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From YouTube: Parks & Recreation Commission | April 17, 2018
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A
B
B
A
A
A
Is
time
for
public
comments?
This
is
this
time
has
been
set
aside
for
members
of
the
public
to
address
Parks
and
Recreation
Commission
on
agenda
items
and
items
of
general
interest
within
the
subject
matter:
jurisdiction
of
the
Commission.
Although
the
Commission
values
your
comments
pursuant
to
the
Brown
Act,
it
generally
cannot
take
any
action
on
items
not
listed
or
posted
on
the
agenda.
Today,
three
minutes
is
assigned
to
each
of
you
to
speak
and
we'd.
A
A
E
Tim
Stewart
42
year
resident
of
Papa
Springs
of
movie
colony
area,
and
it's
done
an
agenda
item
but
I
want
to
bring
to
the
Commission's
attention
the
absolute
deplorable
condition
being
kept
at
one-thirty
Park.
We
walked
that
park
every
morning
with
our
dog
today,
I
counted
14
nests
for
the
fire
ants
all
around
where
the
children
play
to
get
and
eventually
something's
going
to
happen.
We've
gone
through
this
several
times
with
different
contractors.
E
It's
never
been
kept
up
the
way
it
was,
and
we
had
city
employees
doing
it,
but
we
have
about
60
to
70
expansion,
joints
that
have
weeds
and
grass
growing
in
them
broken
sidewalk
and
the
landscapers
do
nothing
about
it.
We
don't
have
a
good
watering
schedule.
You
have
brown
all
over
the
park
and
living
across
the
street
from
it
for
all
the
years.
This
is
it's
going
back
to
a
horrible
condition.
E
The
the
maintenance
we
either
need
to
go
to
bid
get
a
new
landscaper
out
there,
because
I
could
foresee
from
my
knowledge
and
construction,
probably
six
figures,
at
least
in
sidewalk
repairs
that
you
guys
are
going
to
have
to
do
within
the
next
year
or
so
because
they
allow
these
things
to
grow.
Then
you
have
two
different
sizes
on
the
sidewalk
I
see
that
the
people
have
already
marked
I,
think
three
spots
where
they're
going
to
be
chopping,
it
up
and
you're,
looking
at
probably
a
couple
hundred
grand
in
total
sidewalk
repair.
E
E
city
managers
told
you,
but
you
can
walk
down
paths
and
get
sprinklers
instead
of
blowing
on
the
grass
they're
going
across
the
sidewalk
all
around
the
tennis
court
area,
where
you
have
the
walkway
between
the
tennis
court
coming
towards
Caballeros,
but
it
really
needs
to
be
looked
into,
and
and
possibly
you
have
to
go
to
bid
for
a
new
contractor
for
that.
Thank
you.
Thank.
F
Hello,
my
name
is
Angela
Williams
and
I
am
here
to
talk
about
the
tiny
tots
program
that
is
currently
run
out
of
the
rec
center
I,
just
like
to
say
that
the
tiny
tots
program
has
been
invaluable
to
my
family
and
my
two
children.
My
older
daughter
currently
goes
to
Katherine
finchy,
but
my
younger
daughter
is
in
the
tiny
tots
program
now
and
she
will
hopefully
again
be
going
there
next
year,
she's
not
gonna
meet
the
cutoff
for
kindergarten.
So
we'll
need
that
program
again
in
place
for
next
school
year
for
her
the
teachers.
F
There
are
amazing
they
are
committed.
They
care
deeply
about
all
the
kids.
Also,
the
parental
involvement
and
the
contributions
we
make
to
the
program,
I
think
should
be
should
be
noted,
noted
as
well.
I
mean
the
program
is
subsidized
by
the
city,
but
we
do
pay
tuition
there
and
we
do
make
daily
contributions
for
a
snack
time.
Each
day
is
a
different
child's
turn
to
bring
snacks
for
everybody.
They
do
bring
their
own
lunch
to
school.
The
teachers
this
year
have
done
just
some
amazing
things
with
them.
F
We
all
donated
supplies
and
they
built
an
amazing
community
garden
in
the
back.
They've
been
on
three
field.
Trips
and
they've
had
two
guest
speakers
in
the
classroom,
which
has
just
been
amazing
for
all
the
kids
there's
also
a
summer
camp
program
that
goes
on
there
with
the
tiny
tots
again
runs
the
same
as
the
school
Monday
through
Thursday
from
9:00
to
12:00,
or
they
do
swimming
music
arts
and
crafts.
F
I'd
also
like
to
just
mention
some
other
programs
that
do
run
out
of
that
same
space
that
would
be
affected
by
a
head
start
coming
in
I,
know,
there's
a
woman
that
teaches
yoga
there
three
mornings
a
week
in
one
of
the
dance
studio,
spaces
and
I
also
believe
that
they
run
dance
classes
at
some
point
sessions
throughout
the
year.
In
that
same
space,
you
know,
I'd
like
to
emphasize
that
the
tiny
tots
program
is
not
a
daycare.
F
It's
a
traditional
preschool
program
where
they
are
learning
their
ABCs,
their
1
2
3
so
shapes
their
colors.
All
these
amazing
things
learning
to
spell
their
name
also,
all
of
the
current
students
that
tiny
tots
will
not
qualify
for
Head
Start.
All
of
us
that
send
our
kids
there,
our
middle-income
families,
you
may
or
may
not
be
aware
you
have
to
be
in
the
federal
federal
poverty
level
to
go
to
headstart,
so
that
would
definitely
eliminate
all
of
the
families
that
currently
send
their
kids
there.
F
So
it
kind
of
leaves
us
in
a
you
know
in
the
dark
for
what's
to
come
next
school
year.
I
know
especially
for
me,
because
my
child
other
child
goes
to
Kathryn
finchy,
so
it
just
makes
perfect
sense.
It's
right
down
the
road.
You
know
get
the
kids
dropped
off
at
the
locations.
Perfect
I'd
really
urge
the
school
district
to
you
know,
look
for
either
a
different
space
or
look
into
possibly
leasing
portable
trailers
classroom
trailers.
F
F
G
Good
afternoon
I
am
Julie
Estrada
Palm,
Springs
resident.
This
is
Alexa.
My
daughter,
she
just
turned
five
years
old.
I
wanted
to
reiterate,
as
I
did
last
time
regarding
the
tiny
tots
program.
I
have
a
24
year
old
son.
In
addition
that
lives
in
LA.
Now
that
grew
up
here
went
to
Palm,
Springs
High
and
attended
the
tiny
tots,
the
dance
and
the
after-school
program.
G
Wanting
to
reiterate
it
is
not
a
babysitting
service,
it
is
not
a
daycare,
and
also
none
of
us
do
qualify
were
middle-income
families.
A
lot
of
stay-at-home
moms
are
part-time
working
moms.
So
you
know
when
I
sent
my
son
to
private
school
and
I
know
a
lot
of
the
other
families
did
15
17
years
ago.
The
tuition
has
gone
up
about
four
times,
so
that's
two
car
payments
for
some
people.
So
in
the
past
you
could
send
your
child
to
first
school
to
desert
sunshine,
which
is
no
longer
to
st.
G
Theresa's
to
part-time
three
four
days
a
week
for
maybe
$400
or
350.
Now
it's
like
eight
nine
hundred
dollars,
so
you
know,
and
then
none
of
us
would
qualify
for
a
program
like
Head
Start
and
not
that
nobody
is
sympathetic,
but
the
schools
already
have
Head
Start,
so
they
need
to
find
another
space.
I
hope
that
you'll
support
us,
because
this
program
that
Vickie
does
an
amazing
job.
G
Just
a
phenomenal
job
with
has
been
in
place
for
over
thirty
years,
and
it
would
just
be
shameful
to
you
know
for
us
to
lose
that
when
a
lot
of
the
parents
don't
have
another
option.
So
it's
again,
you
know
the
middle
class
sort
of
pain
for
everybody
else's
programs
and
an
entitlement
program
that
we
already
have
plenty
of,
and
then
we're
left
with
no
place
else
to
go,
except
to
spend
$1,000
a
month
for
private
school.
For
us
it
does
not
affect
our
family.
G
My
daughter
will
be
entering
kindergarten,
but
a
lot
of
the
other
parents
and
families
it
will
affect
them
because
they
would
like
to
continue
next
year
with
the
city
of
Palm,
Springs
and
I
did
bring
as
a
quick
example.
I
would
just
like
all
if
I
may
pass
this
to
see
my
daughter
at
four
years
old.
Is
writing
her
first
and
last
name
she's
reading?
So
this
is
not
a
babysitting
service.
G
I
I
My
name
is
Chantal
I,
just
moved
to
Palm
Springs
a
month
ago
and
I
want
to
say.
Thank
you
so
much
at
this.
A
wonderful
city,
I
have
one
of
my
daughters
here
who
goes
the
tightened
up
program.
My
other
daughter
is
at
Katharine
finchy
and,
as
you
can
see,
I'm
expecting
so
I'm
also
doing
this
for
the
future
generations.
I
stand
here.
I
come
from
a
city
called
Long,
Beach
I,
don't
know
if
you
guys
have
heard
of
it.
I
We
have
headstart
programs
everywhere
in
Long
Beach
and
there
is
no
more
tiny
tot
programs
at
all.
I
graduated
from
a
tiny
top
program
in
Long
Beach
and
personally,
when
I
was
a
single
mother
in
Long,
Beach
I
had
two
children
and
it
was
very
difficult
and
I
was
just
making
$40,000
a
year
which
isn't
really
nothing,
but
it
is
to
a
point:
I
didn't
make
it
the
poverty
level,
but
I
couldn't
afford
private
daycare,
so
I
was
really
stuck.
I
Luckily,
I
did
have
my
parents
around
to
help
me
out,
but
I
could
not
qualify
or
benefit
in
any
sort
of
program.
That
was
private,
and
that
was
a
big
difference.
So
that's
what
I'm
saying
you're
not
only
eliminating
when
you
have
a
head
start
program
and
of
course
it
does
benefit
a
specific
type
of
community,
however,
but
the
people
who
are
trying
to
make
it,
for
example,
like
I,
said
someone
like
me.
I
Let
you
guys
know
that
there
is
a
financial
difference,
the
financial
difference
between
having
someone
you
know,
having
a
program
through
five,
four
or
five
times
a
week
where
it's
even
three
hours
can
help
mothers
or
families
who
are
barely
making
it,
who
are
not
qualified
for
the
headstart
program.
But
who
are
not
necessarily
at
a
you
know:
higher
income
level
or
Maido
higher
income
level
either.
So
it
makes
a
big
big
difference.
It's
not
just
this
city
of
Palm
Springs.
It
really
is
a
statewide
and
nationwide
problem.
I
What
to
do
with
our
daycare
with
our
children.
However,
at
the
city
level,
I
think
that
it
would
be
to
families
to
children's
education,
and
also
just
in
general,
for
the
the
future
of
Palm
Springs,
because
just
having
one
type
of
program
available
and
not
having
a
diversity
of
programs
is
not
necessarily
the
best
option
for
children.
Those
are
my
thoughts.
Thank
you
very
much.
Thank.
H
Bill
Miller,
William,
Miller
scary,
loud
I
had
a
question
for
the
board
and
anybody
can
address
me
who
here
has
a
horticultural
or
Barbara
cultural
background.
Actually.
H
Very
good,
okay,
that
was
exhausted,
he's
okay,
I'm
bill
miller,
I'm
a
federally
certified
arborist
and
a
state
horticultural
person.
In
january
I
wrote
an
article
was
published
in
the
local
newspaper
as
concerning
the
damage
done
to
our
trees
by
people
that
don't
know
what
they're
doing
in
the
way
of
arboriculture
and
horticulture,
as
the
one
gentleman
was
talking
about
the
park.
Most
of
our
parks
are
in
deplorable
condition.
H
When
you
see
a
tree
that
looks
like
a
hat
rack.
That's
the
damaged
tree.
You
don't
do
that
when
you
walk
away
from
a
tree
that
needs
work,
nobody
should
be
able
to
say:
oh
I
can
see
they
did
work
here,
except
if
the
trees
a
little
more
open
or
something
that
lot
went
through.
I
live
at
the
north
end
of
town
and
I
can
tell
you
about
some
wind,
but
anyway,
I'll
leave
this
with
you
or
there's
a
copy
of
my
resume
as
well
the
the
condition
here
at
City
Hall
alone.
H
It's
deplorable
you've
got
a
rose
garden
out
there.
That's
a
memorial
to
somebody
and
no
one
knows
how
to
take
care
of
that
Rose
Garden.
Now
this
is
something
that's
in
my
background
and
it's
a
mess
and
the
parks
are
a
mess
because
the
people
doing
the
work,
they're
not
trained,
they're
not
required
to
be
trained,
it
seems
and
I
don't
understand.
You'll
come
for
me.
I
was
born
and
raised
in
Philadelphia
I
study
horticulture
at
Longwood
Gardens
in
Kenneth,
Square
Pennsylvania.
It's
a
world-famous
display
garden.
H
It
was
a
DuPont
estate
and
there's
thousands
of
acres
of
intensely
garden.
You
know
intense
gardens
there
as
well
as
greenhouses,
but
it
saddens
me
that
here
is
a
part
board.
You
know
you
guys
aren't
directing
the
city
to
require
people
to
be
trained
to
know
what
they're
doing
to
not
destroy
our
trees
in
front
of
da
P
just
up
the
street.
Here
the
trees
were
recently
destroyed,
there's
barely
a
leaf
on
them.
You
know
those
little
green
things
that
trees
sort
of
need
to
live.
H
You
know
there's
like
a
symbiotic
relationship
between
the
leaves
and
the
roots
when
you
destroy
all
the
leaves
the
roots
go
next
and
then
the
tree
goes
down
when
the
next
wind
comes
because
the
roots
have
died,
as
well
as
the
top
growth.
It's
all
hooked
up
together,
but
anyway,
that's
enough
of
me
blathering
and
there's
a
copy
of
the
article.
If
anybody
cares,
I'd
left
a
pile
of
them
here.
Last
time
I
came,
but
I
was
too
late
to
speak.
But
thank
you
all
for
your
time
and
what
you
do.
Thank.
J
Hi,
my
name
is
Jason
Martinez
I'm,
the
vice
president
Palm
Springs,
youth
baseball
I'm,
just
gonna
read:
Richards
Richard
Jenkins,
the
president
of
baseballs
letter
on
Namie
renaming
our
field,
six
Jared
Dougherty
jr.
in
memory
of
Jared
Gordy,
Jr
Jared,
passed
away
last
year
in
our
2017
spring
season.
The
loss
of
him
was
one
of
the
most
devastating
events
that
have
occurred
in
organization
in
Richards
22
years
of
experience,
Jerez
was
one
of
the
most
endearing
people
he's
ever
met.
Jared
amplified
the
spirit
and
ethics
that
many
say
don't
exist
in
young
people.
J
Today
his
character
was
kind,
thoughtful,
respectful
and
playful
Jared,
frequently
volunteered
to
t-ball
with
our
special-needs
players,
which
we
call
Kelsey's
heroes.
He
was
an
excellent
player,
but
above
all,
demonstrated
that
ethics
and
sportsmanship
that
are
intended
to
teach
young
people
I'm.
Sorry,
I'm
gonna
go
ahead
and
pause
because
I
know
the
dad
wants
to
speak
to,
but
I
want
to
say
he
was
helping.
My
t-ball
team,
we
have
I
I've
won
two
championships
with
Jared
on
my
team.
D
Sadly,
his
last
championship
came
weeks
after
his
passing
the
last
game.
He
played
against
India.
He
was
our
catcher
and
he
took
a
hit
from
a
kid
about
two
times
his
size
got,
thrown
back
about
40
feet
got
up
and
went
to
the
dugout
next
at-bat
he
came
up
hit
the
ball
and
all
he
said
is
I
heard
a
pop
and
finished
the
game
with
a
dislocated
elbow
which
we
came
to
find
out
afterwards.
D
He
had
a
heart
of
gold,
a
smile
that
made
you
melt
and
he'd
do
anything
and
everything
for
the
game
that
he
loved
so
much.
He
has
a
third-generation
desert
resident
who
played
on
these
fields,
and
he
who
has
aspirations
of
playing
high
school
baseball,
which
I
now
go
out
and
help
coach
in
his
honor
and
I
would
appreciate
it
if
you
guys
consider
aim
in
the
field
after
him.
G
G
J
K
There's
always
a
caution
against
doing
landscaping
with
the
lowest
bidder
that
were
just
know
in
response
to
one
of
the
comments,
but
I
would
just
you
know,
I
think
we'll
just
let
you
know
we're
in
the
process
of
looking
for
a
new
landscape
company.
Obviously,
we've
had
some
some
problems
with
that.
So
I
look
forward
to
working
with
you
as
we
move
forward
through
this
process
and
I
think
with
a
new
landscape
company
I
would
just
mention.
K
We
probably
need
to
have
some
significant
input
from
the
Commission
with
regard
to
the
scope
in
the
parks,
because
I
do
believe
that
there
is
some
significant
room
for
improvement.
That
would
just
be
the
general
comment
I
want
to
make.
Thank
you.
Thank
you,
sir
also
mr.
chairman,
I,
just
just
want
to
be
clear
on
it.
Just
so
I
understand
in
terms
of
the
the
fee
structure,
you've
made
a
recommendation
on
fees,
but
not
on
facilities,
and
you
will
be
doing
that.
Just
the
time
frame,
so
I
know
how
to
we're.
A
K
A
Just
wanting
to
wrap
this
one
up
so
that
we
could
sit
down
with
the
subcommittee
and
review
both
of
them
so
we'll
set
that
up
now.
Thank
you
all
right.
We're
gonna
move
on
with
the
agenda
to
the
first
item,
which
is
the
discussion
of
the
Palm
Springs
Unified
School
District
request
for
space
Vicky.
Did
you
want
to
to
get
up
for.
B
What's
going
on
with
the
program
and
and
the
multitude
of
questions
that
you
had,
so
we
have
what
to
say.
Obviously,
dr.
Reddy's
here
today
say
manager.
We
have
mr.
James
Williamson
here
representing
the
pom
sanctuary's
Quincy
High
School
District
Board,
and
we
have
Myra
Kosta
who's.
The
early
childhood
educators.
E
A
M
Just
say
that,
firstly,
we're
very
as
a
school
board
very
excited
by
the
opportunity
to
partner
with
the
city
to
offer
early
childhood
education
programs.
We
have
as
a
board
that's
a
lot
of
resources.
We
now
have
full
time
in
kindergarten
and
all
our
schools,
and
we
are
focusing
now
expanding
our
early
childhood
education
program.
One
of
the
things
that
we're
faced
with
the
challenge.
One
of
the
major
challenges
we're
faced
with
is
facilities.
M
We
actually
have
available
to
us
through
grants,
the
funds
to
run
licensed
facility
of
licensed
facilities
with
licensed
teachers
programming,
but
we
don't
have
the
facilities
and
that's
why
we're
we're?
Having
this
conversation
with
what
the
cirrie,
who
we
understand,
has
facilities
that
we
can
help,
we
believe
maximize
their
use
to
serve
as
representative
a
sample
of
our
community
as
possible.
N
Thank
you,
I
just
thought.
My
voice
was
really,
though,
but
I've
been
with
the
district
for
about
a
year
and
a
half
now
as
being
fairly
new
to
the
district.
One
of
my
responsibilities
was
analyzing
the
need
in
all
areas
and
where
I
focus
is
to
preschool
children,
so
we're
we're
servicing
as
pregnant
moms,
infant
and
toddlers
and
three
to
five
year
olds
and
looking
at
the
need.
N
So
one
of
the
first
things
that
I
decided
to
do,
which
is
information
that
I
can
also
leave
with
you
guys,
was
an
assessment
of
Thor
district
and
the
areas
with,
and
also
with
a
comparison
with,
the
Coachella
Valley
Unified
School,
District
and
desert
sense.
So
what
that
was
one
of
the
tools
that
I
utilized
to
start
getting
data
and
trying
to
look
analyze,
the
need,
where
is
the
biggest
need
and
how
what
we
can
do
for
our
families
and
our
children?
So
that
was
one
of
the
tools.
N
N
So
the
first
page
is
basically
just
the
resources
that
I
use.
So
besides
this
assessment
tool
that
I
used
the
surveys
and
I
use
the
census
and
I
attach
every
resource
that
I
utilized
to
where
I
obtained
all
of
this
data
from
on
the
second
page,
it
gives
you
numbers
of
the
population,
and
everything
is
just
geared
to
Palm
Springs
the
city,
and
if
you
see
presence
under
five
years
old,
the
data
is
three
point:
nine
percent,
and
that
was
a
2010.
N
The
reason
it
was
a
2010
was
due
to
the
2016
was
there
was
discrepancies
due
to
ethnicity
and
so
on,
so
they
didn't
have
an
accurate
number.
So
what
I
use
was
the
population
increase,
which
is
more
or
less
about
the
fourth
page,
so
it
demonstrates
about
a
1%
a
little
bit
over
1%
increase
throughout
the
years
now
utilizing
that
what
it
demonstrates
with
families
in
Palm
Springs
only
with
children
under
five
years
old
we're
seeing
a
need
of
about
3,000
children
under
the
age
of
five.
N
N
There's
also
there's
many
factors
that
we
take
into
place,
so
this
is
where
I'm
at
more
or
less
so,
there's
many
factors
that
we
take
into
while
we
are
enrolling
like
many
parents
concerns
that
I
heard
as
we
were
here
is
Head
Start.
We
do
use
the
federal
poverty
guidelines
and
that's
basically
what
I
based
on,
because
that
is
the
lowest
income
guidelines
that
we
have
to
base
this
data
from.
N
We
also
use
the
state
preschool,
so
it
depends
what
kind
of
funding
there
is
and
that
what
kind
of
service
that
we're
providing
and
those
are,
the
guidelines
that
we
use
for
that
program,
but
for
all
the
data
that
I
used
I
use
the
federal
income
guidelines
based
on
that
there's
a
lot
of
criteria
that
we
also
look
at.
We
look
at
disability
if
the
family,
the
caregiver,
has
a
disability.
If
the
child
has
it,
then
income
becomes.
A
second
factor
is
the
need
of
the
family,
regardless
of
the
program.
N
N
This
is
something
that
you
can
always
go
back
and
reflect
and
look
at
the
data,
so
I
added
every
link,
every
resource
where
I
took
the
information
from
at
this
current
time,
just
in
Palm
Springs
itself,
we
are
offering
between
Head
Start
and
state
preschool
without
the
collaboration
with
the
city,
340
families.
That's
what
we're
serving
in
Palm
Springs,
with
the
new
collaboration
that
we
began
with
our
city.
N
N
N
Thing
part
of
our
regulations
is
to
be
licensed
so
due
to
the
square
footage
restrooms
and
what
we
have
in
place
with
one
restroom.
That's
what
community
care-a-lot
will
allow
us
to
have
in
one
given
facility,
no
more
than
fifteen
I'm
hoping
with
a
waiver.
I
can
have
sixteen
children
in
there.
So
that's
what
I'm,
hoping
for
part.
C
N
Would
increase
depending
on
the
program
so
if
there
would
be
a
state
preschool
it's
an
AM
and
PM
session,
so
that
would
bring
twenty
four
children
in
the
morning
twenty
four
in
the
p.m.
and
that's
forty,
eight
children.
If
it's
headstart
part
day,
then
it's
only
thirty
two
also
divided
in
half
and
if
it's
full-day,
then
no
more
than
sixteen.
M
If
there
is
interest
on
the
series
behalf,
one
of
the
things
that
we
are
constrained
by
our
funding
is
that
we
can
only
do
leasehold
improvements
and
buildings
that
are
owned
or
leased
by
the
school
district,
but
there
may
be
creative
ways
to
get
around
that.
So,
if
you,
if
the
the
city,
is
interested
in
opening
that
space
up
to
us
I'm
pretty
sure
we
can
find
a
way
to
do
it.
N
Well,
the
only
one
at
this
time
that
I
have
seen
is
the
desert
island,
which
we've
been
trying
to
get
that
started.
So
at
this
time
we've
been
functioning
it
as
a
home
based
program.
Until
that's
completely
licensed
Fire
Marshal
clearance.
We
can
begin
to
operate
it
inside
the
classroom
itself,
but
we
have
looked
at
churches
anywhere
where
there's
actually
space
I
have
been
looking
for
space
because
there's
there
seems
to
be
a
huge
need,
not
only
in
Palm
Springs,
but
in
other
areas
as
well.
C
N
Portable,
the
portable
at
this
time
is
what
I'm
trying
to
complete
with
the
Community
Care
license
and
Fire
Marshal
clearance
in
order
to
get
that
up
and
running.
But
at
this
time
we've
been
operating
as
a
home
base
program.
So
that's
a
different
option
where
the
teacher
goes
to
the
child's
home,
but
we
follow
our
same
curriculum
and
it's
individualized
for
every
child's
needs.
But.
M
N
What
Community
Care
licenses
I
have
to
have
every
facility
license
and
the
fire
marshal
needs
to
come
out,
give
a
clearance
this.
This
space
is
safe
to
house
these
children
first
with
one
of
their
regulations
based
on
title
22
is
there
needs
to
be
one
restroom
to
15
children,
so
I'm?
My
goal
is
to
at
least
try
to
get
a
waiver
to
do
at
least
the
16,
but
that
those
are
the
regulations
based
on
title
22.
C
N
A
10%
there's
depending
on
if
the
child
has
a
disability,
my
child
went
to
headstart
and
I
didn't
qualify
due
to
income
base,
but
it
was
more
based
on
his
disability
and
his
IEP.
Currently,
what
we
have
is
also
an
MOU.
The
district
has
an
MoU
with
regional
centers,
so
we're
identifying
infinite
dollars
this
time,
we'll
also
have
a
need.
O
O
So
it
seems
like
no
one
really
knows:
what's
gonna
happen
to
them,
and
we've
heard
a
lot
of
families
come
and
express
how
concerned
they
are
so
my
question
I
guess
to
you
is:
has
there
been
any
effort
to
reach
out
to
this
program
and
seeing
what
we
could
do
to
work
together
or
to
give
them
other
options
as
to
if
this
is
gonna
be
taking
over
their
space?
Is
there
other
spaces
for
them,
or
it
has
there
any
communication
with
a
tiny
tots
program.
N
There's
many
actually
options
that
we
can
look
at
okay.
My
goal
in
purpose
and
vision
is
just
servicing
our
families
and
children,
regardless
of
income,
if
to
me,
is
just
a
label
to
be
able
to
facilitate
people's
salaries
salaries.
My
focus
is
our
children
and
our
families,
so,
regardless
of
anything
else,
getting
education
out
there.
So
there's
a
lot
of
options
with
a
state
preschool.
N
It
can
be
part
private
as
well
so
depending
on
the
family's
salary,
and
they
would
have
a
fee
to
be
able
to
do
that
and
I
would
have
to
just
get
the
permission
granted
from
the
state.
So
there's
a
lot
of
factors
so
just
listening
to
the
family's
passion
and
the
little
girl
that
was
up
here
was
amazing
and
I.
Don't
want
them
to
feel
that
way
as
well.
N
I
want
them
to
feel
that
there
is
a
place
for
them
to
take
their
children
every
single
day,
where
they're
they
feel
their
child's
secure
and
safe
and
we're
providing
a
service
as
well.
So
there
is
a
lot
of
options.
It's
just
basically
looking
at
where
it's
the
need.
What
can
we
do
and
that's
the
best
thing
that
I
will
do,
try
to
make
sure
that
we
meet
all
of
our
family's
needs
and
our
children's
needs
and.
M
M
So
if
you're
serving
30
students
in
that
program,
assuming
15
graduate
out,
you
have
15
students,
you
want
to
make
sure,
are
not
displaced
and
that's
something
that
we
can
manage
until
we
get
the
ratios
and
to
what
I
think
they
should
be,
which
is
yeah
to
3
people
2
to
3
children,
who
don't
make
the
income
requirement
of
a
total
of
15.
If
we
really
want
to
reflect
the
makeup
of
our
community.
K
I'm
happy
to
yield
to
other
questions
of
the
commissioners,
but
I
would
like
to
make
a
couple
observations
and
and
offer
a
possible
solution
or
a
recommendation,
because
I've
been
dealing
with
this
issue
for
a
long
time,
just
just
from
a
general
observation
standpoint,
I've
always
had
a
signature,
city,
manager
and
I
think
all
of
us
are
concerned,
but
particularly
the
city
manager
I've,
always
been
concerned
with
the
liability
of
dealing
with
small
children.
You
know
that's
not
what
we
do
in
terms
of
as
a
city.
K
Our
workers
aren't
certified
in
some
level
of
childcare
that
has
ever
given
me
a
comfort
level.
That
being
said,
it's
been
an
important
program
and
the
council,
as
a
policy,
has
wanted
to
continue
to
do
that
and
and
the
Parks
Commission's
have
wanted
to
continue
to
do
that.
So
we've
we've
moved
forward
there.
So
so
now
we
have
a
situation
where
the
school
wants
to
help
and
bring
start
in
so
the
benefit
to
that
is
besides
maybe
undoing
some
of
our
liability,
which
has
always
been
a
concern,
but
they
have
their
skills.
Certified.
K
You
know,
federal
state
school
prove
curriculum.
However,
they
do
it,
which
is
completely
different
from
ours,
we're
just
doing
like
the
best
we
can.
What
we
think
is
good.
That
being
said,
I
think
the
issue
you're.
Having
is
there's
some
unknowns,
who
will
be
left
out?
There's
a
universe,
there's
a
population
that
that
doesn't
really
maybe
meet
their
qualifications.
That
may
be
left
out,
but
a
good
portion
of
them
are
not
City
residents.
Our
program
doesn't
pay
for
itself
for
subsidizing
it.
K
K
If
we
go
forward
with
that,
we
would
be
negotiating
with
the
school
district
I
believe
they
would
potentially
be
paying
as
some
sort
of
lease
payment
there'd
be
a
payback,
but
we
should
improve
the
restrooms
anyway,
so
we
possibly
could
go
forward
with
it.
Go
with
the
program
and
I'm
just
sort
of
thinking
from
a
solutions
perspective
you
go
with
the
program,
we
get
the
benefits
of
the
program
and
then
we
see
what's
left
in
terms
of
that
population
that
we
may
not
be
able
to
serve
and
they
may
not
be
able
to
serve.
K
We
understand
what
that
is.
We
sort
of
as
a
pilot
program
have
this
dual
thing
going
on.
At
that
point,
our
population
who
may
not
be
able
to
get
into
their
program
is
much
smaller.
We
continue
maybe
as
a
pilot
for
a
year,
so
with
our
program
in
a
in
a
different
location,
it's
much
smaller
space.
We
would
probably
need
we
would
have
some
continuing
expense.
Obviously,
and
then
we've
got
a
year,
maybe
it's
two
years
and
at
that
point
we're
able
to
evaluate
you're
able
to
evaluate
who's
being
served
who's.
K
N
May
I
just
add
what
we
do
in
our
program.
We
don't
look
at
the
child
as
just
that
one
child.
We
look
at
the
entire
family.
What
are
the
family's
needs?
So,
with
that
being
said,
we
have
a
STEM
program
for
our
preschool
children.
We're
there
actually
it's.
There
is
a
science
and
math
technology
based
program
where
our
children-
this
is
the
first
year
that
we
started
this
program
there.
N
Actually
it's
individualized
for
every
single
child
depending
on
their
skills
and
it's
timed
in
their
classroom
during
their
time
for
they're
working
throughout
their
classroom
and
that's
what
we
call
it
as
they're
going
to
the
different
areas.
We
have
an
assessment
tool
that
analyzes
every
child,
where
they're
at
in
social,
emotional
and
cognitive
development
and
math
in
history
and
ours.
So
we
do
this
assessment
three
times
a
year.
N
Teachers
develop
lesson
plans
where
they
individualize
for
every
single
child
in
that
classroom,
depending
on
where
they're
at
and
how
are
they
going
to
move
them
to
the
next
level?
They
create
an
individual
learning
plan
in
collaboration
with
the
family,
to
make
sure
that
that
child
is
moving
forward
to
the
next
level.
We
have
a
needs
assessment
for
the
family
itself.
If
the
families
are
in
crisis
in
type
of
housing,
nutrition,
anything
that
they
may
need,
we
provide
the
resources
and
assist
them
in
getting
down
that
path
or
training.
N
Some
workshops
that
we
provide
and
parenting
courses
that
we
provide
throughout
the
year.
So
we
try
to
make
sure
that
we're
looking
at
the
whole
child
and
that's
including
the
family
itself
and
making
sure
they
become
an
advocate
for
their
children
as
they
continue
on
through
their
children's
education
itself.
P
Building
on
what
David
said
about
trying
it
out
for
our
group
someplace
else
and
take
a
look
down
the
road
and
see
how
things
develop,
how
about
your
group
go
to
an
alternative
location
and
we
assess
that
over
a
couple
years
and
don't
touch
ours
right
now,
I
mean
we've
got
that
we've
got
a
building.
That
really
is
doesn't
have
a
for
rent
sign
on
it.
I
hate
that
I
hate
to
disrupt
the
group.
P
That's
there
would
it
be
possible
for
you
all
to
go
someplace
else
and
that's
to
watch
you
for
a
couple
years
to
see
if,
if
it's
used
because
I'm
not
sure
the
demographics
that
you're
saying
there's
a
hundred
spots
that
people
could
qualify
for
this,
are
they
central
Palm
Springs?
Are
they?
You
know
this
Coachella
Valley
I
read
or
they
desert
hot
spring?
Is
this
a
good
location?
Should
we
be
considering
or
you
know
so,
could
we
look
at
an
alternative
location
and
not
okay,
how's
the
applecart
out
window,
so.
N
That
the
Dave-
this
is
the
one
that
we
did
I
did
do
where
we
also
did
the
comparison
with
the
other
districts
itself.
What
I
did
for
just
this
meeting
for
today
was
just
pull
out
information
just
for
Palm
Springs
itself.
What
is
the
need
here
in
this
area?
So
as
as
we
see
in
every
single
slide,
I
added
the
source
of
where
I
pulled
that
information
from
and
the
numbers
the
data
the
census?
So
everything
that
I
pulled
is
base
and
gear
today,
and
this
presentation
was
just
based
on
for
Palm
Springs
central.
N
J
First
I
want
to
thank
you
all
for
coming
and
I
want
to
talk
about.
Look
we're
asking
questions
about
head
start.
You
know
my
family's
use
head
start.
My
nieces
nephews,
it
started.
I
know
how
important
it
is,
and
it's
very
compelling,
of
course,
when
people
come
with
their
children
and
put
them
on
their
knees
and
talk
about
this
program
and
I.
Imagine
this
goes
to
City
Council.
It's
gonna
be
hard
for
the
City
Council
to
think
about
that.
J
Without
hearing
the
other
side,
that's
all
Collard
about
what
these
programs
are
and
what
I
was
sort
of
disturbed
at
our
last
Commission
meeting.
Why
I'm
glad
you're
here
is
that
there
seem
to
be
a
misunderstanding
about
the
level
of
poverty
in
Palm,
Springs
I
mean
your
numbers
say:
23%
are
living
under
the
poverty
level
level
in
Palm
Springs,
you
know.
So
what
is
our
responsibility
to
those
children
and
to
people
that
children
that
get
reduced
lunches
and
we
have
limited
space
on
their
needs?
J
We
do
have
to
look
at
what
as
a
community,
how
we
want
to
allocate
our
resources
I'm.
Talking
generally,
you
know
not
just
the
city,
resources
and
so
I.
You
know
we
do
have
a
lot
of
working
poor
in
this
town
and
as
a
tourist
economy.
We
all
benefit
from
these
poor,
these
low
wages,
and
so
we
do
have
some
responsibilities
as
a
city
for
the
poorest
among
us,
some
of
their
children.
J
N
And
it's
actually
and
also
like
I,
said
everything
I
added
all
the
data,
the
resources
where
it
came
from
so
where
we
have
I
first
start
with
early
headstart.
Okay
in
that
early
headstart.
So
that's
where
I'm,
focusing
with
pregnant
mothers
and
from
zero
to
three
years
old
and
the
program
that
we
use
a
curriculum
that
is
geared
for
them
as
parents
as
teachers.
N
If
the
teacher
works
with
the
family
at
home,
they
start
either
at
pregnancy
or
as
the
baby
is
a
newborn
and
throughout
the
taller
so
depending
on
the
child's
age-
and
we
start
working
together
with
the
parent
at
home
and
using
that
particular
curriculum.
What
we've
seen
on
the
data
and
just
to
even
receive
more,
you
can
go
on
the
links
and
get
additional
data
on
that.
N
But
what
we
actually
seen
in
Head
Start
itself
is
how
children,
progress
and
there's
data
to
demonstrate
in
language
and
literacy
and
math
the
scores
that
they
have
demonstrated
in
additional
years
throughout
time.
What
we
use
is
the
same
curriculum
that
the
district
utilizes.
So
it's
continuing
that
that
education
throughout
time,
so
they
started
off
young
depending
on
the
child's
needs,
so
it
can
be
a
child
with
who's
functioning
at
a
lower
level
or
in
IEP
or
at
different
levels,
and
that's
why
the
teacher
tends
to
individualize
depending
on
that
child's
needs.
N
N
Another
one
was
the:
has
their
children
have
better
social
school
skills,
impulse
control
approaches
to
learning?
Kester
children
also
decrease
their
problem.
Behaviors
such
as
aggression,
hyperactive.
We
look
at
the
health
itself,
so
we
have
a
registered
nurse
and
an
LVN
that
worked
with
all
of
our
children
and
our
families.
So
that
is
one
of
the
things
that
we
also
look
at
our
children.
So
obesity,
overweight.
We
provide
nutrition
classes
and
one-to-one
if
something
that
they
say
that
a
child
is
overweight
or
there's
anything
than
our
RN
and
registered.
N
Dietician
is
also
contacting
that
family
Head
Start
children
show
gains
in
social-emotional
development
as
a
result
and
participating
in
Head
Start
as
it
continues.
We
have
throughout
what
how
it
impacts
K
through
12.
So
the
changes
with
that
and
that
are
compared
with
the
the
full-day
has
our
children,
and
this
is
the
where
they
did.
The
research
was
a
Monterey
County.
N
Public
schools
were
more
likely
to
meet
reading
benchmarks
by
the
end
of
kindergarten
compared
to
the
students
who
of
the
half-day
or
it
did
not
attempt
preschool
children
who
attended
Early
Head
Start
had
significant
fewer
children.
Child
welfare
encounters
during
elementary
years
has
their
children
and
Harrison,
where
they
did.
A
different
research
had
higher
mean
since
course,
in
fifth
grade
than
a
control
group
of
academic
and
executive,
functional
outcomes
and
there's
more
there,
so
I'm
just
highlighting
a
few
and
then
there's
another
slide
as
adults.
N
The
impact
that
Head
Start
students
created
with
test
our
children
had
fewer
likelihoods
likely
they
were
likely
hired
to
graduate
high
school
attend
college
and
receive
a
post-secondary
degree
license
or
certificate.
Histor
students
are
more
likely
to
graduate
high
school
among
children
who
attended
head
start
in
the
1960s
and
70s.
N
Why
children
28.3%
more
likely
than
their
siblings,
complete
high
school
based
and
27.6,
are
more
likely
to
attend.
College
history
improves
adults,
health
status
and
graduates
as
adults.
Hester
graduates
are
19
percent,
less
likely
to
smoke
siblings
mothers
who
dip
based
on
the
siblings,
who
did
not
attend
among
children
who
attended
Head
Start
in
the
1960s
and
70s
African
American
children
who
attended
Hester
were
twelve
percent
less
likely
to
be
arrested
or
charged
with
a
crime
compared
to
their
siblings.
N
J
Just
would
like
the
commissioners
to
think
of
those
outcomes.
I
mean
for
these
very
vulnerable
population
up
children
as
many
parents.
We
all
you
know,
benefit
from
because
they're
working
in
the
tourist
economy
that
does
not
pay
so
we're
all
kind
of
complicit
in
that
way.
But
I
have
one
other
question
or
just
on
the
liability
issue.
Vicki.
Can
you
tell
me
how
many,
how
many
children
that
tiny
Tots
program
using
the
room
now
currently.
J
N
I
wouldn't
know
if
they
qualify
without
seeing
the
income
guideline,
but
maybe
TK
would
be
an
option
for
that
child
to
continue
their
education
to
start
the
TK
because
they're
it's
not
income
based,
so
they
can
start
TK.
So
it's
just
looking
at
the
options
available,
so
I
would
always
always
encourage
families,
depending
on
where
they're
at
to
make
sure
that
I
can
at
least
provide
a
resource
of
where
that
that
family
can
go
to
continue
to
get
in
education
for
their
children,
child
and.
M
We
would
be
happy
to
do
that.
Work
with
all
the
families
to
kind
of
first
establish
whether
they
qualify
for
the
program,
then
then
kind
of
point
them
towards
the
resources
that
are
available
and
and
as
we're
seeing
Myra
saying
there
are,
there
are
more
resources
available.
Probably
the
most
families
know.
We
know
what
those
are
I
guess.
A
The
problem
I
have
is
all
your
references
to
early
start
or
headstart
programs
seem
to
be
in
comparison
to
not,
and
that's
not
the
case
here.
These
kids
are
going
through
a
program.
That's
pretty
developmental,
but
one
of
the
other
concerns
I
have
is,
if
you're
talking
about
340
families
with
children
in
the
city
who
follow
to
the
poverty
level,
then
I'm
not
really
excited
about
15
of
them
getting
to
sit
in
this
room
and
the
rest
of
them
not
get
to
be
taken.
Care
of.
A
We've
got
to
displace
32,
kids
and,
and
there
are
kids
behind
these
kids
in
line
into
these
programs
that
don't
qualify
for
headstart
and
they're,
not
gonna,
qualify
I,
don't
want
to
be
pushing
people
who
have
a
slightly
higher
income
away
from
this
city
and
drive
them
out
to
you,
know,
Belmont
or
back
to
Coachella,
or
things
like
that.
I'd
like
to
address
all
of
these
situations,
and
it
seems
to
me
like
something
that
Commissioner
Bohle
mentioned
earlier.
If,
if
we
could
leave
our
kids,
where
they.
P
A
Work
with
programs,
whether
we
get
land
and
and
set
up
trailers,
so
that
we're
dealing
with
the
larger
number
of
the
children,
I
I
would
be
sick
to
realize
that
we're
throwing
thirty
kids
out
positioning
15
children.
But
it
sounds
to
me
like
there's
hundreds
more
that
are
falling
into
this
need
level
and
we're
not
addressing
them.
What.
N
One
of
the
good
things
is
is
like
I
said
what
our
main
focus
is
trying
to
help
our
children
and
our
families.
So
one
of
the
good
great
things
is
the
new
collaboration
that
we
began
with
the
city
with
desert
Highland,
because
that
didn't
exist,
and
that
was
in
servicing
anybody.
But
due
to
that,
we
added
32
slots
that
we
were
able
to
start
serving
our
community.
So
that's
amazing.
The
reason
is
that
I'm
trying
to
get
education
to
our
children
but
high
quality
education
is
a
full-day
program
full
day.
N
The
research
is
going
down
the
full-day
because
they're
longer
hours
and
that's
a
greater
opportunity
for
our
families
to
go
out
there
if
they're
working
if
they're
gonna
go
back
to
school,
if
they
need
to
tre
tick,
anything
that
they
may
need
that
gives
them
that
opportunity
in
that
time
to
know
that
their
child
is
safe,
that
they're
learning
that
they're
getting
all
their
needs
met
and
that's
an
opportunity
itself.
So
that
was
great
partnership
from
our
city
on
our
district
to
start
that
program
itself,
so
that
was
32
slots
that
didn't
exist.
N
So
hopefully,
if
we're
able
to
move
forward
with
this,
that
we
can
also
create
that
there
is
a
lot
of
regulations
with
the
program.
So
we
do
follow
the
title.
5
title
22
Community
Care
license,
and
that
is
one
of
the
reasons
that
they
state
those
guidelines.
Do
we
do
need
a
fire
marshal
clearance
to
make
sure
this
facility
is
safe,
so
one
of
those
guidelines
is
with
one
toilet.
They
only
allow
us
to
have
15
children
in
that
facility.
N
M
Commissioner
young,
just
to
address
a
couple
of
things.
You
said
there
is
no
assessment
that
I
know
of
of
the
tiny
tots
program.
So
while
parents
may
feel
that
there
is
academic
progress
there,
you
do
have
the
the
instructors
are
not
licensed
and
there
is
no
real
measurement
going
on
of
what's
happening
there.
So
that's
one
thing.
Secondly,
as
a
school
district,
if
there,
where
other
facilities
that
we
could
either
build
or
were
available
to
us,
we
probably
wouldn't
be
having
this
conversation
with
the
cirrie.
M
We,
as
I
said,
are
limits
it
significantly
by
all
the
programs.
Expansion
is
limited
by
the
lack
of
available
facilities
during
trailers
on
two
campuses
and
doing
portables
is
never
the
best
solution
and
a
number
of
our
school
sites,
we're
already
maxed
out
in
terms
of
the
number
of
trailers
that
we
can
add
to
that
facility,
because
there
has
to
be
a
ratio
between
place,
space
and
etc,
etc.
So
I
wish
that
there
was
another
solution
and
if
there
was
I
trust,
it
trust
us
we
would
be
taking
that.
M
K
Look
I
miss
chairman
one
thing
just
to
keep
in
mind
and
part
of
this
discussion
gets
started
because
counsel
is
concerned
about
the
subsidization,
so
for
so,
for
example,
in
the
Unga
for
kids
only
program
27,
our
city
residents,
65-
are
not
even
City
residents
on
the
tiny
tots
13
are
residents
of
Palm,
Springs
20
or
not
so
it
a
minimum
council
is
going
to
go
to
a
bifurcated
system
would
be
my
sense
where
they're
gonna
significantly
raise
the
prices
for
non
city
residents.
You
know,
I,
don't
know
that
they
would
be
able
to
pay.
K
C
I'll
just
18
minutes
ago,
you
mentioned
that
there
was
a
there's
options
when
it
comes
to
a
state
preschool
program
for
people
that
don't
qualify
for
headstart
because
they
have
a
higher
level
of
income
and
there
are
continued
options
beyond
that.
So,
if
I'm
getting
understanding
this
correctly,
this
is
a
phased
project.
C
You're
working
to
get
to
demuth
portables
that
have
already
sorry
not
to
move
the
Highland
Unity
Center,
the
ones
in
the
park
that
have
been
used
for
a
program
like
this
before
that
are
owned
by
the
county,
to
get
started
as
either
a
head
start
or
preschool
program.
You're
trying
to
do
the
sunrise
thing,
so
it
appears
that
you're
looking
at
this
in
steps.
C
N
Currently,
in
this,
in
this
slide,
I
have
where
Palm
Springs
Unified
what
we
currently
have
so
in
total
just
with
that
is
serving
three
hundred
and
forty
families
in
the
Palm
Springs
area
itself.
So
that's
coyote
run
that's
a
how
off-site
Housing
Coalition,
so
that
is
not
at
an
elementary
school.
So
it's
a
Housing
Coalition
that
allows
us
to
use
that
space.
We
have
a
playground
and
we
work
with
them.
We
have
Salafist
other
charter
school
where
we're
serving
176
state,
preschools,
Cahuilla,
forty-eight
and
catheter
finchy.
All
of
those
are
elementary
schools.
N
C
P
N
B
M
D
N
What
we
would
do,
what
I
would
do
is
for
our
families,
because
they
are
already
being
served.
Is
it's
about
similar
to
my
returning
families?
So
early
headstart
are
all
returning
because
of
their
age
group.
There's
a
priority
group.
So
that's
how
we
would
try
to
get
this
group
first,
a
priority
group
and
enroll
them
before
it's
completely
open,
enrollment
for
all
families.
D
So
what
I'm
asking
is,
do
you
already
have
a
raining
roster
for
this
coming
season?
If
you
were
to
open
in
September
whatever
school
starts,
do
you
already
have
an
approved
list
of
children
that
will
be
participating
in
your
program
already
and
maybe,
if
tiny
tots
was
to
come
on,
maybe
you
would
make
additional
spaces,
but
right
now,
do
you
already
have
a
set
group
of
participants
to
fill
all
the
slots
already
or
is
there
still
room
available,
possibly
right.
N
Now,
at
this
point
right
now,
we
just
started
our
new
enrollment
for
our
new
school
year,
so
right
now
throughout
our
entire
district.
What
mr.
Williamson
just
mentioned
all
those
regions
so
we're
servicing
quite
a
bit
of
families
so,
depending
on
what
their
home
school
is.
That's
what
we
try
to
place
that
child
if
we
provide
the
service
there,
but
for
our,
if
we're
able
to
move
forward
with
that,
we'll
get
the
tiny
tots
families
and
put
them
as
a
priority.
So
it
comes
the
way
we
put
it
in
the
system.
N
A
M
You
know
yeah
that
that
building
is
not
I'm.
Iris
spent
some
time
talking
about
the
licensing
requirements
that
Bill's
building
is
no.
It
does
not
meet
meet
the
licensing
requirements
for
early
childhood
programs,
probably
as
yours
doesn't,
and
the
building
is
used
constantly
for
professional
development
for
teachers
constantly.
There
are
people
cycling
in
that
all
the
time
it's
not
available
to
Spade
available
or
suitable.
M
N
With
community
care
licensing
they
come
out
and
monitor
they
look
at
like
I
mentioned
square
footage.
They
look
at
even
the
playground
structure
that
all
of
that
is
safe.
Fire
marshal
clearance
has
to
come
through
before
they
even
come
out.
So
they
look
at
every
detail
to
make
sure
that
this
is
suitable
and
safe
for
our
children.
C
I'd
like
to
make
to
make
a
motion
to
approve
the
use
of
that,
our
tiny
tots
thing
for
the
school
to
continue
to
expand
theirs,
as
well
as
consider
additional
spaces
that
we
could
make
available
to
them.
So
they
are
serving
of
more
families
across
the
multiple
programs,
regardless
of
the
income
or
anything
else.
D
O
Down,
hopefully,
you've
seen
it
it's
coming
back.
Well,
obviously,
we
had
to
install
new
sod
on
the
small
dog
park
that
was
just
not
salvageable,
so
that
was
disappointing,
but
but
regardless
I
think
in
the
end,
it'll
it'll
suit
us
well
over
the
summertime
and
get
us
back
on
track.
The
large
dog
park
is
coming
back
very
well,
so
we're
on
track,
we'll
open
as
planned,
right
and.
A
O
Having
a
little
struggle
with
the
I
guess
what
we
would
call
the
small
dog
park
on
the
east
side
of
Mesquite
we're
struggling
with
the
folks
coming
out
when
we
need
to
to
come
in
here
and
mow.
There
have
been
a
lot
of
resistance
to
that
more
than
we
usually
encounter
so
well.
I'm
gonna
work
on
that
with
some
additional
signage,
but
the
large
dog
park
did
well.
We
did
have
some
vandalism.
O
That's
occurred
a
few
times
where
someone
has
sniped
through
the
back
of
the
fence
onto
the
golf
course
side
and
dogs
have
gone
through.
We
fixed
it.
Someone
did
it
again,
so
that's
something
we're
keeping
an
eye
on.
I
know
during
spring
break
we
had
some
kids
running
in
now,
leaving
the
gates
open,
but
you
know
that's.
We
hope
the
citizens
are
being
mindful
as
well
and
trying
to
help
us
out
absolutely
with.
P
O
The
small
dog
park
I
think
we
actually
have
more
usage
at
the
move.
If
that's
at
all
possible
in
that
little
space,
it
is
I've
not
seen
it
not
full.
Since
we've
had
to
shut
down.
The
large
dog
park
is
not
as
busy
and
I.
Think
part
of
that
may
be
signage
and
lack
of
familiarity,
and
that's
something
I'm
gonna
work
on
trying
to
guide
it's
a
little
unique
to
try
to
get
back
there.
So
I'm
gonna
work
on
I've
already
got
some
signs
ordered
to
try
to
guide
people
in
that
direction.
J
A
question
about
after
we
open
the
dog
park
about
these
spaces.
What
are
your
thoughts
about?
Trying
to
keep
them?
I
mean
I,
know
it's
more
work
and
more
maintenance.
The
larger
area
does
need
probably
some
shade
and
and
some
things
like
that,
but
the
gates
already
in
we
have
a
park
that
now
is
high
maintenance
and
I.
Think
you
mentioned
that
the
perhaps
meeting
that
or
in
have
more
closures
in
the
future,
probably
to
keep
it
up
to
the
city
standards
higher.
So
I
just
was
curious.
O
A
big
fan
and
I
don't
have
the
resources
right
now
to
add
all
the
things
that
I
would
love
to
add
parking
or
shade
structures
from
additional
parking
areas,
but
yeah
we're
we're
in
favor
of
it
as
a
department
as
a
whole.
We
see
a
lot
of
benefit
to
that.
The
salt,
the
small
dog
park-
that's
another
story
just
because
of
the
the
animal
shelter
and
they
have
a
pretty
consistent
need
over
there,
but
for
the
large,
large
dog
or
large
off-leash
I'm,
not
really
sure
I.
O
Don't
it's
confusing
to
call
them
both
large
dog
from
small
dog
parks,
but
for
that
space
between
the
fields,
I
think
it's
been
very
beneficial
and
mean
it's
wise,
it's
very
print
because
it
doesn't
have
the
turf
and
the
irrigation,
and
we
can
actually
drag
that
and
it's
much
easier.
The
one
thing
we've
got
to
figure
out
right
now:
we're
using
pressure
washers
to
keep
the
dust
control.
O
So
that's
something
we're
probably
gonna
have
to
figure
out
long
term,
maybe
a
better
alternative
for
that,
but
we're
very,
very
happy
with
how
it's
how
it's
working
out
yes.
Well.
I
would
like
to
make
a
motion
to
recommend
to
city
councillors
to
make
it
a
permanent
and
not
a
temporary
and
I
think
this
is
being
on
the
ad-hoc
committee
for
finding
a
space,
it's
kind
of
like
you're,
giving
it
to
us.
O
D
O
D
L
O
C
Commissioner
face
it's
outside
of
the
motion.
It
would
just
be
more
for
information
gathering,
but
you
doing
what
you
do
if
you
had
a
list
for
us
of
things
that
you
would
need
or
like
or
things
that
you
need
to
do
I
know
not
today,
but
for
future
meetings.
That
would
come
in
handy
for
us
to
make
recommendations
and
to
like
finalize
this
in
case
the
City
Council
has
questions
about
the
costs
that
we
were
being
pre-emptive
about
it,
so
that
we
can
present
a
whole
plan.
Great.
O
L
I
I
mean
I
would
hate
to
go.
I
like
the
motion
and
I
do
think,
adding
something
around
a
preparation
for
safety,
because
really
one
pop
on
the
head
is
a
lawsuit
and
so
taking
a
motion
and
saying
look
we're
giving
a
directive
we'd
like
to
do
this
without
putting
in
something
that
says.
That
is
what
like
the
first
priority
would
be
that
human
safety
and
that
that
safety,
that
priority
might
be
before
shade.
You
know
if
and
when
we
can
get
some
resources
like
I,
just
want
to
suggest
that
we
maybe
add
something.
O
So
I
can
make
a
motion
to
recommend
that
we
make
the
large
larger
dog
park
temporary
to
permanent,
with
doing
some
research
on
what
it
is
that
we
will
need
to
make
it
a
priority
to
have
safety
for
folks
that
are
using
the
park
and
allowing
us
to
review
those
and
to
approve
those
first
as
well.
To
mr.
L
A
O
Would
be
a
council
decision
on
whether
or
not
to
keep
it
overnight,
throwing
in
an
under
unfunded
request
with
that,
as
a
condition
might
be
a
whole
nother?
That
means
we'll
probably
have
to
go
ahead
and
shut
it
down
and
wait
until
we
can
get
through
Council
get
through
a
funding
option
which
I
can
definitely
start
working
on
getting
some
clothes
on
when.
O
A
D
O
O
L
Mean
so
I
apologize
for
that,
but
it's
in
order
to
understand
it
and
the
scope
of
it
to
see.
Let's
move
it
forward,
let's
get
it
to
stay
open
and
take
those
measures
make
sense
to
me
and
so
I
apologize
if
I,
for
you
know
kind
of
lobbing
that
out
there
without
really
hearing
all
those
all
those
sides.
So
I
don't
really
know
what
Vicki.
A
O
A
C
A
A
P
P
This
is
basically
the
layout
of
it.
This
is
where
the
museum
is
now
just
give
you
a
quickie
going
down
the
new
street.
This
is
where
the
Luminara
house
will
go
and
they
have
got
all
of
it
built
in
there.
This
area
here
first
starts
with
a
stage
right
here
for
performance
performance
venue
area.
Here
this
area
is
going
to
raise
up
and
be
able
to
cover,
and
so
you
don't
see
the
parking
garage
back
there.
It
will
go
up
in
the
air,
but
not
up
and
fall
off.
P
It
will
go
up,
it'll
be
landscaped
over
here
we
have
just
some
other
little
potted
areas
of
saving
areas
that
are
gonna
go
through
here
down
here
it
will
be
a
waterfall
that
will
be
built
in
one
of
the
neat
things
they
did.
They
came
up
with
the
waterfall
will
be
built
in
I'll.
Tell
you
a
little
bit
quickly
how
they
come
up
with
that,
but
they're
using
the
wall
from
the
restrooms
to
put
the
waterfall
on
it,
just
to
kind
of
camouflage
that
and
blend
it
in
with
what
is
most
necessary,
I.
P
Think
a
police
substation,
because
if
we
have
something
nice
down
there,
we
want
it
to
be
taken
care
of
and
I
mean.
We
first
thought
the
nice
bathtub
here.
Well,
the
police
will
be
right
there,
so
it
shouldn't
be
a
problem
and
it
goes
on
through
down
and
they
have
good
news
and
bad
news
as
they
presented
all
this,
it
was
like:
let's
move
ahead
faster,
we
had
talked
about
that
they
were
going
to
possibly
side
the
area.
The
grit
was
going
to
do
siding
and
sprinkling
until
we're
ready
to
do
this.
P
This
looks
like
this
will
be
there
in
2020,
but
as
it
comes
down
to
all
of
this,
the
good
news,
let's
move
faster,
then
they
have
this
section
here
of
trees
and
some
shade
areas
that
you'll
see
in
a
minute
and
right
here
you
see
this
is
forever
Maryland
Park
or
a
large
art
sculpture.
This
was
the
bad
news
they
present
it
to
us.
Maryland
is
not
a
done
deal.
P
We
may
have
a
part
that
doesn't
include
Maryland
down
there.
We
don't
know
yet
so
that
was
kind
of
the
bad
part
of
how
the
it
all
comes
along.
Just
to
give
you
some
ideas,
what
they've
done
they
went
around
the
valley
and
looked
at
stone
structures.
Looked
at
the
different
rock
that
you
find
in
here
and
they're
trying
to
incorporate
that
rock
into
the
structures
of
the
park.
P
This
gives
it
two
years,
so
you
can
see
how
they're
going
to
do
different
elevations
on
the
setting
area.
So
there's
not
long
places
to
lay
down
there
taking
the
rock
and
there
they
went
to
the
indian
canyons.
They
went
to
the
waterfalls
up
there,
that's
where
they
got
the
idea
of
that
in
a
waterfall
in
because
there's
the
waterfalls
in
the
hiking
area,
they
saw
the
the
concrete
and
the
rocks
and
they've
had
rock
developed
for
chairs
down
here.
I.
Think
it's
better!
On
the
next
one.
P
You'll
see
seating
area,
something
that
we're
not
Gro.
Sure
of
is
these
armrests.
They
said
the
people
our
age,
need
armrests
to
get
up
and
down
all
the
time,
but
never
armrests
would
have
been
kind
of
hot.
We
thought
in
the
parks.
That
was
something
that
we
were
looking
at.
Maybe
it
wasn't
quite
as
interesting
to
have
out
of
metal.
These
are
some
of
the
trees
and
all
that
they're,
looking
at
in
the
local
area
that
are
indigenous
to
this
area
that
they
want
to
bring
in
there
they
have
looked
at
they've.
P
Given
us,
you
can
see
the
park
up
there
and
they've.
Given
us
some
areas
of
what
the
trees
are
going
to
look
like
to
be
planted
through
keeping
this
area
open
for
stage
the
stage
is
going
to
be
20
by
30
16
foot
high.
It
will
hold
about
500
people
in
that
park.
They're
telling
us
something
that
concerns
me.
It
is
above
the
parking
garage.
L
L
P
P
Acres,
they
did
give
us
like
these
are
different
to
the
plants
that
they'll
put
in
and
the
colors
that
we're
going
to
get
throughout
the
years
throughout
the
year
time
of
the
year
that
they've
gone
through
and
put
it
in
that
you
can
see
where
they're
going
to
go
the
splash
zone,
the
water
feature
is
gonna,
have
a
splash
zone,
but
the
splash
zone
is
only
going
to
be
about
three
or
four
inches
deep,
so
that
you
can
just
go
in
there.
It'll
have
water
shooting
up,
it'll,
have
water
coming
down?
P
P
This
is
the
stage
and
they're
looking
at
these
units
that
will
be
kind
of
like
a
fan.
Palm
canopy.
It's
designed
out
of
palm
leaves
that
will
go
together
to
cover
the
stage
for
shade
on
the
stage
and
make
it
part
of
the
atmosphere
of
this
area.
This
gives
you
the
police
substation
over
here
and
the
waterfall
feature
on
the
left.
P
A
P
There
we
go.
No,
this
comes
back.
Alright,
here's
the
water
feature
with
the
Jets,
the
will
shoot
up,
but
you
can
see
they're
walking
on
it,
those
kids,
they
don't
either
walk
on
water
or
there
or
it's
not
that
deep
one
of
the
two,
but
you
see
the
parking
structure
is
behind
it,
though
the
hill
will
go
up
slightly
and
they
can
walk
up
there.
It's
not
off
limits
and
things
like
that,
but
it's
just
to
give
some
kind
of
a
break
between
it.
So
they
do
have.
The
Maryland
is
still
there.
P
P
P
With
a
caveat
that,
if
they
needed
it
down
there,
they
would
take
it,
they
don't
seem
there
were
no
or
people
that
I
talked
to
are
not
weren't
on
measure
J,
when
this
happened
Sid
and
Jim,
there
are
new
people
there.
They
don't
know
anything
about
this,
but
it
looks
like
that
they
could
take
our
well.
Actually
the
money
is
there
to
do
it.
The
way
it's
been
presented,
if
they
take
our
money,
that
they
are
already
done
to
us,
but
the
whole
park
and
everything
is
looking
real
good.
What
Commission
faced
it.
C
P
P
A
P
L
A
P
P
A
A
P
P
P
M
P
M
I
A
L
A
P
L
C
Can
we
go
to
back
to
the
slide
of
costs?
Please
the
slide
that
has
all
the
costs
and
stuff
on
it
breakdown.
Thank
you.
So,
if
we're
looking
at
the
702
plus
the
$300,000
for
the
facade
added
to
the
four
nine
nine
eleven,
which
was
their
budget,
that
brings
us
to
five
point:
nine,
nine
one
pretty
much
five
point:
nine,
nine,
three,
sorry
and
that
would
be
two
years
of
our
500,000
from
measure
J.
A
A
C
A
A
P
P
A
P
That's
why
they
can't
do
a
lot
of
grass
roots
trees,
because
they
don't
have
that
much
dirt,
because
it's
parking
structure
there.
But
if
you
look
over
it
on
the
front,
this
does
include
all
this
landscaping
and
all
the
building
and
waterfall
features
and
all
this
landscaping
that
goes
around
the
house.
P
L
J
I'm
just
kind
of
disappointed,
because
I
was
served
on
the
city's
water
conservation
task
force
Oh
a
couple
years
ago,
and
you
know
this
water
agency
and
just
we
had
to
shut
down
our
fountains
and
so
stopped
going
forward.
Our
representatives
on
this
commission
committee
think
about
sustainability
because
to
add
all
that
water
on
when
the
city
was
looking
before
to
shut
down
the
water
features
doesn't
really
make
sense
to
me.
It's
not
really
sustainable.
C
Two
weeks
ago,
less
than
I
got
to
meet
about
the
rental
fee
thing.
The
original
recommendations
came
from
the
city
based
off
of
a
an
equation
that
didn't
seem
to
quite
make
sense
and
was
applied
based
off
of
usage
and
everything
else,
whereas
we
were
looking
at
trying
to
stabilize
things
across
the
city,
making
them
equal
and
setting
a
base
rate,
basically
off
square
foot,
and
then
whether
programs
had
rooms
had
special
features
or
not,
which
should
be
an
upcharge
for
people
to
use
because
of
their
higher
maintenance
costs
and
higher
replacement
cost.
C
A
E
C
Vicki,
all
of
this
was
based
off
trying
to
find
a
rental
rate
that
would
be
similar
to
commercial
to
create
base
rates
kind
of
like
what
we
did
before.
So
the
commercial
rate
listed
under
here
is,
on
the
right
hand,
side
that
is
basically
the
base.
That's
if
you
were
to
try
to
rent
any
other
space
in
the
city
of
Palm
Springs,
not
from
the
city
of
Palm
Springs,
but
by
somebody
who
is
offering
it
privately.
It's
based
off
of
that
per
square
footage.
C
It's
five
times
the
general
commercial
rental
rate
divided
by
you
know
an
hourly
thing.
So
from
there
we
broke
it
down
into
giving
from
commercial
down
to
a
ten
percent
discount
to
non-residents
a
twenty
five
percent
discount
to
residents
and
a
fifty
percent
discount
to
nonprofits.
Now,
in
some
of
these
spaces
it
across
the
board,
it
makes
them
a
little
bit
more
expensive,
but
one
of
the
things
we
figured
out
while
we
were
doing
this
is
these
spaces
are
also
very
underutilized.
They
don't
get
advertised
sit.
C
Vicki
has
no
advertising
budget
really
to
put
this
out
there,
that
we
have
a
10,000
square
foot
pavilion.
That's
almost
a
ballroom
that
people
can
use
for
quinceaneras
and
high
school
graduations
high
school
proms.
These
are
all
spaces
that
could
be
utilized,
but
are
not
so
one
of
our
recommendations
is
definitely
get
the
word
out
about
them
more
and
make
sure
that
larger
organizations
here
in
town
know
that
these
are
available.
C
They
all
have
good
features.
We
created
a
base
rate
for
using
the
kitchens,
because
kitchens
require
more
cleaning.
All
the
deposits
are
based
off
the
you
know,
half
of
the
what
your
rental
rate
would
be,
so
you
have
a
place
to
start
currently
each
the
way
it's
set
up.
Currently
each
rate
doesn't
really
make
sense
for
how
big
the
space
is,
what
features
it
has,
whether
you
can
rent
it
with
alcohol
without
alcohol
for
three
hours
for
eight
hours.
That's
the
current
structure.
It
doesn't
make
a
lot
of
sense.
This
simplifies
it
a
great
deal.
C
C
If
you
want
to
do
alcohol,
your
party,
it's
just
gonna,
be
$300
flat
fee
over
the
top
again
kitchens
$250
flat
fee.
It
makes
sense
to
simplify
this
and
base
it
off
of
how
big
the
room
is.
Gymnasiums
get
rented
a
lot.
Well,
we've
got
to
gymnasium
floors
that
really
need
work
now.
One
of
them
definitely
needs
to
be
replaced
coming
up
and
that's
an
Vicki
price
of
a
gymnasium
floor.
84
thousand
I
think.
B
C
With
their
normal
use
of
what
they're
supposed
to
be
used
for,
basketball,
keep
games,
teams
and
everything
that's
great,
but
they
also
get
rented
and
people
damage
them
with
high
heels
and
all
kinds
of
stuff
so
spilling
stuff
on
it.
While
having
parties
and
everything
they
do
get
cleaned
up,
but
it
damages
the
floor.
This
would
help
to
alleviate
some
of
those
costs.
L
C
B
C
L
A
Think
what
we're
gonna
teach
the
city
is
that
parks
and
recs
is
not
in
a
100%
cost
recovery
in
any
place
in
the
country.
But
we
can
do
more
by
leveling
and
treating
people
equitably
across
the
board
and
and
the
other
piece
that
the
Trent
just
mentioned,
which
will
really
be
helpful,
is
if
you
fall
into
the
poverty
level.
It
doesn't
mean
that
you
can't
rent
a
facility
for
less
than
the
the
resident
right.
So
that's
gonna
kind
of
factor
on
to
this,
and
actually.
C
Like
using
the
kitchen,
but
it's
just
not
that
location
either
it's
across
the
board,
they
all
have
a
viability
to
make
more.
If
the
uses
stayed
exactly
the
same.
Definitely
if
it
drops
a
little
bit,
it
still
makes
more
money
than
they're
currently
making.
If
we
could
advertise
these
things,
I'd
be
a
lot
happier.
A
It's
amazing
I
actually
spoke
to
someone
who's
running
a
very,
very
large
event
at
the
convention
center
and
their
comment
was
they
had
to
use
the
caterer
which
really
hurt
their
profitability
and
I
said?
Would
you
have
considered
the
pavilion
and
they
said
well,
what
is
that?
And
they
said
it's
a
ten
thousand
square
foot
ballroom.
That's
within
the
city's
confines
and
he
said:
does
it
have
a
kitchen
and
I
said
yes
and
you
don't
have
to
do?
A
P
D
B
C
Was
mentioned,
and
that
was
one
of
the
things
so
like
the
leisure
center,
the
pavilion
and
James
a
Jessie
have
full
air
conditioning.
The
DeMuth
community
center
has
swamp
coolers
I'm,
hoping
that
if
some
of
these
spaces
that
DeMuth
get
rented
on
a
more
regular
basis
that
they
would
consider
adding
it,
because
it
is
something
that
seriously
needs
to
be
done.
I
think
it's
on
the
budget
somewhere.
B
C
C
L
B
L
B
L
C
C
So
there's
their
specific
and
in
general
they
run
at
a
general
throughout
the
regular
renting
hours
and
for
a
special
event
they
stay
on
longer,
but
in
general.
Yes,
it
stays
accounted
for
because
they
are
running,
especially
the
community
centers
themselves
because
of
their
long
hours.
It
covers
all
of
that
time,
but
the
pavilion
it's
got
the
highest
rent
to
rent
on
there
and
that's
one
of
the
reasons.
It's
got
a
lot
more
to
cover
it's
10,000
square
feet
yeah.
P
B
A
A
O
J
So
I'm,
hoping
next
month
in
our
agenda
that
sustainability
will
be
able
to
come
here.
We
had
some
commissioners
from
that
Commission
come
last
time
and
they
have
done
some
work
on
recycling
bins
in
our
parks
and
I
think
they
have
a
proposal
for
a
type
of
been
a
number
of
bins
and
they're
under
a
deadline
because
they
have
money
that
expires
and
in
June,
so
I
sent
Vicky
an
email
that
has
an
outline
of
the
drink
hands,
and
maybe
she
can
share
that
with
everyone
else.
So,
hopefully,
next
month,
he'll
come.
B
A
A
D
Got
it
episode?
I
would
like
to
add
that
on
the
agenda,
please
do
we
talked
about
that,
maybe
see
what
we
can
do
moving
forward
and
then
I.
You
know:
I
live
at
the
DeMuth
Park
area
and
so
I've
been
walking
and
taking
pictures
and
I
also
play
a
lot
of
pickleball,
and
when
that
group
found
out
I
was
on
this
commission
things
got
things,
got
a
little,
not
heated,
but
very
much
discussed.
D
There's
a
group
out
there
that
would
like
to
know
what
the
cost
would
be
to
make
both
of
those
make
that
whole
get
rid
of
the
tennis
courts,
move
them
over
to
the
Ruth
Hardy
part
and
make
that
just
a
pickleball
court
now
I'm
just
I'm
bringing
it
up
as
to
put
it
onto
the
agenda
for
next
time,
miss
absolutely
miss
reading
and
anything.
But
with
that
being
said,
I
I
think
on
a
personal
level.
I'll
be
a
kind
of
a
fun
thing.
So
if
we
could
put
down
on
the
agenda
degree,
I.
A
L
What
I'd
like
to
add
to
the
request
for
the
naming
of
the
ball
field
and
I
appreciate
the
family
coming
forward
in
making
that
request?
I
think
we
should
invite
Harriet
to
the
meeting.
If
it's
an
agenda
item
I,
don't
know
if
the
city
has
a
fort
has
formally
created
a
naming
protocol,
but
Harriet
has
mentioned
namings
a
few
times
and
so
I
it'd
be
great.
If
she
could
join
us,
so
we
could
get
as
much
information
at
that
meeting
as
possible.
A
B
So
a
couple
updates
the
I've
just
put
together
a
proposal
to
go
out
to
bid
for
this
management
operation
of
the
skate
park.
If
you
know
action
park,
alliances
agreement
actually
expires
on
April,
the
22nd
and
so
I
have
passed
on
the
basic
information
to
procurement,
with
the
intent
of
hopefully
by
midsummer
of
the
start
of
the
new
fiscal
year.
We
will
have
a
new
contract
or
contractor
or
existing
contract.
I,
don't
know
in
place
for
the
continued
maintenance
operation
of
the
skate
park.
B
B
The
way
that
the
bid
process
was
set
up
was
not
to
just
have
one
but
multiple
ones.
There
may
be
one
who
may
just
do
the
parks
and
one
may
do
the
assessment
districts
and
one
may
do
the
median
islands.
So
it's
not
just
one
company
doing
everything
in
the
city
and
before
Stacey
left.
She
let
me
know
that.
B
Apparently,
the
bids
were
probably
due
within
the
last
week
and
they've
extended
that
to
next
Thursday
for
the
receivable
of
the
bids
on
that-
and
my
last
item
is
coming
up
on
the
June
ballot,
we
have
a
park
bond
that
is
coming
forward
for
the
voters
of
the
state
of
California.
It's
got
properties
even
60.
It
was
initiated
by
Assemblyman
Eduardo
Garcia.
He
was
one
of
our
look
over
Assemblyman
and
in
its
years
past
the
city
has
benefited
from
these
park
bonds.
B
The
last
one
was
Proposition
40
and
we
got
about
three
hundred
thirty
thousand
dollars
from
the
state.
The
main
part
of
the
bond
issue
is
a
per
capita
so
based
on
our
population,
we
get
X
amount
of
dollars
and
also
there's
some
competitive
grants
as
part
of
that
as
well.
So
I'm
going
to
be
moving
forward
with
getting
information
out
there,
educating
the
public
on
Park
bond
and
hopefully
getting
the
council
to
support
it
as
well
so
I
didn't.
You
mentioned
the
workshops.
B
I
can
send
you
the
link
that
California,
Parks
and
Rec
is
very
obviously
that's.
One
of
their
main
things
is
to
provide
funding
for
parks
throughout
the
state
and
so
I'll
pass
along
to
use
the
link
that
just
came
back
from
the
state
of
what
we
can
do
to
support
this
and
how
we
can
educate
the
public
on
it.
So
so.