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A
A
Lims.Miniofminneapolismn.Gov
and
kenzie
and
galen:
do
you
have
the
agenda
well,
you're
driving!
Don't
look
at
the
agenda.
I
take
that
back
kenzie.
Do
you
need
me
to
send
you
anything
or
are
you
good
on
the
agenda?
No,
I
got
the
agenda
pulled
up,
I'm
good
perfect!
Is
there
anything
either
of
you
two
wanted
to
add
to
what
is
already
on
here.
A
Okay
and
I'm
getting
that
message
that
I
have
bad
network
quality.
So
please
just
signal
me
if
my
audio
starts
cutting
out
at
any
point
and
I
can
turn
off
video
and
see
if
that
helps.
But
the
first
thing
I
had
was,
I
was
just
gonna
give
a
couple
updates.
I
was
at
an
lgbtq
leader's
table
for
congressman
omar's
office.
That
nikki,
who
presented
at
the
tec,
recently
helped
pull
together,
and
there
were
folks
from
a
ton
of
different
orgs
giving
updates
on
kind
of
what
they're
working
on.
A
A
So-
and
I
will
kind
of
organize
this
by
org
as
best
I
can
but
reclaim
is
the
like
policy
piece
they're
pushing
for
is
continued
funding
for
sexual
violence
prevention
in
schools,
and
this
is
more
state
level.
I
believe
and
then
also
continued
funding
for
telehealth
therapy,
which
was
something
that
there
was
some
bursts
of
funding
to
make
it
more
accessible
for
small
non-profits
to
do
at
the
beginning
of
covid.
A
But
it's
a
thing
that
many
of
their
clients
could
benefit
from,
even
once
we're
in
a
point
where
covid
wise,
it's
safe
for
therapy
to
happen
in
person
out
for
good,
which
is
the
queer
and
trans
everything
of
minneapolis
public
schools.
That's
not
their
technical
title,
but
I
could
not
come
up
with
their
technical
title
off.
A
The
top
of
my
head
is
working
on
gender-neutral
bathrooms
in
minneapolis
public
schools,
which
I'm
sure
casey
knows
a
decent
amount
about
as
well
and
inclusive
sex,
ed
curriculums
for
the
schools
and
at
any
point
I
will
like
go
through
all
this
and
then
we
can
check
in.
But
if
at
any
point,
there's
something
you
have
more
questions
about
or
want
to
flag
like.
I
want
the
tec
to
jump
on
this.
Please
also
just
jump
in.
I
don't
need
to
just
like
talk
at
you.
A
Black
immigrant
collective
was
talking
locally
specifically
about
the
deportation
of
a
lot
of
queer
somali
youth
recently
and
what,
if
anything,
congresswoman
omar's
office
could
do
to
stop
that
and
then
outside
of
the
u.s.
The
targeting
that
queer
and
trans
folks
are
experiencing
in
certain
refugee
camps.
A
Black
lgbtq
plus
migrant
project
was
talking
about
the
need
for
immigration
legislation
that
doesn't
have
criminal
bars
with
the
kind
of
concern
that
the
dream
and
the
promise
act
that
are
currently
moving
through
federally
because
of
bars
around
criminal
history
and
access
to
like
legal
immigration
status
would
exclude
many
black
immigrants,
because
we
know
the
criminal
justice
system
is
racist,
etc,
etc.
A
Out
front
minnesota
is
working
on
conversion
therapy
bands
quorum,
which
supports
lgbtq
plus
owned
businesses,
is
working
on
support
for
lgbtq
plus
by
poc
business
owners,
both
getting
access
to
capital
and
not
having
to
pay
taxes
on
their
ppp
loans,
which
is
definitely
a
federal
government
thing
and
not
a
not
a
city
level
thing
minnesota
department
of
health,
sure,
former
tec
member,
as
you
may
have
even
heard.
A
The
mention
is
working
on
trying
to
actually
collect
sexual
orientation
and
gender
identity
data
with
regards
to
all
of
the
coveted
work
so
that
we
can
track
the
impact
of
covid
on
our
communities
and
where
we're
at
with
vaccines
etc.
A
Just
us
health,
which
I
also
believe
is
in
the
middle
of
a
name
change
like
right
now,
but
I'm
blanking
on
what
they're
changing
their
name
to
is
working
on
supporting
federal
employees
in
accessing
gender,
affirming
health
care,
the?
U
of
m
twin
cities,
has
been
working
on
more
trans-inclusive
health
insurance
for
the
university
for
both
staff
and
students.
A
Having
screening
questions
that
around
trans
inclusivity
that
determine
which
insurance
provider
gets
their
contract,
working
on
advocacy
and
needing
more
support
around
advocacy
with
building
codes,
so
that
architects
can
stop
denying
the
need
for
gender,
inclusive,
restrooms,
dealing
with
anti-trans
athletic
bills,
and
they
have
just
passed
a
system-wide
policy
around
trans
inclusion.
A
That
seems
really
really
thorough
and
they're
hoping
to
see
more
national
non-discrimination
laws
that
look
more
like
the
type
of
policy
they
just
put
together
and
then
root
springs.
Minnesota
was
talking
about
black
queer
land
projects.
There
are
multiple
going
on
in
minnesota
and
support
for
black
folks,
owning
land,
coordinating
farms
and
other
spaces.
A
A
So
I
just
threw
a
ton
of
things
at
you.
Many
of
them
are
federal
level,
but
I'm
curious
if
anyone
has
any
reflections,
thoughts,
comments.
Anything
like
that.
B
A
Yes,
great
clarification
point
we
passed
it
in
minneapolis
when
we
couldn't
get
it
passed
on
a
state
level
and
what
they're
working
on
now,
because
it
still
seems
unrealistic
on
a
state
level
with
the
current
state
senate,
is
getting
other
cities
to
pass
it.
So
I
think
we're
at
seven
cities
in
minnesota
right
now,
who've
done
it
they're
working
on,
I
want
to
say,
like
burnsville
and
richfield
right
now,
maybe
robinsdale.
A
A
Hi
there
good
to
see
you.
I
was
just
giving
a
summary
of
some
of
the
things
different
orgs
had
been
working
on
at
congresswoman,
omar's,
lgbtq,
plus
leaders
roundtable,
and
I
will
also
send
all
of
that
out
in
the
notes.
Galen,
were
you
about
to
jump
in
and
say
something
yeah?
Sorry,
you
probably.
C
Heard
my
car
you're.
A
C
I
was,
I
was
curious.
You
said
that
the?
U
was
working
on,
ensuring
more
trans-inclusive
healthcare
options
like
insurance
for
students
and
staff,
and
I
was
curious
if
that
you
know
you
know,
questionnaire
like
what
sort
of
things
they're
asking
for
to
qualify
as
inclusive,
because
obviously
insurance
is
a
very
prickly
thing.
I
was
just
curious.
A
That
is
an
excellent
question.
I
don't
have
that
in
detail,
but
I
am
actually
meeting
with
some
of
the
folks
who
do
some
of
the
trans
inclusion
work
at
the
u
later
this
week.
So
I
will
ask
that
when
I
meet
with
them
and
follow
back
up
with
you
all.
C
Yeah,
I
was
just
curious
because,
like
there's,
there's
trans-inclusive
quote-unquote,
but
then
it
still
doesn't
cover
all
sorts
of
different
care
that,
like
trans
folks,
would
be
looking
for.
And
so
I
was
just
trying
to
get
a
a
sense
of
scope
for
how
inclusive
they
were
trying
to
make
sure
their
provider
is
going
to
be.
C
I
I
think
you
don't
have
to
ask
them
anything
in
particular.
It's
it's
mostly
an
issue
of
curiosity
because,
like
you
know,
we
have
so
many
different
things
that
insurance
providers
will
exclude
as
cosmetic,
and
so
I'm
just
curious
if
they
are
even
thinking
about
those
sorts
of
things
and
how
they
would
approach
that,
because
if
they,
if
they
were
thinking
about
those
things,
that
would
be
super
cool
and
it
would
be
fun
to
like
use
as
a
model
for
other
organizations
who
are
trying
to
pursue
that
stuff.
A
In
that
case,
I
can
move
into
giving
updates
for
you
all
on
some
of
the
like
policy
priority
areas
you
all
have
identified
and
may
do
you
did
you
get
the
agenda?
That's
attached
to
the
calendar,
invite
as
well.
Do
you
have
what
I'm
looking
off
of
or
do
you
need
it.
D
A
Perfect,
okay,
so
I
don't
have
a
ton
in
the
transforming
community
safety
conversation.
I
don't
have
any
updates
on
the
mental
health
crisis
response
teams.
I
think
that's
still
like
I
told
you
when
the
request
for
proposals
for
those
went
out,
and
I
think
that's
just
still
in
the
hiring
process.
I
will
follow
up
with
those
staff
soon,
when
I
think
it's
a
little
further
along.
A
The
one
thing
I
do
know
just
happened
is
part
of
what
got
funded
as
a
potential
project
in
the
budget
cycle
at
the
end
of
last
year
was
working
on
an
unarmed
traffic
safety
division
that
would
exist
outside
of
mpd
and
do
traffic
enforcement
separate
from
mpd
without
any
weapons,
and
so
what
is
going
through
council
this
week
will
will
be
voted
on
city
council
this
week
is
a
staff
direction,
essentially
an
instruction
to
city
staff
to
start
figuring
out
what
it
would
look
like
to
create
an
unarmed
traffic
safety
division.
A
What
the
timeline
would
be,
what
the
process
would
be
and
report
back
to
council
by
the
end
of
june
with
that
kind
of
high-level
overview,
so
that
will
be
voted
on
at
the
council
meeting
this
friday.
It
passed
unanimously
in
the
public,
health
and
safety
committee,
so
is
now
going
to
council.
A
That's
the
only
update,
I'm
aware
of
on
any
of
that
work
that
we
all
had
talked
about.
I
watched
the
public
health
and
safety
committee
meeting
last
week
to
see
if
there
were
any
more
updates
for
you
all.
There
was
like
a
document
attached
to
the
agenda
around
mpd's
new
policies
on
less
lethal
crowd
control
weapons,
but
there
wasn't
a
presentation
or
anything
like
that.
So
and
the
document
was
pretty
high
level.
A
So
I
didn't
I'm
not
bringing
that
to
you
all,
but
it
does
exist
there.
If
you
want
to
see
it,
the
council
members
were
just
a
number
of
council
members
expressed
that
they
were
disappointed,
that
there
wasn't
a
presentation
and
we're
told
that
the
city
attorney's
office
had
advised
mpd
to
not
speak
publicly
publicly
on
their
policies,
while
there's
pending
litigation
about
their
use
of
less
lethal
crowd
control
weapons.
So
that
is
where
that's
at
and
that's
why
there's
not
much
there
that
I
can
offer
from
having
watched
that
meeting.
B
Like
legislation
happening
in
for
like
a
city
in
florida-
and
I
think
maybe
somewhere
in
oklahoma,
where
like
city
city
officials
are
or
maybe
it's
at
the
state
level,
so
I
apologize
clearly
I'm
coming
in
uninformed
but
they're
trying
to
make
it
so
that.
D
If
I
remember
correctly,
they
had
done
a
story
about
this
on
npr
and
actually
what
they
had
done
is
and
again
my
words
they
had
juxtaposed
this
against.
There
seems
to
be
two
different
types
of
avenues.
People
are
seeking
for
this
type
of
policy
so
like,
for
instance,
and
I
want
to
say
it's
austin-
they
have
a
thing
where
they
did
in
fact
vote
to
defund
the
police.
They
don't
know
what
that
means
yet,
but
they
did
in
fact
follow
through
on
it
and
then
for
other
places.
D
They
were
tightening
up
procedures
where
it
would
be
more
difficult
to
defund
the
police
right,
so
whatever
that
was
so,
it
kind
of
depends
really
on
where
the
the
political
mindset
is,
and
it
also
is
about
who's,
paying
attention
to
how
the
work
is
done.
D
You
know-
and
you
can
say
that
really
about
anything
gerrymandering
or
about
you
know
how
the
voting
rights
act
is
going,
but
for
people
where
the
law
and
order
segment
of
their
society
has
let's
say,
a
greater
monetary
value
right.
The
prison
system
is
big.
There
is
a
strong
paramilitary
presence,
then
it's
it.
D
They
see
it
as
an
attack
on
their
livelihood,
not
just
the
system,
the
community,
but
a
better
real
attack
on
their
livelihood,
and
so
that's
why
they're
trying
to
shore
up
their
their
police
departments,
because
it's
not
just
about
what
they're
doing
to
the
community.
It's
also
about
what
you're
trying
to
do
to
them.
B
D
B
Yeah
and
also
I've
been
seeing
similar
in
addition
to
you,
know,
trying
to
make
it
next
to
impossible
to
defund
the
police,
increasing
like
punitive
measures
for
like
riots
and
so,
and
the
reason
I
bring
this
up
is.
B
I
don't
know,
is
there
a
way
that
we
can
like
prevent
that
legislation
and
like?
I,
don't
necessarily
think
that
that
would
happen
in
minnesota.
But
if
there
is
like
something
in
minneapolis
where
we
can
don't
know
put
something
into
place,
that
says
like
we're
not
going
to
increase
punitive
measures
for
grieving
communities
or.
B
Something
like
that-
and
I
mean
like
also
our
city
council,
said
that
they
were
going
to
defund.
They
were
going
to
like
reform
our
police
department,
and
that
has
yet
to
happen.
So
I
don't
know.
I
don't
think
I
have
a
coherent
thought,
but
I
have
a
lot
of
feelings
and
I
also
have
a
lot
of
feelings
about
this
unarmed,
like
traffic
division.
B
B
D
D
I
mean
seriously
there
are
people
cannot
make
that
distinction
and
they
confuse
them
all
the
time.
So
I
I
hear
you
so
yeah
there's
a
lot
here
it
just
it.
It
doesn't
quite
formulate
up
here.
Yet
I
get.
A
That-
and
I
can
I
can
try
to
offer
to
all
of
that.
I
don't
know
if
there's
any
state
legislation
going
on
right
now
around
like
preventing
things
that
would
count
as
defunding.
I
feel
like
I
heard
that
there's
something
proposed
around
riots,
but
I
or
riots,
but
I
honestly
can't
keep
track
and
don't
know
necessarily
whether
it
has
a
chance
of
passing.
I
can
look
into
that
and
figure
out
if
I'm
making
something
up
or
not.
D
Actually,
what
you
probably
want
to
do
is
check-
and
I
can't
remember
that
a
very
nice
man,
nice
man's
name,
but
one
of
the
things
that
they
got
into
was
about
when
the
government
is
giving
money
to
rebuild.
After
last
year's
civil
unrest,
part
of
it
was
you're
out
of
state
you're
out
of
minneapolis
or
out
of
you
know
the
outer
suburbs.
D
But
why
should
they
have
to
be
punished
and
give
their
money
to
people
who
are
rioting
right
and
people
who
are
who
are
seeking
to
do
destruction
and
that
that's
one
of
the
things
that
they
were
talking
about?
And
I
can't
remember
they
had
the
discussion
around
how
to
allocate
funds
right
and
where
it
was
gonna
go
those
dollars.
But
I
cannot
remember
the
the
gentleman's
name-
and
I
say
that
literally
the
gentleman's
name
who
was
bringing
that
point
up
so
that
might
be
some
place
to
start.
A
A
There
are
a
lot
of
legal
logistics
that
I
do
not
have
the
degree
to
explain
around
like
when
the
state
preempts
the
city
and
when
the
city
preempts
the
state-
and
I
just
have
to
ask
someone
else
when
that's
the
case,
but
I
can
ask
that
question
and
the
other
other
thing
I'll
offer
in
terms
of
the
unarmed
traffic
safety
division.
Conversation
is
both.
A
A
I
believe
that
work
is
being
led
by
council
member
cunningham,
who
is
the
executive
sponsor
of
the
tec
and
is
always
looking
for
tec
feedback,
and
so,
if
you
have,
a
sense
of
like
here
is
what
we
as
the
tec
would
want
to
see,
and
I'm
wondering
kenzie,
even
if
you
want
to
raise
that
in
the
next
tec
meeting
and
we
can
leave
some
space
for
brainstorming
there.
I
think
that
could
be
a
great
place
to
give
feedback
both
to
staff
and
councilmember
cunningham.
That's
like
very,
very
specifically,
action.
B
B
That's
just
my
thinking,
so
yeah
I'd
be
interested
to
hear
what
other
people
think.
It's
very
interesting
that
councilmember
cunningham.
What
did
you
say
he
is
he's
it's
his
project.
A
B
Okay,
cool
yeah-
I
again
still
trying
to
form
all
of
my
thoughts,
but
I
definitely
would
like
to
bring
that
up.
A
B
Not
do
we
have
other
other
updates
about
community
safety
or
is
it
is
it
just
the
unarmed
traffic
safety
division?
That's
kind
of
come
up.
A
I
don't
have
other
updates
because
they're
still
in
the
process
of
filling
the
mental
health
crisis
response
teams-
and
that
was
the
other
thing
we
were
actively
tracking,
but
I
am
going
to
follow
up
with
the
staff
in
charge
of
that
just
to
get
a
sense
of
where
that
timeline's
at.
A
A
In
terms
of
housing,
then
of
the
housing
policies
that
you
all
had
advocated
around
the
only
thing
that's
changed
since
I
last
gave
you
all
updates
is
that
the
city
is
drafting
some
new
renter
eviction
protections
and
will
be
bringing
forth
the
legislation
language
for
public
hearing
and
for
a
council
vote
in
may
2021.
A
The
goal
is
to
get
these
passed
before
the
eviction
moratorium
ends.
It's
not
legislation
that
could
it
is.
A
The
legislation
is
not
an
eviction
moratorium,
but
it
is
legislation
that
decreases
the
context
in
which
a
landlord
can
file
for
eviction
and,
like
increases
the
amount
of
conversation
that
has
to
happen
between
a
landlord
and
a
tenant
before
they
can
put
forward
some
of
the
paperwork
that
like
even
if
the
tenant
one
one
in
court,
would
still
end
up
on
their
permanent
record,
so
they're
drafting
the
legislation
language,
so
I
don't
have
legislation
language
to
present.
To
you
linked
in
the
agenda.
A
A
In
that
case,
in
terms
of
the
sex
work,
decriminalization
work,
I've
been
continuing
to
go
to
the
decrim
coalition
meetings,
they're
working
on
ideally
repealing
the
city's
loitering
ordinance,
which
can
charge
people
for
quote
unquote
with
both
loitering
for,
like
intent
to
cell
narcotics
and
intent
to
commit
prostitution
is
the
language
so
all
based
around
police
officer,
perceived
intent
of
the
person
being
charged.
B
C
A
In
the
coalition
meeting,
we
brainstormed
a
lot
of
things
around
like
explaining
why
it's
actually
beneficial
from
a
public
health
perspective
for
folks
not
to
get
arrested
in
these
contexts,
explaining
like
what
the
loitering
ordinance
is
actually
being
used
for
versus
what
it
like
theoretically,
is
intended
to
be
used
for.
A
Talking
about
this
from
a
like
sex,
ed
perspective,
talking
about
like
alternatives
to
policing
and
like
what?
What
exactly
are
the
police
doing
in
this
context,.
A
And
then
trying
we're
working
with
the
city
attorney's
office
to
trying
to
pull
a
bunch
of
data
on
like
who's,
getting
in
charge,
demographics,
any
information
we
can
get,
and
so
that's
some
of
the
stuff.
That's
in
that
was
brainstormed
as
potential
useful
questions
for
the
toolkit.
To
answer
right
now
and
my
question
for
you
all
is:
are
there
more
questions
that
either
like
you
have,
or
you
anticipate
people
you're
connected
to
having
or
like
pieces
like
pieces
where
this
could
be
more
trans-specific
in
ways?
That
would
be
helpful.
A
D
A
A
No
worries
at
all
glad
you
made
it
back
in,
but
totally
fine
if
there
are
no
auditions
and
as
as
an
actual
toolkit
gets
developed
that
can
be
distributed,
I
will
be
sending
that
out
to
the
whole
tec,
so
you
have
so
you
can
spread
it
to
other
partners
and
folks
who
are
connected
to
as
makes
sense,
and
so
you
can
see
all
the
language
that
they've
come
up
with.
So
I
will
continue
to
keep
you
all
posted
on
that
and
again.
A
A
And
then
the
last
policy
priority
category
I
had
was
the
trans-panic
defense
so
for
context
may,
as
we
throw
you
into
everything,
the
the
goal
is
to
ban
what
is
currently
a
viable
legal
defense.
Where
someone
can
say,
I
killed
someone
because
they
were
trans
and
I
was
freaked
out
by
that
and
what
was
the
technical
term
for
this
again.
Dear
trans
panic
defense,
as
in
someone
who
is
trans
yeah,
so
there
is
there
has
been.
This
is
something
that
would
have
to
be
banned
on
a
state
level.
A
It
is
not
a
thing
that
can
be
addressed
on
a
city
level,
there
has
been
legislation
introduced
on
a
state
level.
That's
really
about
all
I've
got,
which
is
where
we
were
last
time,
is
that
legislation
has
been
introduced
on
a
state
level
again.
The
tc
technically
has
no
official
jurisdiction
on
a
state
level,
but
could
could
always
contact
state
representatives
either
like
one-on-one
or
via
a
letter
naming
kind
of
like
we
advise
the
city
of
minneapolis.
A
We
are
not
speaking
as
a
tec
or
the
city
of
minneapolis,
but
like
look,
we
are
people
who
know
things
and
please
ban
this.
If
that
is,
I
know
that
was
something
you
all
discuss
drafting
at
some
point.
I
also
know
that
the
world
has
been
everything,
and
I
I
have
not
done
everything
that
I
hoped
I
wanted
to.
C
A
C
Just
on
the
on
the
letter
topic,
I
think
the
more
I
think
about
it.
I
would
like
to
time
if
we
do
something
with
when
it's
actually
being
heard
in
committee
and
all
of
that
jazz,
and
I
don't
even
know
if,
if
anything
has
happened
with
it
at
the
legislative
level,
and
so
I
feel
like
I
feel
like
it
will
be
more
of
a
priority
once
it's
starting
to
actually
be
discussed
because
right
now
we
just
have
the
legislation
proposed
right
and
that's
it.
A
I
believe
so
my
experience
isn't
tracking
legislation
on
a
city
level,
not
a
state
level.
So
I
tried
to
look
this
up
this
morning
before
this
meeting
got
a
little
confused,
transparently
and
but
I
will
try
to
get
a
better
sense
of
exactly
what
that
looks
like
and
let
you
know
on
timeline,
because
I
agree,
I
think,
targeting
it
then
would
be
ideal
if
possible.
C
Yeah
the
legislative
tracking
system
back
in
colorado,
because
it's
the
only
one
I'm
really
familiar
with
would
say
it
would
like
update
like
on
when.
D
C
Being
heard
in
committee
and
all
that
sort
of
stuff-
and
I
don't
know
if
the
minnesota
version
does
that,
but
you
know
it
always
seems
like
any
time
these
sorts
of
things
come
up.
You
could
try
and
contact
people
ahead
of
time,
but
it
may
be
that
the
people
that
you
contact
won't
even
see
it.
You
know,
etc,
and
so
until
you
know
it's
being
heard
in
committee,
it
can
be
a
bit
messy
to
try
and
reach
out
to
specific
people.
A
A
Okay,
I'm
thinking
this
one
through
out
loud.
So
thank
you.
Thank
you
for
your
patience
on
that.
If
you
were
writing
a
letter
to
city
council
or
the
mayor
in
your
official
tec
capacity,
you
would
have
to
vote
as
a
tec
to
take
that
action.
So
you
would
have
to
time
it
around
being
able
to
vote
in
a
tec
meeting
to
do
this,
although
this
is
not
technically
in
your
official
tc
capacity,
and
you
therefore
don't
need
to
vote
to
take
this
action.
A
I
don't
think
it
could
hurt.
I
don't
believe
there
is
any
just
from
a
like
moving
systems
as
they're
supposed
to
perspective,
and
so,
if
you
even
wanted
to
report
back
in
the
next
tc
meeting,
just
like
we
are
planning
on
writing
a
letter,
obviously
not
in
our
official
tec
capacity
when
like
when
this
comes
through
committee,
making
that
announcement
now
in
advance-
because
my
guess
is-
we
may
not
have
the
like
months-
lead
up
of
time
to
plan
this
with
the
whole
tec.
A
So
I
just
want
to
make
sure
anyone
who
wants
to
be
a
part
of
it
gets
looped
into
that
conversation
in
advance.
So
you
all
can
just
go
when
it
is
likely
to
get
to
get
hurt
in
committee
soon,
if
that
makes
sense,
so
maybe
not
a
vote.
But
just
I
want
to
make
sure
that
this
gets
reported
back
on
in
the
full
tec
and
that
folks
have
the
opportunity
to
plug
in
if
they
didn't
already.
Thanks
for
listening
to
me,
talk
that
one
through
out
loud,
I
couldn't
get
through
it
in
my
head.
A
A
If
not
the
two
other
things
I
had
flagged
for
the
agenda
and
I
think
the
last
policy
meeting.
We
talked
briefly
about
the
transequity
summit
and
the
idea
of
like
how
do
we
connect
storytelling
to
policy
amir
who's,
a
former
city
staff,
member
and
jay
who
had
joined
the
call
and
is
a
staff
at
family
tree
clinic,
had
both
been
kind
of
brainstorming
around
that
idea.
A
I
wanted
to
bring
that
back
up
if
there
are
no
further
ideas,
that's
totally
fine,
but
if
anyone's
like
yeah,
I
want
to
think
about
a
summit
workshop.
That's
about
storytelling
oral
history
policy
building.
Out
of
that
anything
like
that,
I
wanted
to
pose
that,
so
we
could
brainstorm
a
little
more
and
connect
anyone
who
might
be
interested
in
that
conversation.
A
Off
yeah
do
some
thinking
do
what
feels
good
for
you
and
if
you
want
me
to
at
some
point,
I
can
connect
you
to
the
other
two
folks,
who
also
were
not
necessarily
planning
a
workshop
or
anything
yet,
but
both
also
wanted
to
think
about
it
to
see.
If
the
three
of
you
want
to
think
through
any
way
to
build
a
workshop
out
of
like
supporting
folks
in
connecting
their
stories,
their
narrative
to
policy
building
or
anything
like
that.
A
Okay
and
the
one
other
thing
I
will
offer,
is
we
I'll
continue
to
kind
of
brainstorm
out
loud
in
the
last
summit
planning
committee,
the
two
kind
of
areas
of
potential
summit
theme
we
talked
about
one
was
around
like
civic
engagement
and
how
to
make
change,
and
one
was
around
like
joy
and
celebration
and
let's
not
just
talk
about
the
shitty
statistics.
I
think
this
potentially
connects
to
both
I'm
I'm
seeing
a
piece.
A
I
think
the
thing
I'm
thinking
about
right
now
is,
I
feel,
like
I've
at
least
seen
workshops
in
the
past
around
like
how
do
I
take
my
like
negative
experience,
tell
it
in
a
powerful
way
and
advocate
to
policy
makers
from
it
and
I'm
curious
about
what
it
looks
like
for
folks
to
take
celebratory
positive
stories
related
to
transness
and
turn
those
into
policy,
as
opposed
to
only
here's
how
I
was
discriminated
against.
Let
me
testify
my
trauma
for
you.
A
A
And
then
the
last
thing
I
had
was
just
who
wants
to
report
back
on
this
subcommittee
meeting
at
the
next
broader
tec
meeting.
I'm
realizing
that
we
need
to
actually
remember
to
assign
that
in.
A
A
B
In
our
minutes,
will
you
I
know
there
were
so
many
updates
from
the
lgbt
roundtable
if
you
could
just
like
bullet
list
those
yeah.
I
think.
B
A
Yeah
you've
been
watching
me
take
minutes
when
you
all
are
talking
I'm
typing
when
I'm
reading
off
of
other
docs
I'll
copy
that
over
later
before
I
send
out
the
minutes.
I
don't
get
my
talking
points
into
the
minutes
in
real
time,
but,
yes,
I
will
get
all
of
those
updates
in
there.
Thanks
for
checking
cool.