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A
B
C
Why
don't
we
start
the
meeting?
Since
our
first
item
is
just
the
approval
of
the
minutes?
It's
not
all
that
exciting.
The
public
can
join
us
at
their
Leisure,
so
I'll
call
to
order
this
meeting
of
the
Parks
and
Recreation
Commission
in
the
urban
forestry
Board
of
city
of
Mountain
View
Wednesday,
December,
14
2022
during
this
declared
State
of
Emergency.
The
meeting
will
be
conducted
in
accordance
with
California
government
Code
549-53
E
is
authorized
by
resolution.
Please
contact
city.clerk
at
mountainview.gov
to
obtain
a
copy
of
the
applicable
resolution.
C
All
right,
so
I've
done
the
call
to
order.
Let's
do
the
Roll
Call
osteophilios
here,
commissioner
Michener
yeah.
D
E
C
Item
three
is
minutes
approval.
We
have
received
the
minutes
for
our
meeting
of
November
9th
2022..
Are
there
any
comments?
Questions
changes,
amendments.
C
Seeing
none
I
will
ask
whether
there
is
one
member
of
the
public,
whether
the
one
member
of
the
public
would
have
any
comments
about
our
minutes,
so
Mr
lion
guard.
If
you
have
any
comments,
raise
your
hand
and
we
will
hear
them
and
I
don't
see
that
he
is
interested
in
commenting
on
this
item.
So
any
further
discussion
on
this
item,
if
not
yes,.
C
Let's
vote:
what's
your
failures
yes
and
commissioner
Davis
yes,
and
commissioner
Michener.
Yes,.
D
C
Commissioner
summer
yes
enter
Bryant,
yes,
motion
passes
unanimously,
will
proceed
to
item
for
oral
communication
from
the
public.
This
portion
of
the
meeting
is
reserved
for
persons
wishing
to
address
the
commission
on
any
matter
not
on
the
agenda.
Speakers
are
limited
to
three
minutes.
State
law
prohibits
the
commission
from
acting
on
non-agenda
items,
Mr
Lambert
up
to
you.
Do
you
wish
to
address
us
on
any
item
that
is
not
the
genderized.
If
you
do,
please
raise
your
hand.
C
And
not
seeing
your
raised
hand
I
believe
there
are
no
members
of
the
public
wishing
to
communicate
with
us
on
another
agendas
items.
So
I'll
close
this
item
bring
it
back
to
the
PRC
and
we're
on
to
item
five
new
business
and
5.5.1
is
the
annual
real
estate
update
regarding
Parkland,
and
this
is
just
information
for
us
and
Miss
LaMonica
good.
F
F
Okay,
so
we're
here
tonight
for
me
to
give
the
annual
Parkland
real
estate
update
as
the
real
property
program
administrator.
The
two
key
roles
that
I
play
in
Parks
is
to
provide
the
park
in
Luffy
estimates,
as
developments
come
in
and
also
to
acquire
Park
land.
So
this
evening
we're
going
to
go
over
Parkland
dedication
and
in
Luffy's
talk
about
the
how
per
acre
land
values
are
determined.
Give
example,
calculation
of
the
in
Luffy
talk
about
challenges,
dedications
and
recent
acquisitions.
F
F
One
of
the
primary
components
to
the
in
Luffy
is
the
per
acre
value.
A
few
years
ago,
Council
authorized
staff
to
get
a
land
valuation
study
done
on
a
yearly
basis.
So
in
the
spring
we
do
get
evaluation
and
the
valuation
is
for
a
range
of
values
for
the
densities
that
are
in
chapter
41
of
the
city
code.
This
is
a
snapshot
of
the
valuation
for
2022,
so
you'll
see
low,
medium
and
medium-high
density,
and
there
is
a
per
acre
value
range
that
is
provided.
F
This
information
is
public
and
it's
provided
in
the
master
fee
schedule.
So
this
is
public,
and
this
is
the
range
every
year
that
I
use
to
calculate
the
park
in
Luffy
numbers.
F
So
with
that
understanding,
I
thought
it
would
be
nice
to
run
through
a
calculation
of
an
in-lu
fee.
So
you
can
understand
how
that
is
done.
There
are
three
components
that
are
calculated
in
this
in
Luffy.
The
first
one
is
the
acreage
requirement.
Factor
this
factor
is
found
in
chapter
41.
It's
table
41.6.
On
the
right
hand,
side
you
can
see
the
table
and
again
it's
based
on
density.
F
So
if
there
are
60
units
going
up
and
there
are
20
that
are
being
demolished-
we
presume
that
those
20
have
already
paid
Park
in
Luffy's,
so
they
are
subtracted
from
the
net
new
unit
count
and
then
below
market
rate
or
BMR
units
aren't
charged
a
park
in
Luffy
and
then
the
third
factor
is
the
per
acre
value
that
we
just
went
over.
We
saw
the
range
so
it'll.
The
number
that
goes
in
there
will
be
part
of
that
range
based
on
density.
F
For
those
who
like
to
see
it
I.
There
is
an
example,
so
the
assumptions
that
I'm
plugging
into
a
calculation
is
it's
a
1.15
Acre
Site
there's
going
to
be
approximately
60.
You
know
there
will
be
60
units
that
equals
52
units
per
acre.
So
looking
at
the
density
formula,
we
know
that
this
is
high
density.
There
are
currently
20
existing
units
that
will
be
demolished,
so
those
are
deducted
from
the
60
units
that
are
going
up
so
now
we're
at
40..
F
So
we
calculate
point
zero,
zero,
six,
zero,
that
acreage
requirement,
a
factor
by
the
35
units
add
times
10
million
that
would
equal
a
2.1
million
dollar
Park
in
Luffy
payment
that
the
developer
would
have
to
pay
for
that
new
development.
F
So
now
that
we
understand
how
the
the
fees
are
calculated,
I
wanted
to
just
talk
about
a
few
challenges
when
we
are
acquiring
Parkland,
since
that
is
one
of
the
primary
things
I
do
for
the
parks.
It's
a
built
out
urban
area,
Mountain
View
is
is
growing
and
there
isn't
a
lot
of
vacant
land
available
to
acquire
for
Park
Parklands.
In
the
areas
that
we
need
to
acquire,
Parkland
we'd
like
to
acquire
the
properties
that
we
are
acquiring
are
typically
Residential
Properties.
F
So
with
those
challenges
that
doesn't
mean
that
we
aren't
acquiring
Parkland,
so
we
are
acquiring
Parkland
and
then
there's
also
dedication
of
parks
in
these
developments,
so
Parkland
dedications
dedicated
and
not
yet
constructed.
We
have
400
San
Antonio,
that's
approximately
0.52,
Acres,
555,
East,
Evelyn,
0.68
acres
and
then
Villa
Street,
0.39
Acres.
F
On
the
right
hand,
side
I
did
put
a
snapshot
of
the
planning
area
boundaries
and
this
shows
where
so,
if,
when
the
park
and
Luffy's
come
in,
they
go
into
the
planning
area
where
the
property
is
located.
F
So
that's
dedications,
the
ones
that
we
have
coming
up
and
we've
also
had
a
few
Parkland
Acquisitions
three
of
these
just
closed
to
last
week.
So
the
first
one
is
7-Eleven
Calderon,
it's
on
the
left
hand
side
you
see
the
green
and
the
yellow
portion
in
the
middle
of
that
entire
property
is
a
historic
house,
so
the
city
is
going
to
acquire
the
green
area
for
a
future
Park
site.
F
The
next
acquisition
that
we
have
is
in
the
Terra
Bella
neighborhood
and
that's
part
of
the
Sterling
Park
planning
area.
It's
909,
San,
Rafael
and
917
San
Rafael.
The
acquisition
of
both
of
those
properties
will
be
a
future
Park
that
can
be
up
to
1.66
acres
and
then
the
third
property
is
in
the
Monta
Loma
neighborhood,
the
Thompson
Park
planning
area,
and
that
is
a
single-family
residence
that
is
approximately
0.29
Acres.
F
D
B
D
D
That
helps
and
then,
if
I
look
down
at
the
high
medium
and
high
density,
you
know
there's
a
range
of
11.7
to
13.5,
so
I
guess.
The
first
question
is:
how
do
you?
How
do
you
pick
where
you
are
in
that
range
and
then
also
your
example,
used
10
million
and
I?
You
know
I
know
you
were
just
sort
of
coming
up
with
10
million,
but
it
was
a
hybrid.
D
D
F
So
it
depends
where
it's
located
in
the
city
and
it
would
be
based
on
comparables,
so
I
have
a
list
of
comparable
sales.
So
I'll
see
you
know
there
would
be
a
difference
if
it's
a
26
unit
development
or
it's
a
300
unit
development.
That
would
make
a
big
difference
on
the
per
acre
price,
because
you're
getting
more
residential
units
per
acre
and
then
again
just
location
just
like.
If,
if
you're,
buying
or
selling
a
house,
certain
locations
have
higher
or
lower
values,.
C
All
right,
any
other,
immediate
clarification,
questions
from
the
commission
commission
summer.
G
I
had
a
question
for
Angela:
what
are
your
tactics
that
you're
using
to
overcome
some
of
those
challenges
with
you
know,
given
the
urban
setting
and
the
built
out,
and
what
what
sort
of
tactics
are
you
using.
F
Well,
just
keeping
my
eye
on
the
market,
so
Zillow
Loop
net,
those
online
real
estate
sales
websites,
I
keep
my
open
for
that.
The
city
has
a
lot
of
good
relationship
with
developers
in
the
community.
So
if
they
hear
us
something
that's
on
the
market,
they
will
come
to
the
city
and
say:
hey:
are
you?
Are
you
looking
for
a
park
in
this
area?
It
might
be
a
good
location
and
word
of
mouth,
so
538
Thompson,
a
city
council
member,
heard
about
it
and
they
said:
hey,
look
at.
F
F
Whatever
is
available
in
the
area
that
we
need
Future,
Park
land,
so
909,
San
Rafael,
that
is
a
commercial
property
at
917
San
Rafael,
is
that's
a
residential
property,
but
they
just
happen
to
be
right
next
to
each
other.
So
it's
primarily
based
on
the
planning
area
that
we
need
parks
in
and
also
the
size
of
the
property.
And
then,
if
there
is
assemblage
like
How
likely,
we
think
there
can
be
an
assemblage
of
of
properties
for
a
future
Park.
G
Okay
and,
and
so
you
could
potentially
even
consider
subdivision
if
you
wanted
to
purchase
a
larger
property
and
divide
it
and
then
still
have
something
that
had
value
that
could
be
resold.
These
are
all
things
that.
F
Oh
yeah,
no
yeah,
that's
that's
a
good
idea!
Yeah.
That
could
definitely
happen.
711
Calderon
that
one
it's
a
large
parcel
and
we
subdivided
it
and
got
it
well
yeah
and
got
a
piece
of
it
and
then
they
moved
their
property
to
the
remainder
parcel.
So
that's
kind
of
an
example
but
yeah
I
think
we
would
be
open
to
that
for
sure.
E
Thank
you.
Thank
you
for
the
presentation
Angela.
This
may
be
a
dumb
question,
but
how
does
it
work
when
the
the
park
is
situated
in
property?
That's
part
of
the
development
such
as.
E
F
It
does
so
they
calculate
yes,
so
the
calculation
will
say
based
on
your
development.
You
need
five
acres
of
Park
land
and
they'll
say
well.
We
want
to
develop.
We
want
to
dedicate
three
acres,
so
then
I
just
do
a
calculation
on
the
remaining
two
and
that
would
be
the
park
in
Luffy
that
they
would
pay
once
they've
dedicated
a
portion
of
it.
So
whatever
is
remaining
thank
you.
C
If
the
public
has
comments,
questions
yes,
Mr
Lambert
go
on.
You
have
three
minutes.
H
Yes,
mainly
just
to
let
you
know
when
it
goes,
but
thank
you
for
the
presentation.
It
was
very
rainy.
C
H
Here
we
go
yeah
okay,
I
opened
up
my
laptop
rather
than
the
screen,
so
yeah
just
let
to
let
you
know
I'm
here.
So
thank
you
very
much
for
your
presentation.
I
yeah.
It
was
very,
very
important.
C
Thank
you.
That's
all
right
back
to
the
PRC
I
would
also
like
to
to
say
thank
you
for
the
presentation.
It
was
very
clear.
All
those
steps
and-
and
the
example
was-
was
really
helpful.
Thank
you
very
much
for
that.
A
I
just
want
to
take
the
opportunity
to
thank
Angela
for
joining
us
tonight.
I
know
she
continues
to
look
in
and
see
what
is
available.
A
People
do
reach
out
to
her
directly
when
you,
if
they
have
an
interest
or
desire
and
she's
working
on
a
number
of
things
right
now,
and
so
just
want
to
thank
her
for
her
time
and
effort
to
help
us
out
and
look
forward
to
Bringing
these
new
parts
to
fruition.
So
thanks.
E
D
Want
to
thank
the
city
for
for
finding
some
of
these
these
properties
and
and
purchasing
them.
It's
it's
really
hard
to
to
find
park,
space
and
and
I
think
it's
it's
wonderful
that
we
suddenly
have
I
have
a
few
more
so
I
think!
That's
that's
just
great!
So
thank
you
for
doing
that.
D
I'm
curious
and
you
don't
need
to
answer
this
if
it's
private,
but
the
the
one
in
the
Mauna
Loma
area
I
believe,
was
raised
by
a
speaker
at
one
of
our
PRC
meetings
and
I'm
curious
if
the
city
already
had
known
about
it
or
whether
that
tip
from
a
resident
helped
helped
a
deal
along,
and
if
you
can't
comment
I.
F
Know
I
I
can
comment
I,
so
that's
538
Thompson
the
way
I
heard
about
it
was
through
the
city
council,
but
it
maybe
the
city
council
heard
about
it
through
the
PRC.
So
I
don't
know,
but
word
of
mouth
I
feel
is
one
of
the
best
ways
to
hear
about
it.
So
if
you
guys
hear
about
anything,
if
you
hear
about
something
in
the
Pierce
another
PRC
meeting,
let
me
know.
C
Thank
you.
I
I
will
say
that
the
Calderon
property,
it's
quite
creative,
to
have
moved,
moved
the
house
and
lots
of
taken
out
the
oak
tree,
and
now
the
neighborhood
has
another
Park
is,
is
great
and
just
to
follow
up
on
what
commissioner
summer
said.
The
the
creative
ways
of
figuring
out
how
to
use
space
that
that
is
available
in
in
for
several
purposes
is
probably
the
way
we
need
to
go
given
how
built
out
we
we
indeed
are
all
right.
C
I
see
that
Mr
Lambert
still
is
has
his
hand
up,
but
we
are
yeah
I
thought,
so
he
no
longer
has
his
hand
up
all
right.
I
think
we
can
say
thank
you
to
miss
Lamonica
for
a
very
informative
presentation.
All
right
thanks.
C
A
And
Lauren
I'll
do
a
quick
introduction,
which
is
over
the
last
several
months.
I've
been
along
with
Christine
I've,
been
highlighting
the
great
programming
being
implemented
for
the
teens
of
our
community,
and
really
that
comes
down
to
the
work
of
Lauren
heck,
the
recreation
coordinator
for
our
team
programs.
A
So
we
thought
it
was
a
great
opportunity
to
bring
her
tonight
so
that
she
can
really
give
a
full
overview
of
the
great
things
she's
doing
in
the
programs
that
our
teens
are
taking
advantage
of,
and
so
with
that
I
will
turn
it
over
to
Lauren.
Thank
you.
Thanks.
I
All
right
so,
as
John
said
I'm
here
tonight,
to
provide
an
update
on
our
team
programs.
These
are
the
things
that
I'm
going
to
be
covering
tonight.
I
I
So
first
off
I
just
want
to
overview
the
center
I
know
you
guys
are
familiar
with
it,
but
we
are
a
free
facility
for
all
Mountain
View
and
Los
Altos
6th
to
12th
grade
students.
So
as
long
as
they
live
or
go
to
school
in
Mountain
View
Los
Altos
they're
able
to
attend
our
Center
for
free
we're
open
during
the
school
year
after
school,
3
15
to
7
Saturdays
were
open
for
a
few
hours.
Our
summer
hours
are
just
one
to
six
Monday
through
Saturday.
I
Our
facility
has
a
variety
of
different
things
from
a
game:
room,
video
game
area,
kitchen
Lounge,
study
room.
We
have
a
large
multi-space
room.
We
have
an
outdoor
patio.
We
recently
added
a
maker
space
which
is
like
an
arts
and
crafts
studio.
So
we
have
a
lot
of
different
things
that
the
kids
can
come
and
do,
and
it's
really
just
their
space,
it's
their
their
space
to
come
and
kind
of
do
whatever
they
want
to
do
and
just
take
a
break
from
school
and
whatever
whatever
else
is
going
on
in
their
life.
I
So
what
are
the
attend?
What's
the
attendance
like
at
the
center
this
year
we're
averaging
about
320
18s
per
month?
I
This
is
up
a
drastic
amount
from
last
year,
obviously
due
to
covid,
but
we
are
on
par
with
pre-pandemic
numbers
and
in
the
last
few
months
we've
seen
more
than
400
teens
come
out
each
month
to
the
center,
which
is
really
great
that
the
numbers
are
are
keeping
Rising.
What
do
we
offer
there?
So
we
offer
some
year-round
classes.
I
We
have
Junior
Chef
Stars,
which
teach
cooking
classes,
there's
a
fall
winter
and
a
spring
session
for
those
we
have.
The
Community
School
of
Music
and
Arts
come
out
and
do
art
classes
same
thing,
fall
winter
and
spring
classes
for
those,
and
then
we
have
a
volunteer
that
leads
a
year-round,
Dungeons
and
Dragons
Club
everything
that's
offered
at
the
teen
center,
with
the
exception
of
one
event,
I'll
go
into
later
is
free,
so
kids
are
able
to
sign
up
for
these
cooking
and
art
enrichment
classes
at
no
cost.
I
Every
day
we
offer
a
different
activity
at
the
center.
It
can
be
anything
from
a
game
tournament.
As
you
can
see
on
the
bottom
left,
we
had
a
ping
pong
tournament
recently
we
do
arts
and
crafts
projects,
we
do
holiday
programs,
Fridays
or
movie
nights,
so
whatever
the
kids
are
kind
of
looking
for,
we
try
to
incorporate
that
into
the
program
calendar.
I
Some
things
we've
done
at
the
center
to
kind
of
make
it
more
inclusive
to
the
kids.
Is
we've
updated
our
membership
forms
to
have
inclusive
language,
we've
added
gender,
neutral
restrooms
and
we've
done
a
pride
month.
Pride
month
celebration
the
last
two
years,
which
the
kids
really
enjoy.
We've
also
implemented.
Take
what
you
need
carts
in
all
of
the
restrooms,
so
these
carts
have
items
like
travel
size
products
like
mini
deodorants,
chapsticks,
tampons
things
that
the
kids
maybe
don't
have
access
to
at
home.
That
could
be
useful
to
them.
I
The
kids
are
really
great
about
not
taking
too
much
and
leaving
things
for
others,
and
it's
been
really
nice
to
be
able
to
provide
things
for
kids
that
maybe
can't
ask
for
them
or
don't
have
them
at
home.
And
another
thing
we've
done
is
partner
with
the
schools
to
provide
United
against
hate
week.
It's
a
week
in
November
that
just
celebrates
anti-hate
and
anti-bullying.
I
Each
day
by
the
end
of
the
week,
the
kids
were
lining
up
waiting
at
the
table
for
the
staff
to
get
there
to
provide
the
activity
because
they
were
having
so
much
fun
with
it
and
here's
some
of
those
photos.
I
was
talking
about
in
the
middle
there.
You
can
see
those
carts
that
we
have
in
the
restrooms
and
all
the
different
programs.
We
offer
one
of
the
other
programs
that
the
we
offer
is
a
teen
open
gym
on
Saturday
nights,
which
is
at
the
wisman
sports
center
at
Crittenden.
I
It's
a
three-hour
program:
it's
completely
free,
it's
open
to
middle
school
and
high
school
students.
We
see
just
over
20
kids
come
recently.
I
We
have
also
seen
an
increase
in
numbers
here
as
well,
and
kids
can
come
out
and
play
basketball,
volleyball
soccer,
and
then
we
also
throughout
the
year
offer
various
special
events
to
bring
in
a
new
population
of
kids,
who
maybe
don't
know
about
Teen
open
gym,
but
would
sign
up
for
a
glow
dodgeball
tournament,
which
is
really
great
exposure,
cross-exposure
between
teen,
open
gym
and
team
Center,
because
they
don't
necessarily
attract
the
same
kids.
But
when
we
do
special
events
like
this
at
either
facility,
it
does
bring
in
a
different
population.
I
I
In
general,
we
offer
a
variety
of
special
events
throughout
the
year.
One
thing:
that's
very
popular
is
our
teen
week
that
the
youth
advisory
committee
partners
with
the
staff
to
put
on
so
they
work
with
us
to
come
up
with
different
activities
to
offer
to
the
teen
population
it
was
held
in
May.
I
So,
for
example,
Red
Rock
Coffee
offers
50
off
your
order.
If
you
show
your
ID
some
of
the
ice
cream
places
boba
places,
we
had
15
different
businesses
throughout
Mountain
View
partner
with
us
last
year,
and
then
the
yak
Works
to
award
a
teen
friendly
business
award
during
teen
week,
and
this
award
is
just
to
recognize
a
business
that
creates
a
welcoming
and
supportive
atmosphere
for
teens.
I
Maybe
it's
a
place
that
you
know
a
favorite
place
of
the
teens
that
they
like
to
go
to
hang
out
after
school
or
just
somewhere
that
the
teens
would
like
to
recognize
for
their
service
to
the
younger
population,
one
of
our
other
bigger
events
throughout
the
year
it
used
to
be
called
Elevate,
and
now
it's
called
Club
263
and
we
just
had
one
recently.
I
I
So
these
events
are
mostly
kind
of
more
Recreation
based,
so
they're
more
fun,
just
to
get
kids
out
of
the
house
on
a
Friday
night
into
a
safe
space
where
they
can
have
fun
with
their
friends.
So
you
can
see
there,
we
offer
a
variety
of
different
fun
activities.
This
is
the
only
event
that
we
charge.
Teens
for
tickets
are
three
dollars
in
advance
and
five
dollars
out
the
door
once
they're
inside
everything's
included
from
the
games,
activities
and
food,
and
then
we
offer
other
events
throughout
the
year
like
open
houses.
I
We
do
a
fifth
grade
open
house
where
we
invite
families
to
come
out
to
learn
about
the
teen
center
because
we
start
accepting
members
in
sixth
grade.
So
at
the
end
of
the
school
year
next
year,
in
May,
we'll
have
our
fifth
grade
open
house
and
then
right
before
School
start
school
starts.
We
do
a
back
to
school,
open
house,
and
last
year
we
were
able
to
offer
some
fun
field
trips
that
we
actually
tied
in
a
little
bit
of
learning
into
them.
I
So
the
Bay
Area
Panthers
trip
they
got
to
meet
with
some
TV
and
other
reporters
before
the
game
and
learn
about
careers.
In
that
we
went
to
the
Earthquakes
game
and
did
a
similar
thing.
They
got
to
go
up
in
the
scoreboard
and
talk
to
a
statistician
and
a
reporter
and
go
on
the
field
after
the
game
and
then
at
California's
Great
America.
We
met
with
the
social
media,
Tick
Tock
staff,
member
who
kind
of
took
us
around
the
park
and
showed
us
a
little
bit
about
that
and
here's
some
photos
of
those
events.
I
We
also
focus
on
a
variety
of
Health
and
Wellness
opportunities.
One
big
thing
that
we
started
in
2021
is
the
teen
Wellness
Retreat,
and
this
is
a
five
hour
event
for
middle
school
and
high
school
students.
It's
focused
on
providing
teens
with
a
space,
to
learn
more
about
mental
health
and
have
a
day
to
kind
of
de-stress
and
learn
and
take
away
some
tools
that
they
can
use
in
their
life.
So
this
year
we
had
more
than
90
teens
in
attendance.
We've
partnered
with
13
different
organizations.
I
We
had
organizations
come
all
the
way
down
from
the
city,
even
one
from
Sacramento
that
came
to
provide
a
workshop,
so
the
kids
get
to
choose
what
workshops
they
want
to
attend
throughout
the
day
and
we
had
15
that
they
could
pick
from
this
year
and
then
the
event
also
included
a
resource.
Fair
I.
Guess,
speaker,
therapy
dogs,
ice
cream
truck
lunch.
It's
a
really
fun
event.
I
One
of
my
favorite
projects
throughout
the
year
is,
in
the
summer
time
we
partner
with
El
Camino
Health,
to
provide
Hospital
kits
to
kids
in
the
hospital.
So
these
kits
we
do
a
community
donation.
Drive
collect
all
the
donations,
people
donate
anything
from
socks
to
card
games
to
Legos
to
crayons,
and
then
we
have
teen.
Volunteers
come
to
the
teen
center
and
pack,
all
of
the
donations
into
bins
based
off
of
age.
I
They
hand
write
little
cards
and
notes
for
the
kids
to
read
when
they
open
the
boxes,
and
then
we
get
to
deliver
them
to
the
hospital,
and
these
boxes
go
to
kids
that
are
in
the
hospital
for
long-term
stays
or
are
in
there
for
an
ER
visit
or
something
that
you
know
they
might
need
a
little
bit
of
a
toy
or
something
for
them,
while
they're
in
there,
and
then
we
also
offer
different
things
during
finals
week
for
the
kids
to
help
de-stress,
whether
it
be
a
quiet
study,
room,
some
snacks
study
materials.
I
Last
year
we
did
finals
grams,
where
our
youth
advisory
committee
created
these
fun
little
encouraging
e-notes
that
were
sent
out
to
kids,
that
other
kids
could
request
them
or
their
parents
could
request
for
them
and
they
got
them
in
their
email.
Things
like
your
dynamite,
and
then
that
was
a
cool
picture
of
a
dinosaur
or
something
just
fun.
Little
things
to
keep
kids,
keep
kids
mental
health
up
and
again
here's
some
photos
from
the
health
and
wellness
programs,
College
and
Career
another
one
of
our
big
focuses.
I
This
year
we
started
in
a
teen
career
day.
Event
called
find
your
fit.
This
event
was
focused
on
providing
scenes
with
different
career
options.
It
featured
a
panel
of
different
people
from
different
backgrounds
and
careers.
We
had
Google
developers,
we
had
an
FBI
agent,
we
had
a
librarian,
we
had
an
NBC
reporter
and
they
just
shared
information
and
kids
got
to
ask
questions
about
how
they
got
there
and
what
paths
they
should
take
if
they
want
to
do
a
certain
career.
I
The
event
also
featured
different
workshops
on
resume
building
interview,
skills
and
a
job
volunteer
fair.
At
the
end,
each
year
we
offer
two
high
school
job
fairs,
one
at
each
of
the
high
schools.
More
than
a
thousand
high
school
students
attend
these
and
we
partner
with
a
variety
of
different
employers,
Aquatics
employers,
summer
camp
Employers
in
and
out
anything
that
hire
teams.
I
We
finally
brought
back
our
college
tours
that
we
did
a
lot
before
covid
hits,
we've
done
two.
This
fall,
we
went
to
Berkeley
and
Santa
Cruz
and
each
of
those
trips
featured
a
campus
tour.
We
did
a
meet
and
greet
with
a
current
student,
so
they
could
get
a
little
bit
into
the
social
life
in
college
and
then
we
paired
it
with
a
fun
outing.
At
Berkeley
we
went
to
the
football
game
and
Santa
Cruz.
I
We
went
to
the
boardwalk,
we
also
partnered,
with
flex
College
Prep,
to
offer
four
College
Prep
seminars,
this
fall
and
we're
going
to
be
keeping
working
with
them
to
offer
some
more
next
fall.
We
did
have
12
attendees,
plus
their
parents
attend
these,
so
we
thought
those
were
pretty
impactful
as
well,
and
some
photos
from
College
and
Career
programs.
I
One
of
our
big
things
in
the
summer
is
our
Junior
leader
program.
This
program
is
an
opportunity
for
teens
who
maybe
aren't
quite
old
enough
to
have
a
paid
job
but
want
to
get
some
job
experience.
So
they'll
sign
up
to
be
in
the
Junior
leader
program,
there's
three
different
tracks
that
they
can
take
within
the
program.
We
have
the
just
the
regular
Junior
leaders
which
works
with
our
summer
camps
and
Summer
Camp
staff.
I
They
learn
how
to
lead
an
activity,
what
to
do
in
certain
situations:
safety,
precautions,
things
like
that
and
then
they're
placed
in
various
camps
and
get
to
interact
with
the
kids
and
learn
or
get
to
put
in
practice
the
things
that
they
learned
in
training
and
Shadow.
The
staff
we
had
just
under
100
participate.
Last
year,
so
we're
hoping
to
raise
that
this
year
and
applications
are
coming
up
and
will
be
available
soon
for
next
summer.
I
So
we
do
all
these
programs
and
like
how
do
we
get
our
word
out?
How
do
we
Market?
How
do
we
reach
the
teens?
So
our
big
place
that
we
go
to
reach
the
teens?
Is
the
schools
obviously
want
to
meet
the
kids
where
they're
at,
and
that
is
our
Target
population?
So
we
work
with
various
staff
at
the
schools
that
we've
developed
relationships
with
to
post
flyers
on
the
morning
announcements
and
get
into
newsletters.
I
One
big
relationship
that
we've
gained
this
year
was
the
director
of
equity
at
the
middle
schools,
I
partnered,
with
her
to
put
on
the
United
against
hate
week
and
we're
actually
going
to
be
starting
to
visit
the
Middle
School's
monthly
and
provide
activities
to
the
kids
in
the
middle
schools
and
we'll
also
be
able
to
promote
our
programs
to
more
than
500
kids
once
a
month
at
each
of
the
middle
schools,
which
will
be
big
and
then
I
attend
quarterly
Wellness
collaborative
meetings
which
are
meetings
that
the
health
and
wellness
director
at
Mountain,
View,
High
School
puts
on
it's
a
collaborative
meeting
with
people
from
all
over
the
district
in
various
capacities
that
work
with
youth
and
teens.
I
So
it's
another
way
to
form
relationships
and
and
get
the
word
out
about
things.
We
also
have
a
big
big
social
media
presence,
Instagram
Facebook,
we
post
events,
we
stay
on
top
of
Trends
and
do
some
fun
things
on
social
media
which
gets
a
lot
of
Engagement
and
then
some
other
things
that
we've
done
recently
that
have
been
really
successful
is
the
beat
program
which
is
an
after
school
program
that
Daisy
pagon,
who
is
the
youth
coordinator,
runs.
I
She
brought
her
kids
to
the
teen
center,
a
lot
of
who
have
never
been
to
the
teen
center
and
from
that
we
actually
got
eight
new
memberships
from
just
bringing
her
kids
over
to
the
teen
center
to
see,
and
now
some
of
them
come
every
day
after
school.
We
also
started
this
fall
a
most
valuable
participant
punch
card,
this
punch
card,
it's
like
a
normal
coffee
punch
card.
Where
you
come
to
the
center,
you
get
a
punch.
I
If
you
visit
so
many
times,
you
were
invited
on
this
field
trip
and
they're
actually
on
the
field
trip
tonight
and
one
of
my
staff
just
sent
that
photo
down
below
they're
at
round
one
doing
some
bowling
in
games.
I
So
it's
cool
to
see
some
of
our
most
visited
members
from
this
year
enjoying
a
little
special
treat
and
then
Ari's
advisory
committee
promotes
teen
activities
through
all
of
their
channels
and
clubs
in
schools
and,
lastly,
here's
some
of
the
partners
that
we've
worked
with
over
this
year
that
we've
partnered
with
for
maybe
just
one
event,
but
a
lot
of
them.
We've
actually
developed
relationships
with
and
have
partnered
with
for
various
things.
C
E
Wow,
that's
that's
a
really
impressive
presentation
and
stuff
like
that
makes
me
really
proud
to
you
know,
be
a
Mountain,
View
I!
Think
it's
a
really
enlightened,
City
and
just
wonderful
to
see
that
kind
of
support.
E
It's
a
great
job,
obviously
have
John's
presentations.
Maybe
that.
I
I
think
the
big
thing
is
just
awareness
that
we
have
this
awesome
facility
that's
available
for
free
to
teens.
Often
we
get
parents
come
in
or
just
members
of
the
community
and
I
always
hear
we
don't.
We
didn't
know
about
this
place,
but
look
at
all
the
stuff
it
has
to
offer,
and
you
know
we
we
Market
it
relentlessly
and
I.
Think
sometimes
it's
like.
How
did
you
not
hear
about
this?
But
that's
that's
probably.
The
big
piece
is
just
making
sure
everyone's
aware
that
we
have
this
resource
for
teens.
E
A
lot
of
the
neighborhood
groups
have
associations
and
newsletters
and
I
would
be
happy
to
run
and
I'm
sure
many
of
my
neighborhood
association
colleagues
would
also
want
any
kind
of
promotions
or
information
about
the
center
to
help
promote
it.
If
that's
useful
to
you,
I'll
follow
up
with
you
offline
on
that,
but
anything
we
can
do
to
either
promote
it
or
volunteer.
E
Please
let
us
know
through
John
or
whatever
the
appropriate
channel
is
but
really
impressive.
Thank
you
for
that
presentation
of
three
good
work.
D
So
yeah
Lauren.
Thank
you
very
much
for
the
presentation.
It's
you
could
probably
spend
two
hours
just
going
through
all
the
all,
the
all
the
things
and
you
know
and
and
we
we're
it
was
great
to
have
you
in
person.
You
know
we
we
get
the
updates,
the
monthly,
the
monthly
reports-
and
we
see
some
of
that
through
that,
but
but
it
was
really
good
to
get
this
face
to
face
with
you.
D
You
know
my
my
son
was
actually
on
the
youth
advisory
commission
as
a
teen
center
was
the
location
was
identified
and,
and
it
was
started
up,
so
it's
been
really
fun
for
me
to
to
follow
as
the
programming
has
developed
and
it's
continued
to
grow.
D
I
think
that
you
know
I'd
noticed-
and
you
mentioned
it
tonight-
also
that
the
Outreach
that
you're
doing
to
middle
schools
now
is
is
awesome.
You
know
I
think
it's.
First
of
all,
it's
just
a
great
way,
it's
great
to
partner
with
the
the
middle
schools
and
and
the
high
schools,
and
it's
also
an
excellent
way
to
create
visibility.
So
I
think,
as
as
you
do,
that
more
I
think
the
numbers
will
will
go
up.
D
You
know,
as
I
I
was
a
school
board
member
and
as
a
School
Board
member
I'm
super
appreciative
of
the
tutoring
that
that
gets
offered
at
the
teen
center
and
and
I.
You
know
when,
when
we
see
the
numbers,
I
I'm,
always
thinking
God
people
are
missing
out
on
this
great
opportunity.
So
hopefully,
as
the
word
gets
out,
more
people
will
take
advantage
of
that
because
it
seems
underutilized.
D
So
thank
you
for
thank
you
for
doing
that,
and
you
know
good
luck
as,
as
you
know,
I'd
also
noticed
when,
when
you
did
the
field
trips
to
the
colleges
building
in
some
of
those
fun
activities
is
is,
is
a
is
a
really
neat.
I
mean
I've.
You
know
I
looked
at
that
UC
Berkeley
trip
and
other
than
the
fact
that
I'm,
a
Stanford,
grad
and
I
would
have
been
rooting
for
how
to
lose.
D
J
Again,
Warren
I'd
just
like
to
thank
you
again,
tremendous
presentation
and
I'd
like
to
compliment
you
on
what
I
call
touching
all
the
bases
very
reaching
out
to
different
interests
that
the
kids
may
have,
whether
it
be
by
age
or
just
their
interest
areas.
It's
not
just
an
open
gym.
It's
there's
other
things
that
going
on
that
reach
out
to
different
kids
in
their
different
interest
areas
and
I.
Just
can't
say
enough
about
what
you're
doing
you
guys
rock.
Thank
you.
G
I
just
want
to
quickly
share
my
appreciation
for
all
that
that
you
Lauren
and
the
city
is
doing
for
teens.
G
C
You
and
I
think
that
leaves
only
me
not
having
made
my
comments,
so
I
was
actually
on
Council
when
we
launched
the
the
teen
center
and-
and
there
was
a
lot
of
which
are
awfully
awfully
pleased
and
proud
of.
There
was
a
lot
of
of
interest
from
the
community
and
the
the
surrounding
Community,
especially
of
of
residents
and
I'm
I'm,
wondering
if
you
have
contacts
with
with
people
who
live
in
in
that
in
that
area
in
the
apartments
around
that
area.
C
I
Yeah,
we
definitely
see
a
wide
variety
of
who's
coming
there.
We
do
have
a
lot
of
kids
that
are
in
with
within
walking
distance.
I
would
say,
probably
a
fourth,
maybe
a
little
bit
more
of
our
kids
are
within
walking
distance.
I
We
have
three
kids
that
come
almost
every
day
that
live
in
the
apartment,
complex
directly
to
the
right
of
the
center,
and
they
seem
to
be
finding
the
other
teens
in
the
building
and
bringing
them
into
location
is
definitely
a
little
bit
of
an
issue
with
it
not
being
directly
located
right
beside
a
school,
but
I
am
working
with
the
middle
schools
to
hopefully
someday
have
sort
of
some
kind
of
Transportation
available.
B
I
C
And
do
you
have
contacts
like
with
with
the
parent
groups
like
at
Castro
school,
for
example,
I
mean
kids
aren't
teens
yet,
but
many
of
them
have
siblings.
I
Yeah
yeah
we
reach
out
to
all
like
the
what
are
they
called
ptos,
the
parent
Association
associations
at
the
schools.
You
know
a
lot
for,
especially
for
the
middle
schools.
It's
mostly
the
parents
seeking
out
things
for
them,
so
we
try
to
directly
go
to
the
parents.
If
we
can.
C
Yeah
and
one
more
question
the
teen
center,
when
it
first
opened,
had
a
Dusty
parking
lot
behind.
It
has
anything
happened
to
that
as
I
at
the
time
hoped
something
would
happen
to
it?
Is
it
still
a
parking
lot
has?
Has
it
been
turned
into
a
beautiful
garden.
I
You
said
directly
behind
the
center:
yes:
well,
we
have
a
grassy
area,
I,
don't
know
John.
If
you
want
to
speak
on
this,
maybe
sure.
A
A
We
did
take
the
majority
of
that
outdoor
space
and
it
is
a
grass
area
for
the
teens
to
utilize
the
go
out
and
they
kick
a
soccer
ball
around
or
play
other
outdoor
games,
and
there
are
a
certain
number
of
parking
spaces
available,
but
those
are
official
parking
spaces
and
appropriate
is
no
longer
dirt
back
there
and
then
Lauren.
If
you
want
to
talk
about
the
we
had
had,
some
planter
beds
installed,
yeah.
I
We
had
an
we
had
an
Eagle
Scout
project.
Someone
approached
us
with
the
idea
to
put
in
some
garden
beds
into
the
back
side
of
the
teen
center,
so
we
could
do
some
gardening
programs,
so
those
were
installed
in
summer
time
and
we
are
looking
to
start
some
programming
in
the
spring
with
those.
C
K
I
figured
yes,
we
when
we
were
talking
about
our
agreement
with
canopy,
one
of
the
things
that
kept
coming
up
was
education,
education
and
reaching
out
to
these
broader
audiences
and
canopy
offers
a
forestry
school.
So
one
of
the
things
we
asked
canopy
to
do
was
conduct
an
adapted
forestry
school
at
the
teen
center,
at
least
three
sessions,
three
different
topics
with
the
teens
and
hoping
to
engage
that
younger
audience
and
have
them
be.
You
know
our
tree
ambassadors,
our
forestry
ambassadors,
so
we're
really
looking
forward
to
that.
K
C
You
Lauren
I
will
now
see
if
there's
any
members
of
the
public
who
wish
to
comment
I
see
two
members
of
the
public.
If
you
wish
to
comment
on
this
item,
please
raise
your
hand.
A
I
want
to
thank
Lauren
for
being
here
and
I'm,
going
to
put
her
on
the
spot.
If
you
wouldn't
mind
talking
about
a
little
bit
about
challenge
team
and
your
engagement
and
challenge
team,
what
that
is
and
I
mean
some
of
those
resources
came
to
help
with
the
team
Wellness
Retreat
as
well.
So
if
you
just
want
to
comment
on.
I
That
yeah
totally
meant
to
cover
that
in
the
presentation
there's
just
so
much
so
challenge
team
is
a
group
of
people
that
meets
about
once
a
month.
It's
people
that
work
in
with
youth
and
teens
mental
health
and
wellness.
So
some
of
the
attendees
are
police
officers,
school
principals,
superintendents
people
that
can
really
it's
it's
great
to
be
able
to
share
things
at
the
teen
center,
because
then
they
go
take
it
to
all
their
channels.
I
So
so
having
that
group
is
a
is
a
great
group
that
we
can
go
to
and
we
had
some
of
our
police
activities.
League
officers
come
and
do
boxing
workshops
at
the
teen
Wellness
Retreat
I
partnered,
with
one
of
the
principals
at
the
school,
and
now
we
go
on
site
at
Mountain,
View,
High
School,
and
do
some
tabling
and
promotion
of
the
teen
center.
So
we've
gotten
a
lot
of
relationships
and
connections
out
of
the
challenge.
Team
meetings.
C
Let
me
ask
one
more
question:
when,
when
we
have
events
on
Castro
Street,
that
does
the
does
the
teen
center
have
a
table
at
these
events,
just
as
an
another
way
of
letting
people
know
about
it,
I
just
don't
remember.
If
I
saw
you
or
not.
I
Usually,
there's
a
recreation
table
if,
if
the
city
of
Mountain
View
Recreation
is
there,
information
on
the
teen
center
is
available
at
that
table.
C
It
might
be
useful
to
just
have
not
staff,
but
maybe
some
volunteers
and
kids
to
attract
other
kids
all
right.
Thank
you
so
much
though
you're
really
doing
great
work.
Thank
you
very
much
and
we'll.
Let
you
return
to
your
evening
Lauren.
Thank
you.
A
Great
I
will
start
once
again:
John
Marshall
Community
Services
director
and,
as
we
talked
about
at
our
last
meeting,
this
is
going
to
be
an
ongoing
agenda
item
into
the
foreseeable
features.
We
have
a
number
of
topics
that
fall
under
this
heading,
so
I
am
going
to
be
turning
it
over
to
both
Brenda
and
Christine
in
just
a
second
they're
going
to
give
some
verbal
updates
of
where
we
are
regarding
some
of
our
Master
plans
and
kind
of
what
to
look
forward
to
here
in
the
future.
A
So
with
that,
I
will
turn
it
over
to
assistant
director
Brenda
Sylvia
foreign.
K
Commissioners
mine
will
be
very,
very
quick,
they're
going
to
be
exciting,
but
quick.
The
sure
life
Wildlife
Management
plan
is
the
draft
is
currently
being
reviewed
by
City
staff
and
the
consultant
will
make
updates
on
the
draft
based
on
staff
feedback,
and
we
will
bring
that
to
you
at
the
PRC
meeting
in
January
and
for
the
biodiversity
strategy
and
urban
Forest
plan.
The
city
received
two
bids
for
the
community
outreach
and
engagement
consultant.
We
reviewed
them.
K
The
selection
team
was
comprised
of
the
San
Francisco
Estuary
Institute
project
manager
and
then
City
staff
from
CSD
from
Public
Works.
We
had
transportation,
and
then
we
had
also
the
city
manager's
office
sustainability.
We
unanimously
agreed
on
a
preferred
vendor
and
reference
checks
are
underway,
so
stay
tuned,
we're
hoping
to
onboard
the
co-consultant
in
January
and
then
kick
off
with
a
Visionary
process.
K
Will
be
bringing
an
update
to
you
in
February
there
right
now,
they're,
reviewing
plans,
policies,
I
think
I
mentioned
that
last
month
and
they'll
bring
their
findings
to
you
in
February.
L
Okay,
thank
you.
Brenda
I
am
talking
tonight
about
the
Parks
and
Recreation
strategic
plan.
The
last
time
that
you
heard
of
this
item
was
back
in
September
when
we
had
the
scope
of
work
for
the
RFP
reviewed
by
both
the
Parks
and
Recreation
Commission
and
city
council.
C
Great.
Thank
you
so
much
any
questions
from
the
commissioners.
C
Foreign
in
my
in
my
downtown
neighborhood,
there
is
a
surprising
number
of
trees
that
are
going
to
be
taken
out.
Heritage
trees,
because
they're
dead
I
mean
every
reason
to
take
them
out,
but
we're
going
to
be
working
on
a
new
urban
urban
Forest
plan
with
hopefully
new
trees
on
our
preferred
list
and
I'm
wondering
once
trees
are
taken
out.
When
when
can
we
expect
a
new
list?
C
When
can
we
expect
to
actually
see
changes
in
what
we
planned?
How
we
plant,
where
we
plant.
K
I'd
just
like
it
to
happen,
I'm
gonna,
I'm
gonna,
try
to
answer
this
question
I
think
that
some
of
the
changes
we
have
to
wait
as
we
go
through
the
the
process
creating
this
new
Urban
Forest
plan,
depending
if
their
policy
changes
regarding
mitigation,
but
the
here
and
now
we
have
one
staff
member.
K
So
in
our
forestry
division
we
it's
exciting
and
we're
very
excited.
We
just
promoted
Matt,
actually
and
I
was
going
to
mention
that
in
my
my
updates,
but
we
are
working
with
HR
to
recruit
and
to
start
to
build
that
that
team
and
we're
excited
about
having
a
new
team
in
there.
That
has
a
different
approach
and
different,
look
and
and
kind
of
some
of
these.
The
the
new
Urban
Forest
plan
will
help
us
do
that.
So
it's
a
little
bit
twofold!
K
I,
don't
have
a
timeline
for
you,
but
we're
making
we're
making
progress.
We're
I
can
sort
of
see
the
light
at
the
end
of
the
tunnel.
C
I
don't
see
any
hands
raised
right
now.
I'll,
let's
see.
Oh,
we
have
two
members
of
the
public
and
I
see
that
Bruce
England
has
his
hand
up
Bruce.
Would
you
like
to
comment.
M
Thank
you,
chair
Bryant,
Bruce,
England,
Station
Drive,
also
speaking
for
green
spaces,
Mountain
View
we're
following
these
plans
very
closely.
It's
great
to
have
the
update
information
I
wanted
to
mention
that
I
attended
prior
to
this
meeting,
the
visual
arts
committee
meeting
and
something
that
came
up
there
actually
from
Committee
Member
Bryant.
The
other
brand
was
about
the
undercrossing
at
Castro
near
the
transit
center,
and
he
suggested
living
walls
through
there,
which
is
a
wonderful
idea
and
I'm,
not
sure.
We've
really
talked
about
it
within
green
spaces.
M
Mountain
View,
so
I
wanted
to
mention
that.
But
I
also
wanted
to
mention
that
there's
discussion
I
think
maybe
with
the
two
Johns
John
Lang
and
John
Marshall
about
incorporating
Landscaping
into
public
art
and
what
John
Lang
said
in
the
meeting
was
that
they
were
talking
about
the
tying
into
the
biodiversity
strategy.
That's
fine,
but
I
think
that
this
idea
could
go
beyond
just
the
biodiversity
strategy
in
any
time
where
Landscaping
could
be
incorporated
into
public
art
placements
and
I'm.
M
C
G
Just
wanted
to
say,
I'm,
looking
forward
to
all
these
activities
and
we're
going
to
be
busy
just
to
share
my
philosophy
on
you
know
the
landscape
and
trees
they're
living
things
and
they
live.
You
know
50
60,
70
years
and
they're,
not
instantaneous,
and
so
we
sort
of
have
to
you
know.
G
Imagine
a
lot
of
these
effects
that
we're
going
to
you
know
the
the
city
will
feel
as
a
as
a
having
implemented
the
these
reports,
as,
in
other
words,
it's
future
future
leaning
and
I'm
I'm,
totally
looking
forward
to
to
envisioning
that
with
everyone.
Thank
you.
C
All
right,
I,
don't
see
any
further
comments
from
PRC,
so
I
want
to
thank
director
Marshall
for
the
update,
I.
Think
it's
very
useful
both
for
the
PRC
and
for
members
of
the
public
who
are
following
this
to
have
a
clear
idea
of
where
we're
at
I
know
you
guys
in
your
offices,
are
working
extremely
hard,
but
if
the
public
doesn't
doesn't
hear
and
doesn't
say,
then
they
don't
know.
C
So
thank
you
for
the
updates,
which
puts
it
out
there
for
for
people
to
to
know
what
is
going
on
all
right,
we'll
close
item
six
and
move
on
to
item
seven
commission
announcements,
no
action
will
be
taken
on
any
question
raised
by
the
commission
at
this
time.
Director
Marshall.
A
Great
thank
you
chair,
Bryant,
I'm,
gonna
start
and
then
I'm
gonna
turn
it
over
once
again
to
both
assistant
director,
Brenda
Sylvia
and
Christine
Crosby
Recreation
manager
for
their
updates.
I'll
take
advantage
of
them
as
they're
here
tonight.
So
I
just
want
to
say
that,
as
we
move
into
the
new
year,
it's
we
are
going
to
have
a
number
of
large
items
and
just
a
number
of
items
coming
forward.
A
The
number
of
agenda
items
is
going
to
be
increasing,
so
just
want
to
give
you
a
preview
of
what
we
have
for
January.
As
Brenda
had
mentioned,
we
are
going
to
see
the
Shoreline
Wildlife
Management
plan.
A
We
have
the
election
of
officers.
We
have
Lindsay
Wong,
coming
our
our
analyst
Senior
Management
analyst
and
she's
going
to
be
talking
about
our
Parkland
fund
at
the
mid-year,
some
of
the
parks
projects,
as
well
as
bringing
forward
some
of
the
things
we
are
looking
at
requesting
as
part
of
the
CSD
budget
for
the
next
fiscal
year
as
this
program
moves
forward,
and
so,
as
you
can
tell
a
number
of
good
things
coming
up
and
then
February
is
already
looking
to
be
another
busy
agenda
as
well.
A
So
I'm
looking
forward
to
that
and
with
that
I
will
turn
it
over
to
assistant
director
Renda
Sylvia
to
give
an
update
on
parts
for
stream
Shoreline.
K
K
Park's
leadership
team
recently
attended
a
water
Summit
in
Walnut
Creek,
in
an
effort
to
continue
to
exploring
water
saving
techniques
and
practices,
and
the
community
services
department
will
be
nominating
Pyramid
Park
for
a
California,
Parks
and
Recreation
Society,
2022,
Park
planning
award
so
hope
to
take
coma,
take
home
a
trophy
or
whatever
they
give
you
for
forestry
City
Staffing
canopy
held
their
first
Arbor
Day
committee
meeting
yesterday
to
discuss
event
activities,
timelines
roles
and
responsibilities,
we're
really
looking
forward
to
having
a
different
type
of
event,
bigger,
broader,
reaching
the
Greater,
Community
and
and
having
it
be
very
interactive
and
educational.
K
So
we're
really
excited
about
that.
We're
starting
planning
now
Arbor
Day
will
be
in
March.
I
will
come
to
you
with
more
updates,
as
we
make
more
progress
as
part
of
the
budget
process.
The
forestry
division
is
proposing
to
modify
the
manager,
supervisor
and
coordinator
position
titles
to
better
reflect
the
nature
and
duties
of
the
positions
we
are
proposing.
New
titles
be
Urban,
Forest
manager,
Urban,
Forest
supervisor
and
urban
Forest
coordinator
we'll
begin
using
these
working
titles
we
already
have
actually
until
the
bud
budget
process
has
been
completed.
K
I
think
it
just
better
reflects
the
nature
of
the
jobs
and
and
as
we've
gone
through,
these
recruitments
we've
had
feedback
that
forestry
supervisor
or
porschement
just
doesn't
quite
reflect
it.
So
Urban
Forest
is,
is
a
better
title
for
those,
and
our
Urban
Forest
coordinator,
Matt
by
saml,
has
been
promoted
to
Urban
Forest
supervisor
position
the
urban
Forest
supervisor
positions
currently
occupied,
but
will
be
vacant
at
the
end
of
January
due
to
a
retirement.
So
we
plan
to
head
and
we
over
hired
in
order
to
provide
for
some
cross
training
in
Matt's
new
role.
K
He
will
have
the
opportunity
to
hire
and
lead
a
tree.
Trimmer
tree
team
make
improvements
to
treat
programs
and
policies
and
help
develop
the
city-wide
biodiversity
strategy
and
urban
Forest
plan,
so
we're
very
excited
and
happy
for
Matt
and
at
Shoreline
the
sailing,
Lake
erosion
dock
replacement
project
continues
to
be
on
schedule.
There
was
a
temporary
full
closure
of
the
windsurf
beach
for
regrading,
but
once
complete,
the
Windsor
Beach
can
be
fully
open
for
the
remainder
of
the
project.
K
This
will
complete
the
sediment
barrier
and
windsurf
Beach
portions
of
the
project,
and
the
shoreline
team
is
working
with
the
city's
communication
team
to
develop
an
Outreach
campaign
for
Shoreline
called
the
12
days
of
Shoreline
The
Campaign
Will
feature
news
releases,
daily
emails,
social
media
posts
and
videos
about
Shoreline,
and
it's
designed
to
be
educational,
interactive,
newsworthy
and
entertaining
I
did
get
to
see
a
little
preview
today
of
the
first
five
days
and
it's
it's
exceptional.
The
communications
team
has
really
done
a
great
job
with
photos
and
real
catchy
information.
K
L
Well,
we
are
almost
at
the
end
of
the
calendar
year,
which
means
we
are
I
think
we
are
officially
done
with
our
2022
special
events,
so
we
this
month,
has
been
very
busy
for
our
staff.
We
kicked
it
off
with
breakfast
with
Santa
at
the
beginning
of
the
month,
with
over
120
participants
having
breakfast
with
Santa
doing
a
few
fun
activities,
it
was
I,
think
sold
out
in
October,
so
very
highly
demanded
program,
as
you
may
be
aware
and
may
have
attended.
We
had
our
community
tree
lighting
celebration
on
December
5th.
L
We
tried
a
few
new
things,
because
we
just
can't
stay
stale
and
we
moved
the
stage
into
the
street.
We
had
a
really
fun
skit
and
interplay
between
the
mayor
and
the.
B
L
L
We
also
had
two
other
holiday
events,
one
that
took
place
this
past
weekend,
which
was
Santa's
Workshop.
It's
a
three-hour
program
for
elementary
age.
She
used
to
work
on
different
arts
and
crafts
that
are
holiday,
themed,
very
successful
and
that
one
sold
out
as
well
and
then
today,
from
four
to
six,
we
had
the
senior
holiday
Gala,
which
is
one
of
our
popular
senior
dances
at
the
senior
center.
L
They
all
look
forward
to
it
and
get
dressed
up
and
we
play
fun
holiday,
music
and
lots
of
dancing
so
on
the
last
holiday
function
that
we
just
completed.
L
Is
we
have
an
amazing
Santa
letter
program
where
we
collect
letters
from
Mountain,
View,
Youth
and
their
letters
to
Santa,
and
we
have
little
elves
that
volunteer
their
time
in
sending
responses,
and
this
year
we
received
158
letters
and
we
had
about
40
volunteers,
volunteer
total
of
70
hours
to
send
responses,
so
those
should
be
going
out
in
the
mail
this
week
on
behalf
of
Santa
so
very
excited.
L
We
are,
we
hit
a
few
bumps
in
the
road
with
getting
a
vendor
to
do
the
striping
for
us,
but
we
finally
got
courts
three
and
four
at
ringstar
Park
Stripes.
Last
week
late
last
week
we
had
to
contend
with
weather
and
we
found
a
pocket
of
time
when
there
was
no
rain,
we're
able
to
get
them
straight.
We
have
noticed
a
few
uses
on
the
courts,
but
we're
starting
to
promote
it
right
now
to
remind
people
that
this
opportunity
is
there.
L
Staff
will
be
monitoring
the
usage
of
these
courts
by
both
Sports
pickleball
and
Tennis
over
the
next
six
months
we
have
signage
posted
at
the
courts
where
people
can
scan
a
QR
code,
that'll
bring
them
to
a
website
where
they
can
provide
feedback,
and
we
also
have
the
link
for
the
feedback
on
our
City's
website
at
mountainview.gov
forward,
slash
pickleball.
So
we
will
be
monitoring
the
next
six
months
and
we
hope
to
bring
this
item
back
to
the
tennis
Advisory
board
and
the
Parks
and
Recreation
Commission
in
the
late
spring
or
early
summer,
and.
B
C
Thank
you
so
much
Commissioners
comments,
questions.
J
L
L
You
so
the
project
is
going
very
well.
So
far.
Obviously
we
had
a
few
delays
with
rain.
Recently,
we've
had
a
small
delay
here
and
there
related
to
receiving
supplies
due
to
supply
chain
issues,
but
right
now
we're
looking
at
an
early
fall
time
frame
as
a
potential
for
opening
I
keep
telling
everyone
the
caveat.
If.
L
Went
swimmingly,
it
would
be
maybe
July
if
everything
just
drowned,
it
would
be
February
2024.
Sorry
I
felt
like
the
restaurant
called
the
twins
in
there,
so
we're
right
now,
looking
at
maybe
October
November,
but
we
know
that
there's
a
lot
of
things
that
are
still
in
the
pipeline
for
construction
that
could
get
delayed
and
some
items
that
we're
waiting
on
to
see
when
they're
going
to
come
in,
but
the
price
projects
looking
well.
If
you
swing
by
the
site,
you
can
see
that
both
of
the
pools
actually
have
a
shape.
L
They
have
depth.
We
actually
had
a
little
pool
with
the
rain.
Recently
they
had
to
get
that
water
out,
but
the
building
is
going
to
start
taking
shape.
They've
recently
poured
the
foundation
and
starting
to
work
on
all
the
underground.
B
C
Seeing
enough
I
believe
we
are
ending
very
early
today,
this
will
be
our
last
meeting
of
2022.
Thank
you
all
very
much
and
thank
you
to
staff
director
Marshall.
A
All
right
meant
to
say
this
earlier,
just
a
reminder
that
I
mentioned
what
is
coming
up
on
the
agenda
in
January
and
then
looking
to
come
together
in
person
starting
in
February.
Just
as
a
reminder,
thank
you.
C
A
At
the
moment,
we
will
be
coming
back
in
person
and
we're
waiting
to
hear
more
about
hybrid
options,
but
starting
in
February.
We
will
start
as
in
person
only
and
we'll
continue
to
update
you,
as
other
options
become
available.
C
J
That's
one
question:
real
quick
January
meeting
were
a
week
later.
Is
that
correct
do
I?
Have
it
correct
on
my
calendar
in
72nd
Wednesday
we're
the
third
Wednesday.
C
All
right,
we'll
we'll
adjourn
this
may
so
everyone
bye-bye.