►
Description
San Bruno City Council Meeting January 26, 2021
4. Announcements/Presentations
B
Okay,
thank
you.
Thank
you,
mr
mayor,
good
evening
to
the
marin
city
council.
My
name
is
jennifer
danis
and
I
am
here
presenting
to
you
this
evening
on
behalf
of
our
eoc
public
information
team.
We
have
the
presentation
up
here
on
the
screen,
so
you
should
be
able
to
see
the
cover
page.
Now
I
have
a
full
but
brief.
B
Available,
even
though
our
offices
are
limited,
as
we
have
adapted
with
safety
protocols
and
of
course
we
will.
B
C
B
The
order
was
lifted
due
to
the
increased
four-week
icu
capacity
projections
and
while
the
order
was
lifted,
san
mateo
county
remains
in
the
purple
or
the
white
spring
tier.
On
the
blueprint
for
a
safer
economy
on
the
screen,
you'll
see
the
allowances
for
indoor
operations,
retailers,
shopping,
centers
and
malls.
They
can
all
operate
indoors
at
25
capacity,
hair,
salons.
B
B
However,
on
the
cases
by
episode
date
graph
here
in
the
middle,
there
appears
to
have
been
a
slight
div.
This
doesn't.
B
B
Are
making
a
difference
in
san
bruno?
We
have
a
total
of
1876
cases,
and
that
is
as
of
last
friday,
january
21st,
and
there
is
a
new
metric
dashboard,
that's
available
on
the
county
health
website
and
it's
related
to
covet
19
vaccinations
of
san
mateo
county
residents.
This.
B
B
B
B
The
state
has
also
launched
a
notification
system
that
will
alert
residents
that
sign
up
for
it
once
they're
eligible
within
their
respective
category,
and
you
can
sign
up
for
that
at
my
turn.ca.gov.
B
Next,
we
will
talk
about
safety
now
that
outdoor
dining
has
reopened.
It
is
important
to
practice
outdoor
tent
safety.
This
applies
to
restaurants
and
at
home.
For
those
who
have
tents
in
their
backyards,
tents
have
the
potential
of
being
highly
flammable,
so
no
smoking
or
open
flames
should
be
under
or
near
a
tent.
A
portable
fire
extinguisher
should
be
close
by
and
exits
should
not
be
blocked.
B
B
B
This
line
will
be
placed
in
parts
soon
and
just
as
a
friendly
reminder
to
visitors
to
do
their
part
to
keep
our
community
safe
while
out
in
public
and
next
I'll
go
over
some
city
services
that
have
been
adapted
to
accommodate
our
residents
during
coven,
first
being
sitting
at
services,
a
city
that
continues
to
provide
new
installations
and
follows
all
coded
safety
protocols
to
protect
our
employees
and
residents.
B
B
Through
the
curbside
pickup
program
and
the
recommendations
are
appropriate
for
kids,
teens
and
adults
alike,
so
it's
a
fun
way
to
learn
and
spend
some
family
time
together
and
when
you're
ready
to
put
your
book
down
and
dance
the
traditional
father
and
daughter,
dance
has
adapted
to
advanced
competition
for
all
ages,
can
choreograph
or
wing
your
dance,
but
whatever
you
do
get
it
recorded
and
submitted
to
our
recreation
services
team.
That's
at
sbcs
sanbruno.ca.gov.
B
That
is
an
ongoing
event.
So
it's
anytime
between
february
1st
and
february
27th,
and
while
this
is
not
a
city
service,
the
slide
on
the
screen
supports
our
local
businesses,
and
so
I
want
to
make
sure
that
I
get
an
opportunity
to
share
it.
The
california
small
business
relief
grant
opens
up
for
round
two
on
february
2nd,
so
it's
a
short
one-week-ish
window,
but
approval
notifications
will
be
on
a
rolling
basis
and
applicants
that
apply
during
the
first
round
and
didn't
get
approved
but
are
still
eligible,
do
not
need
to
reapply.
B
So
this
is
a
great
opportunity
for
small
businesses
that
are
in
need
of
funding
and
what's
not
on
the
screen,
because
it
was
released
earlier
this
afternoon,
but
we're
worth
noting
to
the
community.
The
county
announced
a
new
restaurant
brewery
and
winery
relief
program.
It's
another
funding
opportunity
for
those
impacted
by
hogan,
19
and
specifically
restaurants,
that
application
period
will
or
is
expected
to
open
in
the
middle
of
february,
and
so
that's
something
that
restaurant
owners
should
pay
attention
to.
B
Information
will
be
released
on
smc
strong.org,
another
resource
for
our
local
businesses
and
lastly,
please
stay
connected
sign
up
for
smc
alert
notifications,
follow
our
official
city
account
on
social
media,
and
that
includes
next
door,
facebook,
instagram
and
twitter,
and
with
that,
mr
mayor,
that
concludes
my
presentation.
I'm
happy
to
answer
any
questions
that
you
may
have,
and
I
appreciate
your
time.
A
Thank
you
for
your
report,
any
questions
or
from
colleagues.
C
C
To
to
aid
in
times
of
need
and
disasters,
when
we
have
very
little
time
to
move
people
out
of
harm's
way,
and
this
project
itself
was
funded
by
the
county
of
san
mateo.
And
it
was
developed
by
all
fire
and
law
enforcement
agencies
across
san
mateo
county
by
those
law
enforcement
and
fire
agencies,
and
also
by
a
contractor
that
the
county,
hired
called
zone
haven.
C
Tonight
is
we're
going
to
review
what
the
wildfire
problem
is.
I
say
wildfire
and
that's
kind
of
the
nexus
of
how
this
project
was
developed,
but
the
same
platform
could
be
used
in
other
situations
that
require
us
to
move.
People
rapidly
and
you'll
see
the
value
of
that
as
we
move
along
in
the
presentation.
C
So
the
wildfire
problem
in
today's
day,
you
know
we
have
fast-moving
wildfires
and
that
really
has
highlighted
the
need
for
a
change
in
the
way
we
move
people
in
a
mass
way
during
these
fast-moving
emergencies.
C
C
The
hood
of
a
pickup
truck,
a
local
battalion
chief
who's
in
charge
of
those
first
phases
of
the
incident
would
literally
get
on
the
hood
of
a
pickup
truck
drawing
hand
drawing
on
a
map
and
trying
to
articulate
and
communicate
those
areas
that
they
need
to
evacuate
to
somebody
to
get
the
message
out
to
the
public,
and
that
is
obviously
a
slow,
arduous
process.
That's
not
very
effective,
and
in
today's
modern
world,
with
some
of
the
fires
moving
as
fast
as
they
do,
it's
really
problematic.
C
So
we
needed
to
think
of
a
new
way,
so
some
of
our
firefighting
in
the
init,
what
we
call
the
initial
attack
phases
and
that's
that
first
phase
of
putting
out
these
fires
is
really
not
effective.
So
we
really
work
because
the
resources.
B
C
There
to
support
the
incident
in
the
early
phases.
We
really
are
in
a
mood
where
we're
moving
people
out
of
harm's
way,
so
this
requires
multi-agency
coordination
and
command
and
control,
so
between
law
enforcement,
fire
and
public
safety
officials.
B
Evacuation
earlier
in
larger.
C
Areas
because
these
incidents
are
really
so
fast
moving
traffic
congestion
is
now
you
know
it's
really
important,
that
we
coordinate
some
of
the
issues,
so
we
can
move
traffic
in
a
single
direction,
so
we
don't
have
traffic
that
opposes
each
other
and
causes
congestion
and
accidents,
and
we
also
need
to
address
the
vulnerable
populations
in
our
communities.
C
C
So
this
is
a
picture
from
the
tub
fire
in
santa
rosa
the
north
end
of
santa
rosa.
I
actually
went
to
this
fire
and
the
top
was
prior
to
the
incident
itself,
and
you
can
see
that
the
entire
neighborhood
is
just
foundations.
C
So
we've
really
changed
the
model
with
climate
change
and
things
like
that
in
these
fast-moving
fires,
where
it's
important
for
us
to
be
able
to
move
people
quickly
to
get
them
out
of
harm's
way-
and
these
are
things
that,
in
you
know,
20
30
years
ago,
were
very
rare
events
and
now
they've
become
common
occurrences.
C
C
The
state
are
suffering
the
same
problem
right.
They
have
the
same
issues
that
we
do.
San
mateo
county
was
the
first
to
implement
this
zone
haven
platform
to
standardize
our
emergency
evacuations.
Other
counties
are
following
our
lead,
including
santa
cruz,
sonoma,
napa,
marine
yuba
and
other
small
jurisdictions
throughout
the
state
of
california.
C
The
next
slide
you
have
before
you
is
is
really
meant
to
talk
about
the
way
the
public
gets
evacuation
information.
We
have
a
variety
of
ways.
We
message
the
public,
we
have
our
regular
911
and
reverse
9-1-1
systems.
We
use
mass
notification
systems
like
smc,
alert,
ipaws
and
weap
social
media
direct
contact
from
first
responders.
We
try
to
use
websites
and
other
news
media
outlets
to
get
the
information
out.
But
again,
it's
it's
difficult
to.
C
You
know
quickly,
move
that
information
to
the
public
and
these
traditional
measures,
methods
of
social
media
and
press
releases
are
slow
and
down.
Don't
really
adequately
address
the
need.
So
this
newer
technology
has
really
been
developed
to
work
with
some
of
these
opt-in
and
non-opt-in
systems
like
ipaws
and
weave
the
integrated
public
warning
system
and
what
they
call
wea
or
the
wireless
emergency
alerts,
and
those
are
the
same
things
like
you
would
get
an
amber
alert
on
your
cell
phone.
C
So
local
state
and
so
state
and
local
law
enforcement
agencies
and
fire
agencies
typically
work
together
to
collaborate
during
these
events
and
it's
important
that
we
have
this
unified
approach
to
dealing
with
these
emergencies,
the
standard
evacuation
project
really
creates
a
seamless
platform
where
we,
where
public
safety
agencies
can
coordinate
and
the
public-facing
side
of
the
standard.
Evacuations
planning
platform
which
is
is
developed,
provides
a
single
place
where
citizens
can
view
areas
that
are
being
evacuated
and,
in
fact,.
B
The
same
platform
zone
haven.
C
Is
being
used
today,
as
we
speak
with
the
mudslide
and
debris
flow
that
are
occurring
from
the
ccu
complex
if
anybody's
seen
the
smc
alert
that's
gone
out
today,
evacuating
residents
on
the
south
coast
of
san
mateo,
county.
B
C
Conducting
these
evacuation
zones
on
the
hood
of
a
pickup
truck,
these
are
pretty
ad-hoc
ways
to
do
business.
Each
event
is
unique
and
decided
really
rapidly,
and
you
know
as
quick
as
we
can
put
the
plan
together,
but
again
we
have
to
articulate
that
to
the
public,
so
the
idea
here
is
to
use
instead
of
going
from
the
major
incident
occurring,
as
you
see,
on
the
on
the
left
of
the
screen
going
down
to
a
planning
session
and
then
pushing
it
out
through
those
platforms.
C
A
Solution,
it
will
work
beyond
san
mateo
county.
C
Counties
that
I
I
spoke
about
earlier
are
already
developing
these
platforms
and
we
see
their
evacuation
zones
and
they
can
see
ours.
C
C
We
would
normally
use
are
tied
directly
into
this
platform.
It
was,
it's
really
meant
to
reduce
the
complications
and
time
it
takes
to
get
public
moving
faster
towards
evacuation,
and
it
it's
really
designed
to
put
and
aggregate
local
knowledge.
C
So
if
a
fire
department
from
another
jurisdiction
comes
here
to
us,
assist
us
in
evacuations,
they
can
see
all
of
the
critical
infrastructure,
the
number
of
residents
in
the
neighborhood
and
the
evacuations
routes
that
we
have
pre-identified
and
this
tool
has
been
again
made
available
to
the
public
and
it
is
going
to
allow
for
those
mutually
resources
to
also
know
our
evacuation
routes.
C
C
C
Platform,
which
you
see
there
on
the
right
it's
going
to
automatically
integrate
with
those
other
alerting
systems
and
make
the
notification
to
the
public,
and
that
can
be
done
by
the
incident
commander
in
the
field.
And
I'm
talking
about
the
very
first
battalion
chief
sergeant
from
the
police
department
that
arrives
on
scene.
We
have
firefighters
that
are
have
credentials
to
the
system
and
can
make
those
notifications
and
initiate
those
evacuations,
as
well
as
our
police
department,
personnel.
C
So
the
the
the
idea
of
this
evening's
presentation
was
just
to
to
warm
up
the
council
and
the
the
public
to
the
idea
of
the
the
zone
haven
platform
and
these
emergency
evacuations.
We
are
for
next
steps
working
on
developing
a
what
they
call
a
know,
your
zone
campaign.
C
It's
really
identified
to
or
developed
to
train
the
public
on
that,
knowing
which
zone
they
live
in
where
their
evacuation
routes
are,
and
then
we're
working
on
a
plan
for
community
messaging
and
developing
a
video
explaining
the
evacuation
process
and
the
plan
platform
and
kind
of
next
steps
for
that
process.
In
case
there's
a
large-scale
emergency
and
again
this
is
not
just
for
fires.
It's
not
just
for
wildfires,
it's
for
all
different
types
of
emergencies.
C
It
over
briefly
to
chief
ryan
johansen
for
some
closing
comments
and
a
wrap-up.
E
Thank
you
ari
good
evening,
mr
mayor
members
of
council
and
members
of
the
community.
I'll
be
brief,
but
just
a
few
points
to
add
to
the
wonderful
presentation
that
our
fire
chief
has
already
provided
to
you
both.
I
have
a
couple
of
things
to
add
to
this,
because
I
have
experienced
use
of
this
system
both
professionally
and
personally.
E
I
mean
you
were
really
quite
in
the
dark
and
you
were
waiting
for
mass
media
to
pick
up
these
incidents.
And
you
know
if
it's
a
relatively
small
incident
or
they're
going
on
all
over
the
place.
Often
you
know
smaller
jurisdictions
like
ours.
Don't
get
that
mass
media
attention
where
you
can
rely
on
information
you're
getting
in
the
news.
So
personally
I
found
it
hugely
valuable.
E
Evacuations
are
actually
really
quite
complicated
because
of
all
these
different
entities
that
are
working
together
and
as
a
law
enforcement
entity
showing
up
these
incidents,
we're
going
to
facilitate
almost
every
single
evacuated,
residence
or
business
or
every
person
that
needs
to
be
moved.
But
it's
going
to
be
at
the
direction
of
fire
because
they're
the
experts
who
know
what
direction
these
fires
and
threats
are
moving
in,
and
so,
if
you
think
about
how
that
works
practically
you
saw
some
pictures
there,
like.
E
Police
are
catching
those
that
don't
get
caught
in
that
initial
net,
instead
of
being
the
only
source
of
reliable
information
telling
you
to
get
out
of
your
home,
and
even
if
you
have
a
massive
response
of
officers,
I
mean
I
already
told
you
that
he
responded
to
some
of
the
larger
fires.
I
I
worked.
E
The
fires
in
sonoma
and
the
fire's
out
in
paradise,
and
the
massive
undertaking
of
an
evacuation
is
terrifying,
because
you
know
that
every
house,
you
don't
get
to-
is
potential
life
loss
and-
and
this
is
a
really
revolutionary
system
that
we're
very
fortunate
to
have
and-
and
I
think
that
our
fire
chief
kind
of
understates
the
amount
of
work
that
he
and
his
staff
put
into
getting
together
to
make
sure
that
the
real
work
goes
into
the
front
end
right.
What's
basically
happened
is
evacuation.
E
Planning
on
a
very
robust
level
has
now
occurred
in
a
vacuum
where
you
can
actually
slow
down
and
not
be
pressured
by
an
actual
live
incident
and
think
constructively,
not
just
about
who
to
evacuate
and
when.
But
what
are
the
ingress
and
egress
routes
and
for
me,
from
the
law
enforcement
perspective?
That's
the
most
important
component.
When
you
look
at
a
fire
like
in
paradise,
there
was
a
lot
of
life
loss,
while
people
were
trying
to
get
out
and
that's
really
terrifying
right.
E
These
residents
will
flee
this
way
and
that
information
comes
through
in
that
notification,
so
not
just
to
get
out
but
a
get
out
and
here's
the
way
to
get
out.
It's
really
really
quite
powerful
and
really
changes
drastically.
The
way
that
we
do
things
the
other
piece
about
it
is
it's
scalable,
most
evacuations
we've
been
kind
of
hesitant
to
use
in
the
past
because
it
can
create
a
lot
of
alarm
or
we
have
to
do
something
much
larger
scale
than
what's
necessary
for
a
given
emergency,
and
this
gives
us
a
very
scalable
solution.
E
That
says
something
very
simple:
like
a
residential
gas
leak,
we
can
use
this
system
to
facilitate
a
really
small
evacuation
or
to
facilitate
evacuation
of
the
entire
city
in
a
much
larger
event,
like
maybe
an
emergency
up
at
our
water
treatment
plant,
so
really
really
a
ton
of
great
work
that
went
in
here
very
much
led
by
fire
and
their
staff,
with
some
participation
from
pd
when
it
was
needed.
E
We're
really
really
excited
about
it,
and
I
think
this
is
something
that
bottom
line
is
going
to
save
lives
when,
as
we
know,
all
too
well,
the
inevitable
events
come
to
our
little
town.
So
with
that,
I
will
close
up
and
I
think
the
fire
chief's,
probably
our
best
resource
for
questions,
but
I'll
remain
on
in
case
there's
anything
I
can
help
with.
A
Thank
you
chase
any
questions
or
comments
from
colleagues
vice
mayor
medina,
yeah
yeah.
This
sounds.
E
Really
great
will.
A
C
Of
the
process,
cobit
is
obviously
going
to
play
an
important
piece
of
it.
Communities
across
the
bay
area
region
have
actually
just
prior
to
coven,
started
doing
some
testing,
and
our
plan
would
be
to
kind
of
get
primed
up
for
fire
seat
next
fire
season,
truthfully
is
probably
going
to
be
our
best
bet
and
there's
opportunities.
C
I'm
working
with
another
agency
across
the
bay
to
to
kind
of
do
a
run
through
what
they've
done
a
virtual
evacuation
notice
to
kind
of
warm
up
again
the
community
and
kind
of
get
them
in
the
routine
of
knowing
this
platform,
knowing
where
it
is,
how
to
get
to
it
and
how
they're
going
to
interact.
So
my
hope
is
to
get
something
done
by
mid-summer.
C
A
You
seeing
no
one
else
on
council
once
again
chiefs.
Thank
you
for
your
comments
and
please
chief,
thank
you
for
expressing
what
you
you've
dealt
with
on
a
personal
basis,
because
it's
very
interesting
to
see
it
in
both
ends
as
it
worked
for
your
family,
but
as
as
it's
going
to
work
for
our
community
and
our
county
and
fire
chief.
A
I
know
you've
put
a
lot
of
time
and
effort
and
your
team
has-
and
I
know
this
is
one
of
those
things
that
you
enjoy
and
you
enjoy
this
technical
and
and
it
really
from
what
I've
seen
and
what
the
emergency
services
council
will
see
it
is
it
was.
It
is
quite
it's
come
a
long
way
that
will
save
lives
bottom
line.
So
thank
you
to
both
we're
going
to
go
ahead
and
move
on
to
item
c,
receive
community
grant
from
the
san
bruno
community
foundation.
B
D
Now,
hello,
all
good
evening,
honorable
mayor
and
council
members
and
members
of
the
public
happy
to
be
here,
I'm
emily
roberts,
the
current
president
of
the
san
bernardino
community
foundation
and,
as
stated
I'm
here
tonight,
to
share
some
good
news
regarding
the
san
bruno
community
foundation.
Grants
program.
D
As
you
all
know,
council
members
I
know
know,
but
perhaps
as
a
reminder
to
the
public.
D
And
so
this
year
the
foundation
is
funding.
Two
community
grants
to
the
city,
one
to
support
the
city's
library
and
one
to
fund
the
purchase
of
lightweight
and
portable
life-saving
tools
and
equipment
for
the
city's
fire
department.
Both
departments
and
needs
well
highlighted
in
earlier
presentations.
D
Our
board
approved
those
23
grants,
totaling
300
thousand
dollars
on
december
2nd.
We
are
thrilled
that
youtube.
Google.Org
has
also
partnered
with
the
foundation
on
the
community
grants
fund
yet
again
this
year
and
has
provided
a
hundred
thousand
dollars
of
the
total
300
000
in
grant
funds
being
distributed.
D
D
A
Again,
thank
you
very
much
for
being
here,
appreciate
it
and
again
the
city,
the
staff.
All
of
us
are
the
council
very
appreciative
for
what
the
board
does
and
we
appreciate
the
grants
that
have
been
awarded
to
the
city
which
will
help
this
community
and,
as
was
said
many
times
before,
you
know
there.
This
is
the
element
that
something
good
has
come
from
a
tragedy
and
a
disaster
that
that
helps
many
folks
going
into
the
future.
So
please
pass
our
thanks
and
appreciation
from
the
council
and
staff
to
the
board.