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From YouTube: June 22, 2023 Public Safety Advisory Board Meeting
Description
Live teleconference of the Public Safety Advisory Board Meeting scheduled for Thursday, June 22, 2023.
A
A
A
A
C
A
Thank
you.
Moving
on
to
minutes
approval
peace,
five
minutes
approval
first
April
27
2023.
Does
anyone
have
any
questions
about
the
meeting
minutes.
B
E
F
F
A
You
we're
going
to
item
four
oil
Communications
item.
Four
is
oral
Communications
from
the
public.
This
portion
of
the
meeting
was
observed
for
persons
wishing
to
address
the
Advisory
board
on
any
matter,
not
on
the
agenda.
Speakers
are
allowed
to
speak
on
any
topic
for
up
to
three
minutes
during
this
section.
State
law
prohibits
the
peace
out
from
acting
on
non-agendized
items.
Would
any
member
of
the
public
like
to
provide
public
comments
on
an
item
that
is
not
a
legit
the
agenda?
B
H
H
Pronouns
nice
to
meet
in
the
meat
World,
some
of
you,
it's
lovely,
to
be
able
to
be
in
person
and
I
just
want
to.
Thank
you
guys
for
all
the
work
that
you
did
making
this
hybrid
that's
actually
kind
of
funny.
The
the
first.
The
third
in-person
meeting
is
the
first
one
that
I
was
able
to
attend
and
I
could
have
done
virtually,
but
I
do
really
enjoy
being
able
to
be
present
in
this
space
with
you,
and
thank
you
for
the
work
and
effort
that
you
did
to
make
that
a
reality.
F
I'm,
sorry,
I'm!
Sorry,
if
the
text
is
the
is
the
public
supposed
to
be
visible
to
the
folks
that.
B
Are
watching
it's
not
possible
with
the
way
that
the
camera
is
situated
just
I
just.
I
Foreign,
thank
you
very
much.
Bruce
England
speaking
for
NBC
pro,
which
is
Mountain
View
Coalition
for
police
reform
and
accountability,
which
is
a
mouthful
and
I,
have
a
few
items
for
this
section
of
the
meeting.
I
have
to
switch
over
to
it
three
things.
We
have
a
question
about
the
process
for
closing
out
subcommittees,
I.
Think
at
the
last
meeting
there
was
a
discussion
about
possibly
ending
one
of
them
which
started
a
conversation,
but
it
wasn't
genderized
I,
don't
think
so.
I
It
seems
like
whenever
a
subcommittee
is
going
to
be
closed,
or
at
least
going
to
be
considered
being
closed,
that
that
should
be
agendized
and
there
should
be
a
process
for
that
and
if
you
need
it,
maybe
something
for
psab
to
consider.
Second,
we
would
like
to
see
a
standing
item
in
the
agenda
for
each
subcommittee
each
active
subcommittee,
even
if
there's
nothing
to
report.
This
is
a
good
way
to
provide
accountability
to
the
public
and
to
yourselves
to
know
what
each
subcommittee
is
actually
working
on
between
meetings.
I
And
lastly,
we
continue
to
be
interested
in
seeing
increased
representation
from
the
other
parts
of
of
Public
Safety,
such
as
the
fire
department
and
EMS,
particular
in
particular,
because
there's
a
change
in
the
role
for
the
staph
liaison
potentially
and
a
new
police
chief.
This
might
be
a
good
time
to
reconsider
that.
Thank
you.
A
And
did
did
the
gentleman
want
to
speak
now
or
just
grab
a
one
in
case
all
right,
very
good.
We
will
now
close
the
oral
Communications
item
and
move
on
to
description
items.
We
have
a
full
agenda
tonight
to
facilitate
participation,
but
I'll
be
submembers.
I
will
be
recognizing
in
turn
each
member
who
signals
they
are
ready
to
speak
after
all,
members
who
wish
to
speak
on
an
item
have
done
so
I
will
recognize
members
who
have
additional
comments.
A
Moving
on
to
number
five
discussion
item
mvpd
annual
report
by
interim
police
chief
Max
bozell,
my
neighbor
will
present
at
the
mvpd
annual
report.
K
For
2020.
thank
you,
chair
and
Frank
Vice
chair,
Wayne
board
members.
It's
a
my
honor
to
present
to
you
our
2022
annual
report.
My
name
is
Max
bozell
I
serve
as
your
interim
police
chief
since
Chris
Young's
retirement
in
February
and
I
feel
kind
of
full
circle
with
this,
because
in
the
time
of
my
retirement,
the
receipts
for
this
board
were
planted
and
finished
my
time
in
the
interim
capacity
as
Chief
here
at
this
board,
It's
a
Full
Circle
event
for
me.
K
So
I've
presented
our
annual
report
to
the
human
relations
commission,
and
this
is
the
first
time
that
I'm
honored
to
be
able
to
present
that
to
you
as
a
public
safety
Advisory
board,
so
Captain,
Saul,
Jaeger
and
I
will
be
taking
turns
I'll
start
with
an
overview
and
then
Saul
will
get
into
more
of
the
details
of
our
division
operations
at
the
end
of
the
presentation.
So
starting
off.
K
We
have
about
30
000
calls
for
service
that
were
either
initiated
or
dispatched
by
by
our
staff
in
response
to
serving
the
community
and
about
1500
of
those
were
emergency
calls
or
dispatched
emergency
calls
over
the
course
of
the
year,
and
this
is
roughly
the
same
from
2021
and
a
little
bit
lower
than
pandemic
levels,
which
averaged
about
35
000
prior
to.
K
Proudly
continue
to
reflect
generally
the
demographics
that
are
reported
in
census
within
the
community,
and
this
is
a
challenging
Prospect
for
an
agency,
because
when
the
chief
hires
staff,
they're
they're
hiring
someone
today
and
over
the
course
of
time,
the
demographics
and
the
city
changes.
So
what
we
might
try
to
represent
is
the
diversity
of
our
community
today
may
not
necessarily
reflect
the
diversity
of
the
community
in
10,
15
or
or
20
years.
So
luckily,
I
think
through
many
decades
of
innovative,
recruiting
we've
been
able
to
maintain
at
least
a
diversity.
K
Within,
ethnicity,
where
we
continue
to
struggle
and
look
to
improve,
is
our
representation
of
females
in
the
sworn
ranks.
We've
been
lower
than
10
percent,
but
we've
also
been
higher
than
10
percent
and
I.
Think
some
of
the
hirings
that
you'll
be
seeing
in
the
next
several
months
will
reflect
an
effort
to
increase
that
representation
within
the
department.
K
Crime,
Trends
and
activities
so
last
year
was
a
a
year
of
transition
and
the
way
the
department
reported
to
the
state
and
federal
government
are
crime
statistics
in
the
city.
We
shifted
from
something
called
Uniform,
Crime
reporting,
reform,
crime,
reporting,
the
FBI
initiated
I,
think
in
the
70s,
and
it
reflects
account
of
crime
in
communities
that
represent
homicide.
K
Rape,
aggravated
assaults,
burglary,
larceny,
motor
vehicle
theft,
robbery,
and
it
was
a
effort
to
show
consistency
or
Trends
by
with
consistency
across
the
United
States
over
the
years
that
has
become
Antiquated
and
the
FBI
shifted
to
something
called
the
national
incident
based
reporting
system
and
last
year
with
the
new
records
management
system.
We
transitioned
to
this,
which
counts
crimes
a
little
bit
differently
and
we
group
them
now
in
groups
A
and
B.
K
So
we're
looking
at
apples
to
oranges
instead
of
Apples
to
Apples,
as
we
compare
statistics
across
the
prior
years
until
over
the
trend
years,
we'll
be
able
to
catch
up
and
show
the
neighbor
statistics
and
years
moving
forward.
However,
you
can
see
that
the
predominant
issue
for
the
community
continues
to
be
property.
Crimes
reported
to
us
at
3,
36
and
941
person
crimes.
Now
the
person
crimes
under
the
old
UCR
are
aggravated
assault.
K
Homicide
robberies
actually
considered
a
person,
a
property
crime,
although
a
person
is
under
fear
or
a
victim
of
force,
but
it's
actually
considered
a
property
crime
under
neighbors.
The
prop
the
person
crime
categories
are
broader
and
more
extensive,
so
we'll
see
different
numbers
moving
forward
and
hopefully
receive
a
more
accurate
picture
of
the
type
of
incidents
we're
responding
and
reacting
and
trying
to
prevent.
K
Under
arrests,
well,
you
see
a
significant
decrease
in
coveted
years
and
even
last
year,
with
the
number
of
rests
that
we've
encountered,
and
these
include
everything
from
Warren
arrest
and
misdemeanor.
It's
a
felony
arrests
for
crime,
the
height
in
this
particular
chart
being
back
in
2019
and
last
year,
went
from
2019
over
2000
to
just
985,
adult
arrests
and
juvenile
risks,
trending
downward
to
21
from
65
back
in
2019
and
years
prior.
K
Actually,
we
were
in
the
hundreds
with
juvenile
crime,
so
there's
been
a
significant
decrease
trending,
certainly
over
the
last
decade,
and
we
also
provided
for
you
some
areas
of
interest
that
we
typically
get
from
members
of
the
community.
This
is
not
specifically
referenced
in
the
annual
report
itself,
but
they
are,
of
course,
topics
that
we
hear
about.
K
Were
we
receive
inquiries
about
including
fatal
collisions
or
72-hour
toes
catalytic
converter
theft,
those
gun
seizures
and
mental
health
calls
for
service
chart
above
shows
you
the
kind
of
consistent
low
numbers
in
our
fatal
collisions
significant
decrease
in
the
number
of
72-hour
toes.
Of
course,
we
just
recently
returned
with
practice.
K
So
game
cases
we've
been
tracking
for
several
decades.
The
city
had
a
more
predominant
issue
of
gang
violence
in
the
90s
and
it
tapered
off
a
little
bit
in
the
beginning
of
the
21st
century.
However,
we
do
still
have
issues
of
evolving
gangs
and
gangs,
for
us
are
defined.
Penal
Code,
there's
a
definition,
and
it
talks
about
an
ongoing
group
organization
or
Association
of
three
or
more
people
who
have
a
common
name
or
common,
identifying
sign
or
symbol
that
are
primary.
K
Their
primary
activity
is
the
commission
of
one
or
more
criminal
acts
as
described
either
separately
or
collection,
engage
or
have
engaged
in
those
criminal
acts
and
based
on
that
definition,
along
with
our
gang
experts
who
are
certified
in
their
testimony
to
courts
involving
gang
activity.
Getting
certain
game
cases
are
classified
as
in
crime,
and
you
can
see
that
it's
trended
significantly
lower
in
recent
years,
especially
post-pandemic,
which
we
hope
continues.
K
We
do
all,
unfortunately,
still
have
issues,
including
some
pretty
serious
assaults
that
have
occurred.
This
is
fire
return
here
in
February,
so
unfortunately,
it's
not
something
that
I
can
say
we're
eliminating.
K
Our
emergency
communications
center
is
operated
within
the
police
department
and
takes
we
call
it
a
psab,
a
psap.
Rather
so
it's
not
similar
to
your
acronym.
It's
actually
a
public
safety
answering
point:
it's
our
9-1-1
system
and
we
take
calls
for
police
Fire
EMS.
We
also
Contract
Services,
with
the
mid
Peninsula,
open
space,
district
and
dispatch
after
hours
for
public
works.
So.
K
In
multiple
jurisdictions,
with
a
variety
of
responsibilities,
around
in-progress
incidents
from
crime
to
suspicious
activity
to
service
cases
to
emergency
medical
calls
in
which
they
give
instructions
for
emergency
care,
including
delivering
babies
and
also
fire
response,
as
well
so
they're,
a
very
comprehensive
service
that
we
provide
to
the
community
and
just
over.
A
hundred
thousand
calls
were
taken
in
that
Center
last
year
about
forty
thousand
four
thousand
540,
where
our
emergency,
seven
digit
line
and
20
almost
27
000
are
9-1-1
calls
and
a
lot.
77
000
were
answered
on
non-emergency
line.
K
Our
contact
data
is
something
we've
also
collected
for
a
number
of
years.
We
started
with
traffic,
stop
data
in
the
late
1990s
and
expanded
that
to
all
contacts,
to
really
get
an
idea
of
not
just
who
we
contact
in
an
enforcement
capacity
for
traffic
violations,
but
also
who
we
encounter,
who
are
victims
of
crime,
Witnesses
of
crime
who
were
described
as
suspects
or
identified
as
suspects
and
involved
in
arrests
or
citations,
and
we
break
this
out
by
U.S
census.
K
Demographics
and
surprisingly,
although
this
is
not
contrasted
the
prior
years
from
having
seen
these
charts
over
the
years,
they're
fairly
consistent
over
over
the
progression
of
time.
What's
changed,
of
course
is
the
population
in
the
community
has
increased
and
the
the
demographics
somewhat
had
changed
related
to
the
type
of
ethnicity
and
race
within.
K
In
the
community,
so
this
represents
about
ten
thousand
three
ten
thousand
four
hundred
total
contacts,
and
you
can
see
the
breakdown
in
which
there's
about
2,
000,
citations
and
arrests,
2400
suspects,
a
thousand
Witnesses
and
almost
3
000
victims
involved
in
the
percentages
of
those
breakdowns.
K
We
also
report
in
our
annual
reports
the
uses
of
force
that
you
are
involved
with
in
an
arrest
situation
and
at
the
bottom
there
were
the
is
covered
up.
The
total
number
of
uses
of
force
are
nine,
so
you
can.
K
You
know
contrast
that
to
the
number
of
arrests
that
were
involved
in
which
is
2000,
and
it's
a
very
small
percentage
of
arrests
that
actually
involved
a
use
of
force,
the
predominant
use
of
force,
uncontrolled
takedowns,
which
is
the
physical
contact
of
an
officer
on
a
suspect
in
which
they
are
then
brought
to
the
ground
and
apprehended,
and
in
that
case
we've
had
of
those
one
minor
injury.
K
K
Fortunately,
nothing
more
serious
and
the
majority.
Of
course
there
you
see,
have
the
nine
five
resulted
in
no
injury
to
the
suspects.
K
Within
our
Professional
Standards
unit,
we
have
our
Personnel
complaint
investigations
that
are
either
generated
internally
or
through
external
reporting,
and
you
can
see
that
at
the
close
of
the
year
we
found
two
sustained
violations
of
misconduct
or
policy
violations.
Two
were
unfounded:
six
were
not
sustained
pending
at
that
time
of
the
end
of
the
year
were
two:
it
was
continuing
to
this
calendar
year
and
would
be
reported
next
year.
K
Award
for
a
heroism
or
life-saving
or
an
officer
who's,
you
know
injured
in
the
course
of
performing
their
duties.
You
will
see
an
award
this
next
calendar
for
2023
next
year,
because
we
did
already
award
one
of
our
officers,
the
Purple
Heart,
for
having
been
injured
after
sustaining
a
gun
shopping
last
year.
K
We
do
monitor
our
Pursuits.
We
have
a
fairly
comprehensive
review
of
when
we
are
engaged
in
a
vehicle,
pursuit
of
a
violator
or
suspect
and
two
were
initiated.
There
was
one
apprehension
and
both
were
within
policy.
There's
restrictions
about
when
an
officer
because
of
the
inherent
dangers
of
vehicles,
traveling
at
a
very
high
speed
and
typically
erratically.
There
are
conditions
in
which
must
be
met
in
which
an
officer
and
then
pursue
a
suspect.
L
L
Before
I
do
go
forward,
though,
it
is
ironic
a
little
bit
that
Max
is
here.
On
the
last
the
last
time
he's
gonna
have
a
PSAT
meeting
and
somebody
that
actually
started
this
and
seated
this
idea
so
from
me
and
from
the
police
department.
Thank
you.
So
much
for
all
of
your
service
and
2.0
help
again
looking
forward
to
Mike
coming
in
and
exciting
time.
L
Okay,
the
first
division
we're
going
to
look
at
is
traffic.
If
you
follow
the
annual
report,
that's
in
there
as
well,
so
the
Traffic
Unit
or
the
the
motorcycle
officers
that
you
see
there
trending
again
similar
to
Crime
with
traffic.
L
You
know
we
saw
a
a
large
decrease
in
the
amount
of
traffic
in
general
during
the
pandemic,
which
also
resulted
in
global
crashes
and
other
things
that
were
involved
in
that
we're,
seeing
a
kind
of
return
to
normalcy,
a
bit
in
2022,
with
an
increase
in
in
crashes
and
collisions
traffic
issues
and
complaints
and
congestion.
So
that's
happening
as
well,
and
it
seems
to
be
so
far
back
to
similar
to
pre-pandemic.
L
Our
canine
unit
this
year
had
450
training
hours
total,
and
it
is
the
three
the
three
dogs
that
were
there
for
2022.
L
and
just
we
had
105
deployments
and
just
to
ident
I,
don't
know
if
the
definition
of
what
a
deployment
is
has
ever
been
really
talked
about.
But
a
deployment
for
us
is
utilizing
the
dog
and
Handler
team
for
really
any
task
that
they're
trained
for
that
could
be
evidence
that
could
be
tracking.
It
could
be
trailing
tracking
apprehension
and
Protection
work.
L
L
That
time
and
there's
some
examples
of
some
of
the
cases
that
we
helped
with
and
some
of
the
cases
where
there
were
apprehensions
on
there
as
well,
but
in
2022
we
actually
also
had
four
apprehensions.
Just
to
give
you
some
ideas.
Prior
to
that
2021
had
520
hours
of
training
and
in
2020
we
had
700..
Sometimes
those
training
hours
and
deployment
times
are
because
the
dog
and
the
Handler
team
might
be
out
injured
or
off.
For
some
other
reason
or
like
in
Maya.
L
L
The
next
section
is
our
youth
services
section.
So
in
this
section
now,
there's
one
Sergeant
three
school
resource
officers,
one
fantastic
police
activities,
League
coordinator
and
two
police
assistants,
not
that
the
other
ones
are
not
fantastic,
they're,
all
fantastic
and
you.
You
had
already
done
a
lot
of
work
with
the
school
resource
officer
program.
So
we're
not
going
to
go
too
much
into
detail
with
that
in
regards
to
the
a
manual
that
was
developed,
I
finalized
as
well.
L
The
neighborhood
Event
Services
Unit,
everybody
knows
Jen
Leia,
we're
very
proud
again
of
the
fact
that
in
this
unit,
we've
referred
over
100
people
to
project
home
key
in
2022
and
there's
more
in
2023,
specifically
15
individuals
and
families
were
also
referred
to
move
move
Mountain
View
program
very
helpful,
resulting
in
10
adults
and
two
families
to
receive
permanent
housing.
There's
a
lot
of
that
program,
and
then
this
this
unit
also
does
a
lot
of
the
community
presentations
which
has
been
low
recently
and
coming
out
of
the
pandemic
and.
A
L
It's
broken
up
into
three
different
units
crimes
against
persons,
which
has
one
sergeant
and
four
detectives
assigned
to
it:
crime
suppression
unit,
which
is
our
surveillance,
sort
of
undercover
unit,
narcotics,
work
and
support
for
the
rest
of
the
department.
There.
They
have
one
Sergeant
three
detectives
in
our
cyber
and
financial
fraud
crimes
unit,
which
is
one
sergeant
and
two
detectives
and
also
has.
J
L
The
Cyber
forensic
lab
under
them
as
well,
and
then
we
we
also
have
one
detective
assigned
to
each
of
the
three
task
forces
in
the
county,
which
is
the
regional,
auto
theft
task
force,
radiff,
the
Santa
Clara
County
specialized
enforcement
team
or
csat,
and
the
stolen
vehicle
I'm.
Sorry,
the
regional
enforcement
Allied
computer
team,
Branch
team.
That's
for
the
county!
L
There
was
a
lot
of
a
lot
of
cases
in
2022
and
we've
been
very
busy
on
the
investigative
side
and
some
of
the
standouts
and
I
was
going
to
call
this
out
for
commendations
for
in
2020.
Please
there's
going
to
be
a
larger
number
than
normal
because
of
the
homicide
case
from
the
one
of
the
concerts
that
we
had.
That
was
involving
the
Hell's
Angels.
That
resulted
in
many.
L
Doing
fantastic
work,
that's
going
to
be
committed
in
this
year,
in
addition
to
some
cold
cases
as
well.
We
do
continue
to
see
a
lot
of
property
crime,
which
is
the
crime
suppression,
units
Focus
as
well.
The
catalytic
converters
and
auto
burglaries
are
it's
a
regional
issue
and
we
are
working
together
with
the
other
agencies
and
Allied
agencies
in
the
area
for
that
and
we're
seeing
continued
uptick,
unfortunately
and
cyber-related
child
crime,
and
that.
L
We
are
continuing
to
lead
and
innovate.
We're
excited
to
announce.
You
know.
The
mvpdx
program
continues
to
be
really
popular
and
we're
going
to
be
starting
to
recruit
for
the
fifth
cohort
in
just
a
few
weeks.
That
should
be
in
late,
August
and
September
to
start
rolling
for
that
and
of
course,
our
social
channels
continue
to
break
records
and
do
amazing
things
to
connect
with
our
community
figure
out
the
questions
section.
A
K
Thanks
for
the
question
we
are
not
criminologists,
so
you
know
I,
guess
anecdotally.
We
can
come
to
conclusions.
There
are
I
think
a
variety
of
conditions
that
the
pandemic
brought
in,
which
include
change
in
people
commuting
coming
into
work,
downtown,
not
being
vibrant
officers
being
restricted
from
doing
proactive,
policing
contacting
individuals
and
spokes
out
and
about
which
resulted
in
less
activity.
For
us,
that's
what
anecdotally
we
concluded
so
that
I
think
can
be
supported
based
on
the
fact
that
post-pandemic
we're
starting
to
see
increases
in
that
Trend.
So
there's.
L
L
G
K
Right
so
the
way
crime
is
reported
in
Neighbors
is
different
than
what
we
might
charge
is
kidnapping
in
the
California
penal
code,
207
PC,
which
you
may
think
of
as
like
kidnapping,
for
instance.
So,
yes,
I,
think
the
numbers
reflect
everything
from
child
custody
issues
to
kidnapping
which
can
be
something
like
recently
a
case
we
were
involved
in
in
which
female
victim
got
into
a
pickup
truck
and
the
person
refused
to
stop,
even
though
they
may
not
have
wanted
to
take
that
person
for
ransom.
L
D
K
Good
question:
we
typically
see
more
aggravated
assaults
downtown
weekend
hours
and
also
you
know
at
Shoreline,
Amphitheater
During.
Certain
concert
that
venue
certain
concerts
can
bring
more
serious
assaults.
They're
simple
assaults
which
results
in
a
minor
injury
in
aggravated
assaults
which
are
more
serious
injury
or
with
the
weapon
or.
K
K
Yeah,
so
we
call
that
neighbors
calls
it
pickpockets.
We
call
that
Grand
Theft
from
person.
That
could
be
anything
from.
Let's
say
you
have
your
personal
shopping
cart
and
someone
steals
it.
That's
considered
a
grand
theft
from
person
as
long
as
that
purses
within
a
proximity
of
your
control,
or
you
know,
if
that's
off
your
person,
a
problem,
personal
property.
D
J
K
So
we
do
report
or
we
have
reported,
although
I
don't
think
the
mechanism
by
which
this
particular
neighbors
report
is
consistent.
With
past
years,
in
past
years,
we
had
a
separate
category
for
elder
abuse
crime
and
just
for
reference
anytime,
a
senior
is
involved
as
a
victim
of
a
crime
that
is
specifically
charged
as
a
part
of
the
mission
of
that
crime.
If
we
apprehend
and
prosecute
a
suspect-
and
that
is
reported
as
a
separate
category,
we
do
have
that
information,
but
it
may
not
be
a
part
of
our
annual
report.
L
K
And
even
our
UCR,
where
we
just
reported
that
one
crime
we
did
specifically
Define
what
Elder
crimes
were.
We
had
responded
to
and
they're,
not
surprisingly
dealing
with
my
mom's
own
fraud
issues,
who's
97..
K
We
don't
have
as
many
as
you
would
think.
At
least
in
the
past
years,.
D
And
then
well,
this
is
the
question
is
answered.
My
my
question
is:
why
would
gay
cases
go
down
in
covert
years,
but
you
answered
that
people
are
staying
at
home?
Is
that
essentially
the
yes.
K
And
schools
were
out
as
well:
we
have
a
fair
number
of
issues
or
concerns
around
school
activity
that
could
involve
gangs,
so
the
fact
that
they're
out
of
out
of
school
that's
another
reason.
That's
probably
the
case
foreign.
D
D
Okay,
so
these
are
people
who've
already
been
determined
and
then
a
question.
That's
really
is
just
I
would
just
like
feedback
on
it,
I'm
uncomfortable
with
the
idea
of
sex
offenders
having
to
register
once
they've
done
their
time.
Could
I
have
your
could
I
have
an
academic
reply
to
that.
K
Having
sat
on
the
California
sex
offender
management
board
for
a
number
of
years,
California
was
one
of
the
only
states
of
just
a
couple
that
had
lifetime
registration
requirements
up
until
just
a
few
years
ago,
the
laws
were
changed
to
reflect
a
tiered
registration
requirement
based
on
the
seriousness
of
the
offense.
K
So,
for
example,
you
might
have
with
what's
called
a
Romeo
and
Juliet
case
in
which
a
19
year
old
boy
is
with
a
16
year
old
girl,
but
they
are
then
married
and
have
a
family
and
children
which
under
California
law,
could
be
a
felony
case
of
unlawful
sexual
intercourse
with
a
minor
and
that
person
could
be
subject
to
Sex
Registration
under
the
new
law.
Those
cases
are
looked
at
differently
than
just
a
blanket
lifetime
registration.
K
If,
in
that
particular
case,
registration
is
required
at
all,
but
you
might
have
someone
who
is
in
and
gets
arrested
for
indeed
and
convicted.
As
for
indecent
exposure
and
as
a
condition
of
the
sentencing
is
required
to
register,
and
that
person
may
only
have
to
register
for
a
period
of
10
years,
whereas
someone,
for
example,
commits
a
serious,
violent
assault
with
the
intent
to
commit
rape.
That
might
be
a
lifetime
registration
requirement.
Depending
on
the
Court's
determination.
K
D
That
decides
yes,
then.
Finally,
the
total
number
of
contacts
in
2022
was
about
30,
000.,
and
but
we
have
only
nine
cases
of
use
of
force.
Yeah.
K
N
Thank
you.
Both
I
really
appreciate
your
presentation.
N
I'm
especially
interested
I,
really
appreciate
the
data
on
the
mental
health
culture
service
and
I'm
really
interested
in
seeing
how
that
changes
in
future
years
with
trust
and
mtrt,
and
all
these
other
things
coming
in
I
also
really
appreciate
the
data
on
the
neighborhoods
and
Event
Services
and
kind
of
specifically
the
community
events.
N
Data
and
I'd
love
to
see
that
also
for
the
SRO
program,
if
that's
possible,
so
I
saw
that
there
was
like
the
pow
boxing
and
all
these
other
things
that
they
do,
but
I
think
it'd
be
really
great
to
see
the
efforts
that
are
going
on
to
have
structured
Outreach
to
community
members,
so
I
think
seeing
that
next
year
would
be
really
cool.
N
I
saw
that
there
was
a
significant
decrease
in
juvenile
arrests
between
2019
and
2022
and
I'm.
Just
kind
of
curious
like
what
happened
between
then
and
if
there's
any
change
in
policy
would
just
I,
don't
know.
Environment
I.
K
Think
similar
to
the
the
general
activity
over
the
covid
pandemic
period
is
there
was
that
significant
decrease
that
we've
observed
across
the
board,
related
to
our
contacts
and
and
arrests,
and
it's
reflected
not
just
in
juveniles
but
adults
but
interestingly
and
I
I,
don't
know
the
answer
to
this.
It's
really
trended
downward
over
many
years.
K
Some
of
it
might
be
Law
changes
in
the
way
in
which
laws
are
enforced,
the
type
of
laws,
for
example,
whereas
you
know
drug
possession
or
marijuana
cases
an
example,
although
even
juveniles,
technically
it's
illegal
under
21
to
possess,
but
also
the
version
programming,
restorative
justice.
So
those
are
potential
reasons
why
that
Trends,
it's
declining.
N
K
A
D
O
K
Yeah
I'm
not
certain
if
it
was
a
mandate
or
a
serious
request
in
the
sense
that
California
has
not
been
moving
towards
neighbors
for
many
years,
while
other
parts
of
the
nation
already
has
adopted
it.
But
there's
a
strong
effort
in
California
and
part
of
that
reasoning
is
within
the
State
Department
of
Justice.
The.
K
O
K
G
E
Challenge
questions.
First
of
all,
the
2021
report
is
on
the
website,
so
that
might
be
upload
of
feedback
for
oh.
K
E
Yeah
it
just
wasn't
under
I
was
looking
under
transparency,
general.
K
E
K
We
have
95
sworn
from
the
chief
on
down
to
the
officer
in
the
academy.
There's
a
budget,
as
you
know,
council's
considering
a
budget
next
week,
which
would
make
a
limited
period
position
permanent
for
96
sworn.
K
So
our
investigators
make
a
determination
and
actually
have
criteria
that
includes
things
like
graffiti
in
their
possession,
tattoos,
clothing,
Association
or
affiliation
with
other
known
gang
members
or
gang
Affiliates.
There's
a
distinction
between
the
two
and
a
legal
process
by
which
we
Define
them
photos
of
them
and
clothing
that
have
the
game
symbols.
G
E
K
Of
their
probation
or
parole
in
which
they're
a
gang
registrant
and
they
are
required
to
come
in
and
register
as
such
an
arson
person.
Conviction
of
arson
is
another
registration
that
could
happen
as
well
as
certain
drug
offenses.
The
court
could
require
registration
as
well
unless
they
are
recently
eliminated.
This
was
back
in
the
day
when
I
was
still
working
a
lot,
so
it's
still
good.
Okay,
I.
E
Feel,
like
am
I
getting
rusty
so
for
and
then
and
then
there
was
a
part
of
the
report
that
was
gain
cases.
So
I
wanted
clarification
on
what
that
term
meant.
K
So,
for
example,
we
go
to
a
report
of
graffiti
local
business
or
location
park
or
whatever
it
might
be,
and
the
person
that
we
arrest
is
is
graffiting
and
my
name
is
Max
and
they're,
not
a
gang
member.
That's
not
a
game
case,
but
if
they're
graffiting
MV
VMV
XIV
audio
Mountain,
View
martinio
xid.
That
potentially
then
is
a
game
case
or
an
assault,
an
assault's
committed
and
it's
committed
by
members
of
the
gang
that
have
been
identified
or
validated.
We
call
it
validated
gang
members.
That
would
be
a
gay
case.
So.
L
F
E
I,
just
no
it's
not
it's
still
visible,
oh
okay,
sorry
and
then
I
had
a
question
about
9-1-1
calls
are
any
calls
routed
to
to
988
or
like
the
the
county
mcrt
by
emergency.
We.
K
Are
in
the
process
now
of
working
out
the
protocol
in
which
that
occurs?
Do
you
have
a
unique
operating
system
in
which
we
share
a
virtual
system
of
dispatch
with
Palo,
Alto
and
Los
Altos?
So
we
have
the
same
cat
system
so
part
of
the
strategy
and
working
988
into
our
call
taking
is
coordinating
with
those
agencies
so
that
there's
a
commonality
in
which
the
calls
are
processed
and
handled
and
they're
forwarded.
So
that's
in
in
process.
E
E
Another
point
of
feedback
is
actually
I'm.
Sorry
was
this
only
questions
because
I
we.
B
E
For
canine
yeah
yeah
and
then
since
we
have
our
own
canine
units
and
what
situation
would
we
be
borrowing
like
a
canine
unit
from
another
another
jurisdiction?
That
was
the
word,
but
I
wasn't
sure
if
it
was
thank
you,
you.
F
Tip
of
your
thank.
K
You
so
if
we
have
local
resources
available,
we'll
draw
from
our
own
resources
unless
there's
a
specialty
that
we
don't
have
locally,
for
example,
a
bomb
dog,
we
would
call
the
Sheriff's
Office
and
request
resources
for
that
or
if
our
dogs
are
not
working
and
we
have
a
situation
as
an
example,
a
person
suspected
inside
a.
E
There
was
a
mentioned
that
catalytic
converters
is
a
regional
issue.
I
would
like
to
clarify
what
region
like
County,
Bay,
Area
Bay.
E
Yeah
and
then
I
promise.
This
is
the
last
question.
Do
the
property
crimes
that
are
refrigerated
include
theft
of
all
monetary
value,
of
specific
monetary
value.
G
K
F
D
K
The
moment
no,
but
within
the
industry
and
within
discussions.
K
F
I'll
split
mine
some
before
so
after,
as
you
can
go
back
and
look
at
the
demographic
data.
F
I'm
just
trying
to
understand
the
columns
so
I
get
census,
victims,
Witnesses
suspects,
I,
I,
think
I'm
struggling
with
arrests
and
citations
versus
suspects.
K
F
And
so
you
know
just
looking
at
the
numbers
right,
it
might
be
a
natural
thought
to
say:
oh
look
at
the
census
number,
so
I'm,
Hispanic
or
Latino
census
numbers
on
black
or
African-American,
and
then
look
at
the
arrest,
the
suspect
and
the
arrest
numbers
and
the
just
the
general
contact
numbers
and
I
don't
want
to
draw
conclusions
either
way.
I'm
just
curious
if
they've
seen
disproportional
the
thoughts
are.
K
Well,
I'm,
not
a
scientist
that
analyzes
the
data,
so
it
is
I
think
a
discussion
Ally
that
is
being
held
and
a
curious
question
as
to
the
reasoning
behind
why
certain
numbers
may
appear
different.
But
demographic
might
be
I.
K
Think
just
from
an
awareness
perspective
that
the
demographics
that
we
may
see
in
the
city
or
contact
are
not
necessarily
the
population
because
we
do
have
a
lot
of
people
who
drive
through
work
in
the
city
may
be
in
the
city
for
a
variety
of
reasons,
like
a
concert
that
aren't
counted
as
a
member
of
our
census.
So
we
have
workers
that
commute
into
town
that
don't
necessarily
represent
the
demographics
of
the
residences
of
the
city.
So
that's
one
consideration,
but
if
I
have
the
answer.
K
I
L
L
An
area
that
is
an
option
for
certain
crimes
right,
it's
it's!
If
you
think
about
it,
like
a
business,
we're
good
customers
to
criminals
right,
there's,
lots
of
high-tech
equipment
here,
that's
worth
a
lot
of
money
that
can
be
sold
very
quickly,
so
back
to
the
chief's
point
about
people
coming
into
this
city
that
aren't
counted
necessarily
in
the
sense
of
State
as
well.
F
That's
another
question:
I
had
is
saw
the
word
apprehensions,
it's
the
dog
involved
and
actually
physically
apprehended
apprehending
the
suspect.
Of
course,
dog
parks.
I,
don't
know,
I,
don't
know
what
an
apprehension.
L
L
K
And
there's
conditions
in
which
a
dog
might
bite
if
there
are,
for
example,
a
risk
of
rape
bodily
injury,
where
a
Handler
can
then
deploy
the
dog
to
prevent
Serious,
injury
or
death
right
or
other
conditions
in
which
the
policy
allows
in
the
park
and
hold
tactics
that
we
deploy.
K
I'd
have
to
look
to
see
also,
but
judging
by
the
fact
that
we're
not
biting
people,
the
apprehensions
are
the
dog
either
found
the
individual
and
then
officers
arrested.
They
don't
jump
on
the
person
unless
the
Handler
determines
that's
right,
necessary
for
safety.
We
had
a
case
by
the
creek
that
was
a
stolen
vehicle
in
a
foot,
pursuit
and.
L
F
About
three
inches,
like
a
big
word,
that
I
wanted
to
just
make
sure
I
understand.
Now
that's
one
more
and
then
I'll
save
my
other
three
for
later,
but
I'm
concerned.
Why
cyber
crime
that
involves
kids
is
increasing.
L
Again
that
you
know,
probably
a
social
scientist
would
need
to
maybe
take
a
look
at
those
kind
of
things
and
trending
information
about
what's
available.
What's
not
dark
web
access
and
not
and
just
the
anonymity
on
the
internet
itself.
L
L
D
K
We
don't
well,
we
do
track
the
confederated
dispatch.
K
K
It's
not
the
homeless
or
not
a
exclusive
area
of
response
for
us.
They
are.
They
involve
one
of
many
areas
of
response
for
us
with
relation
to
both
crime,
as
well
as
mental
health,
as
well
as
Safety
and
Security
for
them
drug
issues
and
abuse.
K
So
it's
a
very
complex
issue
that
we
are
involved
in
and
sometimes
they
are.
I
K
The
numbers
are
not
as
high
that
the
per
capita
percentage
is
third
highest
and
it
is
an
issue.
It's
a
problem.
There
are
other
drugs
that
are
trending,
xylazine
I,
believe
it's
pronounced,
a
tranquilizer
which
is
also
cut
with
fentanyl
and
Other
Drugs,
which
is
even
more
concerning,
whereas
fentanyl
is
an
opiate
and
can
be.
The
effects
of
Overdose
can
be
reversed
with
what's
called
Narcan,
which
most
of
us
have
heard
of.
K
That
is
available
for
reversing
those
symptoms
and
signs,
so
that
is
concerning
Trends
as
well,
and
as
we
look
at
the
type
of
Narcotics
that
we've
brought
into
the
department
and
maybe
Trend
that
over
the
five
years,
I
don't
know
what
that
will
show.
But
it
will
be
an
interesting
kind
of
look
at
how
we.
O
F
O
Thing
kind
of
related
to
law,
enforcement
and
stuff,
simply
because
I,
like
personally
involved,
two
of
your
offices,
came
to
my
property
and
asked
for
video
of
potential
theft
from
a
motor
vehicles.
No
vandalism.
O
It
was
a
bit
of
an
effort
for
me
to
to
go
through
the
video
and
and
then
put
it
on
a
Google
drive
or
put
it
up
in
the
cloud.
I
think
we
sent
them
a
link
or
whatever,
but
I,
never
heard
back.
O
O
It
probably
wouldn't
from
a
citizen
standpoint.
It
might
not
be
bad
to
know
that
it
was
helpful
or
wasn't
I,
don't
know.
I
also
know
I
was
surprised
that
you
devoted
two
officers
to
like
a
break-in
in
a
car
and
actually
go
over
the
video
that
you
know
so.
I
I
don't
know
just
what
do
you
have
any
comment
on
that
kind?.
O
K
K
Like
they're,
a
repeat
customers,
so
it's
probably
an
effort
to
identify
and
use
the
word
apprehend,
yeah
someone
who's
committee
or
individuals
who
are
Committee
in
multiple
crimes.
The
two
officer
car
could
have
been
a
training
car,
that's
usually
the
circumstances
in
which,
unless
the
officers
are
there
for
their
safety,
it
could
have
been
a
training
car,
yeah.
O
K
Then
I
I
think
you
make
some
valid
points
about
follow-up.
They
could
be
in.
G
O
K
So
yeah,
sometimes
we
have
people
from
the
community
that
post
on
next
door
that
ask
their
neighbors
to
help
with
finding
footage
in
the
event
of
an
incident.
I
always
encourage.
If
you
ask
the
officers
for
their
their
name
and
number
and
call
the
police
station
and
ask
to
speak
with
them,
and
then
you
can
add
and
say
who
you
were
and
they'd
go
anywhere.
Yeah
yeah
did.
K
L
Yeah
I
don't
know,
there's
there's
also,
if
I
can
there's
a
level
of
kind
of
concierge
service
that
we
are
have
been
talking
about
for
a
while
in
regardless
of
closing
the
loop
right
yeah,
and
that
is
definitely
an
area
that
we
are
challenged
with.
We
could
do
a
better
job
on
and
that's
even
with
our
own
staff.
If
you
look
at
our
dispatchers,
they
often
don't
know
the
the
evolution
of
the
case,
either
the
phone
just
Rings
right.
They.
A
L
L
If
you
look
at
the
root
of
the
problem,
though,
and
peel
it
back,
you
know
what
are
they?
What.
L
For
somebody
to
take
a
catalog
converts
the
other
issue
and
that's
where
the
larger
cases
San
Jose
PD,
just
had
a
large
case
that
that
ended
up
being
a
basically
a
chop,
shops
and
things,
but
had
a
large
component
of
catalytic
converter
thefts
as
well
that
rattive
task
force
investigating
agency
in
that.
L
L
I
L
A
K
I
I
can
only
speak
so
this
year,
but
it
probably
started
last
year.
It's
that
is
definitely
trending
higher.
We
have
our
dreams
and
Futures
kind
of
it's
our
you
know
summer.
K
A
And
then
my
final
question
is
with
regard
to
calls
that
are
focused
on
Mental
Health
episodes.
Is
there
I
feel
like
we've
talked
about
this
before,
but
is
there
any?
K
So
the
fire
may
be
involved,
they
may
respond
if
it's
a
condition
in
which
mental
health
hold
is
required.
The
police
department
by
law
responds
because
of
the
authority
to
put
someone
on
a
hold,
so
it's
a
really.
K
J
K
Have
serious
medical
calls
they're
responding
to,
and
so
you
know,
there's
a
lot
of
kind
of
competing
interests
and
responsibilities
and
priorities
that
fire
is
involved
in
a
lot
of
different
areas
of
medical,
as
well
as
fire
response
and
to
take
those
resources.
You
know
it's
it's
kind
of
a
give
and
take
and
prioritization
okay.
L
Understood
it's
important
to
also
call
out
you
know
each
area,
City
jurisdictions
and
things
are
very
different.
So
what
works
in
you
know
for
the
kahoots
model,
town
or
you
know
across
the
country
or
wherever
it
may
not
work
in
another
town
or
mountains.
Recently,
that's
why
we've
been
for
years
even
before
all
of
this
trying
different
types
of
response
to
not
have
the
police
go
if
we're
not
needed
for
something
like
that
right,
so
I
think
we've
we're
sort
of
coming
into
a
good,
a
good
model
now
and
with
other
Partnerships.
K
J
K
A
Pretty
good
all
right
with
that
I
think
we
can
take
questions
from
members
of
the
public.
Yes,.
H
Oh
just
on
the
topic
of
catalytic
converters,
I'm
pretty
sure
it's
a
national
issue,
I
think
I,
remember
seeing
me
FBI
broke
gang
in
like
New
Jersey
a
couple
months
ago,
so
it's
it's
all
over.
H
It's
not
just
here
super
pleased
to
see
the
very
limited
use
of
force,
and
that
seems
to
be
consistent
through
through
at
least
the
psab
engagement
that
I've
had
it's
very
nice,
but
I
I
have
difficulty
kind
of
reconciling
the
juxtaposition
of
the
extremely
limited
use
of
force
with
the
what
we
talked
about
recently
of
the
military
use
equipment
in
the
high
degree
of
military
equipment
that
doesn't
seem
to
be
used
and
with
regards
to
prioritization
it's
a
question
of
where
and
how
we're
allocating
resources
a
little
bit.
H
I
think
I
noticed
also
in
one
of
one
of
the
slides
I.
Don't
think
this
is
the
best
unit
to
use
and
I
think
about
dimensional
analysis.
H
A
lot
and
units
are
important,
but
if
you
divide
mental
health
calls
for
service
by
number
of
arrests,
even
though
mental
health
has
been
trending
down,
if
you
make
that
that
comparison,
it's
actually
increasing
as
a
relative
first
10
percent,
again
I,
don't
know
if
that's
necessarily
the
most
useful
unit,
but
to
be
using
to
look
at
but
I
think
the
juxtaposition
of
the
extremely
limited
need
for
use
of
force
and
the
amount
of
resources
that
are
going
into
Weaponry
rather
than
Mental
Health
Care
things
like
that,
because
mental
mental
health
crises
are
Health
crises.
H
It's
not
it's
not
a
physical
trauma
in
the
same
way
that
someone
might
be
bleeding
out,
but
it
can
be
acutely
dangerous,
as
we
saw
I
think
what
like
a
year
year
and
a
half
ago
when
traffic
was
stopped
all
day,
because
someone
was
on
the
bridge
on
the
overpass,
the
one-on-one,
so
I
think
just
I
I,
don't
know.
That's
a
a
strange
juxtaposition
that
I'm
having
difficulty
reconciling
given
are
the
data
that
we
have
of
what
we
actually
see
and
where
we're
investing
our
resources.
Thank
you.
A
M
Dave
looker
hem,
like
person
with
the
MVC.
G
M
Of
the
things
we're
wondering
about
I
think
you
touched
on
this:
was
the
17
72
hour
parking
enforcement
situation?
It
looked
like
it
was
like
slightly
on
the
rise
in
2022,
one
of
the
things
yeah.
We
were
just
curious
about
because
we're
kind
of
hearing
different
things
from
the
community.
D
M
D
E
Two
online
I
believe
this
England
was
first.
I
One
is,
and
if
this
has
been
asked
and
answered
already
sorry
I
missed
it
similar
question
to
some
of
the
other
ones,
though,
to
what
does
mvpd
attribute
the
noticeable
drop
in
gang
cases?
It
was
pretty
noticeable
in
the
chart.
I
Number
two:
can
you
tell
us
what
happens
with
the
dogs
that
retire
from
the
canine
programmer
that
have
to
be
removed
from
the
program?
For
other
reasons,
curious
about
that?
And
lastly,
can
you
describe
what
mvpd
is
doing
worth
noting
to
make
our
roadways
as
safe
as
possible
for
those
walking
and
biking
in
Mountain
View?
As
you
know,
there's
increased
Focus
now
on
active
transportation
in
our
city.
Also
we're
wondering
if
traffic
enforcement
shooter
will
return
to
pre-pandemic
levels.
That's
it!
Thank
you.
E
C
Thank
you.
I
also
have
a
comment
about
my
curiosity.
I
was
struck
by
the
traffic
enforcement
that
Bruce
just
alluded
to
it
looks
like
the
number
of
accidents
is
about
80
percent
of
the
two
pre-pandemic
years.
C
2022
and
violations
are
forty
percent
half
of
that
from
the
pre-pandemic
era,
so
I'm
curious
as
to
what
the
Department's
goals
and
aspirations
are
for
traffic
and
I'm,
hoping
that
at
a
high
level,
perhaps
the
department
could
consider
having
a
community
input
process
to
decide
how
to
allocate
resources
between
traffic
property
and
person
crimes,
because
I
would
love
to
see
the
community
involved
in
that
decision.
It's
so
important.
A
F
You
Mr
chair
I
only
had
a
question
about
hate
crimes.
K
No
so
the
neighbors
reporting
I,
don't
believe
and
our
internal
discussions
regarding
how
this
is
reported
in
years.
Past
Elder
crime
is
an
example.
Eight
crimes
as
an
example
or
specifically
accounted
for,
and
that
is
something
I
think
moving
forward.
We're
going
to
have
to
bring
back
as
a
part
of
our
annual
report.
K
F
G
F
So
that
includes
traffic
stops.
Yes,
I'm
trying
to
figure
out.
Why
B2,
which
just
doesn't
look
that
big
it
had
like
so
many
dispatched
calls,
definitely
beat
one
had
the
most,
but
it's
very,
very
large
and
I
know.
There's
a
lot
of
new
apartment
complexes
there,
but
what's
up
with
B2.
K
Historically,
it's
been
a
busy
beat
San
Antonio
Shopping
Center,
it's
the
California,
Escuela
Corridor
apartment
complexes,
rank
store,
Park,
El,
Camino
Real
down
to
San
Antonio.
So
it's
a
an
area
of
the
city
in
which
we
have
historically
consistently
seen.
F
F
Okay,
that
makes
sense
and
then
I
think
some
of
the
questions
that
were
raised
by
the
public
I'm
interested
in
answers
to
so
just
to
restate.
F
What's
the
pde
doing
about
safe
roadways
like
what's
the
PD's
part
in
that
I,
think
it's
an
interesting
question
and
I
I'd
be
interested
in
hearing
your
take.
What
does
happen
to
the
retired
canines
and
we
all
want
to
inquiring
minds
really
want
to
know
that
I
know
and
then
is
traffic
enforcement
gonna
go
back
up
to
pre-pandemic
levels,
I
think
it's
actually
a
good
question,
especially
with
the
stats
that
were
called
out.
K
K
The
police
department,
with
its
Traffic
Unit,
addresses
areas
of
collision,
High,
Collision
areas
intersections
or
what
we
call
primary
collision
factors
that
are
reported
in
collisions
and
work
on
enforcing
those
laws
that
could
potentially
prevent
those
collisions
as
well
as
general
traffic
enforcement,
either
done
by
traffic
or
Patrol
officers,
either
through
non-citations
or
citations.
K
The
reporting
that
we
do
related
to
collisions
as
part
of
what's
called
sweaters
Statewide
incident
reporting
traffic
system,
which
is
for
our
Traffic
Engineers,
an
important
tool
for
them
to
determine
if
locations
need
to
be
looked
at
for
engineering
and
design
and
then
education
for
example.
K
L
F
And
how
do
we,
how
does
the
PD
and
the
other
bodies
within
the
city
that
deal
with
traffic
and
safe
and
safety?
Have
you
all
sort
of.
L
Report
is
taken
that
gets
entered
into
the
Swedish
Thing,
the
sweaters
application,
Cloud
now
I
guess
and
is
available
for
traffic
engineering
Statewide.
So
our
traffic,
the
mountain
view,
traffic
engineering
team,
has
access
to
that
and
they
can
pull
up
data
and
these
kind
of
things.
But
one.
L
That
there's
a
direct
connection
between
traffic
engineering
and
our
Traffic
Unit,
where
that's
the
other
piece
of
the
E
is
the
engineering
piece
is
that
if
they're
at
a
scene
of
a
crash
and
we've
had
10
crashes
at
the
same
place,
the
officers
are
actually
thinking.
Why
is
this
happening
right?
Is
it
the
light
thing?
Is
there
roadway
issues?
Are
you
looking
directly
into
the
Sun
at
this
time
of
day,
when
all
the
crashes
are
happening
and
they'll
work
with
engineering
to
try
to
mitigate.
B
Those
issues
if
I
could
add
at
the
policy
level
that's
actually
officially
and
formally
coordinated
through
our
vision,
zero
policy,
which
is
a
policy
to
strive
to
get
to
zero
fatal
collisions,
and
it
does
exactly
that
intelligence-based
look
at
where
are
there
more
likely
to
be
or
where,
in
the
past,
have
there
been
injury
or
other
types
of
collisions?
And
what
are
the
factors
that
that
might
contribute
to
that?
And
what
are
the
improvements
that
can
be
made?
B
So
there's
just
a
number
of
traffic
Improvement,
two
of
them
going
on
the
council's
agenda
for
next
Tuesday,
in
fact
really
large.
What
they're
called
Road
diets
with
the
number
of
travel,
Lanes
being
reduced
and
the
buffered
bike,
Lanes
being
increased
and
Center
medians
and
bulb
outs,
all
kinds
of
things
to
to
reduce
the
potential
for
conflict
between
car
and
car,
car
and
driver
or
car
cyclist
and
carpet.
K
In
terms
of
the
activity
for
pre-pandemic
levels,
so
there's
a
variety
of
considerations.
One
is,
of
course,
the
change
in
patterns
of
what
people
are
doing,
post
pandemic,
but
also
Staffing
internally.
So
with
vacancies,
not
just
formal
vacancies,
but
maybe
officers
who
are
off
on
injury.
We've
had
to
limit.
L
C
K
L
But
also
grants
so
some
of
the
grants
were
paused
the
office
of
traffic
safety,
grants
for
seat
belts
and
distracted
drivers.
The
Chiefs
talked
about
the
primary
collision.
Factors
for
collisions,
the
the
top
ones
are
speeding
and
distraction
and
DUI
right,
and
so
we
look
at
those
as
well
and
that
that
helps
to
inform
how
we.
K
Do
It
the
canines
are
generally
given
to
the
Handler
and
I
think
they're
actually
sold
for
a
dollar,
because
there's
the
legal
requirement
of
the
city
can't
gift.
But
there
is
a
process
in
place
with
an
agreement,
and
a
retired
dog
is
back
to
the
Handler
and
the
family
or
anything.
F
L
You
turn
over
the
footage
yeah
so
early
on
with
those
bikes
and
Intuit
bikes
and
other
companies
that
have
them
too
right.
Yeah
I've
been
all
over
the
world
and
I've
seen
Google
bikes,
yeah,
we're
like
in
Italy
and
stuff,
and
it's
not
well
I
mean.
Maybe
it
is
an
employee
I,
don't
know
right,
but
a
lot
of
that
comes
back
to
what
does
Google
want
to
do.
K
Don't
you
know,
stop
people
just
because
they're
writing
the
Google
bike.
It
would
have
to
be
a
little
bit.
You
know
a
report.
O
A
M
A
Right
here
we
go
so
the
next
item
will
be
the
fiscal
20
23
24
Public
Safety
Advisory
board
work
plan.
Then
this
item
will
be
presented
by
assistant
city
manager,
Audrey
Seymour,.
B
Thank
you,
chair
Frank.
This
is
the
second
meeting
in
a
two-step
process
to
develop
the
psat's
recommended
work
plan.
The
first
step
was
at
your
last
meeting
on
April
27th,
at
which
you
reviewed,
ongoing
and
carry
forward
items
as
well
as
suggesting
new
items.
B
There
were
five
new
items
proposed
and
in
the
interim,
Mike
and
I
have
analyzed
these
items
related
to
the
criteria
that
were
put
forward
in
the
staff
report,
both
for
this
meeting
in
the
last
meeting,
which
include
the
fit
with
psap's
purview,
consistency
with
existing
policy
direction
from
the
council
or
strategic
priorities,
or
any
direction
given
by
the
council
to
the
psab
not
duplicating
existing
City
or
Community
efforts.
B
B
Two
of
these
are
carry
forward
projects
which
relates
to
prevention
of
bias
and
extreme
views
and
policing
in
Mountain,
View
and
support
for
the
alternative
models
of
Mental
Health
crisis
response,
and
those
two
ongoing
items
are
intended
to
include
one
of
the
proposed
items
which
had
to
do
with
increasing
resources
and
awareness
for
the
County's
mcrt
program
working
in
coordination
with
mcrt,
as
staff
felt
that
that
fit
really
well
within
the
existing
Mental
Health
crisis
response
subcommittee.
B
There
are
also
five
ongoing
projects.
These
are
things
that
come
to
the
psab
at
least
once
a
year
every
year,
and
then
there
are
two
recommended
new
projects,
and
that
includes
youth
substance,
abuse,
Trends
and
prevention,
resources
and
Forums
on
the
future
of
community
policing.
B
Two
items
are
not
recommended
because
they
are
outside
the
scope
of
psab's
mission
and
will
be
addressed
in
other
existing
City
efforts
and
those
are
the
review
of
parking
regulations,
especially
the
72-hour
Rule,
and
the
review
of
sanitary,
sanitation
needs
and
options
for
people
living
in
vehicles.
The
next
step
after
tonight's
action,
my
psab
to
recommend
a
work
plan
will
be
for
it
to
be
included
with
all
other
advisory,
Body
Work
plans
to
presented
to
the
council
for
approval,
and
that
will
happen
in
September.
And
that
concludes
my
presentation.
E
B
So
this
was
a
an
item
put
forward
by
a
vice
chair,
Lang,
and
we
talked
in
between
so
that
I
could
further
understand
her
intention
in
bringing
forward
that
item,
and
it
really
gave
some
clarity
to
me
around
wanting
to
look
at
what
kinds
of
presentations
awareness,
raising
prevention,
oriented
activities
are
already
underway.
B
What
are
some
best
practices
that
could
be
researched
that
aren't
in
place
in
Mountain
View
currently,
and
then
what
we
would
recommend
we
you,
as
psap,
would
recommend
within
Mountain
View
for
more
effective
or
better
following
of
best
practices
around
those
prevention
resources.
So
that's
what
is
meant
by
my
recommend
so.
B
B
I
mean
similarly
I
mean
the
city
council
doesn't
make
recommendations
to
the
county
and
p7
is
a
fires.
Your
body
wouldn't
be
in
a
position
to
do
that,
so
there
would
be
inherently
some
limitation
to
making
recommendations
to
the
police
department
and
the
kinds
of
things
that
the
police
department
does
are
primarily
around
awareness
raising.
Although
there
are
enforcement
efforts
too,
but
I'm
not
sure
that
that
was
the
intention
of
of
your
colleague
but
I'll.
Let
her
speak
to
that
whether
or
not
you.
N
I
think
in
terms
of
recommendations,
I
do
recognize
that
we
can't
make
recommendations
to
the
county.
I.
Think
I
was
really
looking
for
what
we
could
like
best
practices
like
you
said
for
the
police
department
and
maybe,
if
there's
some
things
that
might
be
able
to
happen
in
the
city
more
broadly,
that
would
be
really
helpful.
Then
I
think
those
things
were
I
guess
potential
paths
for
that
I
was
looking
into
and
in
terms
of
enforcement.
I
think
the
thing
is
I.
N
Don't
really
know
that
much
about
it
yet,
which
is
why
I
think
the
research
part
is
really
important,
but
I
think
that
if
there
are
things
that
we
learn
that
could
be
changed,
then
I
think
that
would
be
a
discussion
that
I
hope
to
have.
E
E
B
I'm
just
trying
to
I
think
that
would
be
a
good
question
for
whatever
subcommittee
gets
created.
If
this
does
move
forward
on
the
work
plan
to
see
what
do
the
best
practices
in
in
prevention?
B
Who,
who
do
those
involve
I
mean?
Do
they
do
they
evolve
across
disciplinary
or
across
departmental
approach
with
other
City
departments?
B
I
know
that
there
are,
at
the
the
county
level,
they're
really
encouraging
the
supply
of
Narcan
be
made
available
in
different
places,
including
in
libraries.
So
there
are
some
emerging
practices
that
that
maybe
don't
prevent
substance
use
but
could
prevent
accidental
substance,
overdose
and
so
I
think
it
will
probably
be
a
factor
of
where
the
best
practice
research
takes
the
subcommittee
in
terms
of
where
those
recommendations
are
and
then
making
sure
to
scope
those
within
things
that
are
within
the
feasibility
of
the
city
to
to
be
able
to
carry
out.
A
D
At
the
end
of
this
table,
it
says
items
10
and
11
are
not
recommended,
as
they
are
outside
of
the
scope,
the
psab
it's.
These
are
the
ones
that
I
wanted
I'm
upset
about
it.
So,
and
it
says
these
will
be
addressed
by
existing
City
efforts.
B
The
city
council
has
identified
a
review
of
on-street
parking
regulations,
practices
as
part
of
its
fiscal
year,
2023
to
2025
work
plan.
So
there
will
be
staff
assessment
and
Council
Direction
provided
on
that,
and
if
the
council
were
to
determine
that
a
role
for
psap
would
be
appropriate
within
that
they
could
so
direct.
But
right
now
they've
got
that
covered.
B
B
City
manager's
office,
we
have
a
human
services
division
that
is
responsible
for
our
safe
parking
program.
Our
liaison
with
the
life
moves
interim
housing
with
our
Elevate
MV,
guaranteed
basic
income
program
with
our
support
of
all
the
mental
health
Alternatives,
and
they
will
be
doing
a
comprehensive
homelessness
response
strategy.
F
Cancel
her
at
the
29.
and
I
asked
Kimberly
Thomas.
G
B
D
F
A
quick
question
on
item
nine,
on
the
forums
on
the
future
of
community
policing.
Just
remember
you
and
I
chatted
about
the
possibility
of
three
as
a
number
that
this
body
might
take
on.
Should
this
item
be
included
in
our
work
plan,
I
was
curious
if
that
I
just
wanted
to
confirm
that
you're
still
of
the
mind
that
that
is
a
number
that
is
feasible.
B
I
think
it
will
be
good
to
have
a
little
flexibility
on
that
and
say
up
to
three
okay,
so
that
the
subcommittee
can
really,
with
the
support
of
the
pde,
look
at
what
the
topics
are
and
who
the
participants
would
be
and
what
the
logistics
of
of
making
that
happen
and
determine
within
the
course
of
the
fiscal
year.
What
is
doable
I
know
with
my
experience
supporting
the
human
relations
commission.
B
They
usually
only
commit
to
two
events
a
year,
sometimes
three
and
it's
it's
often
a
challenge
for
them
to
accomplish
those
events
within
a
year,
because
things
invariably
take
longer
to
plan
than
then
one
thinks
that
they
maybe
should
so
I
talked
with
Ben
Captain,
soon
to
be
Chief
Canfield
about
what
kinds
of
resources
he
thought
it
would
take
to
make
that
work
and
what
kind
of
topics
he
thought
might
be
of
interest
to
the
community
and
also
you
know,
of
interest
to
the
police,
department
and
I.
B
C
A
Very
good,
all
right
with
that,
we
can
go
to
comments
from
members
of
the
public
if
any.
Member
of
the
public
would
like
to
provide
a
comment
on
the
sign
I'm
pleased
to
do
so
by
submitting
a
blue
card
or
if
on
Zoom
click,
the
raise
hand,
feature
or
dial
Star
nine
on
YouTube.
H
Work
plan
looks
nice,
I,
I,
think
the
the
time
limited
subcommittees
the
mental
health
response,
the
bias
in
extreme
extremism,
making
sure
that
that's
not
present
in
our
in
our
community
and
let
me
jump
back
and
look
at
the
agenda.
Yeah,
a
new
substance,
Trends,
those
those
problems,
I,
don't
think,
are
going
to
go
away.
I
think
it
might
make
sense
to
have
those
be
ongoing,
probably
wouldn't
need
to
be
the
same
death
after
like
an
initial
bit,
but
those
ones
seem
like
they
might
be
worth
continuing.
Like
that,
a
bias
and
extremism.
H
The
FBI
made
a
report
about
a
concerted
effort
by
right-wing
extremists
to
infiltrate
law
enforcement
back
20
years
ago.
This
is
not
an
issue.
That's
just
gonna
dissipate,
so
I
think
sort
of
having
not
necessarily
bounding
in
time.
In
the
same
way
and
some
of
the
questions
and
discussion,
I
heard
I
think
ties
in
a
little
bit
with
something
I
heard
a
commenter
make
in
the
unagendized
portion
of
perhaps
reconsidering
what
the
scope
of
Public
Safety
does
not
necessarily
mean
the
police.
H
There
are
lots
of
aspects
to
Public
Safety,
including
fire,
mental
health,
various
different
divisions
within
the
municipality,
so
especially
with
our
long-term
liaison
who's.
Now
going
to
step
up
to
be
the
chief
moving
where
there's
kind
of
a
natural
shake-up
occurring,
it
may
be
a
time
to
sort
of
reconsider
who
the
city
staff
liaison
is
and
encompassing
a
broader
view
of
Public
Safety.
That
doesn't
mean
the
police,
which
the
main
duty
of
the
police
is
law
enforcement.
They
are
the
armed
agents
of
the
state
tasked
with
enforcing
laws.
H
I
There
I
have
six
comments
for
NBC,
but
they're
fast,
so
just
sit
through
them
here.
In
the
discussion
about
the
clear
act,
extremism
subcommittee,
we
would
like
to
see
new
members
sooner
considered
for
that
to
fill
the
existing
vacancy.
It
seems
like
a
reasonable
allocation
of
the
time
of
a
new
member,
although
of
course
she
would
have
to
agree
to
that
number
two,
although
September
for
work
plan
approvals,
is
a
standing
timeline
for
this
city.
We
question
why
this
occurs
so
much
after
the
start
of
the
fiscal
year.
I
It's
a
general
comment.
There
number
three:
we
support
the
inclusion
of
a
subcommittee
to
look
into
substance,
abuse,
Trends
and
resources,
in
particular,
given
member
wank's
knowledge
of
experiences
among
our
peers
number
four.
We
believe
the
Mental
Health
crisis
response,
bias
and
extremism
and
policing
and
youth
substance
abuse
items
should
not
be
time
limited.
I
Although
regular
report,
Backs
from
the
city
and
county
would
likely
suffice
with
feedback
from
p7
members
of
the
community
considered
each
time
number
five,
we
are
still
hoping
that
the
county
and
City
can
provide
infographics
or
other
resource
materials
describing
process
flow
used
by
all
of
the
988
related
programs,
as
discussed
by
P,
said
earlier
in
their
requests.
And
lastly,
please
describe
more
of
the
existing
City
efforts
that
are
considering
covering
review
of
Sanitation
and
hygiene.
It's,
as
you
know,
we
currently
have
a
serious
shortage
of
any
public
facing
restrooms
water,
fountains
and
cleaning
facilities.
I
This
is
a
problem
affecting
everyone
in
Mountain
View,
not
just
the
homeless
facilities
can
include
portable
toilets,
but
also
adequate
coverage
provided
by
other
public
facilities
such
as
City
Park
restrooms.
Either
way
we
do
not
have
enough
of
these.
Currently,
knowing
there
are
no
plans
to
place
portable
toilets
in
our
city
is
telling.
Thank
you.
F
It
was
a
question
that
I
wanted
to
do
later
in
the
because
it's
not
actually
has
to
do
with
this,
but
I'm
back
like
I'll.
Just
ask
my
question:
Chief
I,
don't
know
if
Saul
had
a
chance
to
share
my
questions
with
you
before
you
got
here
today,
just
trying
to
prep
him
so
with
the
clear
Act
with
the
actions
of
Officer
Wong.
F
Learning
about
those
incidents
in
a
more
timely
manner,
not
to
serve
as
some
sort
of
overseen
body
and
not
to
get
involved
in
how
you
execute
disciplinary
actions,
but
just
to
be
more
informed
about
the
types
of
things
the
PD
is
dealing
with,
so
that
level
of
detail
Beyond
just
having
a
number
on
a
spreadsheet
of
an
incident,
happened
in
the
quarterly
or
by
yearly
update,
so
that
we
can
be
more
effective
in
responding
to
when
the
public
asks
us
questions
about
how
PD
is
responding
and
just
to
just
I
guess,
have
a
little
bit
more
color
commentary
on
what
you're
dealing
with,
because
sometimes
we're
dealing
at
a
lot
of
data.
F
But
we
don't
have
that
narrative
around
that
and
and
I
feel
a
little
constrained
without
that
and
the
so.
The
reason
why
that
might
impact
the
work
plan
is
right.
Now
it's
basically
twice
yearly
contact
and
feedback
data
report.
I
think
what
I'm
asking
for
is
a
bit
more
proactive
involvement
of
PSAT
in
when
these
incidents
happen
again
not
to
get
into
overseeing
you
guys
or
getting
into
how
discipline
is
meted
out,
but
just
understanding
what
you're
going
through
and
how
that
impacts.
How
you're
running
this
part.
K
So
currently,
in
prior
to
psab,
the
daily
issues
are
communicated
through
the
city,
manager's
office,
Council
awareness
and
often
see
the
attorney
involvement
because
of
the
confidential
nature
and
potential
legal
issues
surrounding
certain
issues.
Certain
incidents
that
we
might
be
involved
with,
whether
it
is
internal
or
external
yeah
crime.
C
K
K
Think
about
or
work
through,
that
desire
as
part
of
the
change
in
this
board's
Focus
or
attention,
and
maybe
the
council
as
well.
There
would
be
a
lot
of
I
think
thought
that
would
be
needed
with
respect
to,
for
example,
some
of
what
I
brief
the
Council
on
is
closed
session
and
whether
this
body
would
have.
J
K
B
I
think
that
it
there's
confidential
information
and
it
it
would
not
be
in
the
flow
of
that
information
to
have
it
go
to
to
psab
if
it's
within
the
city
attorney's
office
or
closed
session.
But
once
information
is
publicly
available,
I
think
we
could
look
at
what
the
protocols
could
be
for
either
adding
that
as
the
color
commentary,
when
the
bi-annual
report
comes
out,
so
things
are
a
little
bit
less
statistics
and
and
provide
a
little
bit
more
in
the
way
of
examples
where
that
information
is
public.
B
So
I
think
we're
kind
of
limited
to
that
that
category
or
segment
of
information
and
then
the
question
is
what
is
the
what
would
be
the
best
way
to
and
and
most
feasible
way
to
make
that
information
more
available
to
the
psap
I?
Don't
necessarily
consider
it
as
a
work
plan
item
because
there,
as
you
yourself
noted,
there's
not
something
that
the
psab
is
charged
to
do.
B
Council
hasn't
asked
for
that
role
from
the
psab,
but
if
it's
part
of
how
you
feel
you're
better
to
unable
to
understand,
what's
happening
in
the
police
department
and
better
able
to
be
a
liaison
between
the
police
department
and
the
community,
then
we
would
look
at
you
know
what
would
be
the
the
flow
of
that
publicly
available
information
that
wouldn't
necessarily
need
to
be
even
on
an
agenda
and
I.
Don't
think
it
needs
to
be
a
work
plan
item.
F
Okay,
that's
I!
That's
why
I
wasn't
sure,
but
yeah
and
I
want
to
be
respectful
of
some
things
with
the
city
attorney
right,
but
I
have
to
know.
That's
that's
you
know
available
because
of
the
clear
Act
like
this
officer.
Wong
thing
right,
writing
all
his
putting
out
his
biases
on
Instagram
I.
Don't
want
to
be
the
last
one
to
know.
You
know
that
feels
a
little
bit
strange
when
people
are
asking
me
about
it.
I'm
like.
F
What's
that
you
know,
I
would
like
to
feel
like
I
can
respond
because
I
do
get
questions
and
from
community
members,
because
they
know
that
I
sit
here
and
I'd
like
to
be
able
to
answer
them
to
the
best
of
my
ability
and
I've
been
feeling
a
little
bit
like
a
little
bit
behind
the
times.
So
is
that
I
understand
if
that
makes
sense?
Okay,
all
right!
Okay,
I
wasn't
I
thought.
Maybe
it
was
going
to
impact
the
work
plan
and
that's
why
I
wanted
to
bring
it.
So,
thank
you.
G
You
have
to
forgive
me
because
I
don't
know
what
the
formality
of
this
is
only
just
because
my
name
is
brought
up
by
Mr
England
about
the
clear
act
subcommittee,
if
that's
something
that
maybe
I'd
be
interested
I
just
wanted
to.
Let
everybody
know
that
something
I'd
be
interested
in.
That
is
well
for
me.
F
B
So
the
sub,
the
subcommittee
relates
to
understanding
the
findings
of
the
the
state
report
regarding
extreme
extremism
and
policing.
Is
that
the
one
that
that
you
met
yes,
ma'am
so
Cody,
yeah,
okay
on
tonight's
agenda,
for
you
you're
board
to
be
able
to
make
that
appointment?
Since
we
do
have
a
vacancy
and
it's
good
to
know
that
you're
willing
to
serve.
G
A
I
would
offer
one
discussion
thing
that
you
mentioned
and
I
don't
mean
to
be
this
directly
at
you,
but
in
in
my
experience
in
sort
of
watching
my
father
do
this
on
this
work
and
his
boards.
A
People
would
often
ask
him
about
things
that
happened
with
the
PD
and
either
he's
just
got
a
great
poker
face,
or
he
just
didn't
say
anything,
but
he
didn't
always
feel
it
necessary.
It's
not
always
necessary
in
My
View
From.
Again
from
my
perspective
and
my
experience,
it's
not
always
necessary
for
us
to
have
an
opinion
on
everything
that
happens
with
Public
Safety
the
moment
somebody
hears
about
it
or
at
the
moment
that
it
happens.
A
I
think
it's
important
for
us
to
to
be
patient
enough
to
wait
till
we
were
given
the
information
or
we
ask
for
the
information
and
provided
the
information,
and
then
we
can
talk
about
it
if
it's
a
if
it's
appropriate,
with
with
all
of
the
information
rather
than
you
know,
feeling
like
we
have
to
be
a
source
of
everything,
Public
Safety,
I.
Don't
necessarily
believe
that
is
my
role
to
just
be
like
the
reporter
to
the
city
for
everything.
A
Public
Safety,
related
I
want
to
be
able
to
to
advise
and
provide
good
opinions
and
thoughts
and
and
experience
and
and
sort
of
you
know,
citizenry
about
the
things
that
we
want
our
city
to
do
in
our
Police
Department
to
be
involved
in,
but
I,
don't
I,
don't
necessarily
feel
like
I
need
to
be
a
reporter
to
people
asking
questions
I
feel
like
I
need
to.
A
N
In
regard
to
that,
but
in
regard
to
to
the
work
plan,
so
I
guess
we're
transitioning
to
discussion
about
what
we
want
on
the
workplace.
N
Awesome,
yeah,
I,
think
I
am
in
favor
of
all
the
things
that
I
think
staff
recommended
to
the
Workman
I
just
want
to
check
in
really
quickly
and
I
know
that
this
can
happen
this
time,
but
I
would
love
for
it
at
next
meeting
to
hear
a
little
bit
more
about
an
update,
I
guess
from
the
subcommittee
on
biased
and
extremism
and
policing,
I
think
I'm
really
interested
in
to
see
what
they
found.
N
I
think
I
kind
of
lost
that
in
the
mix
a
little
bit
so
I'd
love
to
it
is
on
next
meetings:
agenda,
yay,
awesome,
yeah
and
I.
Think
for
the
item,
eight,
so
youth
substance,
abuse,
Trends
and
prevention
resources
in
terms
of
the
in
terms
of
I
guess
the
focus
on
youth
I
think
I'm.
Definitely
very
much
in
favor
of
that.
But
I
do
want
to
also
kind
of
explore
what
this
means
for
the
rest
of
our
community
as
well.
N
N
I
do
want
to
be
able
to
kind
of
do
something
about
that.
So
that's
kind
of
an
open
thought
and
also
on
that
same
item
I,
think,
like
earlier
member
Tang,
was
saying.
I
do
really
hope
that
the
scope
of
of
this
subcommittee
that
is
formed
does
allow
us
to
to
provide
recommendations
beyond
the
police
department.
If
that's
what
we
find
just
so
that
we
don't
find
out
things
that
we
could
do
better
and
then
accidentally
have
limited
ourselves
in
the
beginning.
N
B
On
the
focus
on
use
versus
the
whole
population,
when
I
spoke
with
Mike
Canfield
about
it,
he
was
talking
about
the
at
least
his
perception
on
the
difference
between
the
level
of
awareness
and
knowledge
and
the
opportunity
to
make
a
meaningful
difference
in
the
choice
process.
For
someone
in
abusing
or
using
drugs
that
it
would
be
much
higher
for
the
Youth
population
and
therefore
much
more
possible
to
make
a
positive
difference
than
it
might
be.
B
With
adults
who
presumably
have
had
more
exposure
to
information,
more
exposure
to
influences
more
brain
development,
around
risk,
taking
and
decision
making
and
a
more
difficult
opportunity
to
make
an
impact
through
awareness,
raising
and
other
kind
of
prevention
resources,
which
isn't
to
say
that
that
there
aren't
prevention
strategies
for
people
of
all
ages,
but
I
think
part
of
the
the
limitation
that
we
have
as
a
city.
Is
that
we're
not
a
behavioral
health
provider?
We're
not
a
mental
health
or
substance
abuse
provider,
we're
a
city?
And
so
we
have
police
departments.
B
N
I
think
that
makes
a
lot
of
sense,
I'm
wondering
if
I
know
for
the
mental
health
subcommittee.
This
feels
so
long
ago,
but
I
know
that
we
had
well.
Since
I
was
going
to
Los
Altos
High
School,
we
had
kind
of
a
Channel
of
communication,
especially
with
the
like
the
school
counselors
and
just
like
admin
and
people
there
and
I.
Think,
especially
since
this
pertains
to
youth
I'm
wondering
if
we
might
be
able
to
open
a
similar
Channel's
communication,
not
to
give
them
recommendations,
but
just
to
kind
of
gain.
B
Yeah
I
think
when
we've
done
when
the
human
relations
commission
did
similar
work
around
lgbtq
needs
and
assets
and
immigrant
needs
and
assets,
there
was
information
sharing
with
the
variety
of
entities
in
the
community
that
you
know
have
a
shared
concern
or
a
shared
responsibility
in
those
areas,
but
it
wasn't
like
making
recommendations
or
findings
that
what
others
should
do,
and
that
was
a
distinction
of
being.
You
know
less
share
with
what
we
learned
similar
to
what
we
did
with
the
mental
health.
N
And
just
a
final
thing,
or
just
one
last
thing
for
now,
for
the
forums
on
future
of
community
policing,
I'm
wondering
if
anyone
on
the
board
or
if
you
have
any
more
specifics
about
like
currently
what
you're
thinking
it
looks
like
or
what
it
entails.
B
Well,
first
I'd
like
to
give
a
member
an
opportunity
to
comment,
as
you
were,
the
person
who
put
that
idea
forward
and
then
I'm
happy
to
share
what
I
can
recall
of
my
conversation
with
captain
Chief
Canfield
about
the
kinds
of
topics
that
came
to
his
mind
as
being
of
potential
shared
interest
between
the
community
and
the
beauty.
F
And
I
got
a
lot
of
really
good
feedback
from
that
event,
for
people
like,
but
I
want
to
talk
about
this
and
I
want
to
talk
about
that,
and
so
I
think
I
think
the
idea
of
being
able
to
hear
directly
from
the
police
from
members
of
the
police
department
and
actually
engage
in
this
rapid
discussion
of
how
leasing
critical
evolved
so
share
ideas.
The
police
departments
give
insights
right,
I
I
think
gives
a
lot
of
people
which
I'm
not
finding
right
now,
but.
F
Agency
is
the
agency
to
community
members
to
be
participating
in
their
in
how
their
City,
Works
and
so
in
terms
of
topics.
I
could
just
share
what
I
heard
after
the
convening.
So
there
was
interest
in
sort
of
in
people
really
understanding
how
the
school
resource.
F
Works
in
detail
like
how
you
know
not
to
come
together
and
argue
whether
it
should
exist
or
not.
That's
not
what
this
is
It's
really
informative
and
then,
if
there
are
there,
you
know
if
there
are
hard
questions
nobody's
going
to
shy
away
from
that.
But
it's
not
meant
to
come
together
and
like
let's
do
battle
or
anything
it's
It's
really
informative.
And
then
you
know
it's
an
opportunity
for
people
to
share
their
views
and
for
the
police
department.
Members.
F
Or
other
folks,
so
that's
kind
of
where
my
head
was
and
I
thought,
maybe
doing
three
between
three
and
five
was
it
a
a
year
might
be
good,
so
I
was
trying
to
save
peace
out,
could
take
a
couple,
and
maybe
some
Community
groups
maybe
take
a
couple.
Maybe
the
foundation
does
a
couple
one
or
two
right,
but
together
you
know
we
might
offer
something
really
interesting
for
residents.
N
Yeah
I
think
that
sounds
really
great.
What
I'm
kind
of
hearing
is
something
similar
to
me
PDX,
but
that's
less
of
a
commitment
or
less
of
a
like
me.
Pdx
is
kind
of
a
long
program,
so
something
that
they
can
learn,
go
and
kind
of
be
more
specific
about
what
the
topic
is
this
time
and
and
learn
about
just
that
without
having
to
to
Really
commit
themselves
to
all
the
time,
but
really
getting
a
lot
of
information.
F
F
You
know
there
could
be
some
brainstorming
right,
I
think,
depending
on
the
topic
there's
other,
it
doesn't
just
have
to
be
a
one-way
presentation.
So.
B
If
it's
helpful,
I
can
share
some
of
the
topics
that
my
cat
in
mind.
He
thought
use
of
new
technology,
including
military
equipment,
might
be
a
good
topic.
De-Escalation,
and
the
different
options
for
mental
health
response
use
of
force,
including
canine,
Recruitment
and
Retention,
especially
around
the
goal
for
diverse
Workforce
and
Community
engagement.
How
is
it
that
people
want
to
be
engaged
and
how
they
want
police
to
interact
within
the
neighborhoods?
As
in
that's
something
that
I
recall
coming
up
at
the
last
P
sub
meeting?
F
E
F
E
I
mean
I
guess
my
only
comment
really
on
the
work
plan
is
I.
I
would
like
to
go
on
the
item
as
original
on,
which
is
the
scope
of
it
to
substance,
abuse,
Trends
and
prevention,
not
limited
to
youth.
E
N
I
do
think
like
I
was
mentioning
earlier.
I
do
think,
there's
a
lot
of
value
in
seeing
what
we
can
do.
Beyond,
youth,
but
also
I,
don't
know,
I.
Think
it's
also
difficult
because,
like
I
also
want
to
be
able
to
do
to
make
something
like
impactful
or
to
do
Flintstone
committee
to
actually
have
some
sort
of
solid
recommendations
or
understand
best
practices
and
I
think
those
vary
greatly
among
populations.
N
So
what
might
work
best
for
youth
might
not
work
best
for
other
parts
of
the
community,
so
I
guess
that's
something
I'm.
Also
thinking
about
and
I
think
I
definitely
introduced.
The
item
as
for
all
of
the
community,
but
also
my
personal
focus
is
usually
on
youth,
so
I
think
maybe
starting
off
with
youth,
and
maybe,
if
we
open
an
entire
can
of
worms,
seeing
if
we
can
put
that
in
for
for
next
year's
work,.
A
I
I
would
I
would
support
sticking
to
youth.
Only
because
and
my
conversations
with
Mike
and
saw
the
problem
with
fentanyl
among
youth
is
pretty
severe
because
everything
has
fentanyl
in
it
and
they
don't
seem
to
understand
that
and
so
like
as
a
parent
of
an
now
18
year
old
it
would.
It
would
just
be
devastating
to
me
so
to
hear
about
other
parents
having
children.
They
get
to
be
completely
emotional.
E
I'll
support
focusing
on
youth,
at
least
for
now;
no
promises
about
future
work
plans,
items
and
believe
I
pray
for
you.
This.
Thank
you.
A
Oh
so
I
guess
the
motion
is:
do
we
accept
this
as
so?
I
I
need
an
emotion
to
accept
the
staff
accommodation.
B
It
was
pleasure,
chair,
Frank
hi.
What's
your
way?
Yes,
member
Tang,
aye
member
burdoski.
Yes,
remember
Langton!
Yes,
remember!
Shouter,
I
think
we
we
have
a
another
possible
motion
to
appoint
member
shout
or
to
the
extremism
and
policing
subcommittee,
I.
F
Don't
know
it's
got
like
three
names,
sorry
as
passionate
as
you
are
I.
Second,
the
motion.
A
B
Would
be
happy
to
chair
Frank
hi,
nice,
chair
Wang,
yes,
member,
Tang,
aye
member
wordofsky.
Did
you
repeat
what
I'm
voting
on
it
is
to
appoint
member
souter
to
the
vacancy
on
the
subcommittee
related
to
extremism
and
bias
in
policing?
A
Correct
so
election
of
a
board
chair
assistant
city
manager,
remember,
could
you
please
provide
information
regarding
the
commission
officer
election
process,
I'd.
B
Be
happy
to
do
that
and
before
that
and
I
didn't
place
this
in
the
script,
so
my
apologies
I
think
as
a
point
of
process,
you
could
choose
to
take
public
comment
on
both
5.3
and
5.4
together
now
ahead
of
the
process
of
nominations
in
that
as
an
agendized
item.
Each
of
these
are
subjects
to
public
comment,
so
this
would
be
a
good
opportunity
to
see
if
there's
any
member
of
the
public
who
would
like
to
speak
on
either
matter.
Certainly.
A
H
I
think
that
board
member
Wayne
Vice,
chair
Wang,
has
done
an
excellent
job
being
by
chair,
and
the
board
has
kind
of
already
set
up
a
little
bit
of
a
tradition
or
it's
two
points.
You
need
a
third
point
to
make
a
line
or
a
trend,
but
of
passing
the
Baton
from
chair
to
Vice,
chair,
I,
think
that'd
be
great
and
remember.
Tang
has
been
very
always
been
very
active.
Asking
a
lot
of
questions
engaged
throughout
I
think
would
make
an
excellent
advice.
Sure,
good
luck,
making
the
decision
yeah.
I
Hi
Bruce
England
again
speaking
for
NBC
pro
just
want
to
repeat
what
Tim
just
said:
we're
in
favor
of
member
Tang
to
take
the
chair,
a
rather
sorry
member
Wang,
to
take
the
chair
position
and
member
Tang
to
take
the
vice
chair
position
for
the
next
period
of
time.
Thanks.
J
B
B
The
chair
would
ask
if,
for
the
first
person
nominated
as
chair,
the
current
chair
would
ask
that
nominee
if
they
are
so
willing
to
serve,
and
then
the
chair
will
ask
if
there
are
any
additional
nominees
and
again,
nominations
could
be
made
by
another
member
of
the
the
body
or
by
the
person
themselves.
B
Then
I
will
take
a
roll
call
vote
on
the
first
person
nominated.
If
a
majority
of
the
commission
votes
in
favor
of
the
first
nominee,
that
person
will
be
elected.
If
a
majority
of
the
commission
does
not
vote
in
favor
of
the
first
nominee,
then
I
will
take
a
roll
call
vote
on
the
second
nominee.
If
there
was
one-
and
this
would
continue
until
a
nominee
receives
a
majority
vote,
if
no
nominee
receives
a
majority
vote,
the
commission
could
have
dialogue
and
then
go
through
a
re-vote
process.
B
A
D
B
Okay,
that
I
can
take
a
roll
call
vote
for
the
position
of
chair
for
which
Vice
chair
Wang
has
been
nominated.
I'll
start
with
member
souder.
G
B
It
said
I
vote
if
you
support
Vice
chair
Wing
as
a
nomination
for
chair
and
I
vote,
aye
hi.
B
Chair
Frank,
absolutely
Vice,
chair
Wang;
yes,
yes,
okay!
So
now
what
happens?
Is
you
pass
the
imaginary
gavel
on
and.
E
N
Do
I
need
to
ski
for.
B
The
same
process
that
I
just
read
that
where
the
floor
is
being
open
for
the
nomination
to
Vice
chair
all.
N
B
Please
signify
by
yes
or
I
if
you
support
the
nomination
of
a
member
Tang
to
be
Vice,
chair,
I'll
start
with
chair
Wang,
yes,
member
Frank,
absolutely
remember
burdoski,
yes,
member
IR,
member
Langton,
yes
member
souter,
aye
and
member
dang
yeah.
Absolutely
yes,.
F
N
All
right,
the
last
item
is
board
staff,
comments,
questions
and
committee
reports.
No
action
will
be
taken
on
any
questions
raised
by
piece
about
this
time.
Do
any
PSI,
members
or
staff
have
comments
or
questions.
N
F
F
I
have
two
questions.
One
is
question
Chief
about
the
72
hour
memo
or
the
right
word,
but
the
clarification
I
was
going
back
through
my
notes
and
I'm.
F
Community
outreach
officer
to
a
CBO
and
I.
Currently
it
would
be
gen
Leia
to
Malia
at
reach
SV
and
then
remembering
this
discussion
and
then
but
I
didn't
see
that
in
the
the
72-hour
document
that
came
out
am
I
misremembering.
That
or
is
that
captured
elsewhere.
F
K
Don't
know
your
misremembering
I
think
within
the
policy
versus
procedure
right,
the
areas
of
which,
for
example,
in
the
policy
talk
about
mitigating
circumstances,
a
reasonable
accommodation
and
officer
discretion
and
then
officers
using
potentially
using
discretion
when
individuals
are
not
able
to
move.
The
vehicle
has
been
applied
with
our
community
outreach
officer
and
that
practice
has
been
long-standing
and
done
even
without
the
community's
request.
K
F
F
For
my
notes
and
I
was
like
wait
a
minute
and
then
my
second
question
is
so
last
year
we
decided
to
move
to
a
six
meeting
format
versus
the
eight
meeting
format,
because
staff's
time
is
limited
and.
F
You
know
just
the
amount
of
work,
that's
not
everybody.
At
the.
D
F
Time
as
I
reflect
on
this
year,
I
I
feel,
like
our
meetings,
are
very
packed,
they're
getting
longer.
F
10
30
11.
we're
talking
about
potentially
four
subcommittees
that
need
to
report
out
and
I've
been
feeling
having
meetings.
Every
couple
of
months
has
left
me
feeling
a
little
bit
disconnected
like.
Sometimes
the
thread
of
of
topics,
I
I
think
so
maybe
I'm
just
getting
older
and
I
don't
know,
but.
F
I
I,
don't
know
I'm
kind
of
missing
the
Cadence.
We
had
I'm
wondering
if
I
don't
want
to
just
say.
Oh,
could
we
put
an
agenda
item
to
vote
on
going
back
to
eight
meetings
a
year,
because
there's
a
reason
we
moved
to
six
but
I'm
wondering
if
we
could
well
what
I'm
curious
if
anyone
else
was
struggling
with
moving
to
six,
if
you
had
feelings
about
that,
I
I
just
felt
more
disconnected
and
I
felt
overwhelmed
by
the
amount
of
information
we're
getting
at
each
meeting.
F
Yeah,
so
I
I
wasn't
sure
the
right
way
to
do
this
like
is
it
requesting?
Could
you
look
at
this
as
part
of
the
agenda
when
we
reconvene
in
October
or
exactly
what
the
thing
was,
but
I'm
not
feeling
very
effective
at
the
moment
and
part
of
that
I
feel
is
the
Cadence
of
these
meetings,
so
I'll
just
stop
there.
Thank
you.
B
Thank
you
for
that.
A
couple
of
points
we
have
seven
scheduled
meetings
in
2023,
not
six,
so
we
went
from
from
I
think
it
was
eight
to
seven
and
the
next
meeting
is
in
August,
not
in
October.
Okay
and
the
tentative
agenda
would
have
us
adopting
the
2024
meeting
schedule
in
December.
So
I
think
that
would
be
a
perfect
time
to
have
this.
D
B
B
So
we
had
a
January
meeting
a
March
meeting,
an
April
meeting,
June
meeting
we'll
have
a
meeting
in
August,
we'll
have
a
meeting
in
October
and
a
meeting
in
December
of
December.
Okay,
I
thought.
December
January
was
off
okay
yeah.
B
So
it's
looking
at
what
the
Cadence
is
of
the
items
that
come
on
a
regular
basis.
It's
looking
at
when
there
tend
to
be
vacations
and
recesses
by
the
council
and
often
staff
complications,
and
then
it's
looking
at
what
workload
and
ability
to
logistically
prepare
for
and.
I
F
With
four
subcommittees
right,
if
I
mean,
if
a
subcommittee
has
an
update,
I
think
the
subcommittee
should
get
the
update.
But
if
we
start
with
them,
I'm
wondering
I'm
hesitant
to
have
four
subcommittees
doing.
B
F
Discussion,
I
guess
like
I,
want
to
chat
with
my
fellow
board
members
about
stuff
and
I
feel
sometimes
that
you
just
have
so
much
information
to
process.
We
don't
have
as
much
to
get
tired
and
we
don't
have
as
much
time
to
just
kind
of
see
how
we're
all
kind
of
check
in
and
see.
What's
on
our
minds.
E
F
N
Now
I
want
to
know
what
the
other
years
are,
but
no
I
saw
that
you
had
your
your
hand
up.
Yes,.
D
I
I
just
wanted
to
Echo
what
Kavita
is
saying.
D
I
know
that
this
isn't
to
be
discussed
at
this
at
this
meeting.
I
would
like
to
see
a
winter
recess
and
a
summer
recess
and
then
concentrated
meetings
like
February
marched,
April,
May
and
then
September
October
November,
so
it
couldn't
be
December
or
December,
but
August
September
whatever,
but
I'd
like
to
see
eight
eight
meetings
during
the
year
and
jam
together
in
two
parts.
N
Do
we
have
any
other
comments
or
questions
all
right?
We
will
now
move
on
to
the
final
item
of
tonight's
agenda,
a
German
this
new.
This
meeting
is
adjourned
at
9,
42
pm.