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From YouTube: Human Rights Commission | May 08, 2017
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A
B
C
B
A
C
A
D
C
B
D
A
F
A
F
D
This
is
a
time
where
we
set
up
wait
time
for
persons
who
wish
to
speak
on
a
topic
within
a
city's
jurisdiction
during
this
portion
of
the
agenda.
You
must
follow
speaker
part
with
the
site
dazon
before
that
portion
of
the
agenda
is
called
it's
three
minutes
per
speaker
and
although
the
Commission
values
your
comments,
pursuant
to
the
Brown
Act,
it
is
generally
cannot
take
any
action
on
items
not
listed
on
the
posted
agenda.
D
G
Thank
you
very
glad
to
be
here
this
afternoon.
My
name
is
Judy
deer
track,
and
it's
been
several
years
since
I've
been
here
and
that's
unfortunate,
because
you're,
a
very
important
committee
and
I
also
have
been
quite
busy.
The
last
four
years,
there's
reasons
where
I
haven't
had
a
chance
to
go
back
as
I
usually
do
and
go
through
the
subcommittees.
The
boards
and
commissions
of
the
city
I
am
running
now
for
City
Council
and
between
now
and
the
election
I
will
be
monitoring
the
agendas
and
the
activity
of
the
advisory
councils
very
closely.
G
But
I
also
want
to
explain
that
my
removal
from
doing
that
in
the
last
four
years
was
not
because
I
felt
you
were
any
less
important
because
it
was
not
running
for
office.
But
I
did
a
research
project
and
it
took
me
from
five
to
seven
thousand
hours
and
that
research
was
for
the
city.
It
was,
for
the
most
part,
almost
exclusively
introduced
to
the
city
of
illustrator's,
the
City
Planning
Department
and
the
City
Council
architectural
Advisory
Committee,
and
the
Planning
Commission
and
I
worked
with
a
group
of
people
called
people
for
proper
planning.
G
G
And
what
I
would
like
to
do
is
bring
the
findings
of
some
of
those
studies
back
into
the
groups
now
and
discuss
the
correlation
between
land-use
economic
incentives,
subsidies
and
programs
that
come
out
of
a
general
plan
and
what
types
of
opportunities
people
have,
and
the
other
thing
I
would
like
to
look
at
is:
is
there
racial
to
vis
there,
racial
discrimination?
Is
there
gender
discrimination?
Is
there
any
classification
discrimination
in
terms
of
where
money
goes?
G
A
A
My
name
is:
Tamika
puts
Rochelle
on
the
regional
manager
for
the
State
Council
on
developmental
disabilities.
It's
just
more
of
soliciting
your
assistance
recently.
As
we
know,
the
American
Health
Care
Act
has
passed
Congress
at
a
vote
up
to
17
to
213,
and
so
I
have
been
reaching
out
not
only
to
congressman
Ruiz's
office,
but
also
to
other
nonprofits
and
community
partners.
That
will
be
greatly
impacted,
mainly
our
older
population
and
people
with
disabilities.
So
we
are
collecting
stories
in
my
office.
A
A
D
A
set-aside
where
we
go
into
our
topics
that
we
that
we
chose
that
our
retreat
in
September,
we
actually
chose
three
broad
topics:
homelessness,
race
relations
and
now
we're
going
to
stop
and
because
we're
yeah
we're
stop
into
our
third
topic.
Last
but
not
least,
which
is
human
trafficking.
So
we
go
put
that
guest
speaker
and
all
that
Commissioner
set
and
wise.
Do
the
introduction
to
our
guest
speaker
today.
A
Wonderful
I
don't
think
this
is
on,
but
maybe
I
don't
even
need.
It
I
just
like
to
think
Kristen
Dolan
for
coming
out
today
to
speak
to
us
on
human
trafficking,
as
it
is
still
a
big
problem
that
we
have
and
we
have
not
been
able
to
get
a
handle
on
that.
So
Kristen
is
with
operation,
safe
house
and
I
just
like
to
introduce
your
come
up
to
the
microphone
and
give
us
her
presentation,
Thank
You,
Kristen,.
E
E
It's
a
song,
okay!
Well,
thank
you
for
having
me,
as
Deborah
said,
I'm
Kristen,
Dolan
I'm,
the
anti-human
trafficking
director
for
operation,
safe
house
and
safe
house
of
the
desert,
which
locally
is
located
in
Thousand
Palms
right
by
the
fire
station
off
of
Ramon
human
trafficking.
Is
such
a
diverse
topic
that
I
want
to
make
sure
that
everybody
is
on
the
same
page.
Our
audience
are
in
all
of
you,
so
there's
a
difference
between
smuggling
and
trafficking
right.
So
it's
smuggling!
E
You
have
somebody
who
is
paying
money
to
cross
the
border,
an
international
border,
it's
a
crime
against
a
country
plus
when
you
come
here
if
you're
coming
from
Mexico
into
the
United
States
you're
free
to
go
from
the
person
who
brought
you
here
once
they
do
so
and
then
finally
you're
agreeing
to
this,
you
have
consent.
You
know
fully.
What's
involved,
you're
approving
of
the
whole
process
and
accepting
the
consequences
if
you're
caught
trafficking
is
a
bit
different
trafficking
crime
against
a
person
and
while
movement
is
suggested,
trafficking,
I,
hope,
I
wish.
E
We
had
like
a
different
name
for
it,
because
trafficking
always
suggests
that
there's
so
much
movement
and
there
is,
but
there
doesn't
have
to
be-
you
can
be
trafficked
by
your
parent
in
your
home,
never
having
left
and
it's
still
considered
human
trafficking.
Also,
there's
no
implied
exit
so
as
in
smuggling,
where
you're
leaving
that
person
there's
really
a
couple
different
reasons
why
you're
not
leaving
and
a
lot
of
them
are
psychological,
because
it's
such
a
crime
of
psychological
manipulation,
so
a
smuggling
case
can
become
a
trafficking
case.
E
So
if
you
are,
if
you
pay
somebody
ten
thousand
dollars
to
cross
the
border
from
Mexico
into
the
United
States,
and
then
when
you
get
here
that
person
says
to
you
now,
you
owe
me
an
additional
ten
thousand
dollars
for
fees
transportation,
whatever
you're
going
to
work
that
off
either
through
labor
or
sex.
Now
we
have
a
trafficking
case,
and
so,
when
we
are
looking
at,
is
this
person
a
victim
of
human
trafficking?
We
look
at
something
called
the
amp
model.
We
need
an
action,
a
means
and
a
purpose.
E
So
with
the
action
there
needs
to
be
a
transporting
harboring
and
obtaining
or
any
attempts
to
do
so
for
the
purposes
of
our
excuse
me
by
means
of
force,
fraud
or
coercion,
so,
whether
you're
that
person
is
violently
being
forced
to
do
something
whether
they
thought
they
were
coming
to
do
a
job
in
a
restaurant
for
normal
day's
work,
normal
days
pay,
and
then
it
turned
out
to
be
working
all
sorts
of
hours,
not
getting
paid
very
much
sleeping,
very
little
or
coercion.
We've
had
it
numerous
times
where
a
trafficker
has
said
to
their
victim.
E
If
you
don't
do
this
I'm
going
to
go
after
your
family
and
then
for
the
purpose
of
commercial
sexual
acts
or
labor,
if
it's
a
child,
if
it's
somebody
under
the
age
of
18,
we
call
them
CSEC
commercially
sexually
exploited
child
and
for
them
we
need
the
action
and
for
where
it
says
any
attempts
to
do
so
so
either
obtaining
them
transporting
them
the
any
attempts
to
do
so.
If
you
so
much
as
ask
a
child,
if
they
would
like
to
have
sex
for
money,
you
can
be
prosecuted
as
Ella
Berto
Jacobo
found
out.
E
He
was
just
convicted
on
over
62
felony
counts,
including
human
trafficking
for
soliciting
minors
and
and
adults
on
Facebook.
He
used
Facebook
for
his
entire
means,
but
with
children
we
don't
need
force
fraud
or
coercion,
because
children
can't
consent
to
sex
or
labor.
So
we
don't
need
that,
but
again
the
purpose
of
commercial
sexual
acts
labor
or
or
debt
bondage.
So
when
we
look
in
Riverside
County
at
what
are
we
seeing
most,
are
we
seeing
labor
trafficking
or
are
we
seeing
sex
trafficking?
E
What
we
are
seeing
as
a
task
force
is
sex
trafficking
of
minors
who
are
female.
We
know
there's
labor
trafficking.
We
know
that
there
are
males
doing
this.
We
know
that
there
are
our
adults
who
aren't
being
found
at
the
moment,
but
the
majority
of
the
cases
that
we're
taking
in
are
the
females
who
are
minors
who
are
being
sex
trafficked
and
most
of
them
are
domestic,
so
I
get
that
question
a
lot.
E
Well,
you
know:
are
they
all
girls
from
Mexico
or
and
they're,
not
they're
from
within
the
Coachella
Valley
within
Hemet
within
Riverside,
and
while
I
said
there
doesn't
need
to
be
movement
in
trafficking?
There
is
a
lot
of
it
in
Southern
California
because
it's
so
easy
to
hop
on
the
ten
and
be
out-of-state
or
link
up
in
LA
and
be
up
north.
So
it's
very
easy
to
move
a
girl
or
a
guy
all
throughout
Riverside
County.
So
we
are
seeing
a
lot
of
it.
E
A
lot
of
people
then
also
ask
well
how
they
get
involved,
and
one
of
the
myths
that
I
want
to
dispel
is
that
it's
an
us-versus-them.
So
whenever
I
talk
to
people
and
I
can
see
it
in
their
eyes
like
that
would
never
be
my
child.
That
wouldn't
happen
to
me.
I
wouldn't
have
done
that
and
I
hear
I
I've
heard
people
say
with
domestic
violence.
E
E
It
can
happen
that
way
what
we're
mainly
seeing
in
Riverside
County
is
the
Casanova
or
the
Romeo
pimp,
and
this
guy
looks
like
a
boyfriend.
This
guy
is
promising
all
sorts
of
things
you
know
dinner's
out
and
dinners
out,
aren't
Mastro's.
It's
McDonald's,
you
know
so
they're
not
really
like
the,
but
the
kids
feel
special.
It
feels
like
somebody's
paying
attention
to
them,
and
so,
when
we're
looking
at
the
types
of
victims
that
fall
prey
to
this
so
easily
we're
really
looking
for
vulnerabilities.
What
is
that
child
missing
in
their
life
that
this
trafficker?
E
E
So
how
do
you
tell
a
14
year
old
girl
who
most
likely
has
a
history
of
sexual
abuse
in
her
past
that
this
guy
who's
promising
her
love
protection,
affection
that
this
isn't
the
guy
for
you
and
he
does
everything
he
says
he's
going
to
do
so.
He's
built
trust
with
them.
It's
a
twisted
trust,
but
through
trauma
bonds
through
the
rape
shillin
door
through
the
beatings
at
shilling
door.
She
comes
to
realize
she
comes
to
find
herself
at
fault
for
all
of
what
has
happened.
Of
course,
he
beat
me.
I
didn't
meet
my
quota.
E
Of
course
he
didn't
feed
me.
I
didn't
make
us
enough
money
for
tonight.
What
was
he
supposed
to
do?
Let
that
slide?
These
are
things
we've
actually
heard
from
our
victims.
One
girl
even
said
because
she
had
been
basically
held
hostage
within
the
Coachella
Valley.
We
had
to
use
law
enforcement
to
go
in
and
find
her.
E
That
was
it,
that's
all
it
took
and
she
was
hooked
on
him.
She
loved
the
fact
that
somebody
every
day
cared
enough
to
say
good
morning
and
he
was
also
the
guy
who
was
brutally
torturing
her
and
selling
her
I've
seen
it
with
parents.
A
lot
of
the
gangs
are
getting
involved
now
in
human
trafficking
and
when
they
do
sometimes
the
parents
are
already
involved
in
that
gang.
So
we
had
an
instance
where
a
girl,
her
parents,
both
of
them
her
dad,
was
an
OG
within
the
I
believe
was
the
Bloods.
E
Her
mom
had
been
with
him
for
a
very
long
time.
The
dad
had
pimped
the
mom
for
years.
The
daughter
saw
this.
The
daughter
was
pimped
by
the
mom
from
a
very
early
age,
and
this
is
what
she
saw
for
herself.
This
made
sense
to
her
because
it
was
in
her
community.
It
was
normal
for
her,
so
kids,
who
were
being
raised
around
game
culture
who
get
involved
in
gang
culture
as
a
young
person.
They
don't
know
any
better.
E
They
literally
don't
know
any
better,
because
this
is
what
their
world
has
looked
like
for
so
long
and
when
I
talked
to
this
girl
because
she
was
about
to
turn
18
and
leave
us
and
I
said,
let's
put
you
in
witness
protection.
Let's
get
you
out
of
this.
You
don't
have
to
go
back
because
she
said
she
had
to
go
back
and
put
in
work
and
I
asked
what
that
meant,
and
it
meant
that
she
needed
to
go
back
and
steal
turn
tricks
whatever.
A
E
If
she
did
not
come
back,
it
would
kill
her
mother
and
make
it
look
like
her
father
did
it
so
the
people
who
sold
her
to
other
people
from
a
very
young
age
she
still
wanted
to
protect,
and
that's
what
we're
looking
at
when
we're
trying
to
convince
these
girls
that
what
has
happened
to
them
was
manipulation
that
it
was
forced
that
they
didn't
choose
this
as
much
as
they
think
they
did,
and
we
hear
our
victims
say:
I
chose
this.
I
was
the
one
that
told
him
where
I
was
going.
E
I
was
the
one
that
was
in
control
of
him.
He
wasn't
in
control
of
me,
except
we
know
it
that
he
was
and
as
a
society.
When
we
look
at
it,
we
people
will
say
that
they
want
to
help
our
victims,
but
they
want
to
help
our
victims
once
we've
identified
them,
but
if
they
see
them
outside
and
about,
they
might
think
differently
of
them,
and
so
I'll
show
you
if
you
have
a
35
year
old,
high
school
male
teacher
and
he
sleeps
with
a
14
year
old,
female,
his
student.
E
E
Figure
she
wasn't
old
enough
now,
I
want
you
to
take
them
out
of
school
and
I.
Want
you
to
put
those
same.
Two
people
on
the
street
and
I
want
you
to
see
that
35
year-old
male
pay
that
14
year
old
girl
for
sex,
historically
speaking
before
January
1st,
who
would
have
been
charged
with
something
criminally.
Oh.
A
E
The
only
difference
is
that
money
exchanged
hands
and
we
look
at
that
money
right.
We
look
at
that
money
and
we
say
that
has
some
kind
of
intelligence
that,
because
she
knew
what
it
was,
she
must
know
what
she's
doing
she
probably
wanted
a
new
Kate
Spade
purse.
She
probably
wanted
whatever
she's
a
child
making
adult
decisions.
She
knew
what
was
happening.
How
disgusting?
How
shameful
that's
our
victim,
though
that
girl
is
no
more
intelligent
out
on
that
street
than
she
was
in
school.
E
Her
brain
is
no
more
developed
than
it
was
when
she
was
in
that
classroom
and
yet
in
the
classroom
we
protect
her
fully
and
we
don't
blame
her.
So
with
the
passing
of
SB
1322,
which
happened
on
January
1st
California
became
one
of
the
first
states,
I
think
its
first
date,
but
I.
Don't
don't
quote
me
on
that
to
decriminalize
children
from
prostitution,
so
the
big
headline
was
that
California,
just
legalized
child
prostitution,
and
so
everybody
was
up
in
arms.
E
What
is
California
doing
now,
but
the
goal-
and
the
aim
of
that
was
to
stop
law
enforcement
from
being
able
to
arrest
children
on
a
crime
of
prostitution,
which
they're
not
allowed
to
do
now.
It's
great
on
one
hand
on
one
hand,
it
allows
for
us
to
find
the
children
resources
much
quicker
than
we
would
have
been
able
to
before.
E
So
it's
not
a
perfect
bill
by
any
means,
but
it's
a
step
towards
not
revoked
amaizing.
These
children,
who
have
previously
been
criminalized,
have
been
previously
told
that
it
is
their
fault.
So
when
they
come
to
us
and
say
it's
not
my
fault,
they've
probably
never
heard
before
or
when
they
say
it
is
their
fault.
E
They've
probably
never
heard
never
heard
before
that
they
didn't
agree
to
it,
that
they
were
manipulated,
I
mean
think
the
last
time
somebody
tried
to
tell
you
that
someone
pulled
the
wool
over
your
eyes
on
something
we
don't
like
to
admit
that
will
go
really
far,
not
to
admit
that
more
adults.
So
we
have
these
kids
who
they
don't
know
any
better.
Yet
they
don't
understand
that
that
guy
didn't
love
them.
They
don't
understand
that
we're
trying
to
help
them
and
they're
not
comfortable
with
it
either.
E
They
were
going
to
do,
and
so
when
we
come
in
and
we're
not
asking
them
to
meet
a
quota,
we're
asking
them
to
do
the
dishes
and
we're
giving
them
a
place
to
stay
and
we're
not
asking
for
anything
from
them
other
than
and
that
they
behave,
but
they
stay
with
us
that
they
work
their
programs.
They
don't
know
how
to
react
to
that.
It
doesn't
feel
right,
it
doesn't
feel
normal
anymore,
and
so
it
freaks
them
out
and
so
a
lot
of
times
they
run.
E
Luckily,
because
of
the
work
that
we
do,
they
come
back
to
us
and
that's
not
always
the
case
with
a
lot
of
places
so
not
to
toot
our
own
horn
on
this,
but
I
think
we're
doing
something
right,
I
think
we're
starting
to
get
the
idea
of
how
to
handle
how
to
handle
these
kids,
how
to
handle
our
victims.
Now,
when
we
look
at
it
on
the
larger
scope
of
Riverside
County
operation,
safe
house
is
the
co-founder
of
the
Riverside
County
anti
human
trafficking
task
force.
E
E
It's
taking
a
lot
of
awareness,
I
think
that
that's
the
first
place
to
start,
because
once
we
get
more
eyes
on
it,
once
we
have
people
who
can
identify
who
these
children
are
and
these
adults,
because
it's
happening
to
the
adults
and
if
we
think
about
so
the
average
age
of
getting
involved,
is
12
12
years
old.
If
you
see
that
person
6
years
later
as
an
18
year
old
they've
been
involved
in
this
industry
for
six
years.
E
E
So
when
we
see
them
at
18
they're,
not
all
that
advanced
then
either
just
because
they've
turned
18
and
became
an
adult
doesn't
mean
that
all
of
a
sudden
they
were
downloaded
all
the
information
of
the
world
of
what
they
could
do
or
the
possibilities
open
to
them.
So,
even
when
we
see
adults,
that's
happening
too,
we
need
to
realize
that
they
were
most
likely
once
children
who
it
was
happening
to
and
when
we're
starting
to
hear
more
stories.
E
There
was
a
story
in
Palm
Desert
last
year
of
three
people
being
arrested
for
trafficking,
a
fifteen-year-old,
and
that's
only
one
of
the
cases
that
we've
had
out
here
when
we
start
to
hear
that
I'm,
even
starting
to
work
with
the
media
on
the
language
surrounding
things.
There
was
a
there's,
a
story
recently
done
about
a
man
in
Blythe
who
coerced
a
girl
into
his
car,
and
she
was
16
and
the
media
called
her.
A
prostitute
and
I
was
freaking
out
at
home.
They
don't
know
they
don't
know
what
to
call
her.
E
They
don't
know
that
she's
a
victim.
They
don't
know
that
this
isn't
something
that
she
chose
and
so
I'm
working
with
the
media
to
try
to
figure
out
how
do
we?
How
do
we
shape
the
conversation?
How
do
we
work
on
the
language?
There
was
even
a
story.
I
believe
it
was
last
year
could
have
been
two
years
ago.
E
Kay
esq
did
the
story
and
it
was
about
the
escort
license
that
Palm
Springs
has
available
not
for
sex,
it's
just
for
companionship,
but
you
do
need
to
get
an
STD
test
and
medical
clearance
to
obtain
it.
Apparently
only
one
person
has
done
that
so
far
and
they
interviewed
a
man
who
said
that
this
was
bad
for
his
business,
that
if
he
was
going
to
have
to
get
a
license
to
do
all
this,
it
was
going
to
cut
into
his
bottom
line
and
I.
Remember
thinking
they
just
interviewed
a
pimp.
E
They
just
put
a
pimp
on
the
air,
and
so
I
talked
to
the
reporter
and
I
was
like.
Do
you
know
that
you
just
had
a
pimp
on
the
air?
You
gave
him
airtime
to
complain
about
his
business
and
he
was
like
yeah.
He
was
very
clear
about
what
he
was
doing
and
I
was
like
I
know
we're
trying
to
see
like
all
sides
of
a
story,
but
I
feel
like
giving
a
pimp.
Airtime
is
probably
something
we
could
hold
back
on
so
with
the
Riverside
County
anti
human
trafficking
task
force.
E
We
have
our
law
enforcement
partners
that
we
work
with
the
FBI
Homeland
Security.
We
work
with
all
major
departments,
anything
we
need
in
order
to
get
a
case
prosecuted
or
to
even
just
get
a
pimp
arrested.
We
are
the
service
provider,
the
victim
service
provider.
So
what
we
do
is
provide
intensive
case
management,
victim
advocacy,
any
kind
of
shelter
or
housing
that
they
might
need.
We
find
it
any
mental
health
services,
medical
dental.
E
We
refer
out
for
those,
we
do
translation
services.
So
if
we
come
upon
somebody
that
does
not
speak
Spanish,
then
we
are
able
to
work
with
a
translation
service
to
get
them
the
person
that
they
need.
So
we
can
communicate.
We
also
do
immigration
and
legal
services.
Well,
we
don't
do
it.
We
refer
out
for
it,
basically,
whatever
they
need
we're
getting
them
in
touch
with
those
resources.
My
case
managers
have
even
gone
to
college
campuses
on
tours
with
some
of
our
victims,
just
so
they
had
somebody
there
to
guide
them.
E
We
have
a
lot
of
community
partners
that
we
work
with
all
throughout
Riverside
County
that
allow
us
to
provide
the
resources
that
we
have
and
do
what
we
do.
So
it
takes
a
lot
of
moving
parts
to
accomplish
all
this.
Now,
how
would
if
you
were
going
to
see
a
victim
in
Riverside
County
or
in
the
Coachella
Valley?
What
would
that
look
like
you
have
a
card
with
you,
a
4x6
card
that
has
some
of
the
identifiers
x'
on
the
back
of
it.
So
you'll
want
to
start
looking
for
evidence
of
someone
being
controlled.
E
You
want
to
look
for
somebody
with
new
tattoos
and,
if
it's
a
child
of
yours
or
if
it's
just
somebody
that
you
interact
with
a
lot
and
you
notice
that
they
all
of
a
sudden
have
a
new
tattoo
or
scarring
or
cigarette
burns
or
something
you
want
to
start
asking
a
couple,
questions
where'd
you
get
that
tattoo.
What
does
it
mean
because
the
pimps
will
brand
their
victims?
They
will
permanently
brand
them
so
that
they
know
who
they
belong
to.
E
Where
did
you
get
that
if
a
child
has
separation
anxiety
from
their
cell
phone,
normal
separation
anxiety
is
fine,
we
I
mean
I,
get
a
little
nervous
when
I
don't
know
where
my
phone
is,
but
if
somebody
is
freaking
out
over
the
fact
that
their
cell
phone
has
been
removed,
you
might
want
to
do
a
little
investigating.
Why
is
that
who's,
calling
that
you're
so
worried
about?
E
Because
these
pimps
will
check
in
with
them
and
they
want
to
know
where
they
are
and
what
they're
doing
and
when
they'll
see
and
all
of
it,
no
knowledge
of
the
local
community?
So
if
there
was
if
there
was
a
child,
so
a
lot
of
what
we
see
with
children
and
labor
trafficking
and
not
all
kids
doing,
this
are
being
labor
traffic,
but
some
of
them
selling
candy
bars
see
those
kids
out
there.
You
know
it's
a
hundred
degrees.
There
doesn't
seem
to
be
another
adult
around
and
you
can.
E
Those
are
the
easiest
ones
to
ask
questions
with.
So
you
want
to
find
out.
You
know.
Well,
why
are
you
selling
this
who's,
the
what's
the
mascot
for
Palm
Springs,
high
school
Indians?
So
let's
say
the
kid
said:
oh
well,
I'm
doing
this
for
a
fundraiser
at
Palm,
Springs,
High
School
and
you
say:
oh,
you
guys
are
the
bears
right
and
they
go
yeah.
E
No,
not
you
know
they're
the
Indians
so
anywhere
you
can
test
knowledge
of
local
community
without
being
about
being
too
conspicuous
just
figure
that
out
and
then
you
want
to
call
the
National
Human
Trafficking
Resource
hotline,
which
is
on
that
card.
Also,
it's
triple
eight
thirty,
seven,
thirty,
seven
triple
eight!
So
if
you
ever
see,
somebody
that
you
even
remotely
suspect
could
be
a
victim
give
that
number
a
call.
E
If
it's
somebody
closer
to
you
that
you
know,
then
you
can
call
us
at
safe
house
and
make
a
referral
and
we
can
start
the
process
of
working
with
them.
Our
programs,
all
of
them
at
safe
house,
are
voluntary.
So
if
somebody
decides
that
they
don't
want
to
be
there
or
work
with
us
anymore,
they
don't
have
to
there
aren't
any
lockdown
facilities
within
California,
so
we
can't
just
keep
them
there
as
far
as
safe
house
on
the
whole
I'll.
Just
give
you
a
brief
overview
of
our
programs.
E
We
have
our
emergency
shelter
for
11
to
17
year
olds
we
have
Harrison
house,
which
is
our
transitional
living
program
for
youth
ages,
18
to
22.
It's
an
18-month
program
for
chronically
homeless
youth.
We
have
a
school
on
each
campus.
That
school
allows
the
emergency,
shelter
children
who
are
11
17
to
be
able
to
continue
learning
while
they're
in
there,
while
they're
in
with
us
for
our
three-week
program.
We
have
a
mental
health
unit
that
works
in
the
schools
to
provide
stress
in
your
mood,
which
is
up
to
20
sessions
of
free
therapy.
E
We
have
cup
of
happy
which
is
working
to
reduce
mental
health
stigmas,
and
we
have
trying
to
thank
you.
We
had
another
program,
we
have
cbits
in
Riverside
and
then
one
of
the
things
that
we
have
out
here
in
the
Coachella
Valley
that
we
do
not
have
in
Riverside
is
our
group
home
for
girls
who
have
been
sex,
trafficked
age
ages,
14
to
17
its
bed
facility,
and
it's
usually
full
so
our
case
managers
at
any
one
time
have
and
I
have
four
of
them:
three
full-time
one
part-time.
E
They
are
handling
15
to
20
cases
apiece
on
per
month
and
our
law
enforcement
partners.
There
are
four
investigators
and
each
of
them
is
handling
40
to
50
cases
a
month.
So
it
is
something
that's
happening
in
Riverside
County.
It
is
happening
here
in
the
Coachella
Valley
and
I
really
appreciate
that.
You've
allowed
me
the
time
to
talk
about
this
today
and
if
you
have
any
questions,
I
love
to
answer
them.
D
I'll
open
it
up
to
thank
you
first
and
foremost
for
coming.
Thank
you
I
believe
Tameka.
You
was
instrumental
in
securing
a
guest
with
Deborah,
no
sudden
one.
So
thank
you
very
much
again.
We
tackled
some
deep
subjects
this
year,
and
this
is
not
an
easy
one.
I
mean
stomach
was
just
kind
of
nuts
over
here,
so
I'm
going
to
open
it
up
to
any
questions
that
any
or
commissioners
know
yeah.
Okay,.
C
C
E
Don't
have
an
outreach
team
out
here,
so
unfortunately,
we
rely
a
lot
on
the
community
to
be
able
to
spot
it
and
call
it
in
and
in
fact,
knowing
that
and
knowing
that,
while
I
have
one
case
manager
out
here
in
the
desert
and
she's
able
to
do
presentations
and
create
awareness,
I'm,
usually
the
other
person
who's
going
out
and
doing
it,
and
so
I
have
a
lot
of
ground
to
cover.
I
we
just
trained
three
volunteers
to
be
able
to
go
out
and
do
presentations
as
well.
E
So
hopefully
with
that
with
the
addition
of
three
other
bodies,
we'll
be
able
to
cover
a
lot
more
here
in
the
Coachella
Valley
get
a
lot
more
eyes
on
it
and
therefore
get
more
reports
in
so
that
we're
able
to
help
them,
because
once
you
call
the
human
trafficking
hotline
that
triple
eight
number,
they
will
take
down
the
information
that
you
have
and
then
a
lot
of
times.
They'll
ask
you
to
call
local
law
enforcement
on
the
non-emergency
number
and
just
report.
E
E
Funding
a
lot
of
it
is
federal,
so
we
receive
money
from
the
office
of
victims
of
crime
and
that
we
actually
received
a
grant
in
2015.
That
was
only
given
to
16
task
forces
throughout
the
country,
and
our
task
force
was
one
of
them,
so
we'll
be
reapplying
soon
and
hopefully
we'll
receive
it
again,
but
the
competition's
becoming
pretty
fierce
out
there,
and
so
our
funding
is
from
there.
E
We
also
have
California
Office
of
Emergency
Service
funding
that
allows
us
to
have
one
clinician
and
human
trafficking
specialist
within
each
of
our
emergency
shelters
and
because
of
that,
we're
actually
becoming
our
highest
refer,
because
we're
finding
that
the
kids
that
are
coming
into
the
emergency
shelter
if
they
haven't
already
been
involved
in
human
trafficking.
They
at
least
know
somebody
who
is
or
they're
at
very
high
risk
for
it.
So
we're
able
to
catch
it
a
lot
quicker.
We
also
have
some
private
funding
from
fundraisers
and
foundations.
H
E
H
H
E
A
E
A
E
H
So
we
look
at
what
operations
safehouse
does
so
providing
this
housing
in
these
three
separate
environments.
What
I'm
trying
to
find
the
additional
link
into
the
sex
trafficking
side
of
things
in
your
work
out
into
the
community,
in
addition
to
the
shelter
that
is
provided,
is?
Is
there
staffing
on
within
your
team?
That's
funded
specifically
for
this
community
outreach
to
raise
awareness
and
the
education
to
help
identify
victims
and
and
put
them
in
touch
with
resources.
I'm
trying
to
draw
a
connection
with
safe,
operational,
safe
house.
How.
E
E
So
we
do
community
outreach
that
way
we
do
community
outreach
by
being
invited
to
or
inviting
ourselves
into
different
schools
resource
groups,
letting
people
know
that
we
exist
letting
people
know
what
kind
of
services
we
provide.
We
do
days
of
action,
which
is
in
accordance
with
SB
1193,
which
mandated
that
certain
businesses
are
supposed
to
have
a
poster
with
information
about
human
trafficking
and
who
to
call
if
they
see
it
happening.
E
The
hard
part
about
that
is
that
we
can
put
up
a
poster
and
the
fee
for
for
not
complying
is
five
hundred
dollars
the
first
time
and
a
thousand
dollars
the
second
time.
But
the
problem
is,
is
that
we
don't
have
enough
people
to
enforce
that,
and
even
if
they
do
to
go
after
somebody
for
five
hundred
dollars,
it
usually
costs
more
than
five
hundred
dollars.
So
not
a
lot
of
places
are
going
after
them,
so
it's
kind
of
a
vicious
cycle
of
even
sometimes
the
things
that
we
are
doing.
That
need
to
be
done.
E
My
problem
with
the
posters
has
always
been
because
I
had
a
friend
of
mine
who
runs
a
he
runs
restaurant
and
anyone
with
a
general
liquor
license
is
supposed
to
have
this
poster
displayed
prominently
within
their
their
place
of
business
and
the
pushback
I
always
get
is
well.
That's
a
buzzkill
I'm
not
putting
up
a
human
trafficking
poster
because
people
are
in
here
to
forget
their
worries,
and
my
response
is
always
most
people
don't
even
know
what's
happening
here
and
what
we
don't
know
about.
E
E
H
E
E
So
I'm
really
excited
about
that.
I'm
really
excited
about
anytime
I
can
reach
a
large
amount
of
people,
because
that
means
it's
one.
Less
tiny
portion
or
I
do
face
book
lives
every
Tuesday
on
our
Facebook
pages,
talking
about
different
human
trafficking
points
so
trying
to
not
need
to
be
in
person
for
somebody
to
hear
about
it
or
for
somebody
to
understand
human
trafficking.
E
So
it's
outreach
is
such
a
huge
part
of
what
we
need
to
increase
our
our
hours
in,
but
of
my
staff
of
nine
three
of
them
three
and
a
half
of
them
or
my
case
managers.
The
other
ones
are,
four
of
them
are
in
the
shelter
and
then
I
have
Marketing
Manager.
So
we
don't
have
a
whole
lot
of
room
to
create
another
team.
That
would
then
go
out
and
do
more.
E
H
H
E
A
A
D
C
A
D
Opposed
minutes
buuut
now
we
go
to
items
9a
and
SR
2017
2018
rollover
budget.
There
was
a
I
actually
brought
that
up
last
meeting
about
for
you
guys
to
start.
You
know
thinking
about
what
you
might
want
for
your
budget
for
this
year
going
into
next
year,
because
I
know
commissioners
Rollo
brought
up
a
good
thing
about
media
information,
or
you
know
promotional
items
and
stuff
like
that.
However,
so
Dale
was
kind
to
already
email.
You
guys
and
you
see,
that
the
budget
is
there
for
you,
previous
years
of
$2,000.
D
D
F
A
A
C
A
A
D
A
D
A
A
D
H
So
I
think
we
can
task
that
to
Dale
if
you
might
be
able
to
find
a
backup
in
case
there
is
an
open
seat
at
the
last
minute,
but
I'll
be
as
I've
shared
before
I'll
have
a
char
a
will
receive
information
on
her
spoken
portion
of
the
program
which
is
going
to
be
nice
to
have
her
up
there
and
we'll
also
introduce
her
to
the
woman
she's
going
to
be
at
the
podium
with
and
she's,
introducing
all
the
elected
officials
and
allies
throughout
all
of
Coachella
Valley.
So
good
experience
for
her.
H
C
A
B
B
Can
we,
since
it
looks
like
we
might
have
some
money
left
over,
because
at
this
point
I
don't
know
if
we're
going
to
be
able
to
move
forward
any
more
promotional
materials
other
than
just
the
business
cards?
Are
we
allowed
to
move
money
to
move
money
within
the
budget
within
the
$2,000
from
line
item
too
long.
F
B
B
Good,
so
my
thought
was
that,
if,
if
we
can
get
an
idea
of
how
much
the
business
cards
will
cost,
if
we
can
at
our
next
meeting,
take
this
up
again
and
maybe
move
the
balance
of
whatever
we
have
since
we
have
to
have.
It
have
to
have
this,
then,
by
the
end
of
June,
move
the
balance
to
sponsorship
and
maybe
through
and
maybe
sponsor
sponsor
something
else
so
that
we
actually
use
the
money
or
and/or
sponsor
and
organization
that
that
we
would
like
that.
B
D
D
D
We
had
the
ending
piece
which
is
going
to
be
the
advocate
piece,
and
so
what
that
was
is
a
we
were
actually
so.
The
subcommittee
wants
to
suggest
that
Commission
again
proposed
for
Lawrence
Crosley,
well,
Crosley
Road,
/
Golf
Club
row
will
be
changed
to
Lawrence
Crosley
Road
I
spoke
at
a
meeting
with
Trey
Daniels
on
Friday,
who
actually
initiated
this
whole
name
change
and
it
started
back
in
2014.
D
It
went
in
front
of
the
Planning
Commission
got
an
analyst
approval
from
the
Planning
Commission
and
then
it
goes
in
front
of
council
council
approves
it
and
then
at
the
time
elapsed
and
then
so
they
started
the
process
again.
Well,
it's
back
there
again,
so
he
had
a
suggestion
of
to
just
started
over
again
with
a
petition
endorsed
by
various
Commission's
and
organizations
and
start
from
scratch
versus
going
back
and
asking
the
council
to
open
it
again
and
then,
and
then
that
way
you
have
the
petition.
D
F
D
F
This
question
was
the
process
in
which
the
name
change
or
a
designation
of
a
street
name
occurs.
I,
don't
believe
it's
within
the
preview
of
the
Human
Rights
Commission
I,
believe
it's
more
at
the
direction
of
Planning
Commission,
as
well
as
involvement
with
engine
city,
engineering
and
streets.
So
there
is
a
formal
process,
but
in
terms
of
what
what
is
the
actual
responsibilities
that
our
Commission
may
have
I
would
have
to
seek
clarification.
It
may
be
more
appropriate
that
the
Planning
Commission
are
even
a
formal
letter
to
the
new
city.
A
F
F
D
D
D
And
he's
doing
a
speech
today,
Sacramento
yeah,
for
so
that's
one
of
nine
escalators,
yeah
and
Commissioner
hunts.
Not
here
preparation,
I
think
we're
great
done.
Anyway.
Social
media
Dale
gave
us
a
update
about
web
page,
so
woohoo,
let's
go
hit
it,
so
we
can
have
about
10
hits
on
that
web
page
and
no
student
representatives
today.
So
anyone
with
type
of
cool
newsworthy
items.
D
A
D
F
Can't
resist
I
did
circulate.
The
Commission
was
a
receipt
of
a
request
to
participate
in
a
statewide
survey
of
the
California
Association
of
human
rights
organizations,
they're
trying
to
outreach
and
see
what
type
of
resources
that
they
can
possibly
provide
to
our
human
rights
organizations,
city
commissions
and
an
offer.
The
possibility
of
student
internship.
If
there
was
a
project
in
which
the
Commission
and
we'll
be
getting
more
information
about
that.
B
Might
wanted
we
might
want
to
investigate
with
the
benefits
of
belonging
to
this
organization
and
see
what
they
are
and
that
way
when
we
formulate
the
budget
for
next
year.
If
we
find
that,
that's
something
that
you
know
beneficial
to
our
Commission
and
the
community
that
that
we
might
want
to
consider
doing
that.
I
definitely
think
it's.
A
F
It
was
an
online
monkey
survey,
so
it
was
very
minimal,
so
I
went
ahead
and
completed
it,
but
they
assured
us
that
they
would
be
being
in
contact
with
us
to
see
if
we
would
have
any
special
projects
or
would
be
interested
in
an
internship
with
a
college
duty.
If
you're
aware
of
other
organizations
that
potentially
that
we
could
be
involved
in
or
join
with,
yes,
q.
B
D
Okay,
so
agenda
items
for
next
of
HRC
meeting
I
have
a
couple
actually,
along
with
the
election
of
the
chair.
You
there's
some
probably
position,
there's
Deborah
and
I.
If
she's
no
longer
be
here,
you
guys
need
to
think
of
a
replacement
for
the
PS
PD
LGBT
Outreach
Committee.
We
usually
have
two.
We
have
three
now
so
really
you
only
brought
well,
everyone
chooses
to
stay
a
part
of
it.
It
actually
goes.
You
know
you
have
an
option
yeah.
F
Currently,
right
now
there
are
three
vacancies
on
the
Commission,
the
two
that
are
terming
out
yourself
and
was,
and
then
the
vacancy
that
was
left
with
Suzanne
that
had
not
been
filled
during
the
midterm.
So
council
subcommittee
will
be
interviewing
candidates
for
three
vacancies
that
are
currently
on
there
by
the
city
code.
F
F
So
that's
up
to
you
I
think
that
it
may
be
to
the
stronger
advantage
of
selecting
those
who
have
already
seated
and
are
familiar
with
the
ardent
organization
of
the
Commission
in
the
tasks
of
the
Commission
new
individuals
coming
on
they're
not
going
to
have
that
familiarize,
ation
and
foundation,
so
I
would
just
think
you
could
be
able
to
move
forward.
But
it
is
the
three
now
in
terms
of
outside
organizations
that
are
the
Human
Rights
Commission
participates,
or
has
a
seat
I'm
not
familiar
with
all
those.
So
we
would
want
to
notify
bigger.
D
Back
to
us,
we
then.