I
came
to
this
panel
to
learn
more
about
housing
for
the
elders
I'm
currently
under
under
the
bmr
program
with
the
city,
cupertino
city,
I'm
very
happy
with
the
program
because
I
had
been
using
this
bmr
facility
for
the
past
14
years
and
I
am
very
happy
with
it.
But
my
question
was
to
join
the
panel
was
to
know
if
I
want
to
retire.
D
E
Yeah,
of
course,
so,
as
you
said
before,
I'm
a
de
anza
intern,
we
work
with
general,
like
community
needs,
some
of
which
are
like
ab540
students,
undocumented
students
and
for
this
engineer,
I'm
working
for
renters
rights.
So
this
is
why
I
wanted
to
just
see
what's
up
here
like
in
the
community
and
how
things
function
in
general
and
I'm
also
a
berkeley
student,
but
just
taking
this
year
off,
to
do
things
with
just
like
internship
and
just
kind
of
more
social
work
in
general.
F
Hi,
I'm
pravisha,
I
am
a
dns
student
as
well
as
I
transferred
to
san
francisco
state
last
semester
and
basically
what
the
thing
that
striked
me
for
coming
here
was
like,
since
I
stay
in
the
borderline
of
cupertino
and
sunnyvale
so
like
due
to
the
inflammation,
the
price
of
everything
has
really
increased
and
for
students
like
us,
like
we
really
want
to
get
like
a
good
education
like
where,
like
things
are
happening,
is
the
tech
feel
like
not
only
like
high-tech
people,
but
like
people
like
us
who
are
struggling,
we
would
also
want
to
be
in
the
area
and
to
start
off
anywhere
like
paying
a
rent
for
like
like
like
having
to
pay
something
more
or
something
like
this
is
like
really
not
affordable
for
us.
F
F
Like
so
like
some
for
some
people,
I
used
to
work
at
edd
and
I
used
to
help
like
students
at
that
time
to,
like
p,
students
were
above,
like
around
the
age
of
18,
who
wanted
to
move
out,
but
for
them
to
pay
a
rent
off
like
700,
is
also
really
expensive,
so
like
finding
affordable
housing
according
to
the
need
age
time,
and
everything
is
really
hard.
So
to
learn
more
about
it.
Since
I'm
a
student,
I
have
elderly
people
at
home.
F
C
G
Good
evening
my
name
is
leslie
butler.
I
am
a
business
owner.
I
own
the
business
moving
green
today,
where
we
help
families
in
transition
during
an
estate,
sale
or
a
clean
out.
What
actually
happens
is
if
a
a
family
has
a
loss,
then
they
are
in
a
urgency
to
sell
their
home,
but
they
have
all
the
belongings
to
take
care
of,
and
the
reason
why
I
joined
this
is
because
a
business
owner
can
also
be
affected.
G
They
have
had
their
loss
through
the
pandemic
or
through
a
physical
challenge,
and
for
me
personally,
I
had
a
very
serious
accident
in
2018
I
fell.
I
broke
my
femur,
my
tibia
and
ankle,
and
now
as
a
business
owner,
I
am
fully
metalized
and
there
is
a
stark
difference
between
having
an
income
and
then
be
able
to
have
enough
income
to
afford
housing
and
cupertino
has
such
high
rent
raises
that
I
now
will
be
forced
to
go
to
below
market
rent,
probably
in
the
next
month
or
so.
So.
G
The
reason
why
I
am
here
is
to
understand
and
give
feedback
as
a
business
owner
being
affected.
As
now
having
a
physical
disability
that
you
can
still
be
safe,
you
can
still
receive
economic
security
and
you
can
still
be
a
part
of
the
community,
but
you
need
to
know
your
resources
and
west
valley.
Community
services
has
gone
above
and
beyond
to
help
me
during
this
very
physical
challenging
time,
and
I
want
to
help
others
that
way
by
sharing
my
experiencing
and
thank
you
very
much.
C
Thank
you,
leslie
erica.
Why
don't
you
bring
us
up
to
the
next
one.
H
So
hi
everyone,
my
name,
is
erica
flores.
I
coordinate
basic
needs
at
dianza
and
I'm
really
just
here
to
one
do
my
best
to
share
the
experiences
of
our
students
with
housing
or
the
students
that
have
confided
in
me
or
come
to
me
for
support
with
housing
issues
and
also
to
learn,
learn
from
everyone.
You
know
what's
going
on
around
housing
in
cupertino,
I've
already,
you
know,
met
people
from
different
organizations.
H
C
Thank
you
erica.
So,
as
we
framed
out
tonight's
program,
we're
specifically
focusing
on
the
barriers
faced
by
students
and
older
adults
and
I'm
sure
there's
overlap
between
the
two
but
there's
unique
aspects
of
both
of
those
communities.
So
we're
going
to
start
talking
about
students
first
and
maybe
edwin.
You
want
to
start
us
off.
What
do
you
think
are
some
unique
barriers
students
face
and
young
people
face
when
it
comes
to
housing.
E
Yeah,
I
think,
like
up
and
down
the
ladder
you
see
like
tons
of
just
like
lack
of
resources,
but
I
think
it's
specifically
concentrated
for
like
younger
people
and
students.
E
I
was
I
mentioned
this
to
kylie,
but
one
of
my
fellow
cross
country
runners
and
I
was
at
the
anza
like
had
to
buy
out
a
box
truck
which
he
would
work
through
like
a
moving
company
and
he
would
live
in
this
box
truck
and
he
kind
of
had
to
like
creatively
like
hide
it
amongst
dean's
other
box
trucks
and
like
buses.
So
they
would
think
it
was
part
like
a
vehicle,
the
anza
owned.
E
So,
of
course
like
he
shouldn't
have
to
like
accommodate
or
get
creative
to
be
able
to
find
like
housing,
and
I
think
just
very
similarly
like
there
would
be
like-
and
this
would
be
a
good
aspect
in
the
community
where,
like
people,
would
tell
each
other
good
parts
in
the
city
to
like
park
if
they
had
to
like
live
out
of
their
cars.
But
these
like
very
unique
issues
where
there's
like
you
lose
like
tons
of
privacy,
some
safety
and
just
security.
We're
having
to
you.
E
You
have
to
accommodate,
where
I
see
tons
of
young
students
like
where
they
have
to
park
in
like
dangerous
areas,
because,
like
that's,
where
people
don't
check
and
they
kind
of
like
they
have
to
live
with
a
bad
like
roommate,
because,
like
rent,
is
cheap
or
just
similar,
like
these
types
of
these
types
of
accommodations,
where
you
have
to
just
like,
have
to
have
just
heavy
planning
and
accommodations
to
make
things
work
and
just
have
like
tight
budgets.
E
So
I
think
just
like
just
general
like
more,
even
if
it's
just
like
information
distribution,
where
some
cities
might
have
resources,
I
think
in
general,
the
accessibility
to
like
access
these
resources.
Just
like.
Oh
these
resources,
a
lot
of
the
students
just
can't
get
access
to
them,
so
they
just
have
to
like
accommodate
and
just
like,
make
things
work
by
doing
things
that,
just
like
you
know
they,
of
course,
shouldn't
have
to.
C
Thanks
edwin
parisha
are
there
any
other
unique
barriers
that
you
think
students
face
young
people
face
as
relates
to
housing.
F
F
We
have
a
lot
of
like
things
to
take
care
of
like
our
books
and
everything,
and
the
rent
is
one
of
the
most
difficult
parts
like
being
a
full-time
student
for
me,
even
though
I
work
like
at
a
place
for
20
hours
like
a
part-time
job
or
something
like
that,
they
are
not
paying
enough
right
right
now.
Everyone
knows
the
minimum
rate
is
like
16
or
something
some
places
like
if
I
work
at
college
at
university.
Basically,
since
I
transferred
like
even
at
applying
at
colleges,
they
just
pay.
F
The
minimum
like
at
16
17
and
working
like
20
hours
per
week
is
really
not
enough
to
provide
for
our
needs
due
to
the
increasing
increasing
in
the
information
in
the
market,
so
yeah,
it's
very
hard
for
students.
There
should
be
like
affordable
student,
housing
and
stuff
like
that,
since
I
transferred
to
san
francisco
state.
I
was
like
thinking
to
move
out
of
the
area
and
when
I
looked
at
the
price
for
a
student
housing,
I
it
just
blew
off
my
mind
I
was
like.
Is
it
like?
F
F
That's
really
hard
for
me
to
like
just
do
everything
on
my
own
and
like
if,
if
I
have
since
that's
why
I
chose
to
stay
over
here
and
contribute
to
the
family
and
then
do
a
commute,
despite
the
fact
that
I
wanted
to
contribute
and
then
go
out
there,
it's
kind
of
like
a
bit
difficult
but
like
if
my
sister
like,
if
we
could
get
something
where
we
could
stay
like
my
sister,
is
also
a
student
at
denzes.
F
You
join
from
this
summer,
like
she's,
a
high
junior
high
sc,
a
junior
in
high
school,
but
she's
at
dianza
as
well.
So
it's
like,
since
we
are
high
school,
like
dns
students
and
stuff,
like
that,
if
you
could
get
like
something
like
at
housing
place
or
something
or
maybe
some
resources
where
we
can
use
those
that
would
be
really
really
really
beneficial
for
us,
so
that
we
can
focus
more
on
our
studies
than
taking
a
stress
or
a
burden
to
be
like.
C
Yeah,
I'm
glad
you
mentioned
the
minimum
wage
parisha.
I
just
recently
was
looking
at
the
minimum
wages
for
the
west
valley
they're
in
the
range
of
14
for
some
of
the
smaller
towns
and
cities
up
to
1620
for
the
city
of
san
jose
and
cupertino's,
in
the
middle
for
minimum
wage
and
according
to
the
silicon
valley
index,
one
adult
household,
you
would
need
to
earn
thirty
dollars
an
hour
in
order
to
be
able
to
prevent
pay
prevailing
wage
on
a
one-bedroom
apartment
in
the
metro
area.
F
Exactly
even
though
we
have
a
vehicle
like,
even
though
suppose,
if
I
say
like
okay,
I
want
to
get
a
vehicle
like
right
now.
The
price
is
like
there,
they're
asking
like
10k
or
15k,
overpriced
like
on
the
market,
like
whoever
gives
them
more
like
they're
selling
it
to
them
because
of
the
chip
thing.
Okay,
that
for
that
reason
too,
I
don't
have
a
thing
to
like
give
them
on
hand,
so
that,
even
though
I
can
do
uber
or
food
delivery
or
drop
of
students
and
stuff
like
that,
so
like
at
this
time.
F
Anything
like
I
don't
know
if
the
community
or
the
area
are
like
can
help.
Students
like
especially
students,
elderly
people
like
they're,
not
making
much
like
they're
just
getting
like
some
people
are
like
getting
like.
They
have
a
fixed
amount
of
what's
coming
in
there
and
then
that
would
be
really
really
really
helpful
because,
like
all
our
lives
like
once,
we
are,
we
get
out
of
the
student
base.
F
We
are
for
sure
going
to
be
supporting
our
community
and
people
who
have
already
served
the
community
is,
are
getting
like
a
place
where
they
are
just
trying
to
get
a
place
where
they
just
want
to
relax,
not
worry
much
about
like
their
financial
needs.
So
I
think
it's
really
important
for
us
to
be
like
get
more
sources
from
the
community,
the
government
or,
like
maybe
the
yeah
things
like
that
around
so
yeah,
okay,.
C
H
So
I
think
what
edwin
and
parisha
have
shared
is
completely
accurate
from
you
know
what
I
have
also
learned
from
students.
I
think
some
things
that
became
clear
to
me
in
this
work.
It's
just
the
challenge
of
even
finding
and
accessing
the
resources
that
are
available
and
obviously
there
aren't
enough
resources
available.
But
you
know
what
I
find
with
students
of
any
age
or
young
people
is
really
just
an
issues,
issues
with
navigating
just
the
maze
that
are
all
of
the
resources,
the
agencies,
the
requirements,
the
guidelines,
the
forms.
H
You
know
it's
a
really
daunting
task
for
someone
who
is
new
to
the
circumstance,
so
I've
had
students
that
were
nervous
enough
to
come
and
talk
to
me
on
their
campus
asking
for
support.
So
when
the
support
is
outside
of
the
campus,
it's
really
difficult,
sometimes
for
them
to
be
brave
enough
or
or
really
make
that
phone
call
or
go
to
visit
that
place.
So
it's
a
lot
of
teaching
how
to
navigate
these
systems,
which
are
so
confusing
and
so
detailed
and
so
intertwined
with
each
other,
so
that
makes
it
really
difficult.
H
Other
barriers
that
I
come
up,
depending
on
the
type
of
help
that
the
student
is
looking
for.
You
know
some
students
need
emergency
shelter
and
that
could
be
completely
across
town,
making
it
difficult
to
get
to
school
or
to
work,
so
it
impacts
their
status
as
a
student.
H
If
they
have
a
pet
or
a
partner,
you
know
some
resources
aren't
available
to
them.
Sometimes
there's
financial
grants
that
have
really
strict
requirements
that
students
just
don't
fit
into
like
valid
leases
versus
subleases.
H
H
So
there's
a
gamma
of
of
barriers
that
students
really
do
face
when
they're
dealing
with
housing
issues.
Somebody
mentioned,
I
think,
edwin,
you
mentioned
athletes.
A
lot
of
athletes
come
from
out
of
state
or
out
of
the
area,
so
when
their
housing
falls
through,
it's
a
really
difficult
position
that
they're
in
international
students
the
same
thing,
and
I
feel
like
a
lot
of
the
students
that
I've
seen
sometimes
or
that
have
come
to
me
having
becoming
housing.
H
Insecure
was
something
that
happened
very
suddenly
with
no,
there
was
no
time
to
plan
or
to
save
or
to
seek
out
resources
or
just
in
it
immediately,
and
that
makes
it
very
difficult,
because
that
type
of
resource
is
incredibly
limited
in
this
area
and
I'm
sure
many
others.
So
students
do
have
a
lot
of
unique
barriers
that
that
maybe
aren't
across
the
board,
but
but
can
happen
at
any
age
or
stage.
C
G
So
good
evening,
so
the
older
adult
faces
numerous
housing
challenges
and
each
adult
has
their
own
unique
scenario,
and
I
will
say
that
first
of
all,
we
all
want
to
feel
safe
have
economic
security
and
we
want
to
feel
comfortable
within
our
means,
but
the
the
difficulty
is
is
that
they
may
have
a
social
security
benefit
that
has
been
predetermined,
that
they
cannot
afford,
even
if
they
had
an
additional
part-time
job,
and
I
will
reflect
on
myself
because
I
did
have
that
accident
and
now
I
applied
for
the
social,
the
disability
benefits,
but
because
I
took
on
a
part-time
job
at
target
three
days
a
week
to
meet
my
my
payments
of
insurance,
my
car
payment,
my
verizon,
they
said
well
you're,
now
not
eligible
for
social
security
you're,
not
yet
67..
G
So
I
will
be
67
in
about
two
and
a
half
years,
I'm
64.,
so
I
need
to
now
have
this
other
part-time
job.
While
I
promote
my
my
strategy
of
my
marketing
of
my
business
moving
green
today,
and
that
has
become
another
challenge
is
do
I
want
to
continue
as
a
business
owner?
What
other?
What
other
things
can?
I
do
with
my
past
experience,
but
I
love
what
I
do.
I
have
a
passion
for
helping
families
in
transition,
and
so
now
I
I
have
a
little
bit
of
mental
awareness
about
my
own
self
is.
G
Sometimes
the
the
older
adult
is
forced
to
then
come
into
shared
housing.
They
might
need
to
live
with
their
their
older
children
and
then
all
of
a
sudden
that
older
child
is
also
helping
with
the
income
for
their
older
parent.
G
So
they
become
dependent
on
the
community
services
and
a
part-time
job
after
retirement
is
also
very
difficult
because
we
have
to
be
flexible
around
other
age
groups
and
then,
of
course,
now
we
are
faced
with
learning
new
technologies.
As
an
older
person,
we
have
to
learn
devices.
We
have
to
learn
zoom
google
networks.
G
G
G
G
C
You
well
I
thank
you
for
that
great
plug
leslie.
I
do
appreciate
that,
but
I
I
want
to
say
you
do
ex
you
draw
out
all
the
constellation
of
challenges:
conflicting
information,
the
disparate
delivery
of
services
in
different
locations
that
exist.
It's
particularly
challenging
if
an
older
adult
doesn't
have
access
to
a
car
or
is
no
longer
driving,
depends
on
public
transportation,
all
those
sorts
of
things.
So
thank
you.
D
Two
challenges
which
I
have
faced
in
my
life
is,
I
lost
my
husband
about
four
years
ago
and
I
never
I
don't
drive.
He
used
to
drive
me
and
best
multi
community
community
service
ride
has
been
a
blessing
to
me
because
they
take
me
to
work
and
they
drop
me
back
from
work,
and
I
really
really
happy
that
I
got
this
ride
for
me
where
I
can
go
to
my
school.
D
My
challenge
is,
as
we
are
getting
older,
we
have
to
work
to
sustain
ourselves
to
get
food,
shelter,
housing,
everything
else,
so
it
if
it
comes
to
a
stage
like
presley
said
that
we
are
not
able
to
work.
Where
do
we
turn
into
how?
Where
do
we
get
our
housing
say?
I'm
almost
80
years
old
8-0
and
I'm
still
working
to
sustain
myself,
because
I
have
to
provide
for
my
housing.
D
I
have
to
provide
for
my
food
for
my
clothing
for
my
living
everything
else,
but
I
saved
nothing
because
the
rents
are
high,
even
though
you
might
have
been
a
more
my
rent
is
high.
I
have
to
pay,
inflation
is
so
high,
and
so
it's
just
meeting
ends.
That's
all
I
can
do,
and
so
the
stage
comes
when
I'm
not
able
to
work
anymore
and
I
have
to
retire.
Where
am
I
going?
What
will
what
will
happen
to
me?
So
that's
a
big
question
mark.
I
have
on
my
mind
all
the
time.
D
D
Why
is
it
that
so
it
has
been
their
static
for
quite
because
I've
been
under
bmr
for
14
years,
and
I
know
that
it
has
not
changed
when
inflation
has
gone
up
so
much
everything
is
about
20
30
40
percent,
higher
than
what
they
used
to
be.
Why
isn't
the
inflat
income
limit
going
up?
Why
is
it
that?
So
why
is
it
that
we
have
to
get
into
that
in
the
same
income
limit
which
was
decided
about
a
decade
ago?
So
that's
another
question
I
have.
D
Why
is
the
inflation
not
being
paneled
out
in
the
in
income
limit
listing
system?
That
is
one
thing,
and
I
would
also
want
information
on
senior
housing
and
what
how
we
can
get
resources
from
where
we
can
get
resources
from
and
how
our
seniors
I
have
lived
in
cupertino
for
the
past
22
years,
our
seniors
going
to
be
helped
by
the
city
for
housing
and
other
other
resources.
C
I
heard
a
combination
of
both
personal
factors
that
you're
facing
based
upon
your
personal
situation
or
for
erica
from
the
personal
situations
of
the
of
the
students
that
you
see
at
the
anza,
but
there's
also
a
series
of
systemic
challenges
that
you're
all
broadly
facing
and,
of
course,
one
of
the
biggest
ones
is
the
lack
of
sufficient,
affordable
housing
for
all
people,
for
students,
for
families,
for
older
adults
and
that's
sort
of
a
factor.
All
of
you
are
saying
prison.
You
raise
your
hand,
please
jump
in.
F
Yeah
to
about
the
affordable
housing
right,
I
was
like
before
moving
to
cupertino,
there
were
like.
I
was
moving
here
like
exactly
three
years
ago.
I
moved
in
here
and
between
july
2019
I
did
fill
out
forms
and
different
like
places
where
they
said.
Oh
there,
there
is
an
open
application
for
low-income
housing,
but
when
right
now,
if
I
reach
out
to
them,
they
are
like
they
be
like.
Oh,
your
turn
is
gonna
come
in
next,
eight
years
or
seven
years,
I'd
be
like
in
next
eight
or
seven
years.
F
Maybe
I
would,
I
would
go
up
to
a
place.
Hopefully
I
will
be
in
a
place
where
at
least
I
could
afford
my
housing.
The
thing
I
filled
out
an
application
right
now
is
something
I
really
need
help
right
now
with
like
staying
with
a
family
or
like
trying
to
help
or
support
your
family
need,
and
then
last
time
to
over
here,
like
I
guess,
everyone
is
familiar
like
in
homes
around
the
homestead
area,
because
my
sister
is
since
she
goes
over
there
and
deanza
like
it's
nearby
place.
F
So
there
was
one
housing
that
was
open
open
recently
and
when
I
called
them,
oh,
they
were
like.
Oh,
we
are
already
filled
out
with
the
application.
The
list
of
the
application
applicants
that
are
supposed
to
be
needed
and
sorry
about
the
thing-
and
I
asked
them
like-
is
there
any
other,
housings
or
like
in
the
area
since
we
needed
in
this
area
due
to
the
school
thing
they
are
like?
Maybe
you
would
have
to
wait.
F
We
don't
know
how
long
will
it
take
or
something
like
that
and
then,
like
so
like,
there
are
affordable
housing
in
the
area,
but
like
they're,
not
people
are
staying
there,
they're
using
it,
that's
really
great,
but
what
it?
What
is
the
new
thing
but
like
we
need
more
space
like
in
more
like
more
like
more
more
more
something
even
more
like
than
that,
what
we
are
having
it,
because,
like
people
who
are
already
staying
there
yeah,
they
can
stay
there
until
they
want
like
or
until
their
situation
meets.
F
C
Yeah
absolutely
thank
you
so
much
for
adding
that
in
I
want
to
talk
about
two
about
the
housing
market,
both
the
bmr
housing
market
and
sort
of
what
we're
seeing
more
broadly
in
the
housing
market
over
the
past
few
years.
For
those
of
you
who
are
renting
in
the
non-bmr
retail
housing
market.
So
let's
start
there.
So
I'm
going
to
open
up
to
the
panelists
who
are
current
renters
in
the
non-bmr
market,
we'll
get
to
you
komala
in
a
minute.
But
what
types
of
things
are
you
seeing
as
renters?
C
G
Yes,
so
I
moved
here
from
saratoga
in
2004.,
I
live
at
the
glenbrook
apartments,
the
rent
started
at
1109
and
I
know
that
at
the
end
of
august
my
rent
will
go
up
to
about
2
900
and
something
odd.
So
I
have
a
one
bedroom.
It
is
a
very
nice
community,
but
I
will
be
forced
to
move.
I
will
be
forced
to
move.
I
did
make
several
calls
today
and
I
saw
a
a
space
right
over
by
bianchi
way,
which
is
by
the
panda
express
and
it
was
for
disabilities.
G
So
I
would
be
considered
that
because
of
my
disability,
but
the
woman
that
I
spoke
with,
she
said
there's
99
people
on
the
wait
list
and
she
said
well.
Why
don't
you
take
the
midped
application?
Oh
you
fill
out
the
application,
it's
about
30
pages,
but
you
may
not
hear
anything
so
the
rental
market
in
cupertino
does
not
really
provide
for
affordable
housing.
G
I
have
I
have
researched
this,
and
so
that
would
pertain
to
an
older
adult,
as
well
as
to
the
younger
students
that
may
be
moving
in
here
and
so
shared
housing
would
be
with
three
or
four
students
living
in
maybe
a
two
or
three
bedroom
apartment,
which
means
they
would
each
have
to
pay
between
1200
to
1500
per
student
and
then,
as
parisia
said,
you
still
have
to
study.
There
is
no
time
to
go
out
and
do
something
part-time.
G
So
I
did
some
research.
I
looked
at
sunnyvale.
I
looked
at
santa
clara
and
san
jose
and
they're
about
in
the
same,
but
the
waitlists
are
still
quite
you
know
up
there
and
then
then
you
have
to
think
about
it.
Well,
what
am
I
going
to
do
if
I
have
to
move
so?
That,
of
course,
is
my
business,
but
the
hardships
are
real
they're
they're
really
hard.
Somebody
then
has
to
downsize
in
a
very
short
amount
of
time.
That
means
taking
care
of
their
belongings
finding
a
place.
G
Seeing
if
you
need
help
if
you're
have
a
mobility
challenge,
that
means
getting
someone
to
help
you
pack
up,
then
you
have
the
move
costs
from
the
move
costs
from
where
you
live
to.
Where
you're
going
to
move.
You
have
new
utilities,
you
have
the
new
internet,
you
have
maybe
changing
your
business
license
like
I'm
going
to
have
to.
I
have
to
then
change
my
business
license
from
cupertino
to
santa
clara.
G
What
is
that
going
to
cost
me,
and
then
it
is
an
emotional
stress,
so
I'm
working
now
with
my
church
group
and
I'm
going
to
have
some
one-on-one
counseling
just
in
order
to
help
me
in
the
move
and
it
is
hard
times,
but
we
have
to
continue
on.
If
we
have
our
community
and
we
know
the
resources,
then
we
can
help
others,
but
we
also
are
in
a
position
a
very
unique
position
in
order.
A
short,
a
period
of
time
is
this
panel.
G
C
I'm
really
glad
leslie
that
you
mentioned
the
impact
of
stress
which
can
have
incredibly
deleterious
impacts
on
the
on
brain
development,
on
the
ability
for
executive
decision
making.
We
cannot.
We
have
to
consider
the
impact
of
stress
experienced
by
people
who
are
facing
housing
and
security,
so
I'm
I'm
really
grateful.
We
live
in
a
country
where
we
don't
often
seriously
consider
the
mental
health
impacts
of
what's
going
on
in
our
world,
and
I'm
I'm
really
glad
you
mentioned
that.
E
Okay
for
sure,
for
sure
yeah,
I
just
wanted
to
add
something
that
was
really
important
to
me,
which
is
kind
of
like
the
undocumented
and
immigrant
community.
E
In
my
like
apartment
complexes,
complex
there's,
two
connected
complexes,
but
it
was
kind
of
at
least
throughout
the
years
before
got
so
high.
It
was
kind
of
like
a
very
good,
like
you
know,
cultural
hot
spot
kind
of
like
a
docking
point
for
any
community
super
to
come
in.
They
would
have
families
who
could
also
speak
spanish
and
like
immediately,
it's
like
I'm,
not
sure
if
others
understand
this
but
like,
amongst
other,
like
even
when
you're
in
public.
E
You
hear
someone
speaking
your
language
there's
like
automatically
a
connection,
and
we
would
have
that
here,
but
slowly,
like
my
community
kind
of
lost
that,
where,
like
people
just
had
to
move
out
like
in
my
complex,
like
it's
almost
like
by
wrote
practice
like
every
six
months,
you
get
like
you
get
that
letter
like
oh
rent's,
increasing
another
hundred
bucks
and
like
almost
like
every
year,
you
get
that
it's
like
it
can,
I
think,
as
much
as
they
can
increase
it.
It's
increased
but
yeah
like
so.
E
I
just
think
it's
very
important
because
here
you
see
like
the
interlocking
aspect
that
rent
has
on
like
immigrant
issues,
because
when
I
first
moved
in
here
like
I
didn't
speak
any
english
and
the
way
I
was
like
more
assimilated
and
like
so
was
able
to
not
so
much
assimilation
but
just
more
acculturation,
because
I
was
able
to
maintain
some
culture
through,
like
this
community
apartment
complex
that
I
lived
in
and
I
was
able
to
learn
the
language
easier.
E
And
so,
if
you
lose
like
these
communities
because
of
rent
like
can't
stay
intact,
you
lose
like
a
huge
talking
point
for,
like
any
other
communities
that
want
to
join
in
here,
because
even
for
it
has,
you
can
put
like
a
monetary
price
style
on
it,
because
day-to-day
favors,
like
daycare
just
general
tips
like
which
schools
to
register
your
kids
and
all
these
stuff.
You
get
in
through
just
community
just
information
circulation,
because
as
we,
I
think
it's
been
a
recurring
talking
point.
E
I
mean
with
other
panelists
that,
like
just
information
acquisition
and
just
like
being
able
to
spread,
and
just
navigating
in
general,
which
is
very
difficult
and
at
least
for
immigrant
communities
and
these
hot
spots,
it
was
one
of
the
ways
which,
through
other
means,
you
could
facilitate
this
type
of
access.
So
in
this
part,
specifically,
I
think
it's
like
it's
kind
of
just
interlocking
and
just
like,
broadly
applicable,
because
you
lose
something
like
communities.
E
This
impacts
like
job
acquisition,
language
acquisition
and
just
like
people,
just
like
his
bunny's,
very
tight,
like
saving
money
by
just
helping
even
giving
food
like
spare
food,
it
would
be
like.
I
also
mentioned
this
to
cali
over
the
phone.
We
would
have
things
like
rent
parties
where,
like
when
rent,
was
starting
to
get
very
high
like
people
who
couldn't
make
that
difference,
we
would,
as
a
community,
raise
them
those
extra
200
x
at
300
bucks,
so
they
could
pay
it
so
yeah,
just
huge
things
like
that.
E
That,
like
I
think
my
community
is
not
really
it's
kind
of
not
really
a
mexican
community
anymore,
as
it
used
to
be
it's
kind
of
just
like
in
different
neighbors,
closed
doors
type
thing
we're
just
kind
of
oh
okay,
everyone's
kind
of
lives.
Here
you
vaguely
know
each
other
and
stuff
like
that.
So
I
just
to
me
it's
very
important
because
I
see
like
mine
is
lost,
but
you
can
still
keep
there's
still
other
ones
that
you
see.
Hot
spots
are
like
oh
people
helping
each
other.
E
We
can
keep
those
intact
and
we
know
the
issues
that
are
causing
it
like
rent
increases
and
inflation
that
we're
just
not
keeping
up
with
the
type
of
money
that
people
need
to
make
to
still
live
there.
So
I
just
it
was
really.
I
think
it's
really
important
to
bring
this
up,
because
a
huge
issue
that
has
just
broadly
affecting
other
people.
C
Thank
you
for
mentioning
that
edwin.
I
think
that's
incredibly
important,
a
point
that
you
bring.
I
recently
read
golden
gates,
the
housing
crisis
and
a
reckoning
for
the
american
dream,
and
this
is
one
of
the
major
themes
in
that
book:
the
impact
on
communities
and
especially
undocumented
communities
of
the
increasing
cost
of
housing.
So
I
I
really
appreciate
you
bringing
that
into
the
conversation
erica.
C
How
about
you
bring
us
one
more
anecdote
related
to
the
housing
market
and
then
we're
going
to
talk
a
little
bit
about
the
bmr,
the
bmr
market,
for
a
minute.
H
Sure,
first
of
all,
evan
thank
you
so
much
for
bringing
that
up.
It's
something
that
maybe
doesn't
come
up
a
lot
in
these
conversations.
So
I
appreciate
that
all
I
really
wanted
to
add
was
really
to
validate
leslie's
point
as
far
as
what
she's
experiencing
is
very
similar
to
what
our
students
are
experiencing
crazy,
rent
hikes,
all
of
a
sudden
students
living,
I
mean
you
mentioned
two
to
three,
sometimes
three,
to
four
to
a
room.
H
I
also
I
coordinate
the
food
pantry
and
one
of
the
things
that
we
ask
is
you
know
how
many
people
are
in
your
household.
I
have
students
coming
in
who
are
saying
that
they
are
in
a
household
of
10,
18
people
and
it's
all
students,
and
I
just
don't
believe
that
it's
you
know
a
five
or
six
bedroom
home
they're.
You
know
sharing
a
two
or
three
bedroom
home
or
apartment
just
rent,
just
the
rental
market
in
cupertino
is
wildly
underestimated.
I
don't
think
people
understand
how
people
are
living
in
cupertino.
C
D
Yeah
bmr
is
when
you
pay
a
rent
that
is
below
the
market
rent,
so
it
depends
on
the
amount
of
income
that
you
earn.
So
your
bmr
house
rent
is
the
the
income
limit.
That's
why
you
spoke
about
inflation.
The
income
limit
is
what
determines
what
rent
you
pay
for
the
bmr.
So
when
I
started
14
years
ago,
I
paid
900
today,
I'm
paying
1
800
after
14
years,
because
my
salary
has
increased,
and
so
my
rent
also
goes
up,
but
then
there
is
a
limit.
D
D
So
that
is
one
of
the
questions.
One
of
the
questions
that
I
wanted
this
thing
but
bmr
has
been.
I
would
say
that
city
of
cupertino
has
been
doing
a
great
job
with
bmr.
I
have
to
admit
the
recertification
that
I
do
it
every
year
and
then
it
has
been
a
smooth
transfer.
Recertification
has
never
been
a
problem
for
me
as
long
as
I
submit
all
the
documents,
and
it
has
so
far
for
the
past
14
years,
I've
had
no
issues
except
the
rent
increase,
which
is
normal.
D
You
know,
which
is,
I
don't
blame
this
thing.
That
is
the
normal
that
you
have
to
say,
but
if
I
lose
my
bmr,
where
will
I
go?
That
is
my
big
question.
So
I
keep
on
working
even
at
this
age,
a
full-time
job,
I'm
working
to
just
to
keep
myself
to
have
the
house
for
myself
to
keep
myself
to
make
the
ends
meet.
C
Thank
you.
Well
we're
fast
approaching
the
end
of
our
panel.
I
I
could
listen
to
this
conversation
for
quite
a
bit
more
and
we
only
scratched
even
just
a
small
portion
of
the
of
the
total
number
of
questions
I
had,
but
I
do
want
to
give
an
opportunity
to
hear
from
all
five
of
you
again
once
more
before
we
conclude
so
my
final
question,
and-
and
maybe
just
summarize
this
question
in
maybe
just
one
or
two
sentences.
G
Yes,
I
do
believe
collective
resources.
If
you
are
a
community
member,
it
is
very
important
to
share
the
resources
that
you
have
gained
with
another
human
being.
G
If
you
have
a
conversation,
if
you're
waiting
in
line
for
the
food
reach
out
to
the
person
next
to
you
and
just
say
hi,
how
are
you
tell
me
a
little
bit
about
your
story
if
you're
at
your
church,
if
you're
at
the
odd
fellows
or
you
know,
you're
volunteering
somewhere
talk
about
your
experience
to
somebody
else,
because
they
may
have
a
connection,
you
may
be
able
to
offer
something.
Thank
you.
C
F
There
was
no
advertisement,
it
was
just
a
self-reaching
or
like
when,
like
around
the
area,
if
they
have
something
they
would
go.
But
the
main
question
that
all
the
students
gave
us
is
that
if
there
was
more
like
advertisement,
then
students
would
more.
Students
would
get
help,
since
the
community
did
not
have
like
the
edd
did
not
have
enough
like
sources
or
like
things
that
they
could
not
help
out
so
yeah.
C
Thank
you,
parisha
edwin.
How
about
you.
E
Yeah
I
mean
first,
I
want
to
really
quickly
quickly
just
echo
that,
because,
while
like
these
type
of
resources
may
not
apply
even
to
the
person
you're
telling
they
might
have
someone
like
even
for
de
anza,
we
have
like
the
adela
scholarship
which,
like
I
think
we
even
got
like
we
kept
like
forcefully
advertising
it,
because
not
enough
people
were
applying
if
the
resources
there.
But
besides
that,
I
think
just
I
want
people
to
take
away
from
this
to
just
pay
attention
to
your
community
like.
E
D
I
also
think
that
community
resources
is
very
important
and
that's
how
I
got
into
the
bmr
with
community
resources
only
and
I
think
west
valley,
community
services
are
doing
a
great
job
there
over
there
and
I
think,
reaching
out
to
each
other
and
telling
them
what
you
what
you
know
about
it,
your
knowledge
sharing.
It
really
helps
other
people
also
to
get
the
resources
that
that
need
that
they
need
to
overcome
any
difficulties
that
they
have.
H
H
It's
just
a
greater
understanding
that
housing
in
your
own
community,
if
you're
living
in
cupertino,
looks
very
different
than
most
people
assume.
There
are
a
lot
of
people
that
are
struggling,
so
I
think
the
takeaway
really
is
in
these
meetings
or
in
these
associations
or
for
people
that
are
working
on
solving
or
impacting
the
housing
crisis.
Market.
Affordability
availability
is
really
to
have
more
of
these
types
of
sessions
where
people
can
come
and
really
talk
about
what
their
housing
situation
is.
H
What
they're
struggling
with
in
the
hopes
of
rallying
the
community
around
solving
these
issues
together
as
a
community,
because
I
think
sometimes
the
community
itself
could
be
the
barrier
and
maybe
it's
because
they
don't
know
what
their
neighbors
are
struggling
with.
So
maybe
that's
just
a
takeaway.
C
C
This
is
how
we
learn
from
people
who
come
to
us
and
share
the
challenges
and
the
opportunities
they
face.
I
feel
like
I'm
walking
away
with
all
sorts
of
additional
learnings
and
questions,
and
I
really
want
to
again
stress
how
how
amazing
this
gift
is
that
the
five
of
you
gave
us
tonight.
Thank
you
so
much
with
that,
I'm
going
to
turn
it
over
to
kristen
who's,
going
to
share
a
brief
reflection
before
we
talk
about
our
next
steps
for
the
evening.
I
So
you
have
questions
that
are
going
to
guide
you,
but
the
basic
thing
is
to
notice
what
you
were
moved
by
and
what
you
may
be
being
moved
to
do
or
to
take
action
on.
So
just
just
just
take
a
breath
before
we
sweep
you
into
breakout
groups
to
be
able
to
share
to
to
notice
how
you
are
from
having
heard
that,
that's
it
and
I'll
go
back
to
josh.
C
Thank
you
kristin,
it's
so
nice
to
remind
ourselves
it's
it's
important
to
breathe
and
that
that
breathing
that's
centering
can
help
prepare
us
to
reflect
on
what
we've
just
heard.
So
we're
going
to
move
you
into
breakout
room
shortly
for
20
minutes.
I
know
we
told
you
the
program
was
going
to
end
at
8
o'clock.
C
It's
gonna
end
a
little
bit
after
eight
o'clock,
but
we
hope
that
you'll
stay
with
us
and
we
promise
that
once
you
come
back
from
the
breakout
rooms,
we'll
quickly
move
you
on
these
are
the
questions
we'd
like
you
to
consider
how
did
hearing
from
the
panelists
impact
your
perspective
on
housing
and
for
students
and
older
adults
needs
these
questions
will
go
into
the
chat
so
that
they
can
carry
with
you
into
the
breakout
rooms.
C
Why
is
it
important
that
we
hear
from
people
with
lived
experience
and
what
can
we,
as
a
community,
do
to
support
our
neighbors
in
need?
We
did
hear
some
ideas
from
our
panelists,
but
you
likely
have
some
other
ideas
as
well
or
want
to
resonate
with
the
ideas
you
heard
again.
You'll
have
moderate
moderators
in
your
room
to
help
facilitate
conversation.
We
will
see
you
back
here
in
20
minutes.
C
It
looks
like
it
looks
like
everyone
is
back,
so
welcome
back
everyone.
I
hope
you
enjoyed
the
second
round
of
breakout
rooms
and
the
conversation
that
you
had
in
them.
We're
just
about
to
conclude
a
few
things.
One
is
shortly
you'll
be
getting
an
exit
survey
launched
to
you.
You
don't
need
to
fill
it
out
this
minute,
but
we
would
like
you
to
fill
it
out
tonight
and
submit
it.
This
helps
us
learn
about
your
experience
and
helps
us
plan
for
the
future
other
conversations
with
the
community.
So
please
take
a
few
minutes.
C
It's
a
very
short
exit
survey.
We
would
love
your
feedback.
We
also
want
you
to
get
involved
with
the
housing
element.
This
is
part
of
a
public
process,
which
means
we
need
the
public
to
engage
with
the
process
and
you
are
the
public.
So
how
can
you
engage
with
the
process?
We
have
some
ideas
here.
We
will
follow
up
with
an
email
that
has
all
this
information
likely
a
little
bit
more
after
the
program
in
the
next
week
or
two,
but
you
can
visit.
C
Engage.Com
engage
cupertino.org,
backslash
housing
element
luke
talks
about
that
at
the
top
of
tonight's
program.
You
can
also
subscribe
to
the
housing
element
newsletter,
complete
the
cupertino
housing
simulator
that
andy
mentioned
you're,
always
welcome
to
attend
planning
commissions
to
strategic
advisory
committees
and
city
council
meetings.
It's
super
easy
to
attend
in
zoomville
because
you
can
attend
from
your
couch
or
your
desk
or
your
office.
You
can
give
public
comment.
You
don't
need
to
be
an
expert,
so
sometimes
people
feel
like.
I
can't
give
public
comment.
What
do
I
know?
C
I'm
just
a
citizen,
but
that's
exactly
why
you
should
give
public
comment.
You
are
an
expert
in
what
is
important
to
you
and
those
are
the
kinds
of
things
we
need
the
public
to
engage
with
in
and
our
city
councilors
want
to
hear
those
things
and
our
commissioners
want
to
hear
those
things.
So
please
feel
comfortable
submitting
a
token
to
speak
during
public
comment
about
any
of
these
meetings
or,
if
you
prefer
attend
as
a
listener.
C
That's
also
great,
and
then,
of
course
we
want
you
to
talk
to
your
friends
and
neighbors
about
the
housing
element
share,
maybe
something
that
you
learned.
So
what
I'm
going
to
ask
you
to
do
now
is
don't
tell
me,
don't
put
it
in
the
chat
but
of
this
list
here.
Can
you
commit
to
one
thing?
Maybe
you
write
it
down?
C
I
also
mentioned
two
books
that
I've
recently
read
we'll
include
this
in
the
email
we
send
out,
but
for
those
of
you
who
want
to
get
it
down
now,
the
first
one
is
golden
gates,
the
housing
crisis
and
a
reckoning
for
the
american
dream,
it's
by
connor
doherty,
and
it's
about
specifically
the
bay
area.
So
I
highly
recommend
it.
C
The
second
one
is
homelessness,
is
a
housing
problem
and
that's
by
greg
colburn
and
clayton
paige
aldern
and
we'll
send
those
resources
out
in
in
the
meeting
as
well
in
the
follow-up
email
to
the
meeting
as
well.
I
I
have
a
few
thank
yous
quickly
before
we
launch
our
closing
poll.
I
want
to
thank
again
our
incredible
panel.
You
were
awesome.
Thank
you
for
sharing
your
perspective
with
us
and
allowing
us
to
learn
from
you.
C
I
want
to
thank
kylie
clark,
our
public
policy
coordinator
at
west
valley,
community
services
and
the
entire
wvcs
team,
who
are
here
tonight
they
can
wave.
So
you
can
see
all
of
our
team
members
who
are
here
tonight
helping
support
this
program.
I
want
to
thank
our
partners
at
the
city
of
cupertino.
C
But
then
you
made
the
time
to
be
here
tonight
with
us
to
learn
that
that
says
a
lot
about
this
community
and
why
it
is
a
special
place
and
why
we
have
a
lot
of
opportunity
to
grow
together
and
make
this
a
place
we're
all
proud
of
where
everyone
can
find
a
place
to
make
this
this
community
home.
With
that,
we
have
two
final
pull
questions.
We
want
to
know
your
thoughts
on
the
first
question
on
a
scale
of
one
to
ten.
C
C
I
have
reached
expert
level
so
again
we're
going
to
make
this
fast
because
we're
a
little
bit
late,
so
go
ahead
and
tell
us
your
thoughts.
Where
are
you
now
in
terms
of
how
you
feel
about
your
understanding
of
of
housing
as
it
relates
to
students
and
older
adults?
C
Okay,
we're
gonna.
I
think
we're
gonna
go
ahead
and
close
that
share
those
results.
I
wanna
say
there
are
no
ones
twos
or
threes.
We
have
definitely
moved
the
needle
on
this
one.
So
that
is
awesome
good
to
see
and
our
last
question.
What
is
one
thing
we
are
going
to
ask
you?
What
is
one
thing
you're
going
to
do
to
get
involved
with
the
cupertino
housing
element,
so
you
can
choose
one
or
you
can
choose
the
bottom,
one
all
of
the
above,
no
pressure.
C
C
It
looks
like
a
lot
of
incredible
work
is
going
to
be
done
in
this
community
and
for
that
we
have
all
of
you
to
thank
with
that.
Thank
you
all
for
making
time
to
join
us
at
tonight's
program,
and
we
look
forward
to
having
an
opportunity
to
learn
with
you
and
from
you
again
in
the
near
future.
Take
care
everyone
and
have
a
good
night.