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From YouTube: NOV 2, 2021 | City Council Afternoon Session
Description
City of San José, California
City Council Afternoon Session of November 2, 2021
Pre-meeting citizen input on Agenda via eComment at https://sanjose.granicusideas.com/meetings.
This public meeting will be held at San José City Hall and also accessible via Zoom Webinar. For information on public participation via Zoom, please refer to the linked meeting agenda below.
Agenda https://sanjose.legistar.com/View.ashx?M=A&ID=890215&GUID=26A7E689-F7C9-47EE-9F9C-04DFF5539291
A
A
B
C
C
C
C
C
A
A
A
D
D
D
E
Thank
you
mayor
good
afternoon,
everyone,
it's
my
honor,
to
introduce
father,
jerry
wade.
Who
will
give
today's
invocation
father
wade
has
been
a
part
of
bellarmine
college
prep,
which
is
the
oldest
high
school
in
the
state
of
california,
along
with
notre
dame
high
school
right
here
in
san
jose.
Ever
since
he
graduated
from
the
school
in
1955.
E
He
is
currently
bellarmine's,
chancellor
and
works
for
the
advancement
of
the
school,
as
well
as
doing
ministry
for
bellarmine
alumni
and
their
families,
including
funerals,
memorials,
weddings,
baptisms
hospital
visits
and
much
more
through
joy
and
grief.
Generations
of
alumni
have
reached
out
and
continue
to
reach
out
to
father
wade
for
spiritual
guidance
and
his
personal
blessing.
E
E
I
will
never
forget
how,
on
my
first
day
on
campus
arriving
as
a
work-study
student,
all
the
way
from
watsonville
who
knew
no
one
at
the
school
or
so
I
thought
father
wade
came
across
campus
to
find
me
check
in
and
personally
welcome
me
to
the
school.
He
even
regaled
me
with
a
few
funny
stories
about
my
wild
uncles
and
a
cousin
who
had
attended
the
school
many
years
before
turns
out
only
one
of
them
left
with
a
diploma.
Just
to
give
you
a
sense
of
the
caliber
of
the
stories.
E
Father
wade
has
an
incredible
gift
for
seeing
beauty
in
all
people
celebrating
their
moments
of
joy
and
providing
comfort
in
difficult
times
and
father
wade.
I
certainly
see
the
living
embodiment
of
the
ignatian
value
of
finding
god
in
all
things,
which
is
why
it
is
such
an
honor
to
invite
him
today
to
provide
our
invocation
with
that
father
wade.
The
floor
is
yours,.
F
Thank
you
very
much
matt
yesterday,
as
I
reflected
on
the
particular
scripture
readings
used
at
our
sunday
liturgy,
I
thought
the
words
of
moses
in
the
book
of
deuteronomy,
of
the
hebrew
scriptures
and
the
words
of
jesus
in
the
gospel
of
mark
were
quite
appropriate.
As
we
pause
in
prayer
to
begin
the
council
meeting
moses
speaks
with
his
people.
This
great
commandment.
F
You
shall
love
the
lord,
your
god,
with
all
your
heart,
all
your
soul.
With
all
your
mind
and
with
all
your
strength
and
then
jesus
first
repeats
these
words
of
moses
in
the
gospel
of
mark,
but
he
adds
a
second
great
commandment
and
you
shall
love
your
neighbor
as
you
love
yourself,
and
so
let
us
take
a
moment
with
ongoing
gratitude.
F
F
Help
us
to
be
channels
of
your
justice
and
a
means
by
which
others
may
feel
good
about
themselves.
We
ask
your
blessings
on
our
civic
leaders
and,
in
particular
the
women
and
men
of
the
city
of
cons.
City
council
of
san
jose
are
mayor
and
those
who
service
by
sharing
their
time,
their
energy,
their
resources
and,
at
times
their
sense
of
humor.
F
And
as
we
begin
this
month
of
november,
we
pray
in
thanksgiving
for
those
who
have
gone
before
us
family
members
and
all
who
have
these
many
years
step
forward
to
make
a
difference
for
the
good
in
the
lives
of
the
people
of
san
jose.
Those
who
are
young
and
those
who
are
much
older.
And
we
ask
you
this
as
we
say,
amen
and
thank
you.
D
A
Adoption
month
in
san
jose
national
adoption
month
is
a
time
to
bring
attention
to
the
thousands
of
children
and
youth
within
foster
care,
who
would
love
a
permanent
home
with
over
120
000
children
awaiting
adoption
from
foster
homes
throughout
the
nation.
San
jose
believes
every
child
should
have
a
forever
family.
A
The
kinship
adoptive
and
foster
parent
association
provided
that
support
they're,
an
advocacy
and
non-profit
that
provides
resources,
specialized
mentoring
and
advocates
for
the
needs
of
families
in
santa
clara
county.
Denise
marchu
has
been
the
executive
director
for
the
kinship
adoptive
and
foster
parent
association
for
the
past
11
years.
I
I
I
And
then
there's
jesse
and
jesse,
we
were
told,
was
unadoptable.
Nobody
was
going
to
take
this
little
down
syndrome,
child
that
had
all
these
problems.
Well,
I'm
here
to
tell
you
that
jesse
is
a
ten-year-old
who
talks
from
the
moment
he
wakes
up
in
the
morning
until
the
moment
he
goes
to
bed
at
night.
He
is
thriving,
he
plays
ball,
he
loves
hockey.
He
loves
annoying
us
and
we
adopted
him
and
he
is
mine,
so
he
is
a
delta.
There
is
no
child
out
there.
I
That
is
unadoptable,
and
I
want
to
thank
all
the
families
that
open
their
homes
and
their
hearts
and
take
our
future
generation
in
and
love
them
just
like
they're
their
own.
When
I
see
my
10
children,
I
don't
see
a
difference.
I
love
them
all,
I'm
committed
to
them
forever
and
ever
and
they
are
mine.
D
D
Thank
you.
Thank
you,
councilmember
davis,
not
just
for
talking
the
talk
but
walking
the
walk
and
how
you
support
adoption.
Our
community
councilman
reynolds,
I
know,
will
be
joining
us
as
we
honor
members
of
our
sikh
american
community
and
sikh
american
appreciation
appreciation
month
and
awareness
month.
H
H
I
learned
this
from
our
our
sikh
sikh
community,
which
is
what
had
a
and
it
means
victory
to
god,
god's
pure
one,
correct
me
if
I'm
wrong,
but
I've
learned
a
thing
or
two
in
the
years
that
I
have
been
visiting
the
courtois
november
is
seek
american
awareness
and
appreciation
month
and
I'm
thrilled
for
this
opportunity
to
have
sukdev
sergey
and
his
daughter
harkira
one
of
our
leading
gurdwara
board
members
here
with
us
and
it's
a
joy
to
be
able
to
recognize
and
appreciate
such
an
important
part
of
our
community
here
in
the
council
chambers.
H
Again,
it
is
so
heartwarming
to
see
people
in
person
and
and
to
reconnect
once
again
and
sick
americans.
H
H
Through
the
pandemic,
they
find
ways
to
provide
service
and
honor
their
culture
and
the
value
of
service,
and
this
is
something
that
linked
me
and
identif
and
identified
with
this
community,
because
it
reminded
me
of
my
own
family,
my
family
really
prioritized
serving
and-
and
I
think
it's
real
one
of
the
reasons
why
I'm
in
public
service-
and
if
I
had
to
say
anything
about
our
sick
americans
is,
is
their
ability
to
serve
others
is,
has
really
no
end
and
no
bounds,
and
so
it
is
an
honor
to
present
this
proclamation
to
the
san
jose
gorduana
in
recognition
of
sick
american
awareness
and
appreciation
month,
and
I'm
grateful
for
their
contributions
to
the
city
of
san
jose.
H
J
Good
afternoon
members
of
the
city
council,
mayor
and
all
those
attending
this
meeting
here
I
would
like
to
appreciate
and
thank
the
council
and
the
mayor
for
having
this
proclamation
in
recognizing
november
as
seek
awareness
and
appreciation
month.
J
J
You
know
through
different
drives
that
we
had
at
the
gurdwara
and
at
high
schools.
So
one
thing
this
appreciation
month
and
awareness
month,
that's
gonna
bring
is
the
identity
of
the
sikhs,
as
you
all
can
see,
I'm
wearing
a
turban.
We
do
look
different
than,
and
that
does
bring
some
challenges
to
the
community
and
to
the
city.
Also,
so
some
of
the
challenges
that
we
run
into
is
hate
crimes.
J
You
know
I
myself
went
through
schooling
here,
you
know
through
the
90s
and
then
through
college,
and
all
that
you
know
at
that
time
I
was
told
I'm
ayatollah
khomeini
and
then
9-1-1
happened.
Then
I
was
told
that
I'm
bin
laden
and
now
just
recently,
not
me,
but
somebody
else
because
of
what's
happened
in
afghanistan.
J
Those
challenges
are
still
there
and
and
then
recently
there
is
a
bullying
that
happened
in
one
of
the
schools
also
and
in
all
those
instances
we
have
brought
it
up
to
the
elected
officials,
and
I
appreciate
them
taking
you
know
immediate,
you
know
providing
immediate
attention
to
it
and
taking
action.
J
So
I'd
like
to
really
appreciate
that
to
our
our
city
officials,
for
taking
action
on
any
of
those
incidents
that
happen,
but
I
personally
think
there's
more
that
can
be
done,
and
this
is
one
event
that
city
I
would
actually
not
only
have
the
proclamation,
but
if
there's
any
other
avenues
to
get
this
the
secret
image
out
there
to
all
the
all
the
communities.
I
would
appreciate
that
we
we're
doing
our
part.
J
J
At
this
event,
you
know
somehow
highlight
who
the
seeks
are,
so
we
feel
more
as
a
community
in
silicon
valley
than
always
being
you
know
somehow
not
feeling
safe.
Here
I
don't
feel
unsafe.
J
You
know
when
I
was
a
kid
and
maybe
I
had
some
thoughts,
but
I
don't
want
my
kids
or
other
kids
to
have
that.
So
I
would
appreciate
the
sitting
first
of
all
thank
the
city
for
doing
what
they're
doing
today
and
then
having
more
events,
and
one
other
thing
could
be.
You
know
more
seeks
on
the
staff,
city,
staff
or
maybe
commissions,
and
all
that
thank
you
again,
the
whole
city
council,
the
mayor
for
having
this
event
today
and
recognizing
november
as
seek
awareness
and
appreciation
month.
Thank
you.
D
K
It's
a
very
special
moment
good
afternoon
everybody
I'm
magdalena
carrasco
and
I
represent
our
beautiful
part
of
our
beautiful
eastside
san
jose
district
five
and
I'm
here
with
councilmember
esparza
on
a
very
special
occasion
to
honor
our
great
friend,
salvador.
Bustamante,
know
him
as
chava
for
over
40
years,
chava
has
worked
to
promote
labor
rights,
human
rights,
civil
rights,
immigration
rights
all
over
our
region
and
actually
throughout
the
state
of
california,
you'd,
be
hard-pressed
to
find
someone
in
our
great
city
that
hasn't
been
graced
by
the
impact
of
chava.
K
K
So
when
I
interviewed
with
chava,
I
found
that
actually
chav
and
I
had
already
been
connected
several
times
over
by
other
individuals
who
were
very
significant
in
my
life.
At
that
time
he
had
worked
with
now
council
member
kevin
de
leon
that
time
he
was
a
civic
leader
in
the
los
angeles
area
and
my
cousin
labor
leader,
cindy
avitia,
who,
just
a
year
before
my
interview
with
chava,
had
lost
her
life
tragically
in
a
car
accident
in
mexico.
K
Chavo's
journey
to
the
u.s
is
not
unique
to
each
other.
When
I
think
of
him,
I
see
my
cousins.
I
see
my
theos,
I
see
my
father,
that's
one
of
the
reasons
why
so
many
of
us
connect
to
chava,
and
I
imagine
that
that's
also
one
of
the
reasons
why
he's
so
empathetic
to
the
struggles
of
others
in
1968.
He
came
to
the
united
states
from
mexico
looking
for
opportunity
and
worked
the
fields
for
12
years,
where
he
connected
with
the
united
farm
workers
union
in
salinas
and
participated
in
his
first
ever
strike.
K
The
legacy
that
chava
leaves
behind
has
been
one
of
hope,
a
desire
to
raise
up
our
community
and,
through
his
his
dedication
and
hard
work.
Chava
has
helped
many
of
our
community
members
prosper
by
taking
them
under
his
wing
and
inculcating
in
them.
Strong
values,
chava
leaves
a
legacy
of
leadership
and
mentorship.
K
Chava
has
served
in
almost
every
capacity
being
a
fellow
with
the
american
leadership
forum
and
serving
on
the
board
of
several
nonprofit
organizations
like
working
partnerships,
usa,
silicon
valley,
rising
and
sacred
heart.
Community
service
chava
also
lent
his
voice
to
our
bereza
flea
market
vendors,
advocating
for
a
fair
outcome
ensuring
that
they
were
prepared
with
the
tools
for
success.
K
K
L
I
just
want
to
highlight
some
of
the
incredible
work
that
chava
and
luna
have
done
during
kova.
This
unprecedented
crisis,
councilmember
carrasco,
talked
about
what
chava
has
done
throughout
his
whole
life,
really
to
lift
people
up
and
provide
opportunity
for
so
many
people.
But
we've
we've
been
in
a
once
in
a
lifetime
pandemic
and
seen
some
of
the
greatest
challenges
that
our
latino
community
has
ever
faced
and
in
a
time
when
our
latino
communities
have
been
hit
with
the
worst
impacts
of
this
pandemic.
L
L
So
again,
I
just
wanted
to
recognize
chava
for
his
leadership
for
his
efforts
throughout
that
he's,
given
us
throughout
his
whole
life,
but
also
just
remind
folks
that
he
and
luna
have
been
out
there
in
these
unprecedented
times,
they've
essentially
helped
save
lives.
Thank
you.
Chava
yeah.
M
M
M
A
couple
of
sundays
ago
I
was
sent
into
retirement
at
an
event
from
latinos
united
for
for
a
new
america,
and
you
know
I
retired
from
my
professional
responsibilities
as
executive
director
of
the
organization,
but
that
doesn't
mean
that
I
have
withdrawn
from
my
activism.
M
M
So
I
thank
you
again
and
be
assured
that
you
probably
have
not
heard
seen
the
last
of
me
and
before
you
know
I
stopped
talking.
I
want
to
recognize
roberto,
gonzalez
and
alfonso
mendes
because
it
was
thanks,
like
you
know,
to
people
like
them
that
I've
been
able
to
to
do
the
things
I've
done.
So.
Thank
you
alfonso.
Thank
you.
Roberto.
D
And
I
ask
my
colleagues:
have
any
changes
to
the
printed
agenda?
I
know
there's
a
new
item
which
is
2.16
redistricting,
commission
appointment,
which
will
be
added
under
orders
if
it
is
going
to
be
added,
it
requires
a
two-thirds
vote.
I've
also
submitted
a
memorandum
on
item
3.3,
which
is
the
pandemic
response
and
community
and
economic
recovery
budget
adjustments.
D
The
memo
seeks
a
deferral
and
I'll
just
read
it.
Since
I
know
this
came
out
very
belatedly.
I
want
to
make
sure
everyone
understands
the
the
reason
here.
In
light
of
recent
uncertainty
in
the
state's
treatment
of
tax
revenues,
I
seek
to
defer
counsel
consideration
of
any
allocation
american
rescue
act
spending
until
the
resolution
of
those
related
fiscal
issues.
The
city
manager
is
directed
to
return
to
council,
with
recommendations
for
essential
expenditures
required
for
critical
programs
and
services
in
the
meantime.
H
D
Okay,
thank
you.
Councilmember
foley
and
second,
I
believe,
is
canceling
sparser.
Okay,
let's
vote
on
orders
of
the
day.
D
All
right
on
the
consent
calendar,
I
believe,
councilmember
sparks
like
the
poll
item
2.9,
which
is
a
grant
application
for
the
california
department
of
parks
and
rec
prop
68
relating
to
park
development
at
midfield
and
havana.
D
D
D
C
I
have
olga
and
ruben:
please
come
down.
Whoever's
first,
come
straight
to
the
microphone.
So
again,
that's
olga
and
ruben.
N
A
H
H
H
D
P
Oh
you
hi.
Can
you
hear
me?
Yes,
okay,
good!
Thank
you,
tessa,
woodman
c.
I
just
wanted
to
read
something
about
the
consent
calendar.
It
says
if
a
member
of
the
city,
council
staff
or
public
request
discussion
on
a
particular
item
that
item
may
be
removed
from
the
consent,
calendar
and
considered
separately.
P
So
I
wanted
to
take
out
that
item
in
regards
to
the
winchester
proper.
What
is
it
the
well
the
almaden
it's
alma
did
in
santa
clara?
I
guess
that's,
maybe
that's
what
we're
talking
about
right
now.
2.7
is
that
property.
P
That
is,
you
know,
next
to
that
hotel
and
on
the
corner
of
santa
clara
and
almaden.
I
guess
that
is
it,
so
maybe
we're
talking
about
it
right
now
and
okay
good.
So
then,
that
that's
good,
and
that
is
public
land
that
I
was
all,
but
I
think
it's
just
important
for
us
to
make
comments
to
you,
mayor
le
carter,
that
the
public
can
pull
and
to
ask
us
what
items
we
want
to
pull
as
well.
That
was
the
point,
and
so
you
know
I
was
thinking
about
this
item
on
armadin.
P
That's
I
guess,
next
to
that
hotel
or
that
you
know
it's
a
big
housing,
complex,
a
tall
building
and
so
yeah.
It
is
public
land
and
I
know
they
want
it.
For
some.
You
know
it's
not
a
big
piece,
but
what,
in
terms
of
our
climate
crisis
and
resiliency,
any
open
lands
should
be
created
for
growing
food
and
that
you
know
it's
easy
to
take
open
lands
because
it's
undeveloped
and
we
have
to
really
start
making.
These
transformational
changes
about
how
we're
going
forward
and
we
need
to
de-grow
that
needs
to
be.
P
Our
emphasis
is
deep
growth
because
growth
is
fossil
fuel
use,
and
so
we
have
to
start.
You
know
we
have
to
bring
that
down
eight
years
to
go
to
zero.
That's
very
quick!
That's
what
the
science
says:
twenty
thirty!
That's
eight
years
practically
now,
and
so
this
is
where
to
create
that
sustainability,
because
those
18
wheelers
aren't
going
to
be
bringing
our
food
in.
Maybe
I
need
to
start
taking
open
lands
to
grow
food.
A
Yes
hi:
this
is
greg
kepferly,
ceo
of
catholic
charities
of
santa
clara
county
and
mayor
licardo.
Thank
you
for
deferring
the
arpa
discussion.
I
realized
there
were
a
bunch
of
people
ready
to
to
speak
today,
including
myself,
but
making
sure
that
the
community
has
time
to
weigh
in
on
the
priorities
is
also
going
to
be
important
in
addition
to
whatever
the
state
tax
consequences.
You're.
A
Looking
at
the
other
issue
is,
I
think,
the
memos
that
council
members,
uranus
and
esparza
presented,
I
think,
deserve
more
consideration
and
looking
at
how
investments
in
our
children,
in
terms
of
child
care
capacity
building,
as
well
as
promotoras
within
the
the
safety
net
areas
of
the
community
and
then,
of
course,
all
the
other
recommendations
in
terms
of
the
economic
development
that
is
centered
in
equity
that
the
other
council
members
have
have
proposed.
So
I
just
want
to
say
thank
you
and
keep
working,
we'll
keep
providing.
N
Q
Hi
blair
beekman
here
it
being
the
beginning
of
november.
I
guess
I
wanted
to
ask
a
few
procedural
questions
about
how
consent
is
run.
First,
a
thank
you
to
the
previous
two
speakers
about
this
item.
Today.
I
really
like
the
current
mural.
That's
in
that
area.
So
thank
you
for
the
public
comment.
Q
I
I'm
a
bit
concerned
that
orders
of
the
day
a
closed
session
report
and
the
city
manager's
report.
It
has
an
inconsistency
about
allowing
public
comment
and
I
will
speak
more
at
open
forum
time
to
ask
how
it
can
be
a
more
consistent
process.
Q
I
guess
that's
about
all
for
now.
Will
you
be
taking
public
comment
on
the
dropped
item
today?
That's
another
question
to
ask
about
consistency
issues
thanks
for
your
time,
and
hopefully
you
can
allow
time
for
public
comment
on
the
remainder
of
consent
items
after
these
two
polled
items.
Thank
you.
D
I
C
Hi,
my
name
is
michelle
kalish
and
I
am
against
2.7.
I
just
wanted
to
add
public
comment
on
that
and
that's
all
I
have
thank
you.
R
Hello,
mayor
council
members,
louise
auerhan,
from
working
partnerships.
I
was
attempting
to
comment
on
the
deferral
under
orders
of
the
day
with
item
3.3.
We
understand
this
item
needs
to
be
deferred,
but
we
did
have
a
large
number
of
community
members
wanting
to
speak
on
it.
R
So
I
hope
that
when
it
does
come
back,
it'll
be
presented
in
a
way
in
with
enough
time
that
the
community
is
able
to
give
input,
possibly
consider
having
it
at
an
evening
session,
because
it
was
difficult
for
people
to
schedule
to
come
today
and
it
will
be
more
difficult.
The
next
time
it
comes
around,
so
just
wanted
to
ask
you
to
give
consideration.
R
A
Yes,
gabriel,
hernandez
with
the
see
sympathetic,
collective,
I'm
actually
speaking
to
item
3.3.
I
guess
that
has
been
deferred
now
and
again.
We
would
like
you
to
consider
again
the
memos
moved
by
alvarez
and
esparza.
We
think
that
our
children
need
and
deserve
more.
We
would
like
you
to
consider
again
those
memos
in
allocating
the
resources
to
augment
child
childhood
youth
services.
A
They
also
should
be
used
to
expand
after
school
programs
full
scholarships,
child
care
services.
A
You
know
things
where
again,
especially
in
the
neighborhoods
that
we
organize
in
and
work
in,
and
that
we're
impacted
very
much
so
by
the
pandemic
and
also
if
you
want
to
go
down
the
route
of
the
inequities
that
the
neighborhoods
have
suffered
for
decades.
I
think
again
using
some
of
these
funds
to
dedicate
towards
those
types
of
programs.
A
We
also
believe
that
you
know
the
models
that
we
use
around
our
training
and
the
organizing
of
promoters
and
that
model
for
community
engagement
has
also
helped
engage
community
members
in
the
process
of
participating
in
in
civic
meetings
like
this,
and
so
we
urge
you
all
to
again
consider
those
memos
of
varenas
and
esparza
council
members
esparza
and
looking
forward
to
that
discussion
when
it
comes
up.
Thank
you.
D
2.7
thank
you,
which
specifically
relates
to
the
sale
of
a
portion
of
north
almaden
boulevard.
That
is
the
item
for
which
we're
accepting
comment,
though,
is
already
been
voted
on
orders
of
the
day
deferral
of
item
3.3,
which
is
the
budget
related
item
to
the
american
recovery
plan
funding,
and
that
will
be
taken
up
in
a
future
council
meeting.
We'll
hear
public
comment
when
we
take
that
up
on
a
future
date.
So
right
now
we're
just
republican
on
public
comment
on
item
2.7.
S
D
2.7,
we'll
take
a
separate.
Do
we
want
to
take
it?
Oh
I'm
sorry,
councilmember
prof
go
ahead.
Thank
you.
E
F
E
Month
ago,
and
it
did
have
a
pretty
minimal
community
outreach,
just
the
the
minimum
requirement,
and
due
to
that,
we
heard
some
public
comment
from
both
united
members,
as
we
hear
today,
and
then
from
the
access
residents
that
live
adjacent
to
this
property
and
actually
share
some
of
the
the
the.
If
you
look
at
the
memo,
here's
here,
some
of
about
half
of
the
property
that
we're
talking
about
being
taken
over,
and
so
we
actually
did
ask
for
it
to
be
fur
deferred.
E
A
couple
weeks
we
actually
went
out
had
some
community
meetings
with
the
community
on
the
project
and
we
did
ultimately
learn
that
there
was-
and
this
actually
was
what
white
was
deferred.
Last
time
we
learned
that
there
was
an
incorrect
reference
of
a
grantee
for
the
axis
condominiums
property.
That's
what
this
replacement
memo
that
you'll
see
here
clarifies
the
direction
itself,
though,
is
is
staying
the
same.
It
is
a
total
of
1381
square
feet
of
surplus
property.
E
It's
a
combination
of
driveway
and
sidewalk,
of
which
about
half
674
square
feet
is
going
to
be
going
into
the
the
new
almaden
corner
hotel
project.
That
is,
it's
obviously
not
existing
there.
Yet
it's
an
approved
project,
and
this
will
go
not
the
whole
thing
about
529
square
feet
of
it.
We'll
go
into
that
project.
The
rest
of
it
will
be
will
be
sidewalk.
E
The
other
half
707
square
feet
is
going
to
be
sold
over
to
the
access
condominium
building
for
a
dollar
that
property
is
is
still
utilized
today
for
ingress
and
egress
of
the
condominium
building,
so
that
will
that
will
stay
the
same,
but
it's
the
title
obviously,
and
the
ownership
it
will
will
now
change.
We
are
going
to
be
getting
213
thousand
dollars.
I
believe
for
the
property
there
that
218
000
excuse
me,
that
is
fair
market
value
of
the
sale
of
that
property.
E
Ultimately
again
the
674
square
feet,
and
this
is
something
that
that
I
support.
I
understand
the
community
has
concerns
on
the
outreach.
I
do
feel
that
we
went
out
and
we
did
do
adequate
outreach
after
that.
That
concern
was
brought
to
us
and
we'll
make
the
motion
to
approve
the
item.
D
All
right
that
vote
is
unanimous
when
one
absence
all
right
item
2.9
is
a
grant
application
for
prop
68
money
for
the
park
at
midfield
and
havana,
councilman
sparzin.
L
Thank
you
mayor
if
we
could
pull
up
a
photo
for
this
item
that
would
be
great.
L
The
community
can
be
proud
of
in
2015
luna,
applied
for
and
received
a
grant
from
the
open
space
authority
taking
the
community
one
step
closer
to
this
dream,
and
I
believe
the
open
space
authority
is
on
the
online
and
we
can
pull
that
up
after,
because
I'm
hoping
andrea
can
make
some
remarks.
Yes,
so
unbeknownst
to
the
community.
This
was
the
start
to
a
six-year
battle
of
working
with
three
different
government
agencies
and
a
non-profit,
along
with
bringing
the
community
into
every
step
of
the
decision-making
process.
L
Though
many
obstacles
existed,
the
drive,
passion
and
persistence
of
the
residents
within
this
community
kept
this
project
alive
and
progressing
through
every
devastating
blow
and
through
every
small
win.
This
is
a
community
that
was
selling
tamales
to
raise
money
for
a
park
so
saying
this
pocket
park
is
important
to
this
community
is
a
major
understatement
being
designated
as
a
community
of
concern.
Many
members
of
this
neighborhood
live
with
overcrowding
and
a
complete
lack
of
publicly
accessible,
open
space
needed
for
the
many
young
families
in
the
neighborhood.
L
There
is
no
park
in
this
neighborhood,
so
the
havana
midfield
pocket
park
project
has
grown
from
a
simple
pocket
park
along
a
sound
wall.
To
really
an
example
of
how
commitment
from
the
community
a
non-profit
organization
like
luna
and
several
public
agencies
can
make
a
project
happen,
even
if
it
takes
years
of
monthly
meetings
between
all
the
stakeholders
and
countless
hours
by
the
community,
luna
city
staff
and
my
staff
to
ensure
that
we
are
making
progress,
no
matter
how
small.
L
So
I
pulled
this
item
from
the
consent
calendar
because,
although
it
may
be
one
of
the
smallest
items
we
vote
on
in
this
meeting
today's
action
pending
the
award
of
the
grants,
we
will
be
closing
the
funding
gap
for
this
pocket
park,
which
would
allow
us
to
break
ground
next
year
and
you'll
see
in
the
photo.
That's
the
mural
that
we
did
along
the
sound
wall
and
that
patch
of
dirt
is
what
the
neighborhood
they
pick
up
trash.
L
They
do
it
regularly
once
a
week.
But
if
somebody,
if
they're,
if
you
see
litter,
someone
will
come
out
and
they'll
pick
it
up
so
that
it
doesn't
get
dirty.
L
So
there
are
so
many
people
that
contributed
to
making
this
project
happen.
I'd
like
to
thank
victoria
partida,
president
of
the
tropicana
lanai
neighborhood
association,
andrea
mckenzie,
general
manager
of
the
open
space
authority,
who
you
will
hear
from
in
a
minute.
Chava
bustamante
and
luna
david
johnson
eve
zuty
from
prns,
jane
wu
from
public
works,
thomas
harris
and
kevin
ice
from
real
estate
services,
and
I'm
going
to
give
a
shout
out
to
nick
kaspar
on
my
staff.
R
Member
esparza's
words
that
on
november
10
2016
the
open
space
authority
board
of
directors
awarded
250
000
to
latinos
united
for
a
new
america
luna
for
their
nuestro
lugar
project
to
transform
this
unused
street
right
of
way
in
the
midfield
neighborhood
into
a
neighborhood
pocket
park.
R
It's
a
very
innovative
partnership
between
luna
and
the
city
of
san
jose's,
prns
department
and
department
of
transportation,
and,
as
you
heard,
the
project
met
some
roadblocks
so
to
speak
in
trying
to
work
out
lease
agreements
with
caltrans.
R
Construction
of
the
havana
midfield
pocket
park
will
be
managed
by
the
city
maintained
as
a
city
park,
and
the
city
is
also
in
the
process
of
acquiring
the
land
from
caltrans
on
august
26.
Just
a
few
months
ago,
the
open
space
authority
board
of
directors
approved
the
transfer
of
the
grant
from
luna
to
the
city
of
san
jose
to
oversee
completion
of
the
pocket
park
project.
R
We
understand
there
remains
a
gap
in
the
budget
for
constructing
this
project
and
with
the
passage
of
the
resolution
before
you,
the
city
can
apply
to
the
open
space
authority
under
its
20
program
for
grant
funds
to
help
bridge
this
gap
as
soon
as
possible.
We
look
forward
to
attending
the
ribbon
cutting
in
the
future.
Thank
you.
So
much.
C
D
All
right
motion,
second
councilman
crosscom,.
K
Just
I
I
just
wanted
to
congratulate
council
member
esparza
this.
What
is
it
a
couple
of
days
ago,
my
son
sitting
in
the
in
the
audience
right
now?
K
He
had
a
project
that
he
had
to
introduce
his
first
year
at
de
anza
and
is
taking
a
chicano
studies.
Class
and-
and
I
said
I
have
the
perfect
spot
and
I
took
him
straight
to
this
beautiful
mural
and
seven
years
ago,
when
I
first
took
office,
I
met
with
luna
and
they
took
me
to
this
little
patch
and
and
and
this
is
what
the
east
side
has
to
work
with
it's
little
patches
like
this
little
pocket
park.
K
Eastside
is
built
out,
we're
paved
over
we're
a
heat
island
and
and
wherever
we
can
find
a
little
piece
of
land.
K
We
we
either
turn
it
into
a
park
and,
of
course,
our
city
manager
went
on
a
tour
with
me,
and
I
had
the
pleasure
of
showing
her
that
we
have
no
land
to
create
parks
or
or
plant
trees,
and
so
anything
that
we
can
get
we're
grateful
for
it,
because
that's
just
our
reality
and
so
what
you've
done
council
member
esparza,
along
with
all
the
partners,
truly,
is
a
work
of
art.
It
was
just
such
I
just
invite
everybody
to
go
out
there.
K
It's
such
a
beautiful
mural
and
my
I
have
pictures
of
my
son
taking
pictures
of
the
mural,
because
it
was,
I
love
it
when
my
children
are
inspired
by
what
they
see
on
the
east
side
of
san
jose.
Again,
we
write
our
narrative.
We
get
to
write
our
headlines
versus
having
others
do
it
for
us
and
and
that
that
is
part
of
our
narrative,
to
see
that
kind
of
beauty
on
the
east
side
of
san
jose
and
take
ownership
of
it.
D
I'm
sorry
have
we
we
haven't,
have
we
I
just
I
just
saw
the
I
saw
the
screen
come
up,
so
I
reflectively
was
ready
to
vote.
Let's
go
to
public
comment.
Thank
you.
Johnny.
Q
Hi,
thank
you
tony
taver
very
much.
I
wanted
to
speak
on
the
redistricting
item.
Would
this
be
the
time
to
speak
on
that?
No
all
right!
Thank
you.
I
will
patiently
wait.
Thank
you.
P
Okay,
thank
you
so
much
for
letting
us
speak
on
this
item
too.
Yes,
I'm
very
happy
at
what's
happening
with
the
open
space
authority,
giving
money
to
the
city-
or
you
know,
to
the
non-profit,
luna
to
then
give
it
to
the
city
to
buy
that
land.
I
guess
they
had
to
buy
it
or
to
develop
it
whatever,
wherever
it
was,
they
got
250
000
to
do
this
transaction,
which
is
wonderful,
and
I
I
I
always
thought
that
the
open
space
authority,
when
I
kind
of
contacted
them
or
somebody
about
it.
P
You
know
that
they
don't
do
this
like
in
inner
inner
urban
kind
of
land
buying,
but
I'm
just
so
happy
that
they
did
do
this,
because
this
is
where
we
need
to
make
san
jose
a
garden
again.
P
We
need
to
make
the
earth
the
garden
again,
but
you
know
it
it's
one
neighborhood
at
a
time
and
just
so
happy
that
you
know
that
the
open
space
authority
sees
the
value
of
you
know
putting
money
into
our
urban
core
to
create
the
you
know
to
bring
nature
back
in
here,
because
you
know
that's
what
we
need
to
start
doing
is
doing
that,
so
that
people
don't
have
to
go
up
to
tahoe
or
even
out
to
the
you
know,
coyote
valley,
because
that's
usually
driving
a
car
out
there
or
you
know,
there's
no
transit
and
even
our
transit
is
in
fossil
fuel
free.
P
So
you
know,
and
it's
too
far
for
a
bicycle
or
whatever-
and
the
thing
is,
is
that
you
know
this
is
where
we
need
to
make
our
city
a
garden
again
and
make
it
beautiful
to
live
here.
P
And
so
that's
where
I
was
hoping
that
they
would
even
help
us
to
to
buy
the
land
at
615
stockton
avenue
to
to
you
know
which
is
open
space,
and
we
have
also
our
problems
of
the
pollution
and
and
how
we
need
to
take
the
open
spaces
and
turn
them
into
the
valley
back
into
the
valley
of
hearts.
Delight
to
deal
with
our
ecological
collapse
to
bring
the
birds
and
bees
and
butterflies
back
as
well
as
to
save
ourselves.
C
D
I'm
not
seeing
anyone
jump
up,
councilman
crosby,
I'm
assuming
that
was
from
a
prior
comment:
okay,
so
clear
that
okay,
let's
now
take
a
motion
on
the
remainder
of
the
consent,
calendar.
C
I
would
like
to
say
that
councilmember
jimenez
just
signed
on
so
we
will
need
to
take
a
roll
call
vote.
D
P
I
I
think
there
was
another
item.
I
really
appreciate
how
you're
putting
up
the
signs
about
things
that
really
helps
the
information
about
what
we're
talking
about.
Oh
yeah
hear
me
and
so
really
helped
that
about
that.
So
thank
you
tony
for
doing
that,
and
the
only
other
comment
I
have
about
you
know
just
issues
of
is
really
great.
P
That
would
be
very
helpful
to
have
that
to
educate
us
more
so
anyway,
getting
back
to
the
consent,
I
guess
the
issues
that
the
one
issue
was,
of
course,
the
travel
expenses
as
we
put
those
into
consent,
and
we
say:
oh
you
know
we
just
put
that
in
no
big
deal,
we're
not
going
to
talk
about
it
and
we
do
need
to
talk
about
it.
P
We
need
to
talk
about
our
travel
and
you
know
we
shouldn't
be
traveling
and
that
that's
the
the
reality
is
that
we
need
to
stay
home
and
do
our
business
from
home,
and
that
is
you
know
we
can
do
that,
and
that
is
the
beauty.
That's
what
covet
has
shown
us
that
we
can
work
remotely
and
it's
very
effective
and
everybody
is
so
much
happier
everyone
I
speak
to
that
says
they're
working
at
home,
how
much
they
love
it,
how
safer
it
is
how
how
much
you
know.
P
They
say
it's
really
an
equity
issue
for
the
disabled
and
the
caregivers
that
it
makes
their
life
so
much
easier
to
be
able
to
work
at
home.
So
when
we
so
in
terms
of
travel,
we
shouldn't
be
traveling.
We
should
be
doing
our
meetings
remotely
and
even
I
talked
to
mtc
today
when
they
said
they
were
going
to
put
a
mandate
for
us
all
to
work
at
home.
Anybody
who
could
and
make
that
a
requirement,
but
the
but
the
city,
the
big
cities,
san
francisco
and
san
jose
their
mayors.
P
You
know
fought
that
because
they
want
business
as
usual,
people
to
come
out
and
and
so
we're
consumers,
you
know
and
that's
where
they
want
us
to
keep
consuming,
to
keep
this
economy
going,
but
we
need
to
transition
our
economy
to
become
producers.
That's
that's.
What
we
need
to
become
is
producers
self-sufficiency,
and
this
is
a
transition
to
be
able
to
work
at
home
to
help
us
become
producers.
Q
Q
No,
I
I
I
was
speaking.
I
spoke
on
the
item
on
two
points.
E
C
L
O
Yes,
thank
you
mayor.
I
wanted
to
officially
kick
off
our
annual
combined
giving
campaign
this
year.
Our
theme
is
give
a
little
to
help
a
lot
and
it
is
very
appropriate
for
the
times
that
we're
in
now
more
than
ever,
we
can
provide
a
better
day
for
people
through
dozens
of
essential
programs
that
are
funded
through
the
city's
annual
combined
giving
campaign
and
to
give
you
an
idea
of
our
contributions
during
last
year's
campaign,
city
employees
donated
147
thousand
dollars,
contribute
over
3
200
hours
of
service
and
donated
over
175
items
for
our
community.
O
This
year,
we've
set
a
goal
of
155,
000
and
hope
to
increase,
volunteer
hours
and
donated
items
by
5.
I
just
looked.
We
just
launched
this
morning
and
we've
already,
as
of
2.
11
p.m
raised
almost
15
800
already,
and
it's
just
been
a
few
hours.
O
D
O
You
jennifer
mayer
and
council
on
behalf
of
the
entire
fire
department.
D
C
P
Oh,
thank
you.
Thank
you
tony.
Yes,
the
combined
giving
campaign.
Well,
the
city,
manager's
report,
and
just
you
know,
was
thinking
about
the
city
manager
and
and
as
we
are
looking
at
the
decisions
about
whether
or
not
to
have
a
strong
mayor
or
city
manager,
that's
just
an
issue
that
I
was
going
to
address,
but
I
guess
you
want
me
to
stay
focused
on
their
giving
campaign,
which
is
a
good
work
of
the
city
manager
and
wanted
to
thank
her
for
that.
You
know
to
create
create
that
campaign.
P
However,
you
know
we
need
to
look
at
that.
That's
one
of
the
major
issues
we're
looking
at
what
is
the
role
you
know?
Do
we
have
a
strong
mayor
or
do
we
have
a
strong
city
manager?
And
the
one
issue
you
know
is:
is
that
you
know
how
we're
running
our
city-
and
you
know-
maybe
it
could
be
better
than
a
city
manager.
You
know,
and
one
of
the
issues
that
I
was
saying
is
that
you
know
we.
P
You
know
we
should
really
have
our
public
comment
in
the
beginning
of
the
meeting
and
who
decides
that
you
know
that
that
you
know
what
are
the
protocols
like
here's,
a
good
example
of
something
that's
good.
The
city
manager
is
creating
a
giving
campaign.
That's
that's
nice,
but
you
know
what
are
the
other
protocols
like,
for
instance,
when
we
have
public
comment
in
our
meeting?
Is
that
is
that
something
that
the
city
council
decides?
P
You
know
when
we
have
that
we
need
protocols
that
you
know
would
establish
good
democratic
principles
and
it
might
be
more
something
from
a
a
staff
position
versus
you
know,
elected
officials,
that
you
know
change
over
every
four
years
and
that
we
have
policies
in
place
of
when
our
a
critical
policy,
which
is
when
is
our
public
comment
in
our
city
council
meeting
and
that
that
that
could
be
essentially
addressed
potentially
from
the
city
manager.
P
You
know
who
you
know
and
just
creating
protocols
versus
at
the
whims
of
the
politicians,
and
so
that
those
are
just
issues
that
you
know
I'm
looking
at
as
we
you
know
we're
facing
that
with
our
charter
review.
Commission,
you
know,
should
we
have
a
strong
mayor
or
strong
city
manager
and
going
to
the
vote,
so
we
really
need
to
be
looking
at
policies
and
this
and
learn
more
about
the
different
roles.
D
G
Hi
good
afternoon,
mayor
and
city
council,
I'm
sulaiman
massiel,
I'm
the
director
of
the
office
of
racial
equity
and
I
am
joined
by
my
wonderful
team.
Chris
cambis
is
the
immigrant
affairs
manager
and
andrea
trong,
the
racial
equity
manager,
so
as
initiated
by
council
member
esparza
in
october
and
as
recommended
by
the
rules
and
open
government
committee
on
october
20th
21.
G
This
is
evolving
quickly,
and
so
a
quick
update
on
the
on
immigration
is
that
on
october
20th
president
biden
announced
a
1.85
trillion
legislative
framework
for
a
potential
budget
reconciliation
bill,
the
framework
included
100
billion
to
improve
and
reform
the
immigration
system
consistent
with
the
senate's
reconciliation
rules.
The
framework
also
referenced
immigration
provisions
that
would
make
enhancements
to
reduce
green
card
backlogs,
expand
legal
representation
and
make
the
asylum
and
border
processing
more
efficient
and
humane
the
senate
parliamentarian.
G
This
week,
senate
democrats
are
working
to
submit
their
plan
c
on
immigration
before
the
parliamentarian,
and
this
is
reported
to
be
an
effort
to
offer
humanitarian
parole
or
temporary
protection
from
deportation,
as
well
as
work.
Authorization
to
undocumented
individuals
who
have
been
in
the
country
up
to
2010.
G
humanitarian
parole
would
not
provide
a
pathway
to
citizenship
and
would
be
a
temporary
status
similar
to
tps.
It
is
not
clear
whether
democrats
will
also
include
provisions
to
address
the
green
card
backlog
and
related
legal
immigration
reform
on
this
third
submission
or
how
the
parliamentarian
will
rule
on
any
of
it.
Regardless
of
the
final
outcome
of
the
budget
reconciliation
process,
it
is
critical
that
we
continue
to
advocate
strongly
for
other
ongoing
legislation
that
seeks
to
provide
pathways
to
citizenship
and
immigration
reform.
D
Thank
you,
council,
member
esparza.
I.
S
I
just
wanted
to
say
that,
as
we
all
know,
the
pandemic
was,
you
know,
really
difficult,
and
I
think
that.
S
Folks,
such
as
farm
workers,
janitors
and
essential
workers,
as
such
as
security
officers
as
well,
worked
really
really
hard
throughout
this
pandemic,
and
they
deserve
the
pathway
to
citizenship
because
they
contribute
to
the
economy
and
other
civil
duties,
like
any
other
citizen
does
and
with
that
being
said,
I
hope
you
support
this
and
I
hope
we
can
get
much
more
support
on
this
immigration
forum.
Thank.
A
Good
afternoon
san
jose
council
members,
my
name
is
joseph,
I'm
the
lead
political
organizer
for
seiu
usw,
and
we
have
thousands
of
members
in
the
city
of
san
jose
in
our
union
alone.
A
Who
are
immigrants,
and
we
we
want
to
give
a
heartfelt
thanks
to
maya,
esparza's
council
member,
my
spices
office,
for
pushing
this
resolution
forward.
We
want
to
give
a
a
respectful
acknowledgement
to
siren
and
maricela
gutierrez
for
helping
us
direct
the
legislation
and
co-sponsoring
the
the
non-legislation.
The
resolution,
I'm
sorry
and-
and
we
want
to
say
that
our
union
supports
a
pathway
to
legalization
for
11
million
people
who
are
undocumented
currently
in
the
us
today.
We
we
support.
A
A
Immigrants
not
only
contribute
to
the
economy
but
low-wage
labor
acts
as
a
form
of
investment
in
the
economy
that
is
essential
to
economic
growth
and
to
sustaining
a
strong
gdp
and
immigrants
throughout
the
history
of
this
country
have
consistently
helped
the
economy,
grow
and
move
forward,
and
we
need
their
help
now,
and
so
we
we
want
them
to
get
what
they
deserve:
a
pathway
to
citizenship.
Thank
you.
So
much
councilmember
esparza.
P
Oh,
thank
you
so
much
federal
immigration
reform.
This
is
really
important.
In
regards
to
the
last
thing,
I
was
referring
to
we're
talking
about
public
public
comment
in
the
beginning
of
the
meeting
the
spotlight
the
san
jose
spotlight
had
interviewed
because
we've
been
dealing
with
this.
We
a
lot
of
citizens
want
this
to
make
it
easy
for
us
to
communicate
with
our
our
elected
officials.
You
just
come
at
a
certain
time.
You
know
it's
the
beginning
of
the
meeting.
It's
like
six
o'clock.
You
know
you
know
time.
P
You
don't
have
to
wait
till
midnight
where
they're
gonna
maybe
give
you
a
half
hour,
thirty
something
a
half
a
second
to
talk
so
anyway,
the
you
know.
It's
interesting
that
what
mayor
le
carter
responded
is
that
oh
people
will
start
talking
about
donald
trump.
You
know,
and
here
we
are-
and
that
was
you
know
like
we'd-
be
off
topics
quote
unquote,
and
here
we
are
addressing
the
federal
federal
legislation
and,
of
course,
we're
all
inter
connected,
and
we
even
have.
P
I
was
just
looking
up
alex
the
sky
alex
who's,
our
feder,
you
know
what
intergovernmental
relations
and
we
have
our
state.
You
know
advocacy,
you
know
we
have
that
we're
actually
paying
people
to
communicate
with
the
federal
and
the
state,
it's
very
essential
and
to
say,
oh,
that
people
will
talk
about
federal
issues
and
you
know
be
off
topic.
It's
not
off
topic,
we're
all
connected
and
and
the
things
that
happen
at
the
federal
level
do
affect
us
as
we're.
Seeing
in
this
you
know
federal
immigration
reform
request.
P
So
this
is
where
that
is
a
a
full.
The
argument
to
say
that
people
will
talk
about
federal
issues,
because
we
do
need
to
be
able
to
talk
about
it
and
they're.
They
do
impact
us.
So
I
appreciate
you
know,
maya
esparza,
bringing
this
issue
up
and
saying
that
this
is
critical
and
that
you
know
the
immigration
reform
issues
and
how
they
impact
our
our
local
citizens
affects
us.
H
Hi,
my
name
is
lina
and
I'm
an
immigrant
rights
youth
fellow
at
siren,
I'd
like
to
say
hello
and
thank
you,
councilman
councilmembers
members,
for
an
opportunity
to
speak.
I'm
from
the
east
side,
specifically
district
7
is
where
I'm
from
I'm
concerned
about
the
exclusion
and
the
new
proposal
and
democrats
promised
a
pathway
to
citizenship
for
all
11
million
undocumented
immigrants,
and
it
is
concerning
to
see
that
the
new
proposal
is
excluding
many
immigrants
and
we
have
here.
We
have
an
immigrant
community
and
a
strong
immigrant
protection
in
san
jose.
H
A
Hi
good
afternoon,
thank
you
for
allowing
us
to
speak
on
this
issue
and
thank
you
to
council
member
esparza
for
this
immigration
resolution
proposal
and
just
it
might
sound
a
little
redundant.
But,
as
we
know
you
know,
the
nation
is
home
to
11
million
undocumented
folks,
and
most
of
those
folks
did
work
throughout
the
pandemic.
A
They
they're
still
working
now
they
weren't
able
to
get
time
off
and
as
someone
who
was
also
born
and
raised
in
san
jose,
I
I
resonate
with
the
with
the
with
the
struggle
of
having
immigrant
parents
that
are
constantly
living
out
of
here.
Fear
whether
they're
gonna
get
deported
or
not,
and
there's
a
lot
of
children
in
in
san
jose
that
also
live
with,
that
fear
that
their
parents
might
might
be
taken
away
and
when
their
currents
contribute
to
the
economy
when
they
they
they
pay
their
taxes.
A
You
know
they
try
to
stay
as
as
low-key
as
possible
to
not
to
stay
out
of
trouble,
and
it's
just
something
that
is
owed
to
the
undocumented
community,
just
a
pathway
to
citizenship.
It's
been
talked
about
in
past
administrations.
It's
it's!
The
talk
now
with
this
current
administration,
but
there's
no
moving
forward.
You
know
like
there's
always
all
these
promises
to
the
documented
community,
but
they're
never
given
a
permanent
pathway
to
citizenship.
So
if
you
guys,
if
the
council
could
please
support
mayas
varsa's
proposal,
that
would
be
great
and
thank
you.
Councilmember
esparza.
S
Q
Hi
blair
beekman
here
thanks
a
lot
for
this
item.
It's
been
a
long
journey.
These
same
issues
were
brought
up
about
seven
years
ago,
under
the
obama
administration.
Q
They
were
really
good
ideas
then,
and
they're
really
good
ideas.
Now,
good
luck,
how
we
can
move
forward
with
this
issue.
I
thank
you
very
much
for
the
presentation
on
this
issue.
I
think
it
covered
a
lot
of
ground
and
it
described
a
lot
of
ways
to
talk
about
this
issue
very
well,
and
I
found
a
great
you
know,
city
staff
report,
how
to
just
how
to
address
and
discuss
this
issue
to
talk
about
the
future
of
border
issues
just
opens
up.
Q
N
I
don't
think
the
city
is
prepared
to
take
on
tens
of
thousands
of
people
crossing
the
border
illegally
they're
from
they're,
not
just
from
mexico
they're
from
many
different
countries
and
they're
going
to
require
housing
and
health
care
education,
jobs.
Where
are
we
going
to
put
everybody?
I
mean
it's
not
a
matter
of
like
having
it.
We
don't
have
it,
and
I
mean
this
is
a
city
that
can't
even
you
know,
have
the
fountain
at
the
rose
garden
work
properly.
N
You
guys
get
upset.
If
I
raise
my
voice
or
use
the
wrong
gender
pronoun,
how
are
you
going
to
handle
real
life
issues
that
people
come
in
in
the
city
with
nothing
clothes
on
their
back?
And
you
know
my
grandfather
was
an
immigrant.
My
my
sister-in-law
was
an
immigrant.
They
both
had
a
lot
of
struggle
with
immigration
people.
My
grandfather
was
quarantined.
N
His
mother,
my
great
grandmother,
didn't
even
know
where
he
was
quarantined
in
ellis
island.
No
one
knew
where
he
was.
Can
you
imagine
because
he
was
sick
and
he
was
ill
and
they
needed
to
quarantine
her?
My
sister-in-law
spent
tens
of
thousands
of
dollars
become
a
citizen.
She
still
has
a
green
card.
N
She'll
have
her
citizenship
soon,
but
she
worked
very
hard
to
do
that
and
her
and
my
brother
spent
a
boatload
of
money
and
and
interviews
and
everything
else,
and
for
people
just
to
waltz
in
and
say,
hey
where's,
all
my
free
stuff
and
yeah.
I
deserve
to
be
a
citizen
right
away.
I
disagree.
Now
people
have
been
working.
No
those
people
should
be
fast
tracked,
but
people
just
show
up.
I
don't
agree
with
that
and
don't
forget
about
bambi
larson,
don't
forget
about
her.
She
was
murdered
by
an
illegal
or
undocumented
person.
S
Hi
good
afternoon,
my
name
is
krista
deletori,
and
I
am
here
on
behalf
of
the
south
bay
labor
council,
to
support
council
member.
As
far
as
federal
immigration
reform
resolution,
it
is
incumbent
upon
the
biden
administration
to
fulfill
their
campaign
promises
and
their
build
back
better
agenda
by
providing
a
clear
and
direct
pathway
to
citizenship.
S
There
are
over
25
000
undocumented
immigrants
in
san
jose,
who
are
our
neighbors
friends,
classmates
co-workers.
Many
of
them
are
front-line
workers,
and
all
of
them
are
fellow
taxpayers.
These
folks
perform
many
of
the
essential
duties
and
work
in
our
communities
like
providing
health
care
services
to
our
most
vulnerable
residents.
S
During
the
pandemic,
we
saw
the
extent
of
the
struggles
our
document
community
face
on
a
daily
basis.
Many
undocumented
families
assumed
high
health
risks
working
tirelessly
on
the
front
lines,
to
provide
vital
resources
to
our
community
and
safeguard
our
health
all
while
living
in
the
fear
of
deportation.
S
It
is
high
time
they
receive
the
path
to
citizenship
that
they
have
been
so
long
denied.
Currently,
the
senate
parliamentarian
is
blocking
efforts
to
pass
comprehensive
immigration
reform,
including
a
pathway
to
citizenship
for
our
nation's
11
million
undocumented
immigrants,
and
we
have
a
supportive
presidential
administration
right
now.
So
we
really
have
this
historic
opportunity
to
act
now
and
break
through
decades
of
political
impasse
and
actually
accomplish
some
immigration
reform
that
could
benefit
many
of
our
undocumented
folks
here
in
the
united
states.
S
So
today
I
asked
the
council
to
urge
our
congressional
presidential
leadership
to
take
bold
and
aggressive
and
immediate
action
on
immigration
reform
right
now
there
is
a
or
there's
been
a
recent
federal
ruling
on
daca
in
texas
and
it's
calling
to
the
question
the
future
of
of
the
program,
and
we
need
to
really
act
urgently,
so
we
might
not
have
a
better
chance
right
now
to
improve
the
lives
of
millions
of
hard-working
immigrants,
all
of
them
who
have
taken
enormous
risks
and
faced
unfathomable
hardships
to
build
a
better
life
and
future
for
themselves
and
their
children.
S
Thank
you.
I
have
to
agree
with
a
con
congress
person.
Sorry,
maybe
later
the
two
things
put
forward
by
the
council
person
and
mary
cardo,
I
didn't
read
all
of
them,
so
I'm
talking
a
little
bit
from
what
was
said.
S
S
S
It's
just
that
I
don't
want
to
see
these
people
who
are
trying
to
become
citizens,
taking
more
advantage
of
what
I'm
trying
to
say,
and
it's
just
really
important
to
make
people
wait
down
there
so
long
or
to
have
to
cross
those
dangerous
places
and
to
arrest
people
who's
just
trying
to
give
them
water.
I
mean,
I
know
we
need
quote-unquote
secure
borders,
but
it
doesn't
have
to
be
cruel.
S
So
it's
not
an
easy
thing,
but
it
should
be
really
built
into
it
that
people
who
are
violent
and
people
who
are
who
take
advantage
and
people
who
steal
and
all
of
that
you
know
lots
of
stuff
people
who
commit
fraud
and
that
take
advantage
of
other
people's
situations.
That
should
be
looked
at
too.
Thank
you.
S
Hello,
thank
you
for
the
opportunity
to
speak.
My
name
is
azusa,
and
I
organize
with
services,
immigrant
rights
and
education
network
siren,
I'm
also
the
constituent
of
district
7
and
daughter
of
immigrants
living
in
san
jose.
I'm
calling
a
support
of
all
11
million
undocumented
immigrants,
which
is
not
necessarily
reflected
in
the
resolution
to
call
on
congress
to
preserve
funding
for
pro-immigrant
policies,
including
a
pathway
to
citizenship.
S
It's
discriminatory
to
exclude
anyone
based
on
criminalizing
labels
that
are
historically
harmful.
Our
families
want
to
continue
working
without
fear
of
family
separation
or
deportation
from
this
country.
Asking
for
11
million
is
not
asking
for
too
much.
Many
of
our
immigrant
community
members
that
are
excluded
have
been
waiting
for
a
pathway
for
far
too
long.
S
This
includes
my
family
and
we
can
no
longer
wait
and,
quite
frankly,
waiting
time
is
over
we're
at
a
crucial
junction
to
pass
a
long
overdue
pathway
to
citizenship,
and
we
need
as
much
support
as
possible
to
urge
congress
to
take
a
bold
action.
Your
voice
city,
council,
members
and
support
will
make
a
difference.
Please
pass
this
resolution
to
echo
the
voices
of
community
members
like
me,
who
know
that
we
need
citizenship
for
everyone,
not
just
some
of
us.
Thank
you.
O
Hi,
my
name
is
jose
servin
and
I'm
calling
as
an
organizer
with
siren
the
services
yeah
siren
the
organization
and
I'm
calling
to
speak
on
behalf
of
item
number
3.4
in
particular,
as
a
longtime
organizer
in
the
immigrant
rights
field.
I
would
like
to
give
my
testimony
also
as
an
undocumented
father
and
the
child
of
undocumented
workers,
to
say
that
we
are
not
a
monolith
and
so
a
lot
of
the
labels
that
are
coming
up
on.
O
This
call
today
actually
represent
us,
and
I
have
no
shame
in
saying
that
my
family
has
been
criminalized
at
the
same
time
that
my
family
is
a
working
family
and
we're
laborers,
and
so
for
that
reason
I
would
strongly
strongly
encourage
the
council
members
who
brought
forward
this
bold
proposal
to
make
it
bolder
and
to
include
all
11
million
people
in
this
country.
O
We
owe
it
to
our
undocumented
neighbors,
to
fight
for
more
and
to
continue
to
fight
for
more,
especially
at
a
moment
when
we
have
the
historic
opportunity
of
having
power
in
in
the
white
house
having
power
in
the
house
and
having
power
in
the
senate,
and
so
our
words
matter.
Our
words
matter
a
lot
we
saw
this
happen.
We
saw
the
power
of
words
the
past
four
years
in
terms
of
criminalizing
brutalizing
and
stratifying
our
community
and
making
us
the
scapegoat
for
whatever
problem
you
want
to
name.
O
Immigrants
were
named
the
problem,
and
so
I
think
it's
time
for
us
to
be
bold
on
the
counter
right
to
uphold
our
immigrant
communities,
uphold
our
values
and
to
really
be
inclusive
of
everybody,
because,
unfortunately,
the
people
being
left
out
are
the
people
that
need
help
the
most.
T
Hi
good
afternoon,
this
is
maricela
gutierrez,
I'm
the
executive
director
of
services,
immigrant
rights
and
education
network,
also
known
as
siren
siren's
been
in
serving
the
san
jose
community,
santa
clara
county
for
35
years,
and
through
these
35
years,
we've
served
everyone,
regardless
of
immigration
status,
criminal
status
or
where
they
come
from,
and
it's
been
an
honor
for
me
to
do
this
role
these
past
six
years.
The
resolution
we're
very
excited
that
the
resolution
is
being
pushed
forward.
T
We
know
that
a
pathway
to
citizenship
is
very
much
needed
to
the
millions
of
11
millions
of
community
members
that
reside
in
the
united
states
and
also
san
jose
being
one
of
the
the
largest
counties
with
immigrants
in
the
bay
area.
We
know
that
not
only
is
this
important,
it's
as
a
symbolic
gesture,
but
also
important
to
show
our
community
that
we
stand
with
him.
Currently,
the
language
is
still
limiting,
because
it
does
only
include
essential
workers,
cps
daca
and
farm
workers.
T
It
excludes
a
number
of
million
millions
of
people,
so
it
only
includes
about
5
million
individuals
we're
pushing
for
all
11
million.
So
we
ask
you
to
reconsider
the
language
to
actually
expand
it,
to
include
all
11
billion,
to
assure
that
our
community
is
not
left
out.
The
communities
are
all
included
in
a
county
where
we
have
this
the
stronger
sanctuary
policies
in
in
the
country.
You
know
with
a
civil
detainer
policy
that
protects
immigrants.
T
We
want
to
assure
that
this
symbolic
resolution
also
represents
us
for
our
communities
and
and
as
an
organization
that
went
out
and
hid
up
hit,
the
hit
the
hit
the
streets
was
on
phone
banking
was
calling
and
texting
almost
600
000
people
to
turn
out
to
vote
in
the
2020
elections.
T
B
To
begin
with.
So
I
think
that
the
start
point
for
the
conversation
needs
to
start
there,
the
humanization
and
acknowledgement
of
this
country
that
they
have
continued
to
exploit
and
to
enrich
themselves
off
of
the
exploitation
of
the
mexican
of
the
honduran
of
the
salvadorian
of
the
peruvian
and
all
of
the
citizens
in
these
cities
that
also
suffer
from
poverty,
poverty
that
is
created.
We
have
not
challenged
ourselves
to
discuss
the
red
line
policies
and
how
those
redline
policies
were
informed
by
much
of
the
language
that
I
heard
today.
B
Brian
the
reason
why
it
was
hard
for
you
to
describe
what
you
were
describing
because
they
are
not
your
words
I
can
tell
I
can
sense
it.
I
can
hear
it
don't
do
that
again,
it's
really
unbecoming
of
you,
but
to
the
topic.
We
need
to
start
discussing
these
federal
immigration
reform
laws
within
the
context
of
us
understanding
that
we
have
been
the
beneficiaries
of
the
exploitation
of
them.
L
Sparza,
thank
you
mayor.
I
want
to
start
by
thanking
siren,
sciu
and
other
advocates,
like
the
asian
law
alliance,
who
advocate
for
our
immigrants
every
day.
L
L
And
the
timing
of
this
is
really
important,
we're
at
a
crucial
time
in
our
nation
in
terms
of
immigration
reform.
At
the
federal
level,
we
have
literally
a
once
in
a
generation
opportunity
to
enact
reform
and
create
a
pathway
to
citizenship
for
11
million
undocumented
immigrants,
who
are
our
neighbors,
our
coworkers,
our
friends,
our
family,
and
they
are
also
many
of
our
essential
workers
who
have
put
themselves
in
harmful
way
to
keep
our
society
running
during
this
pandemic.
L
I
also
wanted
to
add
that
we've
seen
during
the
trump
administration,
even
before
kovid,
I
had
kids
in
the
schools
in
my
council
district
that
were
afraid
to
go
to
school
because
they
weren't
sure
if
mom
and
dad
would
be
home
when
they
got
back,
and
so
this
was
a
big
issue
before
kovid,
where
teachers
and
principals
were
talking
to
kids
and
families
and
it's
a
legitimate
fear.
L
We've
seen
it
during
covid
when
people
who
needed
food
most
were
frankly
afraid
to
go,
get
food.
We
had
to
can
work
to
convince
people.
Please
come
and
get
food
because
we
have
an
immigration
system
that
penalizes
people
from
coming
out
of
the
shadows.
It
penalizes
people
from
getting
help,
so
a
lot
of
folks
have
also
been
isolated
during
covid.
L
First
off.
I
would
know
that
many
people
would
say
that
the
border
crossed
us,
but
more
than
that,
I
would
invite
folks
to
learn
about
the
immigration
system
and
learn
that
nobody
waltzes
anywhere
it's
a
byzantine,
difficult
system
to
work
in
and
all
we're
asking
for
is
a
legal
pathway
to
citizenship.
L
So
now
we
face
a
rare
opportunity
for
congress
and
the
president
to
approve
comprehensive
immigration
reform
through
the
federal
budget
process.
This
comes
as
a
recent
federal
ruling
in
texas
on
daca
has
thrown
the
future
of
the
program
in
doubt,
and
so
the
time
to
act
is
now.
We
need
to
send
a
unified
message
to
our
leaders
in
congress
that
this,
once
in
a
generation,
opportunity
will
not
pass
us
by
and
so
that
we
need
comprehensive
immigration
reform
that
includes
a
pathway
to
citizenship.
L
Before
I
make
a
motion
I
wanted
to
mention
to
folks
the
first
paragraph
of
the
resolution
mentions:
there
are
11,
undocumented
immigrants,
nationwide
hearing
the
concerns
that
were
brought
up
today.
That's
completely
new
to
me.
By
the
way
I
hadn't
heard
those
concerns,
I'm
I'm
I'm.
This
is
all
about
preparing
a
pathway
to
citizenship.
L
D
Thank
you.
I
support
the
motion.
Thank
you.
I
just
sorry
councilmember
mattis,
I
think
kendall
macross
go
beat
you
to
it.
Just
had
a
couple
quick
questions.
One
is,
I
know
that
senator
padilla
has
been
very
clear
and,
on
the
record,
he's
going
to
push
the
reconciliation,
but
I
know
there
are
challenges
based
on
the
parliamentarians
ruling.
G
D
I
just
suggest
it
so
it's
we're
clearing
on
the
record.
Okay.
Is
that
right
with
the
make
of
the
motion.
C
D
Okay
and
the
secondary
yeah,
okay,
great
and
then
you
know
I
I
remember
hearing
the
number
you
know
when
referring
to
the
number
of
or
neighbors
who
are
undocumented
here
in
san
jose.
I
remember
hearing
the
number
80
000
mentioned
in
the
past
and
I'm
trying
to
understand
why
we're
at
25
000
now,
because
I
I
thought
25
000-
might
reflect
the
number
of
folks
who
might
be
eligible
under
daca.
But
I
thought
there
was
a
much
larger
number
of
our
neighbors,
who
might
be
all
who
might
be
undocumented.
D
D
More
san
jose
residents,
who
were
actually
not
citizens
than
just
80
000..
So
I
guess
maybe
I'm
under
a
misunderstanding,
because
I
I'm
pretty
certain
that
the
city
has
put
out
information,
yeah,
saying
that
we
have
an
80,
000,
undocumented
neighbors
in
our
city
and
you're,
saying:
that's
not
that's
not.
D
G
J
O
Sort
of
malleable
areas
is
that
oftentimes,
the
numbers
is
shifts
based
on
whether
we're
referring
to
how
many
are
in
the
city,
specifically
how
many
are
in
the
santa
clara
county.
How
many
are
in
the
san
jose
metropolitan
area,
and
I
think
that's
where
it
gets
a
little
bit
squishy,
sometimes
because
I
know
we've
tried
to
nail
down
that
number
specifically
so
that
we
can
reflect
the
the
appropriate
numbers.
So
that
might.
D
C
O
C
A
Q
D
C
I
have
elmer
juco
and
sarah
mcdermott,
who
are
present.
Please
come
to
the
microphone
in
no
particular
order,
so
whoever's
first
just
comes
straight
to
the
microphone.
I
currently
have
one
hand
up
on
zoom.
If
you
want
to
speak
on
this
item,
5.1
related
to
airport
tenants,
please
raise
your
hand
at
this
time.
Go
ahead.
N
N
N
H
H
We
look
forward
to
our
members
and
and
other
organizations
that
were
represent
workers
at
the
airport
being
able
to
be
part
of
this
ongoing
conversation.
Thank
you.
B
The
dehumanization
that
I
don't
think
anybody
does
intentionally,
but
the
dehumanization
of
hearing
from
a
caucasian
speak
and
say
that.
Well,
you
know
the
we
have
at
the
airport,
people
that
work
there,
that
and
most
of
them
there's
a
lot
of
them
that
are
people
of
color,
and
so
what
we're
going
to
do
now,
they're
afterwards.
That
say
that
how
wonderful
these
systems
are
because
they
help
these
people
of
color.
B
R
So
as
we
work
towards
actually
get
supporting
our
airport
and
getting
it
up
and
running
again,
I
urge
you
to
move
forward
with
this
memo
and
look
at
how
can
we
make
sure
that,
as
we
bring
bring
our
airport
back,
that
we're
also
bringing
back
the
people
who
worked
there
and
built
it
and
kept
it
running
for
so
many
years
and
want
to
keep
our
community
running?
Thank
you
very
much.
Q
Hi,
thank
you.
Thank
you
very
much
for
those
previous
words
and
public
comment.
I
wanted
to
try
to
quickly
offer
that
to
speak
onto
on
a
few
consumer
issues,
the
consumer
aopr
data
collection
program
within
the
city
airport
area,
I
think,
has
been
a
very
good
one.
Q
I
think
it
could
be
a
good
example,
for
you
know,
downtown
parking
issues
and
just
overall,
you
know
issues
for
san
jose
and
it
just
really
addresses
the
concepts
of
open
democracy
and
good
practices
and
civil
rights
and
civil
protections
that
invites
everyone
to
participate
and
try
to
better
themselves
with,
and
I
think
that's
really
needed
right
now
in
our
lives
and
can
really
help
the
current
ai
questions.
Q
That's
going
on
in
san
jose
and
in
bay
area
cities
throughout
the
bay
area
at
this
time,
and
it's
just
a
real
positive
way
to
talk
about
our
sustainability
and
our
hopes
and
our
good
ideals,
and
so
I
just
thought
I'd
mention
it.
This
time
and
thanks
for
the
item.
P
Hi,
yes,
that's
a
wood
man
c.
Well,
I
do
want
to
ask
paul
a
soto
in
regards
to
that
10
million
dollars
and
I've
been
trying
to
find
out
the
real
history
of
what
happened
with
the
homeless
at
columbus
park,
because
I
know
that
it's
sort
of
been
taken
out
of
the
news.
What
the
real
history
is,
and
it
is
about
the
money
that
the
city
of
san
jose
could
get
to
expand.
P
The
airport
is
what's
threatened,
and-
and
so
you
know,
there's
a
lot
of
issues
there,
but
the
you
know-
and
you
know
I
guess
it's
a
big
issue.
You
know
it's
that
it's
the
fact
that
we're
having
to
move
people
in
a
place-
that's
actually
very
hospitable
to
people.
People
have
really
created
community
there
and
it's
you
know
where
our
you
know.
Our
civilization
is
started
by
the
rivers,
and
you
know
we
should
be
providing
that
should
become
a
you
know,
an
eco
village.
It
could
become
an
eco
village.
P
There's
I
mean,
but
I
guess
you
know,
there's
contracts
that
we
got
rid
of
everybody
from
that
area.
You
know
my
neighbors
have
thought
that
the
airport
coming
to
that
area
because
of
what
happened
that
we
moved
the
whole
community
that
was
a
columbus
park,
was
a
neighborhood
and
we
got
rid
of
those
people,
and
I
guess
we
gave
him
some
little
token
of
money,
but
you
know,
and
and
you
know
we
lost
that
neighborhood,
and
so
you
know
for
the
airport-
and
this
is
where
we
have
you
know
you
know.
P
Capitalism
has
exploited
people
and
nature
for
profit,
and
when
we
look
at
what's
happened,
you
know
what
the
people
that
are
suffering
are
the
you
know
the
business
we
shouldn't
be
subsidizing
businesses.
These
businesses
didn't
make
it
the
airport
didn't
make
it.
The
restaurants
didn't
make
it
well,
then
they
should
go
away
because
we
need
to
think
about
a
new
way
of
of
living
and
it
most
is
based
on
universal
basic
income.
So
we
can
be
healthy
and
try
to
move
towards
self-sufficiency.
P
O
A
Afternoon,
san
jose
council
members,
this
is
senior
political
organizer
with
seiu
usw.
We
would,
on
you,
know
behalf
of
our
of
our
union.
We
we
have.
We
also
have
a
member.
We
represent
members
at
the
san
jose
airport
and
we
want
to
thank
maya,
esparza
and
council
member
point.
A
That's
right,
jimenez
as
well,
for
putting
forward
the
memo,
and
we
believe
that
you
know
central
workers
at
the
airport
deserve
their
fair
share
of
the
federal
dollars
that
are
coming
down
for
covet
relief
and
our
workers
are
out
there
on
the
front
the
front
lines
risking
their
lives
and
to
make
sure
that
the
airport
continue
to
run
and,
and
we
feel
like
they,
they
need
some.
A
Some
economic
support
and
relief
and
just
a
fair
share
of
you
know
all
the
the
wealth
and
the
the
profit
economic
activity
that's
generated
by
the
airport.
We
believe
that
our
workers
leave
a
fair
deserve,
a
fair
increase
in
wages
and
benefits.
Thank
you
very
much.
A
Hi
good
afternoon
so
kind
of
like
the
same
that
everyone
has
been
asking
for
I'm
a
political
organizer
with
sciu
usw
and
our
union
does
have
members
in
san
jose
city
airport,
that
that
have
been
working
there
that
did
get
affected
by
the
pandemic.
So
it's
crucial
for
them
to
have
their
their
wages
and
benefits
increased.
A
And,
and
are
able
to
access
just
all
these
benefits
that
are,
that
would
be
included
with
with
the
federal
funding.
Thank
you.
D
Thank
you.
Returning
to
council
council
member
spartan.
L
Thank
you
mayor.
You
know
we
all
understand
what
an
incredibly
challenging
18
months.
This
has
been
for
our
airport
and
all
the
businesses
that
we
rely
on
to
make
the
san
jose
airport
what
it
is,
and
so
I'm
happy
to
support
the
recommendations
from
staff
that
enables
us
to
continue
and
to
support
these
businesses.
L
However,
I
just
wanted
to
add
that
for
each
of
these
businesses
that
have
struggled
this
past
year
and
a
half,
we
know
that
their
workers
have
been
struggling
to
survive
as
well.
Many
of
these
workers,
as
we
all
know,
were
laid
off
at
the
beginning
of
the
pandemic
and
continue
to
face
extreme
financial
hardship,
and
so
one
of
the
things
I
like
to
do
to
do
is
to
know
more
about
the
issues
and
challenges
our
workers
are
facing,
so
that
we
can
figure
out
how
to
address
the
need.
L
Many
of
the
airport
workers
and
hospitality
workers
live
in
san
jose.
Many
of
them
live
in
district
3
and
district
5
and
district
7,
especially,
but
that's
essentially
why,
in
the
memo
that
I
submitted
with
council
member
david
cohen
council
member
sergio
jimenez
to
request
that
staff
return
to
ced
committee
with
an
evaluation
of
the
challenges
faced
by
our
airport
workers,
including
reevaluating,
our
airport
living
wage
policy,
especially
in
light
of
the
immense
challenges
these
workers
have
faced.
L
These
workers
are
disproportionately
people
of
color.
They
live
in
the
same
communities
and
zip
codes
that
have
suffered
the
worst
effects
of
the
pandemic,
and
so
this
is
our
effort
to
ensure
that
their
voices
and
concerns
are
heard.
It's
a
crucial
matter
of
equity
and
that's
why
we
want
to
see
this
report
come
to
ced.
L
So
with
that
I'd
like
to
move
the
memo
written
by
councilmember,
jimenez
cohen
and
myself,.
D
Second,
all
right
motion.
Second,
john
sorry
to
drag
you
down
here,
but
while
you're
coming
down,
let
me
just
say
a
big
thank
you.
I
know
you're
making
some
very,
very
tough
decisions
in
your
leadership
in
this
time
at
the
airport
and
appreciate
your
continued
leadership.
D
I
wanted
to
just
ask
about
the
issue
of
living
wage
versus
what
I
understand.
Many
employees
who
are
working
on
the
premises
to
be
actually
under
union
contract,
so
you
just
sort
of
just
so
that
we
in
the
public
are
all
clear
sort
of
which
which
employees
are
subject
to
collective
bargaining
agreement
and
which
will
be
subject
to
living
wage
requirements.
E
Thank
you
mayor
john
aiken,
director
of
aviation,
the
concession
employees
for
the
food
and
beverage
and
the
retail
stores.
The
vast
majority
of
them
are
union
employees
that
have
a
collective
bargaining
agreement,
so
airport
living
wage
doesn't
affect
them
and
within
those
groups,
everyone
that
was
laid
off
at
the
beginning
of
the
covid
pandemic
was
put
on
a
list
for
rehire
they've
gone
through
the
list
twice
and
all
of
those
people
have
refused
the
job
twice.
E
E
The
concessionaires
are
actually
offering
two
to
three
dollars
an
hour,
more
than
is
required
by
the
union
agreement
to
try
and
entice
people
to
work,
and
additionally,
they're
giving
them
sign-on
bonuses
and
retention
bonuses
to
try
and
keep
the
staff
there.
That's
part
of
the
reason
for
the
additional
cost
of
them.
You
know,
operating
their
business
is
they're
doing
more
to
try
and
get
the
people
to
work
there.
E
N
C
D
C
C
I
have
no
cards
in
person.
I
have
blair
beekman,
followed
by
gail
osmer.
Q
Hi
blair
beekman
here
a
real,
quick
meeting
today,
wow,
congratulations,
I
guess
first
to
note
to
continue
good
mass
use.
You
know
kobet
has
been
rising
in
in
england
and
in
russia.
It's
always
good
to
be
considered
to
be
considering
good
masculine
through
the
holidays
and
and
good
luck
in
in
and
that
we're
starting
to
work
with
a
vaccine
process
with
small
children.
Q
Q
What
is
its
good
points,
its
bad
points
and
our
lifestyles
with
it
in
our
future
with
a
minute
30,
I
guess
from
our
exchange
earlier
today
the
the
mayor
doesn't
necessarily
play
favorites
so
yeah.
Q
I
I
wanted
to
speak
on
item
2.9
about
the
issues
of
the
reimagine,
not
reimagine,
but
the
redistricting
ideas
that
I
felt
were
I
really
like
the
person
that
may
be
becoming
the
new
head,
commissioner
of
the
commission,
and
I'm
really
interested
in
redistricting
ideas
how
they
can
be
the
the
items
of
c3.
The
community
maps
are
are
interesting
to
myself.
Q
Their
adjustments
may
be
easier
to
make
it's
just
easier
to
look
at,
but
there's
real
concerns
from
the
unity
people
that
the
community
maps
are
not
speaking
to
a
certain
population.
Certain
populations
are
going
to
be
cut
out
in
certain
districts.
I
think
needs
to
be
much
more
talked
about,
and
but
I
think
you
know
we
are,
there
can
be
ways
to
to
to
lessen
that
and
lessens
it.
It's
worries
and
I
will
speak.
Q
I
guess
that
rules
in
open
government
tomorrow
that
I
think
there
needs
to
be
a
more
of
a
consistent
way.
We
talk
about.
You
know
the
the
the
apollo.
S
Good
afternoon
it's
been
a
week
now,
since
I
went
to
city
council
to
let
everybody
know
that
phase
three
needs
porta-potties,
it
shouldn't
take
a
week
for
porta-potties.
I
was
out
there
today
and
it
is
a
disaster.
S
I've
talked
to
a
few
women
and
women
now
are
being
in
a
bucket
because
they
don't
have
porta-potties.
It's
very
simple:
get
on
the
phone
call
united,
get
eight
porta
potties
and
hand
washing
stations
out
there,
and
if
that's
not
enough,
get
more
it's
a
very
simple
process.
S
If
they
don't
know
how
to
do
it,
I
have
suggested
they
call
the
person,
the
wonderful
person
who
was
in
charge
of
it
last
year
in
the
year
before.
Who
knows
exactly
what
to
do?
I
don't
want
to
wait.
They
don't
want
to
wait
a
week
for
port-au-potties,
they
need
port-a-potties.
There
should
be
no
excuses.
S
It's
been
a
week
and
also
mayor
le
cardo.
I
know
you're
busy,
but
I
asked
you
to
come
out
friday,
never
heard
anything.
I'd
like
you
to
look
at
your
schedule
this
week.
I
really
would
like
you
to
tour
phase
three.
You
know
everybody
says
they
care
about
the
unhouse.
They
want
to
know
what's
going
on.
S
S
O
O
Since
the
mayor
is
such
an
important
position
to
our
city,
I
believe
we
should
align
the
city
of
san
jose
mayor
election
with
the
presidential
election,
many
people
in
our
city
vote
for
the
presidential
election,
but
in
the
past
years
there
is
not.
There
has
not
been
a
very
high
voter
turnout
in
mayoral
elections.
O
O
O
P
Yes,
it's
very
disturbing
to
hear
this
unhoused
person
having
to
ask
for
port-a-potties
and
that
she
called
her
representative,
and
nobody
responded
this.
This
is
very
much
the
common,
the
common
state
of
affairs.
You
know
the
city
of
san
jose.
I
tell
everybody
that
I
talk
to
on
the
phone
all
the
businesses
that
have
voice
over
ip
to
go
to
their
home
and
are
so
happy
to
work
in
their
home.
P
I
say
our
city
did
not
do
that
would
not
allow
us
to
you
know
would
not
allow
the
connection
to
their
homes
didn't
figure
out
here
we
are
the
head
of
silicon
valley.
How
to
you
know
voice
over
ip
that
forward
the
phones
to
the
homes,
and
so
we
had
about
a
year
and
a
half
of
no
contact
with
our
our
our
citizens,
and
you
like
that,
you,
like
that.
That's
what
you
like,
so
you
know
the
thing
is
you
don't
do
that
and
then
what
I'm
saying
is
that
hey?
P
We
need
public
comment
in
the
beginning
of
the
meeting.
Here's
another
reason
the
fact
that
that
woman.
Luckily,
because
we're
on
zoom,
thank
goodness,
you
know
she
was
able
to
catch
you
and
talk
to
you
about
her
needs,
but
that's
why
we
need
a
set
time.
When
then,
you
know
you
can
come
at
1,
30
or
one
two
o'clock
by
two
o'clock.
It
will
be
open
forum
and
you
can
talk
about
things.
This
is
critical
to
the
survival
of
the
people.
P
B
Yes,
pulsato
from
the
horseshoe
when
I'm
going
through
the
the
allocation
of
funding
and
the
logic
and
reasoning
behind
all
the
different
policies.
What
I
noticed
is
the
order
word
order.
If
you
look
at
the,
if
you
look
at
the
document,
you'll
look
at
child
need
for
support
and
then
you'll
go
down.
It's
a
public
spaces.
You
know
public
safety
and
then
it
there,
the
associations
and
the
word
associations
and
work
proximities
of
poverty,
low-income
people,
persons
of
color.
B
Let
me
see
people
in
need,
limited
means,
and
the
word
association
between
those
and
words
like
danger
need
for
safety,
public
safety,
police
officers
sjpd
you,
you
know,
what's
what's
being
done
to
you,
this
is
a
propaganda
technique
that
is
actually
has
an
algorithm
to
it
to
create
those
words
associations.
B
So,
for
example,
the
person
just
says:
oh,
oh
lord,
come
no
low-income
people,
persons
of
color,
sjpd
and
the
mind
records
that,
and
this
is
being
done
strategically.
I
don't
like
it,
I'm
calling
you
out
on
it.
Please
stop
it,
because
people's
lives
are
being
literally
desecrated
and
decimated
as
a
result
of
that
language.
Please
stop
it.
D
N
You
cannot
call
the
police
department
for
anything,
that's
like
non-emergency
related,
even
if
you
call
9-1-1
they
put
you
on
hold,
but
this
you
know
the
city
council
people,
you
guys
don't
pick
up
your
phone.
Sometimes,
when
people
get
back
to
me
from
pam
foley's
office,
good
on
scott
got
to
hughes
down
there.
He
at
least
has
the
stones
to
talk
to
me
both
but
other
city
council
people
forget
it
sounds
like
pd,
the
worst.
You
cannot
go
down
and
call
every
single
number.
I.
B
N
The
other
day,
nobody
picks
up
the
phone
on
their
on
their
phone
directory.
There
they're
too
good
they're
too
snooty
too
smug.
What
do
you
expect
for
people
going
to
become
millionaires
for
their
retirement,
but
I
really
urge
you,
people
to
pick
up
the
phone
and
call
people
back
and
that's
what
gets
people
frustrated.
N
Is
that
you
don't
respond?
You
don't
you're
too
afraid
to
because
of
your
vanity.
You
don't
want
to
pick
up
the
phone
because
you
don't
want
to
hear
the
complaints,
because
you're
too
good
to
hear
the
complaints,
because
you're
you're
in
the
power
structure.
You
don't
like
the
criticism
you
think
you're
above
it
you're
not.
N
So
I
really
recommend
not
only
the
santa
fe
pd
pick
up
the
phone,
but
they
need
to
learn
how
to
turn
their
lights
on
when
they're
driving
their
car.
When
it's
dark
out,
can
you
imagine
this?
These
people
drive
around
without
their
lights
on?
I
must
have
seen
it
10
times
in
the
last
year.
I
don't
get
out
much,
but
when
I
do
their
sano's
apd
no
lights
on,
are
they
too
good
to
turn
their
lights
on,
because
they're
too
good
to
answer
the
telephone
down
there?
N
N
Good
afternoon
me
and
council,
thank
you
for
the
opportunity
to
address
you
on
the
current
status
of
the
the
project,
specifically
cost
tunnel
tunneling
station
design,
I'd
like
to
close
off
with
the
potential
path
forward.
N
As
you
may
have
read
in
the
press,
the
the
power
project
costs
are
now
at
9.1
billion
dollars,
and
the
good
news
is
we're
getting
2.3
billion
dollars
from
the
feds.
So
the
bad
news
is:
where
are
we
going
to
find
a
6.8
billion
dollar
match
when
we
couldn't
possibly
afford
four
billion
dollars?
Last
time
on
the
tunnel
design?
N
We
all
agreed
that
downtown
requested
a
single
ball
strategy
to
eliminate
impact,
but
we
can
cast,
can
cast
down,
can
cut
and
cut
costs
down
with
single
ball
tunneling
down
to
one
and
a
half
miles
between
tiridan
and
13th
street,
and
if,
at
that
time
we
increased
the
tunnel
diameter
back
to
56
feet,
we
can
now
have
station
entrances
on
both
sides
of
the
street.
N
R
I'm
here
to
talk
about
the
71
vista
montana
site.
Again
I
wanted
to.
I
know
that
you've
heard
from
us
a
lot
and
I've
noticed
this
trend
that
you're
thinking
of
us
as
whining
about
it,
because
just
a
small
site,
it's
just
a
few
rvs,
and
I
want
to
remind
you
that
this
is
not
the
case.
Every
time
I
brought
up
the
location.
R
You've
said:
oh
there's
another
site,
that's
opening
four
or
five
blocks
from
my
house
and
we're
talking
about
a
site
that
is
two
feet
from
our
houses
and
two
feet
from
our
toddler
park
and
it
is
still
open
and
it
is
still
causing
problems.
I'm
glad
to
hear
that
you're
talking
about
setbacks
from
residences
and
parts
for
future
sites,
but
this
is
still
open.
It
is
still
causing
problems.
R
City
manager
mcguire
said
that
she'd
visited
the
site
and
found
it
pretty
clean
compared
to
an
unsanctioned
encampment
that
is
completely
out
of
control
and
hud
has
had
multiple
fires,
whereas
this
is
a
fully
funded
program
that
is,
spending
up
to
forty
five
thousand
dollars
per
person
for
just
nine
months,
but
is
being
turned
into
a
parking
lot
for
unoperation
vehicles
and
a
junkyard
providing
only
porta
potties
none
of
the
services
that
these
people
need
to
get
back
on
their
feet,
nowhere
to
go
indoors
as
it
gets
cold.
R
No
showers
should
make
people
feel
human,
no
laundry,
no
case
workers,
no
education
classes,
no
wellness
opportunities,
nothing
none
of
the
type
of
support
that
they
need
to
get
back
on
their
feet.
Meanwhile,
we
are
seeing
lots
of
problems
we
are
seeing
threatening
behavior
in
our
own
playgrounds.
One
of
my
female
neighbors
got
charged
at
the
children's
park
by
somebody
who
was
yelling.
She
scooped
up
her
dog
and
ran
away
terrified.
R
The
people
arriving
and
sitting
on
our
children's
play
structures,
smoking
up
or
doing
drugs
they're
not
of
sound
mind
and
they're
threatening
us,
and
we
did
not
have
these
problems
before
the
site
was
brought
into
our
neighborhood.
You
need
to
close
the
site
down.
This
is
really
important.
Security
is
non-existent.
An
abandoned
car
sitting
at
the
driveway
does
not
constitute
security.
It's
a
sign,
not
a
cop.
R
Our
neighbors
have
seen
that
there
is
nobody
on
duty
several
times,
even
though
they're
supposed
to
be
24-hour
security
plus
security
has
been
harassing
our
neighborhoods
and
is
not
prepared
to
deal
with
this
population.
You
need
to
shut
this
program
down
soon.
We
haven't
heard
a
timeline
yet,
even
though
the
plan
is
to
move
them
to
a
better
site,
please
take
care
of
this
and
do
this
promptly.
Thank
you.
C
You
know
I
live
in
a
high
crime
rate
area,
that's
densely
populated,
and
you
know
there's
lots
of
times
when
we
need
them
and
they
just
can't
come
it's
a
safety
issue.
C
It's
a
quality
of
life
issue,
and
I
don't
know
if
I
miss
the
opportunity
to
speak
or
be
spoken
on
this,
but
you
know
I
get
pretty
busy
as
a
resident
of
the
city
and
it's
really
hard
for
me
to
get
involved
with
all
the
council
meetings
and
everything
that's
important,
but
the
pandemic
showed
a
lot
of
cracks
in
our
city
and
especially
the
police
department.
So
please,
if
you
can,
give
them
more
more
money
to
the
police
department
and
especially
the
mental
health
mobile
unit.
C
Thank
you
for
your
time
and
hopefully
you
take
into
consideration
what
I
just
said.
Thank
you,
sri,
followed
by
ophelia,
hernandez.
C
R
L
R
L
K
R
So
this
is
pertaining
to
71
vista
montana,
a
common
site
which
is
very
similar
to
what
the
apple
site
was.
Have
you
taken
a
drive
over
there?
Would
you
actually
get
down
and
walk
through
there
by
yourself
and
I'm
not
talking
about
with
your
co-workers
and
police
while
working
doing
outreach,
but
by
yourself
I
doubt
it.
I
double
thought
even
driving
my
car.
Through
there,
this
place
looks
like
a
war
zone,
something
that
shouldn't
even
exist
here
in
san
jose
in
silicon
valley.
R
It
looks
like
a
third
world
country
broke
down
cars,
piles
of
trash
burnt
down
buildings,
but
if
you
look
close
enough,
you'll
see
people
in
there
living
in
these
conditions.
No
one
has
come
to
the
rescue
for
years.
No
one
has
cared
for
years,
but
speak
dollars
and
cents
to
you
guys
and
taking
away
your
funding
and
all
of
a
sudden.
They
are
your
number
one
priority,
and
now
the
problems
that
are
put
into
our
local
neighborhoods.
We
often
think
in
question:
why
are
they
there
what
got
them
there
and
why?
R
When
help
is
rendered,
do
some
of
them
deny
it
like
the
people
that
are
living
at
71,
vista
montana
residents,
around
71
vista
montana,
had
no
choice
and
no
say
residents
just
had
to
accept
the
fact
that
you
want
to
put
them
right
over
our
backyard
wall
or
on
on
or
on
the
other
side
of
our
children's
park,
they're
literally
separated
by
a
fence.
I'm
very
concerned
when
I
hear
advocates
and
council
members
and
others
trying
to
compare
a
city-run
site
to
an
unsanctioned
site
like
coleman
or
apple.
Are
you
kidding
me
there's
no
comparison?
E
Hello
hi,
my
name
is
guyong
yoon,
a
resident
nearby,
71
vista
montana,
safe
rb
parking
site.
E
So
my
next
point
is
that
we
believe
that
current
71
vista
montana
site
is
in
disagreement
with
two
of
the
recommendations
that
citi
is
making
and
we
would
like
to
and
one
that
being
the
site
is
near
a
city
park
and
another
one
is
sharing
the
fences
with
residential
neighborhood.
E
T
Hi,
this
is
soda.
Can
you
hear
me?
Yes,
I'm
also
speaking
regarding
a
71
vista
montana
site
again,
thank
you
for
the
audience
for
listening
and
for
the
memorandum
from
last
week.
We
definitely
agree
that
such
such
should
not
be
within
500
feet,
if
not
more
of
city
parks.
T
Currently,
this
location
is
in
fact
wall
to
wall
in
it's
actually
a
fence,
not
even
a
full
wall,
with
a
park
where
children
are
playing
all
the
time
or
should
be
playing
they
stop.
So
we
ask
and
we
urge
you
to
please
relocate
the
site
as
soon
as
possible,
we're
we're
still
not
getting
any
other
responses.
We've
raised
many
concerns
about
the
site
in
the
past
few
weeks,
we're
getting
very
generic
responses.
T
We
need
to
understand
when
this
site
is
to
be
shut
down
and
how
this
site
was
picked
in
the
first
place
in,
even
if
it
was
an
emergency
situation,
because
this
should
not
be
happening.
We
were
also
told
that
there
was
a
500
000
dollar
fund
for
this
location
to
cover
20
rvs.
If
you
do
the
math
500
000
over
20
rvs
for
nine
months,
that's
a
total
of
25
000
per
rv.
T
That's
actually
the
rent
of
a
one
bedroom
apartment
in
palo
alto,
which
is
one
of
the
most
expensive
places
in
the
bay
area,
take
the
money
and
give
them
decent
housing.
It's
doable,
it's
not
impossible.
They
will
get
a
parking
spot,
they
will
get
running
water
and
electricity
instead
of
a
place
where
there
no
access
to
any
facility
and
barely
one
security
card.
That
is
always
empty.
We've
passed
by
the
location
many
times
and
we've
not
seen
physical
security.
Thank
you.
M
Thank
you
good
afternoon,
everyone,
scott
largent.
You
know
I've
been
hearing
a
lot
of
public
comment,
both
on
a
county
level
and
a
city
level
in
regards
to
the
site
at
71
vista
montana.
M
I
have
said
this
over
and
over
again
that
if
the
city
and
county
or
pretty
much
the
city
for
that
site
had
taken
the
time
to
figure
out
who
would
be
going
there,
I'm
not
necessarily
saying
shake
down
these
people,
but
you
really
could
have
made
that
site
work
and
you
could
have
put
people
there.
That
would
not
have
been
a
problem.
They
were
basically
just
all
lumped
their
stuff
was
towed
over
there
and
no
one
really
took
the
time
to
figure
it
out.
M
So
and
you
guys
all
know,
I'm
I'm
homeless,
I'm
a
homeless
advocate.
I
I
care
about
the
people
on
the
streets.
I
I
this
might
sound
weird.
I
actually
am
kind
of
enjoying
the
feedback
right
now
from
the
residents
near
that
site,
because
they
are
kind
of
putting
the
pieces
together,
they're
realizing
the
failures
of
our
city
they're,
starting
to
realize
that
these
people
really
do
need
adequate
care.
Some
of
them
need
to
be
taken
care
of
and
they're
starting
to
realize
what
happened
there.
It
could
have
been
a
success.
M
This
is
the
same
situation
that
has
happened
now
out
of
the
crash
zone.
You
guys
have
created
a
humanitarian
disaster
by
shoving
everybody
into
basically
one
zone
and
pretty
much
into
the
creek
with
no
real
services.
You
have
to
stop
telling
law
enforcement
out
there
that
everybody
got
offered
shelter
in
housing,
because
that's
not
what
happened
and
some
of
these
other
people
that
are
getting
on
the
calls.
M
I
would
really
love
for
them
to
start
paying
attention
also
to
what's
going
on
out
there
at
the
crash
zone,
because
this
is
city
wide
and
each
one
of
these
new
endeavors
you
guys
kind
of
dive
into
is
a
failure
and
it
does
crash
and
burn,
and
I'm
just
surprised
you
guys
haven't
taken
the
time
to
figure
out
who's
out
there,
the
good,
the
bad
and
the
ugly
and
kind
of
make
it
easier
for
the
the
other
residents
in
our
city.
I
I
don't
blame
them
getting
on
here
and
being
extremely
frustrated,
so
thank
you.
S
Yeah
thanks
for
letting
me
talk,
I
will
agree
with
some
things.
Mr.
S
And
some
things
I
won't,
I
disagree,
I
don't
think
it
could
ever
work
and
for
the
reasons
that
the
city
of
san
jose
put
forth
in
their
recent
memo,
which
you
should
never
put
a
homeless
encampment
next
to
a
city
park
where
children
are
playing.
Not
only
did
the
city
of
san
jose
do
this
once
they
did
it
twice.
S
There's
two
parks:
if
you
could
have
chose
a
worse
spot,
you
wouldn't
be
able
to
because
this
just
doesn't
exist,
and
that-
and
I
know
mr
cohen
must
have
got
a
ton
of
money
from
apple
for
his
next
campaign
and
dude
good
luck
to
that,
because
we're
going
to
fight
you
at
every
step
of
the
way.
This
is
the
one
of
the
worst
decisions
in
the
history
of
mankind.
S
In
this
the
history
of
city
planning,
think
about
it.
You
put
rvs
with
generators
that
pollute
the
environment,
people,
smoking,
people
doing
drugs
and
found
needles,
there's
there's
dumping
oil
and
other
toxic
wastes,
and
and
it's
right
next
to
a
children's
park
and
like
wake
the
half
up
everybody
what's
going
on
here,
we
are
not
going
away,
we're
redoubling
our
efforts,
we're
we're
getting
legal
involved.
We
get
the
media
involved,
we're
doing
everything
we
can
to
stop
this
insanity.
This
is
the
stupidest
thing.
Don't
you
guys
have
any
pride
in
what
you
do
like?
S
Oh,
my
god?
Well
we
screwed
up
okay,
let's
just
let's
just
move
these
people
out
of
here
and
and
pretend
it
didn't
happen,
because
it's
an
embarrassment
folks
I
have
published
a
this-
is
an
article
that
this
is
silicon
valley's,
guantanamo
bay,
it's
all
over
social
media,
the
city
of
san
jose,
being
the
quote
unquote.
C
Hi,
my
name
is
michelle:
kayla
schemas,
a
resident
of
district
3.
on
the
subject
of
parks
and
and
homeless
encampments.
It's
been
very
frustrating.
I'm
in
district,
three
headed
between
two
major
parks,
roosevelt
and
olander.
Olander,
is
near
a
school.
Roosevelt
is
a
park
and
community
center,
both
of
them
are,
are
homeless,
camps
and
they've.
Been
that
way
for
years.
C
The
area
around
that
seems
to
just
be
a
freeway
between
the
two
parks.
I
get
very
frustrated
on
the
subject
of
parks.
When
the
city
comes
to
me
and
wants
my
input
on
a
new
park,
it
seems
like
every
new
park
just
becomes
a
homeless
encampment.
I
don't
understand
why
we're
spending
making
money
on
new
parks
when
we
can't
maintain
the
parks
that
we
already
have,
and
I
understand
we're
trying
to
build
new
neighborhoods
and
all
that
second
thing
is
the
issue
of
the
the
google
new
village.
That's
coming
through.
C
Have
we
decided
as
a
city
that
we're
just
going
to
abandon
the
current
downtown
area
along
santa
clara
street,
where
the
current
city
hall
is
the
building
seems
to
be
empty?
There's
a
lot
of
businesses
that
are
failing,
city
hall
gets
to
be
supporting
a
lot
of
those
small
businesses
if
they
bring
their
people
back
to
work
in
the
in
the
facility
itself.