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From YouTube: AUG 4, 2020 | City Council, Evening Session
Description
City of San José, California
City Council meeting of August 4, 2020. Evening Session
This public meeting will be conducted 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=790195&GUID=29AA1F7D-EFF7-4A6F-8014-14FD1CD841B2
A
B
B
A
Okay,
we've
now
had
staff
presentation,
so
let's
go
to
members
of
the
community.
Mr.
D
A
So
it
appears
that
you
you're
you're,
still
muted.
If
you
could
unmute
your
your
device,
we're
still
not
able
to
hear
you.
A
E
Hi,
so
I
I
would
just
love
to
reiterate
that,
as
you
think
about
redistricting,
we
have
a
chance
to
actually
fix
some
of
the
wrongs
with
redlining
and
we
should
look
at
all
of
san
jose,
for
where
redlining
has
impacted
communities.
In
the
example
of
willow.
Glen,
we've
recently
heard
that
willow
glenn
wants
to
be
more
inclusive.
E
A
It
appears
still
to
be
muted,
so
we'll
come
back
to
you,
carol
watts.
B
Thank
you,
mayor
and
city
council
members.
I'm
carol
watts
president
of
the
league
of
women
voters
of
san
jose
santa
clara.
We
urge
all
of
you
to
vote
yes
to
place
this
measure
on
the
ballot
to
expand
the
power
of
the
ipa.
It's
important
that
its
authority
include
an
unredacted
review
of
all
complaints
and
investigations
into
every
police
use
of
force,
resulting
in
serious
injury
and
unfettered
access
to
police
records.
We
understand
and
sympathize
with
the
cost
involved
to
add
a
measure
to
the
ballot.
B
Nevertheless,
we
hope
that
this
issue
can
be
a
single
measure,
we're
very
pleased
to
see
a
proposal
placed
before
the
rules
committee
tomorrow
on
the
subject
of
police
reform,
including
expansion
of
powers
of
the
ipa
through
changes
to
ordinance.
Thank
you.
The
league
of
women
voters
supports
a
criminal
justice
system
that
is
just
effective,
equitable
and
transparent.
B
A
Thank
you,
reverend
jones,
reverend
nancy
palmer
jones.
Forgive
me.
B
Well,
thank
you
so
much
for
giving
my
full
name
there.
I
am
the
reverend
nancy
palmer
jones.
I
am
senior
minister
of
the
first
unitarian
church
of
san
jose
and
a
member
of
pac's
beloved
community
team.
Since
2015,
we
have
brought
together
hundreds,
perhaps
thousands
of
community
members
to
work
with
all
of
you
with
chief
eddie
and
the
san
jose
police
department
and
the
poa
to
increase
police
transparency
and
accountability,
and
we've
had
some
successes,
but
the
events
of
this
may
and
june
show
us
that
they
are
not
nearly
enough.
B
We
need
a
full
restructuring
of
public
safety
in
our
city
and
a
radical
change
in
the
culture
of
policing.
The
beloved
community
team
is
working
with
other
black
indigenous
and
people
of
color-led
organizations
for
these
urgent
and
necessary
goals.
With
your
leadership,
we
can
do
this
and
we
know
it
won't
happen
overnight.
The
ballot
measure
to
expand
the
ipa's
role
with
the
side
letter
that
will
allow
future
expansion
is
a
partial
but
crucial
step
in
the
right
direction.
B
A
Thank
you.
Thank
you,
reverend
mr
beekman.
C
C
C
Oakland
and
berkeley
have
opened
a
door
for
bay
area
cities
and
what
can
be
more
open,
creative
ideas
to
define
the
future
of
community
services
and
policing
with
help
from
county
state
and
federal
and
international
agencies?
I
hope
local
governments
will
not
be
afraid
of
their
community
and
what
could
be
the
future
of
good
democratic
concepts
for
an
individual
community.
C
F
Also,
yes,
paul
soto
from
the
horseshoe
two
items
they
need
to
be
separated,
yet
they
have
they're
dealing
with
the
same
issue,
which
is
institutionalized
racism
and
systemic
racism.
The
planning
commission.
I
was
disgusted
by
the
fact
that
there
was
four
people
on
that
planning
commission
that
were
from
willow
glen
that
we've
all
publicly
acknowledged
you
included
mayor
ricardo,
that
that
is
the
most
redlined
area
in
san
jose,
which
contributed
to
all
of
the
associated
injustices
that
come
from
racism,
and
one
of
them
is
the
way
that
the
police
treat
the
public
okay.
F
So
this
is
the
this
is
the
system
that
I'm
talking
about
this
is
why
do
we
have
to
allow
or
even
have
the
ballot
to
give
the
police
auditor
more
power?
Here's
the
reason
why?
Because
the
police
department
is
not
following
the
law,
sb
14-21
is
a
state
law.
That
means
that
every
single
day,
that
chief
garcia,
does
not
produce
that
paperwork.
That
means
it
delegitimizes
the
power
of
the
police
department,
because
they
cannot
follow
the
law
and
enforce
the
law.
F
At
the
same
time,
this
is
the
kind
of
cognitive
dissonance
that
goes
on
in
the
city,
and
that's
why
we
have
such
disparate
kinds
of
outcomes
is
because
that
dissonance
needs
to
come,
become
sound.
There
needs
to
be
some
kind
of
soundness
and
harmonious
balance
between
the
institutions
that
we
use
as
society
to
maintain
order
and
the
people
in
which
that
order
is
is
is,
is,
is
assigned.
F
You
know,
I'm
really
tired
of
it.
Man,
I'm
tired
of
educating
white
people
that
hey
you
know
what
there's
some
systemic
racism
going
on
and
here's
the
ways
that
it
is
no
but
we're
just
following
the
law.
No,
when
you
use
the
law
to
break
the
law,
you
are
no
longer
fit
to
enforce
it.
When
you
use
the
law
to
break
the
law,
you
are
no
longer
fit
to
enforce
it
and
eddie
garcia,
leaving
at
this
particular
time.
That
is
a
coward
move.
That
is
a
coward
move
for
him
to
leave
at
this
time.
G
G
Of
questions-
and
so
I
just
wanted
to
because
the
presentation
was
super
quick
so
for
those
that
are
watching
so
this
agreement.
G
D
G
And
then
I
have
a
question
from
the
city
manager,
which
is
so
when
this
would
come
back
to
council
so
say
you
know,
this
process
is
going
to
move
forward,
meet
and
prefer
eventually
it
comes
to
us.
What
is
the
public?
What
do
you
see
as
the
public's
role
at
that
point
around
ipa,
the
discussion
around
ipa
powers.
E
Thank
you
councilmember,
so
I
you
know,
I
think
I
don't
know
if
we
really
thought
that
through
certainly
when
the
council
authorizes
the
administration
to
to
negotiate
things
with
any
of
the
labor
groups,
there's
opportunities
to
to
engage.
You
know
the
public
through
the
the
the
council
process.
E
I
don't
know
if
jennifer
shimbury's
on
I'm
having
trouble
thinking
of
a
scenario
where
we've
actually
done
some
sort
of
formal
engagement
process
with
the
community
as
part
of
a
negotiation
with
a
labor
group,
and
so
we'd
have
to
think
through
that.
That
certainly
would
be
a
different
scenario
than
our
typical
negotiation.
Certainly.
G
And
so
would
then
there
be
space
before
that
and
confer
process
starts
to
get
some
input
from
the
community.
I
think
because
I
think
that
those
conversations
are
missing
from
the
process.
I
mean
we're
we're
discussing
a
ballot
measure,
but
really
it's
about
ipa
powers,
and
so
I
feel
like
the
community's
voice
is
the
one
element.
That's
missing
from
this
discussion.
E
We
could
figure
out
a
way
of
engaging
the
community
getting
input
and
having
that
factor
into
the
council's
direction
to
to
staff
to
to
negotiate.
Obviously,
like
I
said,
we're,
obviously
being
dealing
with
a
very
different
scenario
than
our
normal
negotiations
with
labor
groups.
I
don't
know
jennifer.
Do
you
have
any
kind
of
thoughts
on
that.
B
The
only
scenario
I
can
think
of
that
would
be
similar
is
on
an
annual
basis.
We
bring
forward
the
annual
summary
of
labor
negotiations
before
we
start
negotiations
that
allows,
and
we
bring
that
to
council
in
open
session,
and
that
allows
input
for
from
the
public
before
we
start
negotiations.
That
would
be
something
that
we
could.
Similarly.
G
Well,
you
know,
I
think,
we've
had
protests,
we've
and
and
a
lot
of
communication
that
is
certainly
ongoing.
The
community
is
still
meeting
you
know.
Fortunately,
we
haven't
had
protests
like
we
had
the
first
few
nights,
but
the
community
is
still
coming
together.
They
still
want
their
voices
heard
and
I
think
we
need
to
have
a
public
dialogue
in
some
respect
around
the
issues
I'm
hoping
some
of
it
can
be
incorporated
in
the
police
reforms
and
the
other
discussions
that
we're
going
to
be
having.
G
In
what
what
eventually,
we
can
come
up
with.
E
And
I
appreciate
that,
certainly
you
know:
we've
got
a
pretty
robust
police
reform
work
plan
that
vast
majority
of
it
deserves
community
engagement.
Involvement
in
that
so
you
know
we'll
have
to
it's.
You
know
not
necessarily
needed
to
kind
of
detach
the
ip
duties
from
the
other
pieces
of
of
that
puzzle,
so
we'll
need
to
figure
out
how
we
do
that.
G
Okay,
thank
you
and
then
I
tony
you
issued
a
supplemental,
a
revised
supplemental
memo,
and
so
I
wanted
to
ask
or
give
you
a
chance
to
talk
about
that,
because
you
reviewed
the
costs
and
put
in
quite
an
amount
of
work
into
that.
B
Well,
the
main
thing
is,
I
wanted
to
add
a
line
to
I
had
neglected
to
add
a
line
that
said
the
additional
ballot
measures
cost
629
000
base.
I
also
had
revised
the
the
amounts
just
the
the
math
gets.
I
was
an
english
major.
I
didn't
go
to
law
school
to
avoid
math,
but
I
was
an
english
major
to
avoid
it.
So
I
it
didn't
change
the
totals
too
much,
but
the
main
thing
was
that
the
the
first
ballot
measure
is
about
1.7
million.
B
A
second
one
is
629
thousand
and
we
are
budgeted
for
two
ballot
measures.
If
we
exceed
that,
what
we'll
do
is
come
back
in
the
mid
year
to
make
budget
adjustments.
G
Okay,
thank
you,
and
so
you
know
I'm
interested
in
seeing
what
my
colleagues
have
to
say,
but
I
I
feel
like
you
know,
certainly
the
planning,
commission
and
the
redistricting
go
together
and
in
the
and
in
the
memo
that
we
received
with
the
language.
G
There
were
the
the
two
paragraphs,
sorry,
my
preference
would
be
to
include
the
three.
I
I
think
I
feel
like
the
community
is
smart.
The
community
knows.
G
Equity
when
they
see
it
in
terms
of
planning
commission,
I
think
the
planning
fish
and
dovetails
and
redistricting,
because
it's
going
into
the
register
redistricting
process.
I
think
the
community
understands
redistricting
and
I
think
frankly,
the
community
understands
ipa
reform.
What
we're
doing
is
aligning
this
into
state
law,
and
so
my
preference
would
be
to
have
all
three
incorporated
into
one
measure.
G
I
won't
make
a
motion
because
I
do
want
to
hear
from
my
colleagues
in
terms
of
their
preferences
whether
we
ultimately
do
two
ballot
measures
between
the
card
rooms,
which
we
already
voted
on,
which
and
then
whether
we
combine
ipa,
redistricting
and
planning
commission
into
one
measure
per
the
city,
attorney's
language.
Thank
you.
A
All
right,
I
had
myself
on
mute.
Thank
you
councilmember.
A
A
Of
the
ipa
measure-
and
I
just
want
to
be
really
explicit
because
we
know
legislative
intent
is
often
referred
to
when
there
are
disputes
in
language-
and
I
think
it's
important
to
make
a
really
clear
record.
So
I
want
to
be
even
more
explicit.
A
Assuming
this
measure
passes
regardless
of
whether
it's
combined
or
not,
if
the
council
negotiates
with
the
poa
and
ultimately
decides
after
that
whole
negotiation,
that
it
wants
to
expand
the
power
of
the
ipa
to
handle
negotiations,
I'm
sorry
to
handle
investigations.
Excuse
me,
the
ipa's
power
would
then
include
all
investigations
of
police
misconduct,
essentially
shifting
that
from
the
police
department
into
the
ipa.
D
Reform
such
other
duties
consistent
with
this
charter
as
may
be
required
by
him
or
her
by
the
council,
subject
to
any
requirements
to
meet
and
confer
with
police
officers
so
what
it
says
it
has
to
just
be
consistent
with
the
charter.
D
In
some
cases
you
will
see
a
chapter
that
says
has
to
be
consistent
with
this
section
or
with
this
title,
and
so
this
isn't
limited
to
the
809
section
it.
The
only
limitation
is
the
charter
and,
to
give
an
example,
is
you
couldn't
give
the
ipa
authority
to
do
any
work?
That
was
that
the
charter
had
given
to
another
officer
and
the
city
right?
That
would
be
inconsistent,
but
so
long
as
no
other
officer
has
the
authority
that
you
want
to
give
the
ipa
the
the
council
can
give
that
authority
to
an
order.
A
So
I
appreciate
that
so
clearly,
department
of
finance
is
described
in
the
charter.
We
can't
give
finance
work
to
the
ipa.
I
haven't
looked
carefully
at
the
charter
recently
to
see
whether
or
not
there's
any
responsibility
for
investigations.
H
A
D
A
D
That
is
clearly
under
the
authority
of
the
city
manager,
so
the
question
would
be
at
the
time
that
you're,
considering
the
new
authority
is.
Is
there
any
other
limitation
in
the
charter
with
regard
to
that
authority,
because
it's
already
been
granted
to
another
officer
to
undertake
that
particular
authority?
Now,
if
it
turns
out
that
there
is
one
where
the
authority
has
already
been
granted,
you
could
go
back
to
the
you.
Could
that
would
have
to
go
back
to
the
to
the
voters,
because
this
is
a
limitation
with
the
guard
authority
and
the
charter.
A
Okay,
edward,
I
gave
you
wasn't
just
a
hypothetical
and
it's
actually
something
that
several
council
members,
including
myself,
have
specifically
proposed.
I'm
not
really
asking
this
as
an
abstract
question:
it's
really
a
concrete
one.
So
could
I
ask
if
anyone
on
your
team
has
a
moment
if
mark
has
looked
at
the
issue?
I
don't
know
if
he
has
understand
whether
or
not
there's
anything
charter.
A
I
have
not
reviewed
that
specific
issue
in
the
last
couple
days,
so
it's
not
fresh
in
my
mind,
but
I
think
it's
really
important
for
us
to
know,
because
this
is
a
logical
next
step
in
terms
of
what
we
do
around
police
accountability,
and
I
know
there
are
more
than
a
few
experts
and
advocates
who
believe
that
currently
this
is
important
for
the
city
to
do.
D
Yeah,
okay
mayor,
I
don't
know
if,
if
maybe
the
city
manager
or
jennifer
schembri,
when
they
were
having
discussions
with
the
poa,
whether
that
issue
came
up,
I'm
assuming
that
if
there
was
something
they
were
trying
not
to
include
it
would
have
been
discussed.
But
I
I
don't
know
whether
that
came
up
in
their
discussion.
A
Yeah,
I'm
quickly
looking
through
sec,
article
8,
because
I
know
that's
probably
the
most
likely
place
for
it
to
be,
but
I
can't
say
it
it's
clear
in
my
mind.
The
reason
why
obviously
I
erased
this
now
is
because
we
have
an
opportunity
to
change
the
language
and
specifically
that
limitation,
because
that
limiting
language
is
disconcerting
to
me.
A
If
it
essentially
ties
the
hands
of
counsel,
it
will
expand
ipa
authority
in
a
way.
That
is
logical,
so
I
know
that
folks
are
looking
at
it
now
I'll
give
everyone
a
chance
to
do
that
and
I'll
do
a
little
research
on
my
own.
Oh
we're
all
sitting
here.
A
second
question
I
had
with
regard
to
the
language.
Maybe
this
is
a
question
from
mark.
A
A
And
I
ask:
why
is
the
word
unredacted
in
there
to
modify
review
and
is
there
a
reason
why
we
can't
simply
delete
it?
Because
I
know
what
unredacted
means,
because
I
used
to
have
to
redact
documents
and
I'm
a
lawyer.
But
I
don't
know
that
a
lot
of
voters
are
going
to
understand
it
clearly
and
I'm
not
sure
it's
really
applicable
to
the
issue
of
review
as
it
is
to
access
to
unredacted
documents,
which
I
think
is
a
different
issue.
I
I
think
the
point
is
fair.
The
the
reason
why
unredacted
review
is
included
is
because,
with
respect
to
officer-involved
shootings
and
use
of
force
incidents,
the
ipa
would
have
the
authority
to
review
unredacted
records
right
and
whereas,
in
other
instances
unrelated
to
those
those
two
topics,
there
there's
a
second
component
of
it.
That
would
allow
the
ipa
to
review
redacted
records
if
certain
criteria
are
met,
so
I
think
the
unredacted
it
was
included
there
to
to
make
that
distinction.
I
A
Okay,
I
would
then
ask
that
whoever
makes
the
motion
consider
striking.
That
word,
because
I
think
it
will
be
confusing
to
voters.
A
A
The
the
suggestion
would
be
for
the
maker
of
the
motion
to
delete
the
word
unredacted
that
precedes
review
of
officer-involved
shootings.
Certainly
the
issue
of
redact,
redacting
and
unredacted
reports
will
be
in
the
text,
obviously
in
the
body
of
the
of
the
measure,
but
I
believe
it
may
be
confusing
to
voters
if
it's
in
the
75
words.
D
A
Then,
with
regard
to
redistricting
in
the
census,
I
understand
that
the
language
says
when
census
results
are
late,
that
triggers
our
ability
with
regard
to
the
deadline
for
a
redistricting
ordinance.
A
You
know,
having
had
several
conversations
with
terry
christensen
about
this.
His
concern
was
expressed
that
in
prior
years,
in
2010
and
2000,
I'm
not
sure
the
census
results
were
late
or
not,
but
the
schedule
was
still
so
severely
compressed
that
it
didn't
allow
the
edition
mission
to
work
as
many
had
expected
it
occurred,
and
so
the
question
is.
A
It
appears
that
it's
late
according
to
the
ordinance,
according
to
what's
in
the
text
that,
if
results
are
not
delivered
to
the
states
by
april
first,
that
makes
census
late.
That
right.
A
Okay,
so
I
have
not
really
been
deeply
engaged
in
this
issue,
but
the
question
would
be:
has
anybody
got
any
institutional
memory
from
2010
or
2000
to
tell
us,
even
when
they
were
delivered
to
the
states
on
march
15th
or
some
date
earlier
than
april?
First,
were
we
still
badly
squeezed
on
our
timeline.
I
So
a
mayor,
I
did
look
at
the
this
issue
in
the
sense
that
I
reviewed
the
advisory
commission's
reports
from
2001
and
2011,
and
I
recall
from
both
of
those
time
periods
that
the
census
was
delivered
early
in
march.
I
The
the
issue
that
the
advisory
commission
has
is
that
their
reported
recommendation
is
supposed
to
be
due
within
120
days
of
appointment
and
there
under
the
charter
supposed
to
be
appointed
by
february
first,
and
so
their
issue
is,
is
that
they're
appointed
and
they
would
sit
around
for
about
a
month
and
they
really
can't
do
anything
until
the
census
results
are
delivered.
I
So
there's
about
a
a
month
of
inaction
and
then,
when
the
census
results
are
delivered
to
the
states,
even
if
they
were
done
early
in
past
years
or
earlier
in
past
years,
then
they
could
get
started
on
on
their
work.
That
was
the
issue
that
both
advisory
commissions
recommended
changing,
and
the
proposed
measure
would
do
that
because
it
would
allow
the
council
to
establish
a
deadline
itself
for
the
advisory
commission
so
presumably
or
if
it
were
to
pass
when
the
council
were
to
appoint
the
advisory
commission.
I
On
february
1st,
it
can
assess
the
lay
of
the
land
and
say
we
would
like
you
to
have
the
report
to
us
by.
You
know,
90
days
after
april,
first,
so
any
deadline
that
the
council
sees
fit.
A
Okay,
I
think
I
caught
most
of
that
mark,
and
I
know
this
is
it's
not
easy
to
describe
so
I
think
you
did
a
very
good
job
of
it.
I
guess
the
question
I
I
maybe
if
I
could
rephrase
the
question
a
little
bit,
do
we
really
want
to
qualify
by
saying
that
the
council
can
establish
timelines
only
when
the
census
results
are
laid
or
do
we
just
want
to
give
the
council
some
more
flexibility
here?
So
we
can
get
the
job
done
properly.
I
That's
something
that
can
be
done.
The
one
consideration
there's
a
few
consideration
considerations
is
that
there's
a
state
law
that
was
enacted
last
year
governing
redistricting
for
cities,
cities
who
are
just
going
down
the
route
having
district
elections,
and
so
on
that
establishes
a
deadline.
I
believe
of
august
15,
which
is
consistent
with
what
the
state
law
does
it
only.
It
doesn't
necessarily
apply
to
charter
cities
if
we
establish
our
own
deadlines,
which
we
have
here.
I
So
that's
one
consideration
in
addition,
and
this
comes
into
play
with
the
changes
in
the
with
the
elections
being
held
in
march
as
opposed
to
june,
and
again
it
comes
down
to
I
guess:
council
preference
at
the
time
is
the
redistricting
ordinance
has
to
be,
in
effect
by
the
opening
of
the
nomination
period,
for
the
new
districts
to
apply
and
so
october.
31St
is
a
is
a
good
deadline
in
that,
if
the
for
the
march
2022
election,
I
believe
the
nomination
period
begins
and
don't
quote
me
middle
of
november.
I
I
want
to
say
november
14th
so
again,
if
the
redistricting
ordinance
isn't
enacted
in
that
time,
and
maybe
the
council
establishes
a
different
deadline
by
ordinance,
then
the
new
districts
don't
go
into
effect
and
the
old
districts
will
will
stay
in
for
that
election.
A
All
right,
so
I
think
what
you're
saying
is:
there's
no
point
in
having
unlimited
flexibility
here.
I
Well
it
it.
It
depends
on
what
the
council's
objectives
are
with
respect
to
redistricting
at
some
point
in
1994.
I
believe
it
was
when
this
charter
amendment
was
put
in
place.
The
decision
was
made.
We
want
to
have
the
redistricting
ordinance
in
effect
october
31st,
the
state
of
california,
by
constitution.
Theirs
is
august
15th.
I
I
So
it
depends
on
the
preference
of
the
council
or
the
decision
of
the
council
at
the
time
and
any
concerns
that
they
have
that
future
councils
may
not
redistrict
in
a
timely
fashion,
for
whatever
reason
so,
unlimited
flexibility
could
be
difficult
if
there
can't
be
a
consensus
later
on
down
the
road.
Okay,.
A
All
right,
thank
you
I'll
I'll
move
over
those
issues
as
we
continue
this
dialogue
vice
mayor
jones.
I
Thank
you
mayor
and
I
actually
had
the
exact
same
question.
You
did
in
terms
of
the
language
being
consistent
with
the
with
this
charter,
and
I
just
want
to
make
sure
that
I
understood
mark
and
ed
what
you're
saying,
and
that
is,
if,
if
there's
a
duty
or
responsibility
or
an
authority,
that's
in
the
charter,
that's
in
conflict
with
something
that
we
might
propose
through
the
mean
confer
process.
I
D
D
So
so
that's
why
the
language
in
there
just
basically
says
you
can
get
any
other
duties.
That's
not
set
forth
in
this
particular
charter
in
this
particular
section.
So
long
as
it's
not
it's
consistent
with
the
rest
of
the
chart.
I
So,
by
default,
even
stating
consistent
with
this
charter,
it
can
be
necessary
or
not
necessary
because
by
by
default
right
it
would
it.
D
Would
take
effect
anyway,
yeah,
that's
why
I
said
it
the
language
in
there
is
simply
it's
trying
to
just
to
be
consistent
to
make
sure
that
their
everyone
understands
is.
You
can
give
any
duty
you
want
so
long
as
it's
consistent
with
the
charter.
That's
the
overall
and,
as
I
mentioned
before,
is
sometimes
the
language
will
say
consistent
with
its
chapter,
which
means
it's
just
in
the
context
of
this
809,
but
that's
not
the
case
in
the
way
it's
written
it's.
D
I
I
I
just
wanted
to
make
sure
that
we
were
all
clear
on
that
and
then,
as
far
as
consolidating
the
value
measures
initially,
I
I
was
leaning
towards
having
the
ipa
item
as
a
standalone
item.
But
obviously
we
want
to
weigh
a
couple
of
different
factors.
One
is
the
additional
cost.
I
I
really
don't
see
that
third
scenario
being
a
factor
here
and
as
far
as
potential
confusion
with
the
voters,
because
I'm
so
intimately
familiar
with
all
the
items
in
the
language.
It's
hard
for
me
to
really
gauge
whether
combining
them
or
consolidate
them
would
be
confusing
or
cause
any
issues.
But
just
from
my
reading
of
the
of
the
consolidated
language,
I
don't
see
that
being
a
significant
issue,
so
I'm
leaning
towards
saving
the
money,
consolidating
them
into
one
ballot,
one
ballot
measure
and
and
doing
it
that
way.
A
Is
that
is
that
emotion,
you
were
asked
by
councilmember
menace.
It
wasn't,
but
I.
I
With
the
mayor's
one
revision
of
striking
the
unredacted
review
of
officers
involved,
shooting
from
the
language.
A
A
Yeah,
I
believe
so
that
right
vice
mayor
jones.
D
A
A
I
just
wanted
to
follow
up
on
one
thing
that
was
said
about
the
words
consistent
with
the
charter.
In
some
ways,
aren't
aren't
those
words
just.
A
Duplicative
and
unnecessary,
if,
if
I
were
to
if
the
council
were
to
approve
an
ordinance
that
conflicted
with
a
charter,
that
ordinance
could
never
mean
if
it
was
challenged,
then
someone
could
easily
strike
the
ordinance
right.
D
Correct
before,
with
regard
to
the
question,
you're
moving
mark
was
this
language
that
was
in
the
side
letter
consistent
with
the
charter.
A
So
so
mark,
I
just
want
to
give
you
a
chance
to
respond
to
that
last
qualification
of
that
question,
which
was
that
was
part
of
the
side
letter
that
actually
defined
the
charter,
language,
whose
words
work.
I
The
term
inconsistent
with
the
charter,
the
the
language
that
you're
referring
to
perform
other
duties,
was
in
the
side
letter
agreement
that
the
council
approved.
I
Yes,
it
did
I
if
I
follow
your
question.
The
side
letter
agreement
was
the
basis
for
the
charter.
Amendment.
D
If,
if,
if,
if
there's
no
object
well,
anything
in
the
charter
has
to
be
consistent
with
itself,
so
anybody
can
bring
up
an
a
bring
an
action
and
say
you
can't
adopt
that
ballot
measure,
because
it's
inconsistent
with
the
other
section.
So,
yes,
it
may
be
support
for
this.
Yes,
because
they
would
apply
regardless
of
whether
the
language
was
there.
D
D
Agreement
didn't
include
it,
you
need
to
ask
the
city
manager's
office
as
to
whether
or
not
they
would
feel
that
it
would
be
one
because
my
understanding
is
there
was
a
signed
agreement.
That
said
this
is
what
the
language
will
include.
Yeah
jennifer
did
you
my
wife.
B
Yeah,
I
don't
know
I
kind
of
have
to
think
about
that.
The
sign
letter
agreement
wasn't
the
actual
charter
language
that
was.
J
G
That
we
would
want
to
try
to
avoid
if.
E
A
Okay,
I
know
I
know
you're
you're
hesitant
because
nobody
wants
to
speak
for
another
agency.
I
appreciate
that
dave.
I
know
you're
you're
in
a
tough
position
trying
to
do
that
and
let
me
then
just
go
back
and
reframe
my
question.
A
little
bit.
809A
of
the
charter
defines
the
authority
of
the
ipa
and
the
authority
of
the
ipa
is
defined
under
809,
a
to
include
review
of
investigations
correct
now
under
the
current
language
of
the
charter.
We
know
that's
a.
D
A
Right
correct
and
what
we'd
like
to
believe
we're
doing
with
this
charter
revision
is
we're
lifting
the
lid,
though
other
authorities,
that
other
responsibilities
as
assigned
by
council
can
be
hoisted
on
the
ipa,
and
I
just
want
to
understand
if
what
council
approves
a
year
from
now
is
ipa
thou
shalt
conduct
investigations
of
officer
misconduct?
D
Right
now,
it
says,
review
you
could
later
on
after
meet
and
confer
say,
review
and
initiate
review
and
investigate
whether
or
not
you
would
take
away
be
able
to
take
away
the
full
investigatory
power
of
the
police
department
and
give
it
all
to
the
ipa
would
be
a
question.
We
would
have
to
look
at
just
make
sure
that
it
was
inconsistent
with
the
rest
of
the
chart.
A
A
What
the
council
intends
to
do,
I
would
prefer
a
world
in
which
809a
did
not
constrain
us
from
being
able
to
assign
additional
responsibilities
by
ordinance,
but
it's
important
to
know
how
we
meaning
the
attorney's
office
and
the
city
read
809a,
and
can
we
put
investigatory
authority
in
the
ipa
investigatory
authority
over
police
misconduct
cases
without
running
a
foul
of
809a.
D
A
Right,
okay,
so
I
think
the
answer
is:
if
809a
were
the
only
thing
we
were
worried
about
in
the
charter,
we'd
have
clear
sailing
to
be
able
to
add
investigations,
correct,
okay,
then
the
question
is:
is
there
something
else
lurking
in
the
charter
that
could
constrain
us
in
some
way
and
I'm
guessing?
Several
of
us
have
been
looking
through
the
charter
trying
to
find
that
right.
D
And
I
think
mark
also
tried
doing
as
a
word
search
and
stuff
and
wasn't
able
to
find
it.
But
I
can't
tell
you
today
that
there
is
nothing
in
there
right,
but
our
assumption
is
that
there
isn't
anything
with
regard
to
police
oversight.
Most
of
that
is
basically
just
under
the
general
authority
of
the
city
manager
and
the
police
department.
It's
not
specified
in
the
charter,
but
again
I
we
have
not
done
a
specific
check
for
that
other
than
what
we've
done
this
afternoon
understood.
I
I
am,
and
it's
at
this
point
it's
trying
to
find
a
negative,
I'm
not
I'm
not
finding
anything.
A
Okay,
that's
I
I
know
that's
hard
yeah
you're
doing
the
word.
Search
for
police,
hopefully
that'll
find
anything
left
for
referring
to
police,
okay,
we'll
we'll
move
on
vice
mayor
jones.
You
have
your
hand
up.
Did
you
want
to?
I
want
to
come
back
to
you.
A
You're
you're
on
youtube.
I
just.
I
A
K
Yeah,
I
think
a
lot
of
the
sausage
making
has
already
been
made,
so
I
just
have
maybe
one
or
two
questions,
but
let
me
just
first
say
that
I,
like
councilmember
jones
or
vice
mayor
jones,
don't
see
any
one
of
these,
whether
it's
the
planning,
commission,
redistricting
or
even
the
ipa
is
going
to
be
a
drag
on
either
of
those.
I
don't
see
anything
there,
and
so
that's
why
I'm
comfortable
with
going
with
a
consolidated
version.
K
I
think,
in
an
effort
to
save
money,
I
think
they
all
naturally
fall
under
a
charter
amendments
and-
and
I
think
the
community,
as
stated
by
council
member
spars,
is
smart
enough
to
sort
of
parse
that
out
and
understand
what
we're
putting
forward
and
so
that
that's
why
I
supported
it.
K
I
did
have
one
question
for
staff:
has
there
ever
been
a
pass
ballot
measure
in
which
we
consolidated
sort
of
three
of
these
items
together,
and
I
apologize
probably
should
have
asked
the
question
before
the
meeting
I
just
didn't
get
a
chance
to,
but
is
there?
I
just
wonder
what,
if
there's
a
precedent
for
this
and
and
if
there's
anything,
we
just
need
to
be
aware
of
as
we're
moving
forward
with
with
regard
to
these
three
items,
although
they
fall
under
the
same
umbrella.
In
my
mind,
you
know
just
curious.
I
D
K
All
right
and
just
to
put
it
out
there
I
mean
that
that
worries
me
a
little
bit
but
again.
I
think
that
that
the
the
community
is
going
to
be
wise
enough
to
sort
of
parse
out
exactly
what
these
mean
and
the
importance
of
them.
The
other
thing
I
would
just
say
to
to
I'm
not
sure
how
many
community
members
are
on
the
line
it
seems
like
we
have
about
19
attendees,
but
I
think
this
is.
I
don't
expect
any
opposition
to
any
of
these.
K
You
know
being
put
out
in
the
community
or
folks
sort
of
funding
opposition,
but
I
think
it's
important
to
say
for
everyone.
That's
listening
is
that
if
you
care
about
any
of
these
items,
I
think
it's
going
to
be
important
to
spread
the
word
and
to
engage
your
your
neighbors
and
to
tell
them
about
the
importance
of
getting
this
passed.
So
I
think
these
are
all
important,
very
excited
to
get
them
before
the
voters,
and
I
expect
that
come
come
november.
I
think
they're
going
to
be
approved.
So
thank
you
so
much.
A
Thank
you,
councilmember,
hey.
Do
you
mind
if
I
take
one
more
pass,
maybe
other
passes
to
the
comments
we
go
on
this
dialogue,
but
no
one
else
got
their
hand
up.
So
I'm
going
to
ask
it
section
411,
as
you
know,
deals
with
non-interference
in
administrative
authority,
the
city
manager,
and
that
the
council
cannot
interfere
with
that.
A
D
Well,
you'd
have
to
look
at
you'd,
have
to
look
at
the
language
of
the
charter,
and
if
there
is
no
specific
language
that
delegates
to
the
city
manager
investigatory
authority,
I
mean
I
suspect
that
there
could
be
an
argument
that
it's
implied
in
his
authority,
but
I
think
we're
looking
more
and
the
example
that
I
gave.
D
You
was
more
of
a
specific
example
that
I
said
is
the
ipa
could
not,
as
a
result
of
an
investigation,
try
to
discipline
it,
because
that
discipline
is
clearly
set
forth
in
the
charter
or
the
city
manager,
but
the
investigatory
power.
My
assumption
is
based
on
a
practice
policy
and
probably
some
agreements
with
the
po
or
the
poa
and
not
specifically
in
the
charter.
A
D
K
Eric
can
I
ask
a
question
while
you're
looking
yeah
counselor
menace
yeah,
so
so
tony.
So
the
two
point,
I
think,
was
2.7
million
allocated
for
two
ballot
measures.
So
this
would
obviously
keep
us
out
about
that
right
or
under
that.
So
we
wouldn't
need
to
come
back
at
a
later
date
to
defund
an
additional
measure
right.
That
would.
B
A
So
could
I
make
a
suggestion?
I
know
that
mark
is
doing
his
best
word
searching
and
everyone
needs
a
little
time.
I
happen
to
think
this
is
a
pretty
central
issue
to
us
at
least
those
of
us
who
are
interested
in
moving
forward
other
expanded
responsibilities.
A
I
wanted
to
ask
if
we
could
move
on
to
other
items
this
this
motion's
been
made,
we'll
come
back
to
the
motion
and
vote
on
it,
but
give
the
city
attorney's
office
some
time
just
to
check
the
charter
to
make
sure
we
feel
relatively
confident,
there's
no
tripwire
out
there
would
that
be
acceptable.
Any
concerns
with
that.
D
I
Attention
to
table
this
item
till
later
in
the
meeting.
A
All
right
great
there's
a
motion
in
a
second:
let's
do
this
by
verbal
vote
and
we'll
see
if
there
are
any
objections,
all
in
favor.
A
L
Thank
you
mayor.
There
is
not
a
a
staff
presentation,
but
I
do
have
just
a
couple
comments
to
just
clarify
what
is
before
the
council
this
evening
so
good
evening,
mayor
and
council
members
bloggies
lollich
with
the
office
of
economic
development.
The
item
before
you
tonight
asks
the
council
to
do
two
things.
L
L
These.
This
relaxation
of
rules
in
both
cases
would
be
in
effect
through
december
31st,
unless
our
local
emergency
ends
before
that
date,
which
I
think
we're
all
probably
very
hopeful
of,
but
but
probably
not
going
to
happen
or
the
time
at
which
the
city
reinstates
the
existing
regulations,
and
so
that's
it
in
a
nutshell.
With
that,
I'm
just
happy
to
take
any
questions
that
the
council
might
have
on
these
two
recommendations.
L
A
L
A
Thank
you
motion
and
second,
let's
go
to
the
community
and
thanks
page
for
your
work.
Oh
somehow,
I
lost
okay.
A
F
Thank
you,
council,
back
in
the
1970s
I
had
to
deal
with
on
these
sidewalks
this
city,
making
money
off
the
porn
industry.
Okay,
I
lived
in
the
horseshoe,
so
I
had
to
walk
to
the
jose
theater
and
now
to
walk
to
the
jose
theater.
I
had
to
walk
through
five
porn
shops,
three
porn
theaters
and
a
bunch
of
hookers
on
on
williams
and
second
street.
Now
I
dealt
with
that.
I'm
a
big
boy,
I'm
from
the
horseshoe.
F
F
You
don't
believe
me
follow
the
railroad
tracks,
walk
the
railroad
tracks
in
san
jose
and
it
will
lead
you
to
every
single,
every
single
cannery
in
this
city,
so
this
city
was
built
on
that
and
I
had
to
deal
with
that
and
now
I
gotta.
I
gotta
feel
that
tension,
because
there
is
tension
when
you're
walking
on
the
sidewalk
and
they
have
the
the
sitting
dining
area
on
one
side
and
you're
walking
through
you.
You
could
just
feel
it
like
somehow
another,
I'm
some
kind
of
stranger,
I'm
never
gonna
eat
at
this
restaurant.
F
You
know
why
what
it
costs
to
sit
and
eat
in
one
of
those
restaurants
for
one
meal
for
two
people
is
a
as
at
least
10
days
worth
of
groceries.
For
me,
10
days-
and
so
this
is,
this
is
very
offensive
to
me
that
this
person,
who
represents
that
office
didn't
have
a
report
for
me.
Didn't
have
didn't,
have
some
kind
of
explanation
for
me.
Let's
just
streamline
the
process,
so
we
can
make
rich
people
richer.
H
Good
evening,
everyone,
scott
scotland,
you
know
this-
I
believe
it's
called
alfresco.
I
I
gotta
get
the
word
down
there
properly.
You
know
this
outside
dining
gig
that
we
have
going
on
downtown
a
lot
of
the
business
owners
that
I
interact
with
down
there.
H
Most
of
them
are
very
frustrated
with
the
mentally
ill
and
homeless
that
are
that
are
showing
up
at
a
lot
of
these
locations.
Now
I
don't
blame
them,
they're
thirsty.
They
need
water.
You
guys
shut
off
the
water
everywhere,
so
they're
gonna
go
to
the
closest
place
where
they
see
somebody
drinking
water
or
they
can
ask
for
a
water.
Starbucks
is
very
nice
about
things
they
give
water.
They
give
out
sandwiches
they.
You
know.
H
Peace
offerings
to
get
somebody
to
go
along
their
way.
I
I
think
we
really
need
to
look
into
what's
going
on
downtown
right
now,
with
the
mentally
ill
and
homeless,
they
are
being
dumped
in
our
city.
Salinas
police
department
shows
up
at
2
30
in
the
morning
and
they
drop
inmates
off
and
criminals
at
the
corner
of
the
park
right.
There.
H
A
A
Thank
you,
tessa
woodmancy,.
A
G
Thank
you.
I
just
have
a
few
questions,
which
is:
what
are
the
outreach
or
what
is
the
outreach
strategy
to
reach
out
to
businesses
that
are
not
in
the
designated
shopping
centers.
L
Sure,
thanks
for
that
question
councilmember,
so
we
have
had
a
few
mechanisms
by
which
we're
doing
outreach.
Initially,
when
we
were
all
under
kind
of
the
eoc
structure,
what
we
did
was
primarily
communicate
through
the
liaison
branch
to
the
council
members
in
the
council
offices,
with
a
couple
of
toolkits
that
were
sent
out
because
we
felt
like
the
the
most
direct
contact
with
many
of
the
businesses
was
through
the
council
member
communication.
L
In
addition,
in
those
areas
where
there
are
neighborhood
business
districts
and
neighborhood
associations,
we've
utilized
the
mostly
volunteer
staff
from
those
organizations
to
get
the
word
out
to
their
members
about
the
different
alfresco
initiatives
and
then
we've
also,
to
the
extent
that
we
were
doing
business,
outreach
and
kind
of
touching
base
through
our
business
assistance
and
business
outreach
team,
business
development
team.
L
So
those
are
the
things
that
we've
been
doing.
Our
intention
is
to
continue
to
do
that
outreach
and
actually,
to
the
extent
that
we
can
do
more
outreach
and
kim
earlier
in
the
conversation,
talked
about
the
brochure
that
they're
putting
together.
I
anticipate
that
there
will
be
information
in
that
brochure
about
how
people
can
get
information
on
alfresco
the
different
permits
that
they
can.
They
can
obtain
free
of
charge
and
very
easily,
but
we're
also
very
open
to
other
ideas
that
you
have
on
outreach.
L
If
you
feel
like
there's
certain
areas
that
have
been
lacking.
G
Yeah
I
mean
I
I
I
know
my
office
has
been
talking
with
economic
development
and
we've
been
having
conversations
about
the
shopping
centers.
I
I
like
I'm
sure
all
of
my
colleagues
have
been
approached
by
businesses
in
different
industries.
So
they're,
not
all
restaurants,
but
you
know
some
of
these
strip
malls
are
dead
right
now
and
I'm
I'm
interested
in.
G
I
think,
there's
a
lot
of
opportunity,
particularly
in
what
we're
doing
today,
but
also
what
we're
going
to
be
doing
in
the
coming
weeks
about
offering
some
flexibility
and
utilizing
space
better
to
bring
bodies
in
and
make
it
lively.
I
don't
think
any
of
us
wants
empty
storefronts
for
months
or
a
year.
You
know
years
on
end,
so
yeah.
I
look
forward
to
having
those
conversations.
I
I'm
just
looking
at
some.
M
G
You
know
they
don't
it's
hard
for
them
to
communicate
with
city
hall,
right
and
so
being
more
creative
on
the
outreach,
I
think,
is
important
in
making
sure
that
this
really
great
idea
is
accessible
throughout
the
city.
So
I
look
forward
to
doing
that.
G
L
They're
pretty
similar,
I'm
assuming
when
you're
talking
about
private
property
operations,
the
so
they're
pretty
similar.
Quite
honestly,.
G
If
there's
redirects
people
to
the
general
permit
page
without
showing
them
what
permit
to
use
so
the
alfresco
private
property
business
operations,
registration
got
us
a
really
long
name,
it
directs
people
to
the
right
online
application
right.
So
if,
if
you're
a
mom
and
pop
and
you're
trying
to
okay,
where
do
I
go?
What
do
I
do
you
get
redirected
to
the
general
permits
page
yeah.
L
I
think
I
know
what
you
mean.
I
think,
because
the
public
works
has
the
purview
of
the
sidewalk
public
works
has
a
variety
of
other
permits
that
they
provide,
and
so
let
us
go
back
and
work
on
just
adjusting
the
link
on
their
end
so
that
it
goes
right
to
that
that
application
for
the
private
property,
that's
something
that
sits
kind
of
in
its
separate
place.
So
I
I
hear
you
and
I
think
that
that
is
a
relatively
easy
fix.
Cool.
G
Thank
you,
and
is
there
an
issue
with
allowing
businesses
to
utilize
sidewalks
for
retail
purposes,.
L
So
I
wouldn't
say
that
there
is
an
issue:
that's
actually
one
of
the
items,
that's
on
our
next
work
plan
and
we'll
be
coming
back
in
the
memo
we
mentioned
that
there
were
kind
of
three
other
items
that
we've
been
getting
requests
for,
and
one
of
them
is
the
expansion
of
retail
operations
onto
sidewalks,
and
so
that
is
something
that
we
are
kind
of
working
through
right
now
and
plan
to
come
back
to
council
by
the
end
of
the
month.
Amending
that
sidewalk
ordinance.
G
Great,
I
I
think,
having
some
flexibility-
I
I
don't
think
you
know
it
makes
sense
for
every
shopping
center
or
strip
mall
in
the
city,
but
giving
businesses
in
the
city
to
have
some
flexibility
again,
because
I
don't
want
dead
space.
I'm
sure
a
lot
of
the
business
owners
don't
want
that
either,
and
so
I
think,
there's
an
opportunity
with
this.
I'm
thinking
like
tropicana,
for
example,
or
some
you
know
la
placita
right,
some
places
that
we
can
make
make
it
easier
to
do
some
retail
operations
outdoors.
G
L
Yeah
absolutely-
and
I
would
I
would
just
want
to
clarify
that
right
now,
if
they
have
a
privately
accessible
sidewalk
right,
so
if
that
sidewalk,
that
they
have
in
front
of
their
businesses
on
private
property
and
or
if
they
have
the
parking
lot
accessible,
that
you're
already
allowed
to
expand
your
retail
operations
onto
that
private
property,
whether
it
be
a
sidewalk
or
a
parking
lot.
L
So
what
we're
working
on
that
we're
going
to
bring
back
is
specifically
for
the
public
sidewalk
and
the
public
right
of
way,
so
just
to
clarify
just
to
make
sure
that
if
you
have
somebody
that
wants
to
do
retail
on
private
property,
they
can
totally
do
it.
Okay,.
A
Vlage,
thank
you.
I
know
that
you're
wrestling
with
a
lot
given
there's
a
lot
of
different
sites
throughout
the
city
where
people
might
intend
to
want
to
do
their
business
outside.
Do
you
know,
have
commerce
outside.
L
No,
it's
not
all
me,
it
could.
Never
it
couldn't
be
all
me.
We
were
doing
a
ton
of
work,
there's
actually
a
host
of
folks
from
kind
of
nine
different
city
departments,
all
working
very
diligently
on
this
and
have
been
working
very
diligently
on
this
everybody
from
cio
perks
and
rec
I.t
oca
public
works
for
sure
got
it
so.
A
L
So
right
now
we
have
about
60
that
are
registered
for
private
property
and
about
20ish
or
so
a
little
bit
over
20
that
are
have
permits
for
kind
of
sidewalks
parklets
or
the
the
street
closure.
I
mean
there's
only
one
street
closure
currently
on
san
pedro.
L
I
do
anticipate
that
there
are
a
number
of
folks
that
are
operating
that
are
that
are
not
registered
necessarily,
probably
because
they
don't
know
that
they
have
to,
and
so
you
know
to
the
extent
that
we
can
all
help
to
get
the
word
out
it.
I
think,
if
the
more
people
we
can
get
registered
the
more
people
we
know
this
program
serves,
then
it's
easier.
It's
going
to
be
for
you
all
to
make
decisions
moving
forward
about
you,
know,
continuing
the
program
or
making
adjustments
or
whatnot.
A
L
L
A
Yeah,
I
agree
and
I
guess
we're
hearing
anecdotes
and
I
only
have
anecdotes.
I
don't
have
any
hard
data
just
that
some
folks
aren't
even
aware
that
they
can
go
outside
and
that's
what
gets
me
worried
because
we
know
this
is
really
a
matter
of
survival.
For
many
of
these
small
businesses.
A
I
understand
there
was
a
lot.
There
seems
to
be
some
concern
about
sidewalks
public
sidewalks
and
trying
to
figure
out
the
right
rule.
Can
you
help
me
understand
why
we
wouldn't
just
come
up
with
something
fairly
simple?
Like
hey,
if
department
of
transportation
says
you
need
x,
feet
of
sidewalk,
for
people
to
be
able
to
safely
walk
down
the
street
and
be
able
to
have
the
ada
accessible
and
so
forth?
I
don't
know
what
the
number
is.
Let's
say
it's
eight
feet.
A
L
So
initially,
when
we
did
so,
the
streamline
rules
are
kind
of
like
that.
They're
they're,
definitely
paired
down
from
what
public
works
is
normally
required,
because
the
review
time
is
virtually
non-existent.
You
submit
your
registration
and
you
basically
have
the
okay
to
opt
to
operate
on
the
sidewalk.
So
initially,
when
we
started
this,
there
were
a
number
of
uses
that
were
not
allowed
yet
by
the
county
order,
and
so
what
happened?
L
If
you'll
remember
like
on
a
tuesday
morning
or
tuesday
afternoon,
the
county
said
on
friday
you
can
do
outdoor
dining,
and
so
we
really
hustled
basically
from
tuesday
afternoon
to
friday,
to
get
all
of
this
up
and
running
so
that
people
could
be
on
the
sidewalk
at
no
charge
putting
out
seating
for
outdoor
dining.
L
At
that
point,
you
could
do
indoor
shopping
at
a
lesser
capacity,
and
so
we
also
included
outdoor
seating,
even
if
you
weren't
a
public
eating
establishment
so
that
you
could
in
essence
have
a
waiting
area
outside
if
you
needed
it.
At
that
point,
we
weren't
contemplating
we
just
needed
to
get
that
done.
We
felt
like
those
were
the
two
things
that
plus
the
private
property,
there's
no
restriction,
or
there
are
very,
very
few
restrictions
on
the
private
property,
private
property.
L
You
can
do
retail,
you
can
do
food,
you
can
do
you
know
other
other
services
that
are
allowed
by
the
county
order.
So
we
figured
that
that
was
going
to
help
the
most
number
of
businesses
citywide.
So
now
we're
circling
back.
We've
done
three
other
orders.
L
Now
we're
circling
back
and
what
we've
heard
is
the
folks
doing
retail
need
additional
space,
and
we've
also
heard
that
personal
care,
personal
services
which
are
now
allowed
to
operate
outdoors
only
would
like
the
space
as
well.
So
we'll
take
a
look
at
what
we
might
be
leaving
out.
L
A
I
know
I
appreciate
that
you
know.
I
know
that
your
goal
is
to
make
it
simple
for
folks,
so
they
don't
have
to
be.
You
know
they
have
to
go
higher
a
lot
just
to
figure
out
how
it
works.
I
just
know
that
you
know
from
what
I've
heard
there
is
some
significant
interest
in
being
out
on
the
public,
sidewalk
and
the
extent
we
can
make
a
simple
rule.
That
would
be
great.
A
L
D
A
A
L
Yeah,
so
I
mean
there
are
a
variety
of
items
to
take
into
consideration
when
you're
doing
a
lane
closure
or
street
closure.
We
do
have
some
criteria,
let's
say
specifically
for
a
street
closure
that
you
know
predominantly
the
majority
of
the
businesses
in
the
surrounding
neighborhood
want
it
and
we'll
utilize
it
that
there
are.
L
There
are
not
dedicated
bike
lanes
and
or
bus
routes
on
that
street,
because
there's
a
significant
lift
in
not
to
say
that
it's
not
possible,
but
it's
not
as
easy,
and
it
will
take
more
involvement
with
vta
and
other
folks
and
trying
to
get
the
street
clothes
also
that
the
the
ingress
and
egress
we
have
kind
of
conversations
with
pd
and
fire
about
street
closures,
and
so
every
one
of
those
potential
street
closures
is
kind
of
an
an
episode
that
you
have
to
look
at
in
and
of
itself.
L
So
we
tried
to
give
five
general
criteria
that
are
named
in
the
memo
for
the
streets
that
we
look
at
and
then,
if
people
are
coming
to
us-
and
they
say
okay
we'd
like
this
street
to
be
closed,
then
we'll
go
more
in
depth.
Assessing
how
that
might
be
able
to
be
done,
if
not
a
street
closure,
then
maybe
a
lane
closure,
if
not
a
lane
closure,
then,
for
instance,
parklets.
A
L
A
I
again
I'm
only
hearing
anecdotes
but
I'm
hearing
like
on
south
1st
street.
It's
becoming
well.
This
business
wants
this
thing.
This
business
wants
another
thing
and
I
know
we
don't
have
the
bandwidth
to
play
mediator
and
united
nations
among
what
10
different
businesses
run
right
and-
and
so
I'm
just
wondering,
is
it
possible
for
us
to
take
an
approach
that
says:
look
we're
just
going
to
close
a
lane.
We
won't
close
the
whole
street
we're
going
to
close
the
lane
in
60
days.
If
it
doesn't
work,
we'll
change
it.
L
So,
actually,
specifically
mayor
to
south
first
street,
where
we
came
to,
was
that
we're
creating
two
extended
parklets
and
for
right
now
that
is
going
to
serve
it's
kind
of
the
best
of
both
worlds.
The
traffic
is
still
able
to
go
through
the
businesses
on
the
street
that
do
want
additional
expanded.
L
Seating
are
going
to
be
able
to
go
into
the
parking
lane
and
in
fact,
they're
going
to
be
able
to
go
into
the
lane
and
the
frontage
in
front
of
the
california
theater,
so
they'll
get
additional
expansion,
and
so
what
we've
committed
to
do
was
take
a
look
at
how
those
parklets
operate
and,
to
the
extent
that
they
need
additional
space.
Then
either
we
look
at
the
lane
closure
or
we
look
at
a
full
street
closure.
A
Okay,
great,
if
you've
got
a
solution
fantastic,
I
just
it
just
sounds
as
though
it's
getting
challenging
bringing
everybody
to
agreement
and
I'd
hate
to
think
that
that
that
the
threshold
for
us
being
able
to
move
forward.
This
is
going
to
be
consensus
because
we're
just
never
going
to
get
to
concern.
B
K
Welcome
yeah
yeah,
just
a
quick
question
blogging.
Have
you
found
that
the
majority
of
businesses
that
are
registered
are
clustered
near
existing
business
associations
and
such
or
they
do?
We
have,
you
know,
say
in
the
burbs,
so
to
speak,
right
in
south
san
jose
and
other
places,
and
I
know
we're
actively
working
to
open
up
some
of
those
spaces.
But,
okay.
L
I
would
I
would
say
I
would
say
that
the
ones
that
are
registering
on
private
property
are
definitely
those
that
are
more,
that
are
kind
of
out
in
the
burbs.
To
use
your
your
words
right.
Those
are
the
folks
that
are
situated
in
kind
of
strip,
mall
type
settings
and
so
they're,
the
ones
that
have
the
parking
lots
and
they
have
large
enough
parking
lots
where
they
could
utilize
50
of
their
lots.
L
K
Yeah,
okay,
the
reason
I
ask
is
I
often
think
that
we
need
to
you
know-
and
some
of
it
incumbent
upon
me
and
other
council
members,
but
forming
additional
business
districts
across
the
city
to
try
to
get
more
buy-in,
but
but
there's
some
parts
of
the
city
like
district
2,
for
example,
that
there
are
no
sort
of
this.
K
This
continuous
sort
of
row
of,
like
you,
know,
alum,
rock
or
east
santa
clara
street,
in
which
we
can
sort
of
build
consensus
with
a
lot
of
the
businesses,
it's
more
sporadic
and
you
get
some
of
these
strip
malls.
And
so
I
was
just
curious
if
this
experience
and
this
experiment
of
sorts
has
really
exposed
the
need
to
to
create
more
of
these
business
associations
and
things
of
that
nature.
L
I
would
tell
you
that
it's,
it
is
much
easier
to
communicate
with
a
cluster
of
businesses
if
you
have
a
an
organization
that
is
there
and
it
has
a
relationship
with
them
and
is
in
constant
contact
with
them.
So
that
is
definitely
the
case,
and
I
think
you
know
right
along
the
lines
of
what
you're
what
you
were
talking
about.
We're
going
to
be
bringing
forward
an
item
to
council
regarding
a
grant
that
we're
applying
for
in
the
process
applying,
for
that
would
do
just
that
which
is
grow.
L
The
potential
for
neighborhood
business
districts
in
other
areas
of
the
city,
especially
areas
that
are
that
have
been
significantly
impacted
by
covid19,
and
this
is
an
opportunity
for
us
to
really
strengthen
that
bench.
So
to
speak.
N
Thank
you.
So
this
is
really
exciting.
I
heard
you
say
that
there
was
60
businesses
already
registered.
Do
you
more
or
less
have
an
idea
where
those
60
businesses
are
located.
H
L
N
Yeah,
I
would
be
interested
in
learning
if
our
businesses-
because
I
do
see
some
some
of
our
businesses,
going
out
into
the
parking
lot
and
setting
their
seedings,
and
I
want
to
know
whether
they
have
a
permit
or
not,
not
because
you
know
for
any
ripper
questions,
but
just
so
that
we
help
them
understand
that
that
there
is
a
process
for
registration.
N
They
might
see
that
all
around
town
and
think
that
it's
just
something
that's
allowed
now
and-
and
so
that
was
important
to
me,
and
also
because
I
wanted
to
make
sure
that
we
send
out
information
to
our
respective
businesses
so
that
they
can
have
that
information.
Do
you
have
a
a
kind
of
a
pr
kit
if
you
will
for
for
businesses,
so
that
we
can
forward.
L
L
We
can
resend
out
to
all
of
the
the
council
offices
some
information,
some
copy,
some
links
that
you
can
utilize
in
your
communications.
N
Wonderful
and
I
think,
you're
right
that
you
know
there,
there
was
some.
I
think
people
are
still
apprehensive
as
in
terms
of
whether
is
this
permitted.
Is
this
not
permitted
nobody's
really
sure
there's
some
claw
backs
because
there's
an
increase
in
covered
cases,
and
so
I
know
for
like
our
hair
salons.
They
were
ready
to
go
one
day
and
then
two
days
later,
they
had
to
close
back
up
right.
N
N
He
had
mentioned
to
me
a
while
back
ago
in
trying
to
revive
our
park
in
in
one
of
our
very
impacted
neighborhoods,
which
is
welch
we
thought
about.
Well,
wouldn't
it
be
nice
to
kind
of
have
a
cafe
that
you
know
the
neighborhood
association,
the
local
library
association
would
run
and
you
know
get
it
would
give
an
opportunity
for
neighbors
to
come
together
and
you
know
just
create
some
and
not
you
just
a
moment,
an
opportunity
and
also
some
revenue
to
keep
up
the
the
place
right.
N
And
so
I
wonder,
would
we
lend
ourselves
out
to
to
maybe
some
of
our
city
facilities
such
as
such
as
parks
to
to
allow
some
of
our
businesses
to
sell
on
site?
I
know
that
there
are
some
mobile
vendors
that
already
do
that,
but
couldn't
we
couldn't
we
have
an
arrangement
with
some
some,
I
don't
know
taco
trucks
or
things
of
that
sort
or
whatever
business
is
in
our
own
respective
backyard,
that
we
could
offer
an
opportunity
to
sell
their
items
at
our
local
parks.
L
Yeah
so,
council
member,
I
do
know
that
there
are
kind
of
a
few
things
in
the
works
on
a
variety
of
different
levels
that
could
kind
of
speak
to
what
you're
talking
about.
I
think
everybody
agrees
that
you
know
there's
there's
more
opportunity
for
activation
and
certainly
more
revenue
generating
opportunity
for
our
businesses
right.
That's
all
something
we
want
to.
L
We
want
to
work
towards
so
so
a
couple
of
things
next
week,
you'll
likely
be
ratifying
another
order,
I'm
on
a
roll
with
the
orders,
another
order
that
the
city
manager
signs
that
talks
about
expanding
business
operations
into
parks
and
plazas,
and
that's
mainly
around
health
and
fitness
businesses,
but
it
does
also
include
public
eating
establishments
that
are
in
close
proximity
to
the
parks,
so
that
that's
one
thing
kind
of
on
a
on
a
temporary
basis.
L
The
the
second
thing
is
that
I
know
the
parks
department
is
doing
some
work
through
their
capital
group,
exploring
kind
of
more
permanent
business
operations,
especially
concessions
in
parks
and
how
that
might
be
feasible,
working
with
the
different
constraints.
Kind
of
balancing.
This
idea
of
you
know
public
park
for
public
use,
but
then,
at
the
same
time
you
have
the
the
balance
of
kind
of
private.
L
You
know
entrepreneurship,
revenue,
business,
for-profit,
business
operating
in
in
a
public
park,
but
I
know
that
they're
they're
starting
to
do
some
work
around
that,
and
then
I
think
the
the
third
thing
to
kind
of
speak
more
more
immediately.
L
Is
that
the
pr
s
placemaking
team
is
also
having
a
variety
of
discussions
with
the
different
council
offices
and
trying
to
assess
their
their
resources
for
place,
making
activities
to
support
business,
to
the
extent
that
we're
able
to
it's
also
kind
of
a
fine
line
between
having
an
event
or
holding
activations
that
draw
a
number
of
people
and,
at
the
same
time
making
sure
that
we're
complying
with
the
county
order.
So
it's
elise
and
his
place.
L
Making
team
are
also
doing
work
in
that
area,
and
I
know
that
there
is,
you
know,
specific
budget
allocation
to
to
try
to
do
some
of
those
those
activations.
So
I
those
are
kind
of
the
three,
the
three
fronts
that
are
being
worked
on
and
there
there
might
be
other
fronts
in
the
works.
But
I
think
people
are
thinking
about
what
you
just
mentioned
for
sure.
L
That
yeah,
that
is
it's
the
special
perks,
use
team
and
prns,
along
with
us
in
economic
development
and
and
the
cao.
So
currently,
the
order
that
is
on
the
table
to
to
be
signed
is
an
order
that
primarily
focuses
on
health
and
fitness.
L
Businesses,
kind
of
educational
training,
culture,
day
camps,
cultural
facilities
being
able
to
bring
out
like
music,
for
instance,
if
the
museum
of
art
wanted
to
have
their
art
class
or
a
class
they'd,
be
able
to
do
reserve
a
space
and
park
to
do
that
and
then
also
public
eating
establishments
that
are
either
right
on
the
downtown
plaza
or
within
a
certain
proximity
of
a
park
so
that
that's
what's
coming
forward
right
now.
L
Retail
is
not
included
in
that
again
because
we
were
really
trying
to
streamline
and
also
answer
answer
kind
of
the
the
loudest
and
the
most
frequent
requests
that
we
were
getting
and
mostly
we
were
getting
requests
from
health
and
fitness
businesses.
N
Okay,
well,
that's
great,
thank
you
for
answering
that
question
and
so
the
last
question
that
I
have
I'm
glad
to
hear.
First
of
all,
I'm
glad
to
hear
that
we're
going
to
see
this
next
week.
N
I
know
that
people
are
are
wanting
to
come
out
and
you
know
spend
some
time
just
in
the
outdoors,
no
matter
what
it
is
and
and
they're
sort
of
you
know,
taking
over
our
parks
and
a
lot
of
our
families
who
are
overcrowded,
and
some
of
our
communities
need
a
bit
of
structure
and
some
I'm
happy
to
hear
that
the
place
making
team
is-
and
hopefully
that's
part
of
veva
park's.
N
Some
of
our
our
neighborhoods
got
used
to
having
those
place,
making
opportunities
as
as
ways
to
have
you
know
really
good
time
with
their
kiddos
and
not
spend
any
money
and
stay.
You
know
really
close
to
home,
and
so
I'm
looking
forward
to
that.
It's
great
the
the
other
question
that
I
had
was.
Is
there
a
different
strategy,
and
I
think
you-
you
spoke
with
council
member
jimenez
about
this
and
he
used
the
verbs.
N
I
don't
know
if
we're
in
the
burbs,
but
we're
definitely
not
downtown,
and
so,
if
you
could
expand
a
little
bit
more
in
terms
of
of
what,
if
the
strategy
is
slightly
different
or
for
areas
like
mine,
and
I
know
that
you
said
that
the
strip
mall
strategy,
which
kind
of
comes
into
play
for
some
of
the
some
of
our
districts,
they
don't
have
like
the
downtown
feel
and
so
that
what
that
was
one
of
my
questions.
N
But
if
there's
anything
more
to
add
I'd
like
to
hear
if
there
was
anything
more
that
you
would
add
to
that.
That
strategy
are
you
working
with
any
of
the
like
the
you
know,
main
businesses
or
maine
strip
malls
in
this
circuit?
Sorry.
L
About
that
so,
specifically
in
your
district,
we
have
had
a
few
conversations
with
the
folks
at
evergreen
village
square
and
have
have
talked
to
them
about
kind
of
what's
going
to
work
best
and
what's
what
is
going
to
best
support
their
businesses
there
and
then
in
that
case
they
also
have
some
kind
of
an
internal
checkoffs
through
chappelle
that
they
wanted
to
take
care
of.
First
before.
N
Yeah
and
I'm
not
necessarily
worried
about
them
because
they
actually
through
chapelle,
they
have
a
hired
consultant
that
is
in
charge
of
carrying
on
these
kinds
of
activities.
So
I'm
not
necessarily
concerned
about
them.
They
already
lend
themselves
that
the
type
of
downtown
feel,
if
you
will
for
a
village
square,
already
lends
itself
to
this
real
easily.
But
I'm
talking
about
some
of
those,
you
know
more
traditional
strip
malls
that
you
talked
with
councilmember
jimenez
earlier
about,
and
so
I
wanted
to
know.
Are
you
targeting
our
our
strip
malls
differently?
N
Are
you
maybe
affording
some
some
funds
for
seating
arrangements
that
you
know
our
business
owners
didn't
necessarily
have,
because
that's
not
the
way
their
business
worked.
It
could
be,
you
know,
maybe
a
pizza
joint
where
it's
mostly
pickup,
and
now
you
can
buy
by
the
slice,
and
now
you
have
a
couple
of
chairs
in
front
of
the
business.
So
I'm
just
wondering
is
there:
when?
N
Is
there
any
resource
that
we're
giving
to
our
businesses
to
to
comply
with
this,
so
that
they
could
also
do
the
same
thing
as
downtown
businesses?
Sure
so.
L
And
and
just
to
clarify
that
street
closure
that
we're
doing
and
and
all
of
so
far
everything
that's
kind
of
been
implemented.
So
far,
it
has
been.
The
city
has
provided
certain
things,
namely
like,
for
instance,
for
the
parklets,
the
barriers
or
for
the
street
closure,
the
barriers
to
close
the
street,
but
the
businesses
are
providing
all
of
the
equipment,
the
tables,
the
chairs,
the
stanchions
that
they
need
anything
that
they
need
to
operate
out
in
those
areas
and
that
has
all
been
provided
so
far
by
the
business.
L
Similarly,
the
registrations
that
we've
received
for
kind
of
the
private
parking
lots
and
the
private
lots
in
the
the
strip
malls
businesses
have
provided
kind
of
the
tables
and
chairs
and
brought
all
of
their
supplies
outside
the
work
that
that
is
going
to
be
happening
through
the
pr
s
placemaking
team.
I
know
that
they
have
a
small
budget
to
be
able
to
purchase
some
of
those
kind
of
universally
needed
things.
L
So
some
tables
and
chairs
some
hand
sanitizing
stations,
and
I
know
that
it
is
their
intention
to
utilize
that
for
some
of
the
viva
alfresco
business
support
activations,
and
I
think
that
once
those
start
to
get
underway-
and
we
see
how
those
kind
of
shake
out-
and
we
see
the
resources
that
we
have
remaining
we'll
be
able
to-
you-
know
figure
out
if
we
can
maybe
provide
tables
and
chairs
for
folks.
L
The
the
one
thing,
though,
is
that
we
have
to
make
sure
that
we
can
be
as
equitable
as
possible
and
unfortunately
we
don't
have
unlimited
resources,
and
so
you
know
we'd
really
have
to
have
a
conversation
about
how
we
would
make
sure
that
providing
those
resources
are
as
equitable
as
possible.
N
Thank
you.
You
know,
I
have
another
question
but
and
it's
very
exclusive
to
district
8
and
it
has
to
do
with
eastridge,
and
I
know
that
only
businesses
without
word-facing
businesses
can
stay
open
in
the
mall
and
so
for
for
eastridge.
It's
very
limited.
N
It's
just
basically
two
two
businesses
that
can
actually
do
that,
and
so
I
wanted
to
maybe
talk
offline
and
see
if
there's
something
that
we
can
do
to
help
support
eastridge
in
in
maybe
taking
some
of
their
businesses
outdoors,
and
we
can
take
this
offline
bloodjay.
I
I
know
that
it's
exclusive
to
to
district
8,
but
I
know
there's
malls
in
other
parts
of
the
city
of
san
jose
and
I'm
not
sure
how
everybody
else
is
dealing
with
with
businesses,
but
I
know
for
eastridge
a
lot
of
their.
N
People
weren't
really
purchasing,
you
know
clothes
and
items.
They
were
there
to
actually
have
a
good
time
like
our
bowling
and
the
movies
and
and
the
fitness
center,
and
so
a
lot
of
those
leisure
type
of
businesses
would
draw
a
crowd,
and
now
it's
really
changed,
and
so
I
I'd
be
interested
in
just
having
a
conversation
offline
to
figure
out.
How
do
we?
How
do
we
help
these
folks
survive
through
this?
A
Thank
you,
councilmember
peralta,.
O
Yeah,
thank
you
as
well,
and
apologize
I'm
back
back
at
home,
so
the
internet
is
a
little
slower
here.
So
I'm
off
video,
but
thanks
for
the
presentation
and
blogger
for
your
work
on
this
and
city
staff
being
able
to
move
these
opportunities
forward.
O
I
know
it
has
been
really
great
to
see
the
number
of
businesses
that
I
have
not
actually
just
downtown,
but
throughout
the
city
that
have
been
utilizing
outdoor
seating,
not
necessarily
you
know
exactly
alfresco,
where
you're
on
the
sidewalk
or
you're
shutting
down
some
of
the
street,
but
even
just
you
utilizing
outdoor
space,
some
of
the
private
locations
that
have
used
their
own
parking
spots
right
their
own,
their
own
walkways
out
in
front
that
you
don't
necessarily
see
on
a
normal
basis
just
across
the
street.
O
For
anybody
that's
right,
coming
by
city
hall,
you
can
see
it
at
tostadas
right
using
the
sidewalk
there.
I
don't
know
if
they
got
the
permits
or
not,
but
they
did
oh
good,
okay.
O
I
know
a
lot
of
people
have
jumped
into
using
this
opportunity
right
as
we
I
think,
expected,
and
then
our
hope
was
to
get
them
to
comply
right
with
the
with
the
proper
permits,
and
so
but
we've
seen
this
pop
up
and
there's
just
so
many
great
examples
of
utilization
of
outdoor
space
and
it's
great
it's
great-
to
see
people
outside
right,
wow,
obviously
in
the
pandemic
socially
distancing.
O
But
yet
my
hope
right
is
that
we
can
see
a
lot
of
this
sustain
even
after
the
pandemic.
And
so
that's
my
first
question,
for
you
blog
is
what
is
the
as
far
as
these
permits
go
and
people
that
are
getting
permission
to
do
this.
What
is
the
opportunity
for
them
to
continue
utilizing
outdoor
seating,
at
least
along
the
sidewalks
and
other
areas?
If
it's
not
roadways
that
you
know
that
we're
shutting
down
say
we
may
eventually
or
eventually
reopen
them.
But
what
does
it
look
like
for
ongoing
purposes.
L
So
to
to
be
honest,
we
haven't
had
the
specific
conversation
about
what
it
looks
like
you
know,
past
december
31st,
which
is
the
date
that
we've
kind
of
put
that
these
temporary
restrictions.
You
know
kind
of
end,
but
I
think
you
know,
as
we
get
closer
to
that
date
as
we
have
more
and
more
people
utilizing
outdoor
seating
or
business
operations,
we'll
get
more
and
more
feedback.
L
I
know
we'll
likely
be
receiving
feedback
through
all
of
you,
council
members,
and
I
think
then
we're
going
to
be
able
to
come
back
with
a
recommendation
about
how
to
potentially
you
know,
move
forward
and
not
have
this
temporary
relaxation
of
permits
and
fees
potentially
end.
So
I
think
everybody's
keeping
a
very
open
mind.
We
have
to
be
very
nimble.
L
Things
are
changing
constantly
in
the
in
the
covid
situation
and
so
we're
kind
of
taking
it
all
in
taking
the
feedback
and
then,
as
we
get
closer
to
that
date,
we'll
we'll
figure
out
what
makes
the
most
sense
and
you
know,
bring
forward
a
recommendation.
O
Yeah,
I
would
hate
to
see
this.
You
know
not
be
able
to
continue
on,
especially
for
businesses
that
are
investing
in
making
it
work
right.
A
number
of
businesses
are
purchasing,
they're,
purchasing
their
own
tables
and
chairs,
and
umbrellas
and
whatnot
for
out
by
outdoor
use
and
just
going
through
the
process
right
with
the
city
to
be
able
to
do
this,
so
that'll
be
my
hope
and
that'll
be
something
I'll
be
advocating
for
as
we
get
to
the
end
of
the
year,
whether
it's
extending
this
on
a
temporary
basis
or
looking.
O
More
importantly,
I
think,
for
you
know,
a
permanent
usage
in
some
of
these
locations.
O
The
the
next
topic
for
me,
that's
important,
and
it's
come
up
already,
which
is
just
the
I
think,
the
equity
opportunities
across
the
city-
and
I
again
I've
seen
this
being
taken
advantage
of
across
the
city,
but
I
I'm
not
heading
everywhere
to
every
single
district,
and
so
I
do
think
that
is
important,
especially
when
we're
talking
about
areas
that
are
that
are
more
under
resourced
and
council.
O
Member
arenas
was
just
talking
about
that
right
within
d8,
an
area
that
may
have
better
resources
and
may
be
able
to
take
advantage
of
this
and
there,
and
there
may
be
likely
other
areas
that
it
won't.
O
I
know
for
certain
we
have
that
within
the
downtown
core,
where
we
may
not
get
a
ton
of
businesses
along,
say,
the
east,
santa
clara,
like
costales,
is
great,
taking
advantage
of
it.
How
else
can
we
get
right
more
businesses
to
be
able
to
take
advantage
of
this?
In
some
other
areas?
The
mayor
pointed
out
some
of
the
challenges,
and
so
far
I'm
glad
we're
able
we're
going
to
be
able
to
see
that
happen
soon.
O
As
you
know
blogging,
I
would
love
to
see
this
happen
along
post
street
and
I
think
one
of
the
the
the
challenges
there
is
something
that
came
out
of
the
task
force,
recommendations
which
is,
for
instance,
along
post
street.
You
only
have
a
couple
businesses
that
are
actually
on
sort
of
facing
post
street
and
and
and
so
you
know
to
have
to
shut
down,
say
post
reader
or
or
one
lane.
O
I
think
in
that
case
it
makes
more
sense
that
the
whole
the
whole
street
that
section
of
the
street
there,
but
you're
only
maybe
benefiting
those
few
businesses
and
through
the
task
force
the
idea
was:
could
there
be
an
adjacent
sort
of
something
that
somehow
right,
your
your
a
a
business
away
or
a
building
away?
O
Could
you
be
able
to
take
advantage
of
say
a
vacant
spot?
That's
it's!
You
know
along
an
area,
that's
closed
down,
and
so
on
poe
street.
I
think
there's
there's
a
ton
of
opportunity
where
there
are
businesses
right
next
to
post
street,
maybe
along
first
street,
that
we
may
never
shut
down
that
area
of
first
street.
And
so
how
can
we
create
an
opportunity
for
the
businesses
to
you
know
to
be
able
to
take
advantage
of
space
on
post
street?
O
And-
and
so
that's
you
know-
I
I'm
thinking
of
places
like
good
karma
or
the
skewers
and
bruce
places
right
there
and
literally
right
next
door
to
businesses
that
are
adjacent
like
cream
and
55.
And
so
what
is
your
thought
in
in
regards
to
that.
L
I
agree
with
you
that
we
want
to
try
to
maximize
the
number
of
businesses
that
are
allowed
or
able
to
expand
their
business
operations
without
a
doubt,
and
and
that's
really
why
we
did
the
sidewalks
and
the
private
lots
first,
because
we
felt
like
that
was
going
to
really
maximize
people's
opportunities,
and
today
you
know
we're
here
with
an
amendment
to
the
sidewalk
declaration,
which
basically
would
allow
a
business
to
extend
their
tables
and
chairs
in
front
of
their
neighboring
businesses
frontage
as
long
as
they
have
their
their
permission.
L
So
you
know,
for
instance,
there
are
a
few
businesses
along
first
street,
particularly
whose
neighbors
are
not
open
and
they
could,
potentially,
you
know,
put
out
additional
tables
and
chairs
on
two
or
three
frontages
that
are
not
necessarily
in
front
of
their
their
business
and
so
we're
hoping
that
people
do
take
advantage
of
of
that.
You
know
possible
expansion.
L
L
L
We
want
them
to
benefit
their
business
to
benefit,
and
so
it's
it's
sometimes
difficult
when
you
maybe
only
have
one
or
two
businesses
that
could
benefit
from
that
street
closure,
as
opposed
to
let's
say
on
san
pedro,
where
you
have
nine
or
ten
businesses
that
benefit
from
natural
closure.
So
I
think
I
think,
though,
that
we're
able,
as
we
are
going
through
this
we're
able
to
have
additional
conversations,
I
think
that
we
can
figure
out.
You
know
what
the
correct
parameters
are.
L
L
How
does
that
then
interact
with
the
business
that
is
right
there
abutting
the
street,
so
I
think
we
can
continue
to
talk
through
it
and
and
we
will
continue
to
talk
through
it
and
we
will
try
to
find
the
the
best
solution
for
the
the
largest
number
of
businesses
across
our
city,
but
inevitably-
and
I
I
think,
council
member-
you
know
this-
inevitably
it's
likely
that
we're
not
going
to
be
able
to
satisfy
every
single
situation
for
every
single
person,
but
we're
gonna.
O
Yeah,
thank
you
for
the
the
response
and
I
I
do
appreciate
the
progress
we're
having
today.
With
the
item
we'll
be
approving,
I
think,
we're
all
taking
advantage
of
this
opportunity
to
just
talk
about
alfresco
in
general
and
especially
the
street
closure,
which
I
think
could
add
a
lot
of
value
more
than
than
just
you
know
the
space
in
front
of
your
business
on
the
sidewalk
or
the
ability
to
utilize
a
neighboring
business
is
based
on
the
sidewalk.
O
Shutting
down
a
an
entire
street
allows
so
much
more
opportunity
and
to
your
point
right,
that's
a
it's
a
bigger
investment
on
our
part,
so
we
definitely
want
to
make
sure
right
that
that
opportunity
we're
creating
it's
fully
taken
advantage
of,
and
that's
why
I
think
for
me
it
would
be
in
ensuring
ways
that
we
could
fill
up
a
street
that's
closed,
and
in
doing
so
you
know
not
at
the
same
time,
I
think
running
into
numerous
challenges,
as
you
point
out
well,
who
could
get
invited
right
to
be
able
to
use
that,
and
certainly
there
are
things
that
we
want
to
be
considering,
and
I
just
want
to
ensure
that
that's
the
continues
to
be
the
goal
for
for
staff.
O
I
know
for
me
personally:
we
were
already
working
on
piloting
shutting
down
of
posts.
So
for
me
it's
it's.
You
know
whether
we're
doing
it
alfresco
or
not.
I
think
there's
there's
a
great
opportunity
there.
This
al
fresco
opportunity
just
presents
another
chance
for
us
to
to
look
at
that
area
and
and
to
see
how
we
can
get
more
businesses
to
participate
in
it.
O
But
the
same
thing
could
be
said
right
when
you
talk
about
the
equitable
opportunity
across
the
city
as
you're
looking
at
just
other
areas,
especially
areas
that
may
not
traditionally
right
have
the
resources
to
to
band
together
corridors
right
that
don't
have
business
associations
or
their
or
they're
defunct
or
they're.
O
Just
not
as
active
and
stuff
like
that,
and
so
I
do
think
that
that
should
be
something
that
we're
thinking
of
and-
and
I
think
it
you
know
quite
honestly-
could
start
with
each
of
the
council
members
right
as
they
know
their
district's
best
to
maybe
make
some
suggestions,
try
to
go
out
and
and
help
organize
some
of
those
businesses
and
and
work
with
you
in
city
and
a
city
staff
to
create
some
of
those
opportunities
in
other
areas.
But
you
know
again
appreciate
the
progress
for
today.
O
I
think
we're
continuing
to
move
in
the
right
direction
and
look
forward
to
some
more
of
our
businesses
being
able
to
take
advantage
thanks.
B
Thank
you
mayor,
and
I
appreciate
all
the
the
work
that
staff
has
done
on
this
I've.
Actually,
I
got
this
idea
of
trying
to
do
things
in
parks
from
the
day
I
stepped
into
office,
and
I'm
glad
we're
moving
forward
on
it.
I've
been
working
with
angel
on
pilot.
D
Programs
here
and
there
and
I'm
glad
we're
moving
forward.
When
do
you
expect
the
parks
piece
to
move
through
vlogging.
D
B
D
Situation
that
we're
in
to
have
moved
it
forward,
like
I
said
I've,
I
thought
that
this
was
a.
This
could
have
been
a
great
idea
many
many
years
ago,
when
I
first
stepped
into
office,
and
then
I'm
glad
we're
moving
forward.
A
All
right
we'll
vote
then,
on
the
motion.
Tony.
B
K
B
A
A
A
J
A
Okay,
there
were
a
lot
of
emotions,
I'm
going
to
give
it
to
councilmember
menace.
On
the
motion,
tony.
B
K
G
A
All
right,
the
3.8
is
a
public
hearing
for
this
fiscal
year's
annual
residential,
solid
waste
collection
service
charges
for
this
year's
santa
clara
county,
secure
property
tax
goal,
we'll
have
a
public
hearing
at
this
time.
B
A
I
don't
see
any
council
member
wanting
to
speak.
Let's
vote
tony.
O
B
C
A
Okay
and
then
and
one
more
item
we'll
come
back
3.5,
so
first,
let's
go
to
3.9
was
determination
and
proclamation
of
local
emergency
for
civil
unrest.
Is
there
a
motion
move
to
approve
second
motion?
Second,
mr.
A
C
Hi,
thank
you
check
my
letter.
D
C
As
we
were
all
brave
and
uncertain
in
the
first
days
of
the
protests
and
to
respect
a
certain
amount
of
early
restraint,
sjpd
may
have
had
at
this
point.
I
can't
say
enough
in
my
dismay
how
sjpd
could
have
handled
the
situation
differently,
both
tactically
and
with
everyday
individuals.
During
the
protests,
the
fremont
police
department
chose
not
to
assist
the
city
of
oakland
and
mutual
aid.
During
the
protests
they
seemed
to
have
a
foresight
to
understand,
tear
gas
and
covet
19
would
not
be
a
good
mix.
C
The
doj
understandings
of
2015
and
16
were
finalized
in
conservative
terms,
with
a
specific
intention
to
develop
its
more
progressive
ideas,
a
thank
you
for
chief
garcia
stepping
down
in
terms
of
understanding.
It
may
be
time
for
an
sj
police
chief
to
better
develop
more
progressive
community
ideals.
C
C
How
a
police
chief
can
have
a
new
police
chief
can
have
a
clear
good
channel
towards
open
progressive
creative
ideas
for
community
in
sjpd
is
sjpd
san
jose
government
and
ourselves
ready
to
take
the
next
steps
and
how
to
better
handle
protests
and
day-to-day
relations
with
everyday
community.
C
The
doj
sorry
I'll
hold
on
a
second,
maybe
consider
our
human
relations,
and
it
may
be
to
consider
our
human
relations
our
human
use
of
language.
That
is
what
may
be
a
real
revolution
at
this
time
and
part
of
a
long-term
problems
and
attitudes
in
policing
and
local
city
government
itself.
That
needs
to
be
addressed
a
simple
example
of
microcosm
of
san
jose,
the
usually
decent
intentions
of
public
speakers,
is
sometimes
met
with
a
surprising
hostility
and
prejudice
prejudices
of
sapd
city
government
at
sj
public
meetings.
C
I
do
feel
for
the
past
few
years,
san
jose
city
government
has
been
trying
to
work
on
its
own
problems
of
a
very
narrow
set
of
educational
and
class
prejudices
is
had
of
everyday
community.
I'm
almost
done
with
the
ideas
of
cooperation
on
all
sides.
I
hope
sjpd
can
understand
that
these
are
the
better
efforts
by
san
jose
city
government
to
address
problems.
I
think
this
can
be.
Thank
you.
N
Hedges,
yes,
as
you
thanks
very
much
for
opportunity
to
speak.
B
K
Yeah
mayor,
thank
you.
I
just
simply
wanted
to
say
I
mean
it's
obvious
for
those
of
us
that
are
at
city
hall,
that
if
you
look
out
the
window,
you
don't
see
folks
protesting
anymore,
at
least
not
the
way
it
was
happening
before,
but
I
I
think
it's
important
to
note
that
that,
by
that
by
no
means
suggests
that
people
are
comfortable
with
the
way
things
are,
and
so
I
I
think
it's
important
to
recognize
some
of
the
work
that
we've
been
doing.
K
You
know,
I
know,
there's
a
memo
going
to
rules
tomorrow,
for
example
related
to
the
ipa
I
mean
we
just
voted
to
put
something
on
the
ballot,
so
I
just
wanted
to
express
the
folks
that
are
listening,
the
folks
that
are
on
this
call
that
that
we
hear
you
and
that,
although
we're
sort
of
ending
this
emergency
emergency
declaration
of
civil
unrest,
we
recognize
there's
a
lot
of
work
to
do,
and
I
just
wanted
to
put
that
put
that
out
there,
because
I
think
it's
important
to
take
notice
of
that.
Thank
you.
K
A
You
all
right
moving
on
all
right,
mr
soto,.
F
Good
evening
council,
this
is
this
is
one
of
the
reasons
why
I
wanted
eddie
garcia
to
stay.
There
is
because
what
he's
happened,
what
has
happened
under
his
watch
is
he's
created
a
culture
where
it
was
permissible
to
perceive
the
public
and
the
public
exercising
their
first
amendment
right
as
enemy
combatants
and
the
and
how
I
support
that
is
jared
wins
behavior.
F
This
man
was
standing
there
in
full
tactical
gear,
with
a
deadly
weapon
in
his
hand,
and
this
dude
was
fired
up.
We
still
haven't
even
explored
the
sadism
that
exists
in
the
police
department,
and
I
support
that
by
be
by
that
facebook
page
that
allow
these
people
to
dehumanize
the
very
people
that
they
are
in
charge
of
protecting.
F
F
Well,
how
come
he
can't
stand
there
and
allow
us
to
do
the
same
thing
with
him
when
he's
accountable
for
what
happened
in
society,
because
as
a
society
we're
gonna
pay.
The
money
believe
me
that
man
that
lost
his
testicle
believe
me:
the
city's
gonna
be
paying
millions
of
dollars
to
that
dude
and
all
the
other
victims,
but
yet
we're
the
one,
that's
footing
the
bill
and
he's
the
one
that
created
the
culture.
So
this
is
bigger.
F
H
Great,
thank
you.
I
I
do
appreciate
you
taking
my
my
comment.
I
did
put
my
hand
up
a
little
a
little
late
on
things,
so
I
do
appreciate
that
I
I
am
born
and
raised
in
san
jose.
I
care
about
san
jose
a
lot
now
when
we're
on
we,
we
understand
that
things
went
all
wrong
during
the
protesting.
H
We,
we
know
the
city
made
mistakes.
We
know
the
pd
made
mistakes.
My
concern
right
now
is
it's
just
going
to
keep
happening
over
and
over
again.
Many
of
you
know.
I
I
talk
to
a
lot
of
people
and
I
spend
a
lot
of
time
over
the
police
department
trying
to
engage
with
officers
and
I've
gotten
to
know
them
really.
Well,
there's
only
a
handful
of
them
that
really
think
what
happened
downtown
was
was
wrong.
H
H
H
I
just
don't
think
it's
going
to
change,
I'm
sorry
to
say
that
why
don't
we
take
a
page
and
there's
nothing
wrong
with
doing
this,
the
sheriff's
department
had
a
lot
of
problems
four
or
five
years
ago.
There
was
a
lot
of
things
that
happened
with
our
jails
and
our
training,
the
correctional
officers
it
was.
It
was
bad
news.
The
sheriff's
department
did
a
180
and
they
dealt
with
me
for
two
years,
hammering
on
them
in
public
comment.
I
wanted
it
changed.
I
wanted
him
completing
the
programs.
I
wanted
him
doing
the
bias
training.
H
Why
can't
we
learn
from
them?
Because,
right
now,
when
I'm
putting
together
more
of
these
videos,
I
don't
have
any
misconduct
from
the
santa
clara
county
sheriff's
department
at
that
protest,
but
I
have
hundreds
of
individual
instances
that
are
just
shocking
to
see
and
they
shouldn't
antagonize
the
public.
They
shouldn't
upset
them.
They
shouldn't
say
the
things
they
were
saying,
so
you
guys
get
the
point.
So
thank
you
for
taking
my
comment.
I
do
appreciate
that.
A
Thank
you
all
right,
return
to
council
councilmember
memphis
you
had
already
spoken.
Did
you
want
to
speak
again?
No,
no!
Okay!
All
right,
then,
on
the
on
the
motion.
Let's
vote.
B
K
G
A
All
right
we're
going
to
recall
now
the
item
and
I
recall
we're
going
to
return
to
the
item
3.5
and
I
just
want
to
thank
again
mark
vanni,
who
has
been
working
around
the
clock
for
for
several
weeks
now
to
deal
with
various
charter
change
potential
issues
and
has
been
rummaging
through
the
charters.
I
believe
ed
moran
has
as
well,
and
so
thank
you
for
your
review.
I
just
wanted
to
ensure
we
make
a
clear
record
about
legislative
intent
before
we.
A
We
take
this
vote
because
I
suspect
there
will
be
plenty
of
questions
that
will
come
up
eventually
and
so
marker
ad.
Whoever
would
like
to
respond.
Have
you
had
a
chance
to
review
the
charter
provisions
determine
whether
or
not
you
think
there's
anything
in
there?
That
would
create
a
contradiction
to.
D
G
A
Okay,
thank
you
for
that
ed,
and
so,
if
you'll
beg
my,
I
beg
my
colleagues
indulgence.
I
just
want
to
be
explicit
about
this
on
the
record.
So
although
section
411
clearly
indicates
that
council
can't
meddle
in
the
administrative
matters
of
of
the
city
manager
without
a
council
vote.
A
Okay
and
similarly
with
809a,
which
authorizes
the
ipa
to
do
some
things,
but
not
other
things,
you
don't
see
that
as
being
an
obstacle
either.
D
No,
we
don't,
because
that
additional
language
in
f
only
uses
the
charter
as
a
limitation,
not
the
language
in
809.
A
D
D
D
A
Language,
thank
you
and
again,
forgive
me
for
being
having
to
be
specific
in
a
way
that
may
sound
redundant.
But
I
just
need
to
make
this
record.
I
think
it's
important
to
do
it
on
the
record
section
701
b,
which
governs
the
city
manager's
ability
to
direct
and
supervise
employees,
to
conclude
that
that
does
not
interfere
in
any
way,
with
a
grant
of
investigatory
authority
to
the
ipa.
A
I
No,
I
think
I
I
think
ed
has
said
it
well.
You
know
we
didn't
find
anything
that
directly
prohibited
or
conflicted
with
granting
the
ipa
additional
authority
or
a
greater
role
in
investigations.
So
I
agree
with
that.
Okay,.
A
Great
thank
you
mark.
The
motion,
then,
is
vice
mayor
jones.
Ed.
Is
there
anything
else
we
need
as
part
of.
D
This,
yes,
you
have
to
go
through.
The
same
list
that
you
did
before
is
is
so
you've
agreed
that
you're
going
to
combine
all
three
into
one
and
we've.
Given
you
the
question
that
that
you've
revised
by
taking
out
a
word
so
then
the
question
is:
do
you
want
to
allow
rebuttals
with
regard
to
this
particular
ballot
measure.
D
Summary
yeah,
okay
and
then
do
you
want
to
designate
a
member
of
the
council
to
be
to
write
the
argument
in
favor
of
the
ballot
measure?
D
Yes,
I'll.
A
A
Okay
and
the
impartial
analysis
is
required,
is
that
right,
ed?
Yes,
it
is
okay.
So
that's
part
of
the
motion
is
that
right
vice
mayor,
that's
correct,
okay
and
the
second
or
forgive
me.
I
don't
know
who
that
was
yes,
I
agree
with
all
that.
Bear
okay,
great!
Thank
you,
councilmembers,
all
right.
Let's
vote
on
the
motion.
Thank
you.
A
Thank
you,
okay,
we're
off
to
the
ballot.
Thank
you.
Everyone
thanks
for
your
patience
and
thank
you
mark
for
all
your
help
and
ed,
I
think
all
right
item
310
are
actions
related
to
the
2020
chronovirus
emergency
supplemental
funding
program
grant
fund
to
see,
if
u.s
department
of
justice
your
motion
move
to
approve.
C
Hello,
can
you
hear
me?
Yes,
thank
you
for
this
item.
I
just
wanted
to
try
to
quickly
offer
that
it's
my
understanding,
there's
going
to
be
some
possible
vaccines
that
will
be
ready
for
everyday
people.
You
know
late
fall
and
it's
it's
so
that
that
it's
a
very
hopeful
idea
and
thought.
I
don't
know
how
accurate
it
is.
C
But
it's
from
that
that
I've
been
told
that
the
vaccine
itself
will
not
exactly
be
what
the
term
is
a
silver
bullet
and
that
so
you
may
get
the
vaccine
and
be
you
know
safe
for
maybe
six
months.
You
know
eight
months
to
a
year,
but
by
the
next
flu
season
you
can
be
vulnerable
again
to
it
and
that's
I
I've
heard
that's.
C
You
know
the
conditions
of
what's
happening
right
now,
and
so
that
invites
the
rolling
tumbling
question
of
this
of
this
disease,
and
you
know
I
I
just
good
luck
in
how
we
have
to
work
on
this
and
and
that
we
work
for
a
cure
and
we
don't
dilly
dally
and
just
let
other
things
take
over
our
lives.
Because
of
this,
I
don't
think
it's
worth
it
and-
and
I
hope
we're
all
learning
our
important
lessons
of
positive
sustainability.
C
I
hear
that
language
being
talked
about
more,
that
we
don't
have
to
work
on
these
sort
of
ideas
of
social
planning
anymore.
We
can
talk
about
social
planning,
just
in
warmth
and
in
love,
and
what
we
need
to
do
for
each
other
instead
of
having
to
go
through
these
patterns
of
disease
in
order
to
accomplish
large
goals
that
we
set
for
ourselves.
A
B
That
the
the
recommendation
is
to
allocate
the
the
appropriation
to
the
police
department,
but
that
did
not.
The
recommendation
was
not
consistent
with
the
or
did
not
appear
to
me
to
be
consistent
with
the
analysis,
which
said
that
about
half
of
it
was
going
to
go
to
the
fire
department.
So
I'm
confused
as
to
the
recommendation
versus
the.
L
The
analysis
in
the
in
the
memo
itself
can
somebody
clarify.
E
Yes,
councilmember,
I
I'm
just
if
we
have
staff
on
board.
I
think
I
saw
lisa
perez.
B
A
Okay,
any
other
comments
or
questions,
and
there
is
a
motion
I
believe
so,
let's.
B
K
I
B
A
All
right
we're
on
to
4.1,
which
is
release
of
police
department,
video
clips
related
to
recent
protests,
just
to
clarify
something.
When
I
read
the
agenda
it
appeared,
it
was
information.
Only
accepting
a
report.
Do
we
have
any
ability
to
take
action.
D
You
can
ask
the
city
manager
to
come
back
with
additional
information,
but
you
can't
take
an
action
since
the
action
is
not
specified,
but
you
can
ask
him
to
come
back
with
whatever
information
you
want
and
you
can
take
action
at
a
future
date.
Okay,.
A
A
Regarding
video
clips
and
the
protests,
I
would
like
to
take
action
of
some
kind,
because
I
I
wasn't
particularly
satisfied
with
the
report
and
I
think,
there's
pretty
conclusory
reasons
offered
for
why
a
video
wouldn't
be
provided
right
away,
and
I
think
this
is
important
for
the
council
to
be
able
to
take
action
in
this,
and
so
I
put
that
out
there
for
the
maker
of
the
motion
is:
are
there
any?
Is
there
any
presentation
here
dave
before
we
go
to
the
public.
E
No
we're
staffs
available
for
questions
and
certainly
mayor.
I
know
some
of
the
concerns
that
you've
raised
in
the
past,
and
so
we
we
do
have
a
conversation
going
with
the
attorney's
office
and
the
police
department
with
regard
to
that,
and
certainly
as
you
mentioned,
it
is
included
as
direction
in
the
rules
item
tomorrow.
So
we
certainly
look
forward
to
coming
back
with
that
information.
A
Okay,
so
we
could
consolidate
those
items
when
we
come
back
absolutely
thank
you,
dave,
let's
go
to
the
public
and
then
we
can
figure
out
what
to
do
next.
Jt.
A
Thank
you,
mr
large.
H
Thank
you
good
evening,
everyone,
scott
larkin,
I
I
agree
with
what
the
gentleman
the
previous
speaker
performed.
I
I
don't
see
why
we
just
cannot
make
this
information
public
immediately.
What
do
we
have
to
hide
right
now?
Why
can't
we
just
get
it
out
there?
We
can
all
see
what
really
happened.
I
I
was
at
almost
every
single
protest
that
was
downtown,
I'm
a
legal
observer.
H
I
have
just
unbelievable
videos
and
I'm
just
overwhelmed
with
processing
all
this
stuff
trying
to
get
it
out
there
onto
the
internet.
The
point
is
not
just
to
make
the
san
jose
police
department
look
really
bad,
it's
to
get
the
bad
apples
disciplined
it's
to
show
what
went
wrong
any,
and
all
of
you
are
welcome
to
this
footage
you
know:
do
we
need
to
wait
around
for
a
lawsuit
or
the
poa
to
release
it?
H
You
know
we're
going
to
go
back
and
forth
for
years
on
this
stuff
before
it
gets
out
there
I'll
provide
it
to
you.
I
was
right
up
in
there
and
I'd
say
I
probably
have
about
300
different
incidents
that
happen,
that
that
that
are
just
shocking,
the
language,
the
violence,
the
you
you
guys
can
go
on
youtube
and
watch
it.
I
don't
have
the
time
to
be
doing
all
this,
so
does
anybody
want
it
yeah
I
put
it
in
your
hand.
You
can
make
up
your
own
decision.
H
You
can
say
hey
great
we're
front
row
seats
of
the
protest,
we'll
know
what
happened.
I
believe
it's
31
days
of
footage
so
got
a
lot
of
stuff,
so
anybody
else
is
more
than
welcome
to
have
access
to
that.
You
know
how
to
get
a
hold
of
me.
You
guys
know
my
email,
you
know
my
phone
number.
The
only
problem
about
this
is
the
public
will
get
a
hold
of
me.
Nobody
in
power
is
gonna.
H
A
Mr
largent,
I
encourage
you
strongly
to
submit
the
videotape
that
you
might
have
that
raises
any
concerns
or
complaints.
The
independent
police
auditor,
who
has
specifically
upgraded
her
capacity
to
store
video
files
as
a
result
of
a
budgetary
allocation.
The
council
made
for
this
very
purpose
because
we're
aware
that
there's
a
lot
of
video
out
there
relating
to
the
protest.
A
F
Good
evening,
council,
paul
soto
from
the
horseshoe
I
was
at
that
protest
and
in
the
beginning
it
was
fine.
That's
what
was
like,
like
kind
of
surprising
to
me,
was
because
in
the
beginning
we
marched,
we
got
in
the
middle
of
the
street,
walked
down
santa
clara.
Then
we
walked
down
4th
street
and
everybody
was
just
like
yeah
man
yeah.
This
is
not
acceptable
and
everybody
was
walking.
Everybody
was
fine
every
until
the
police
showed
up
and
I'm
telling
you
this
is
a
militarized.
F
In
fact,
dwyer
was
the
one
that
gave
it.
Dwyer
stated
that
this
is
a
war
zone
and
they
did.
I
have
never.
I've
been
to
iraq,
afghanistan,
nico,
motolo
and
stating
that
somehow
another.
This
was
a
war
zone.
There's
your
clue
because
he
considered
it
that
maybe
he's
got
ptsd
and
doesn't
even
know
it,
which
is
why
we
need
psychological
profiles
and
all
these
cops,
that's
why
we
need
sb
1421..
F
F
So
what
has
happened
is
this
militarization
of
the
police
departments,
and
that
is
the
approach
that
they
have
with
the
citizens,
enemy,
combatants,
the
kinds
of
weapons
that
are
used,
the
tear
gas,
the
approach,
the
front
line,
the
the
the
corralling
of
people.
These
are
all
tactical
measures
in
order
to
incite
violence.
Thank
you.
Thank
you.
C
All
right,
thank
you.
I
hope
the
upcoming
questions
of
what
can
be
public
access
to
police
department
body
camera
footage
during
the
recent
proposal.
Protests
can
also
help
develop
how
everyday
people
can
eventually
have
better
access
to
police
body,
camera
footage
and
realistic
day-to-day
needs
as
well.
C
It
was
ruled
at
the
of
the
raog
og
meeting
public
hearing
that
day
that
he
could
not
have
the
body
camera
footage.
It
was
a
fairly
standard
judgment.
It
also
felt
in
the
room
that
this
standard
could
be
questionable
to
bring
out
these
questions
into
the
open
of
what
can
be
the
public's
right
to
body.
Camera
footage
seems
the
intention
of
san
jose
city
government
to
have
this
january
22
22nd
public
hearing
in
the
first
place.
C
So
this
is
an
issue
that
is
already
on
people's
minds.
The
question
is:
what
do
we
want
to
do
about
it
at
this
time
and
how
can
the
public
be
allowed?
The
right
to
see
body
camera
footage
to
prepare
for
their
own
court
trials,
along
with
similar
important
needs,
and
other
reasons
this
should
make
for
some
ins,
some
decent
good
connections
with
the
current
public.
Ask
of
police
body
camera
footage
from
the
protest.
Thank
you.
B
Yes,
thank
you
very
much.
I
agree
with
the
previous
speakers
that
we
need
to
release
the.
B
I
really
yeah,
I
really
don't
have
a
lot
to
add.
I
just
agree
that
we
need
to
share
the
footage
that
the
police
department
has
and
I'm
glad
that
the
city
upgraded
the
storage
for
the
ipa
to
get
footage
from
the
public
too.
A
Thank
you
return
to
council.
So,
as
was
noted,
there
is
an
item
on
the
rules
committee.
Now
that
would
be
coming
to
council,
so
we
could
defer.
This
item
be
considered
with
it.
Rather
than
accepting
the
report.
If
the
council
so
chooses
council
member
anyone
like
to
speak.
A
Thank
you.
Thank
you.
Councilmember
all
right,
councilman
mattis
is
the
motion
secretary
of
the
vice
mayor
on
that
motion.
K
K
B
G
G
A
Thank
you,
okay
item
5.1
is
the
continued
financial
relief
and
amendment
concession
agreements
for
non-aeronautical
concessionaires
at
the
airport.
There's
no
presentation
here
is
there
a
motion
move
to
approve.
B
K
I
K
B
P
A
Okay,
5.3
is
the
public
hearing
for
support
of
covet
international
services.
P
A
B
K
A
Second
motion:
second:
there's:
no
member
of
the
public
like
to
speak
tony.
B
K
O
G
C
A
All
right
item
8.2
is
a
public
hearing
for
the
draft
2020
to
2025
consolidated
plan
and
draft
fiscal
year.
2021
annual
action
plan
we're
going
to
open
the
public
hearing
at
this
time.
A
J
H
J
So
great,
thank
you
good
evening.
I'm
jackie
morales-friend.
I
am
the
dec
director
of
housing
and
I
am
joined
tonight
by
reagan,
henninger
who's,
a
deputy
director
and
we're
here
to
review
the
draft
of
the
five-year
2025
consolidated
plan
and
this
year's
annual
action
plan,
and
this
is
the
first
of
three
public
meetings
that
we're
holding
on
these
two
plans.
J
There
are
four
different
funding
programs
that
we
receive
through
hud.
The
first
one
is
the
community
development
block
grant
and
it's
the
most
flexible,
flexible,
of
course
we're
talking
about
federal
funds.
So
we
have
to
put
that
into
the
context
of
flexibility,
but
it
can
be
used
to
support
community
development
and
public
service
activities.
J
J
So
our
process,
to
date,
we
actually
started
it
in
september
of
2018,
with
the
county
and
other
cities
in
santa
clara
county.
We
did
a
regional
coordination
and
plan,
and
then
the
city
of
san
jose
did
additional
outreach
in
order
to
ensure
that
our
community
was
engaged.
J
So
this
would
is
not
our
typical
timeline,
but
actually
we
would
have
completed
all
of
our
work
before
your
july
1st
recess,
but
again
because
the
department
has
been
so
engaged
in
the
covet
19
response
and
because
of
the
additional
money
we've
been
receiving,
we
have.
It
has
delayed
our
plan,
so,
as
you
can
see,
we
did
release
the
draft
of
the
consolidated
plan
back
in
july.
J
These
smaller
format
meetings
really
help
to
ensure
that
feedback
was
obtained
from
community
members
who
don't
traditionally
feel
comfortable
either
participating
in
online
surveys
or
who
don't
come
to
city
sponsored
outreach
meetings.
So
the
housing
department
met
with,
for
example,
the
office
of
education
six
times
the
santa
clara
county
office
of
education
six
times
since
late
march,
to
continue
to
discuss
the
evolving
needs
of
homeless
and
at-risk
children
and
their
families.
During
the
coven
19
health
crisis.
J
J
So,
wrapped
up
in
our
federal
funding,
we
have
tried
to
be
responsive
to
covet
19
and
move
as
much
of
our
money
towards
addressing
the
pandemic.
J
J
J
We
see
that
45
earn
lower
incomes
of
the
total
households
in
san
jose.
We
see
small
families
which
are
for
fewer,
and
we
should
be
clear.
It
doesn't
distinguish
in
the
data
that
we
get
whether
this
is
families
with
children
or
if
it's
extended
families,
but
small
families
of
four
or
fewer
represent
36
percent
of
the
households.
J
J
We
also
just
wanted
to
highlight
that
there
are
some
areas
where
the
analysis
showed
just
disproportionality
based
on
race
and
ethnicity,
so
28
of
black
and
african
american
households
spend
more
than
half
of
their
income
on
housing
costs
and
25
percent
of
latinx
households
spend
more
than
half
of
their
income
on
housing
costs
and
those
are
higher
percentages
than
other
race
and
ethnic
categories
in
terms
of
reporting,
one
or
more
housing
problems.
J
Pacific
islanders
and
american
indian
alaskan
natives
reported
more
housing
problems
than
any
other
race
or
ethnicity
in
terms
of
the
2025
consolidated
plan
goals,
three
of
them
are,
the
one
are
were
included
in
last
year's
plan,
so
we're
going
to
continue
to
focus
on
homelessness,
affordable
housing
and
fair
housing,
but
we
did
change
one
of
the
goals
based
on
our
community
input
and
outreach,
and
also
because
of
coven
19,
and
this
goal
really
focuses
on
strengthening
and
stabilizing
our
communities
and
really
growing
assets.
That's
a
new
goal
that
we
haven't
had
in
the
past.
J
J
I
did
want
to
just
highlight
what
the
annual
action
plan
has
in
it.
So
the
majority
of
the
investments
are
not
new.
There
are
continuation
from
the
last
five-year
plan
and
that's
because
you're
not
finishing
in
wrapping
up
this
plan
until
now,
and
so
we
are
planning
on
issuing
rfps
in
the
future,
so
we
carried
forward
most
of
the
contracts
except
for
two
and
those
contracts
will
be.
J
J
J
J
J
This
is
1.4
million
for
rental
assistance,
which
is
how
we
typically
spend
our
hopwa
funds
our
esg.
This
is
our
annual
esg
allocation.
You
can
see,
we
don't
typically
get
32
million
dollars,
it's
less
than
a
million.
M
So
in
response,
our
city's
eoc
has
suspended
abatements
to
advance
this
public
health
guidance
and
locally
valley,
homeless,
health
care
and
public
health
have
begun
testing
at
congregate,
shelters
and
in
encampments
of
10
or
more
people,
and
allowing
people
living
in
encampments
to
remain
where
they
are
has
helped.
People
maintain
critical
service
and
medical
connections
as
well
as
allow
for
contact
tracing
while
we've
been
able
to
provide
support
to
encampments
during
this
public
health
crisis,
we're
proposing
to
lean
in
even
more
and
provide
more
street-based
services.
M
M
M
So
the
housing
department
is
piloting
a
new
program
called
soar
which
stands
for
services,
outreach,
assistance
and
resources
in
partnership
with
our
eoc's
beautify
san
jose
branch.
The
program
is
focused
on
17
of
the
city's
largest
encampments
and
large
is
defined
as
50
or
more
people,
so
we're
estimating
approximately
600
people
could
be
served
by
this
program.
M
It
would
focus
on
increasing
our
hygiene
and
infection
control
with
things
like
increased
trash
service
and
large
item
debris,
removal,
as
well
as
increasing
our
porta
potty
and
hand
washing
stations
and
then
finally,
there's
a
housing
and
shelter
opportunities
which
includes
motels
shelter,
beds
and
our
emergency
interim
housing.
Next.
M
M
M
That's
a
time
limited
rental,
subsidy
with
case
management
and
then
finally,
we're
funding
a
shelter
diversion
or,
as
we
call
it,
housing
problem
solving,
which
is
case
management
and
some
modest
financial
assistance
to
help
individuals
identify
an
immediate
housing
opportunity.
That's
not
shelter,
for
example
a
roommate
or
staying
with
friends
or
family
we've.
Already
started
this
diversion
work
and
coordination
with
the
county
and
our
hud
technical
advisors
by
developing
a
coordinated
program
and
outcomes.
M
So
that's
the
summary
of
our
soar
program.
We
really
think
this
approach
of
street
based
outreach
and
services,
hygiene
and
trash
along
with
housing
and
shelter
opportunities,
provides
compassionate
approach
to
addressing
the
health
and
safety
needs
of
people
living
outside
during
this
public
health
crisis,
and
I
think
I'm
turning
it
over
to
jackie
for
next
steps.
J
Great,
so
this
is
our
first
public
hearing.
We
are
going
to
be
holding
a
our
first
virtual
public
hearing
on
august
6th.
J
We
will
come
back
next
week
or
and
ask
for
your
approval
on
the
plan
and
for
you
to
take
action,
and
then
we
will
be
submitting
both
plans
to
hud
on
august
15th
and
before
I
turn
it
back
to
the
city
council
and
the
mayor,
I
did
want
to
recognize
the
tremendous
amount
of
work
from
the
staff
christian
clements,
who
has
the
division
manager
for
this
team
and
shirley
and
april
who
are
implementing
the
hud
programs.
J
As
you
know,
the
last
time
you
saw
me
I
told
you,
robert,
was
leaving
so
shirley's
had
to
jump
in
and
take
over
a
team
and
then
kelly
from
who's.
Our
homeless
manager,
who
has
been
working
on
the
outreach,
especially
toward
especially
in
getting
our
homeless
residents,
engaged
in
providing
us
feedback.
And
so
with
that
we
are
available
for
questions
and
thank
you.
A
Thank
you.
Thank
you
very
much,
jackie,
andrea
and
ella.
All
right
we're
going
to
go
to
the
community
first.
C
Hi,
thank
you.
Thank
you
for
this,
for
the
public
hearings
you're
going
to
have
I'm
really
into
public,
not
public
housing,
mixed
income
housing,
and
that
was
a
movement
that
I
felt
was
really
coming
on
in
2019,
and
I
was
really
hopeful
about
it
and
I'm
I'd
like
to
learn
how
that
can
be
talked
about
at
this
time.
How
can
we
redevelop
those
concepts
and
put
it
in
a
context?
That's
you
know
towards
our
future.
C
I
don't
I
don't
know
what
that
is
everything's
a
little
foggy
to
me
right
now,
but
it's
such
great
ideas
that
I
you
know,
I
hope
you'll
be
talking
about
mixed
income
and
just
what
the
ideas
of
sustainability
it
offers.
I
think
it's
the
real
ideas
of
sustainability
and
the
ideas
of
how
to
talk
about
community
and
the
future
of
community
and
policing
and
all
of
those
good
things.
Community
energy.
C
You
know
it
just
does
a
ton
of
stuff
towards
community
sustainability
and
I'm
a
bit
fearful
that
your
meeting
was
that
your
public
meeting
that
you're
gonna
have
on
on
thursday
will
conflict
with
the
vta
public
meeting.
You
know
they
work
on
serious
mixed
income,
housing
issues
as
well
and
as
it's
a
shame
that
that
would
conflict
with
each
other
with
42
seconds.
I
just
wanted
to
thank
the
mayor
and
his
budget
ideas
towards
deficit
reduction,
they're,
similar
to
what
gavin
newsom
practices
as
well
with
school
school
budgets.
C
School
budgets
will
not
be
they'll,
be
having
a
steady
cola
process
for
the
next
year
using
deficit
reduction
practices,
and
you
know
I
think
that
that's
an
important
lesson
for
the
the
poa
at
this
time
and
all
and
for
all
of
us-
and
I
just
wanted
to
again
thank
you-
know
it's
good
foresight
to
practice
deficit
reduction
in
this
time
period,
and
it
just
sets
a
good
course,
and
I
feel
safe
and
secure
in
him
doing
that,
and
everyone
doing
that
and
democrats
doing.
That
is
doing
it
very
well.
So
thank
you
very
much.
C
A
You
paul
certain.
F
Good
evening
council,
I
appreciate
what
what
blair
was
talking
about
in
terms
of
the
mixed
income
housing,
because
what
we're
actually
doing
with
this
city
is
we're
streamlining
the
production
of
housing
for
a
majority
of
people
that
have
never
lived
here
in
san
jose.
F
I
know
some,
I
know
a
couple
of
students
that
went
to
school
in
stockholm
and
he
was
telling
me
paul.
We
don't
deal
with
this
kind
of
problem.
The
way
that
san
jose
is
is
because
everybody
of
all
different
classes
have
to
take
the
subways.
So
there's
a
sociological
component
to
it
is
that
these
people,
the
rich
the
money,
also
go
and
they're
sharing
transportation
with
regular
working-class
people.
F
Okay
in
san
jose.
It's
not
like
that,
we're
actually
creating
a
system
that
stratifies
I
mean
the
housing
issue.
You're
gonna
have
you
have
43
000
families
that
are
on
par
to
be
evicted,
and
these
landlords
are
literally
salivating
salivating?
Yes,
kick
them
out,
let's
use
the
sheriff's
department
to
do
it.
I
feel
bad
for
the
sheriff's
department
because
they
are
going
to
be
forced
to
to
enforce
those
evictions.
Can
you
imagine
that
going
to
these
families
houses
and
kicking
out
some
aolitas?
What
do
you
think
their
family
members
are
gonna?
F
A
Thank
you,
jt.
E
The
issue
with
people
who
have
never
been
homeless
is
you
guys
just
don't
understand
the
issue?
You
can
go
ahead
and
waste
a
whole
bunch
of
money
on
job
initiatives
to
people
who,
frankly,
need
addiction
treatment,
we're
spending
four
million
dollars
a
year
on
these
motels
san,
diego
houses
over
1
000
people
per
year
in
huge
tents.
E
A
Thank
you,
scott
largent.
H
Thank
you
good
evening,
everyone,
scott
largent,
you
know
I
I
do
get
that
this
is
a
very
complex
issue.
I
I
the
gentleman
before
me.
It
kind
of
opened
my
eyes
up
a
little
bit
right
here.
All
the
people
that
are
on
the
streets
that
I'm
interacting
with
need
mental
health
services
and
drug
treatment.
So,
no
matter
what
plans
you
guys
are
putting
together
right
now
to
house
them,
give
them
more
service.
H
H
H
I
mean
you
guys
heard
this
over
and
over
again
the
services
are
crap
and
when
somebody's
at
the
door
begging
and
begging
and
begging,
we
don't
help
them
now
an
example
down
your
spring
street
right
there
near
the
faa
crash
zone
right
there.
This
thing
is
just
turning
into
skid
row
over
there
right
now.
It's
it's
the
jungle
2.0.
H
Why
can't
we
go
through
there
and
just
clean
the
area
up
now?
Raul?
That's
your
your
area.
Over
there.
That
park
is
a
is
a
it's
pretty
bad,
but
we
already
have
bathrooms.
We
already
have
plumbing
ram
there.
We
have
electrical,
we
have
power,
we
have
outdoor
park
benches.
You
know
why?
Don't
we
improve
the
area
there
to
help
those
people
maybe
get
some
solar
panels
on
their
motor
homes?
Maybe
fix
the
gray
water.
You
know,
fix
the
black
water
get
their
their
rigs
working
properly.
Get
them
up
to.
H
You,
know
kind
of
lift
them
up
a
little
bit
to
get
into
a
safe
parking
program
to
get
them,
so
they
can
get
to
that
next
job
interview.
I
I
would
challenge
you
guys
to
go
out
to
spring
street
out
there
and
just
go
out
there
and
talk
to
people,
because
there's
a
lot
of
normal
people
out
there
they're,
not
just
what
you
think
they
all
are.
So
thank
you.
P
Yeah,
robert
aguirre,
I
certainly
appreciate
what
the
housing
department
is
doing,
and
I
know
that
they've
reached
out
to
some
some
of
the
advocates,
but
there's
a
lot
of
other
advocates
out
there
that
are
perhaps
better
connected
and
can
provide
better
help
in
some
of
the
outreach
that
you
guys
are
wanting
to
do,
and
we
have
experience
we
have.
We
have
a
lot
more
connection
with
the
people
than
the
the
service
providers
that
you
have
lined
up,
and
one
of
the
concerns
that
I
have
is
the
the
two.
P
I
don't
know
what
you're
calling
them
anymore.
They
it's
supposed.
P
That's
going
in
down
in
d2,
I
have
asked
if
I
could
speak
with
the
residents
of
the
the
the
existing
bridge
housing
community
to
you
know,
to
have
a
real
heart-to-heart
talk
with
them
and
find
out
how
well
this
program
is
working.
P
You
know,
if
you
ask
them
and
you've
got
the
the
people
that
are
running
it
right
there
they're
going
to
be
afraid
to
tell
you
exactly
what's
going
on,
and
I
think
if
we
had
a
way
to
have
that
communication
with
them
and
and
find
out
how
well
this
program
is
actually
working
out
and
having
them
be
able
to
give
their
opinions
without
being
afraid
of
any
kind
of
retribution
getting
kicked
out,
for
example,
and-
and
we
also
need
to
have
more
of
the
people
that
are
involved
in
making
these
decisions
and
not
have
it
top
down.
P
I
think
one
time
I
asked
you
mayor
licardo,
if
you
would
like
me
to
pick
out
your
clothes
for
you
and
at
first
you
didn't
understand,
but
once
we
started
talking,
you
realize
that
it's
important
for
the
people
that
decisions
are
being
made
be
a
part
of
that
decision-making
process
and
not
just
have
people
making
decisions
for
them,
and
I,
I
think
the
only
thing
that
continues
to
lack
and
that's
one
of
the
reasons
why
things
like
the
trailer
program
didn't
work
out,
and
I
would
still
like
to
see
if
those
trailers
were
given
back
or
they
were
actually
taken
back
and
that's
something.
A
N
Thank
you,
so
I
just
had
a
first
of
all.
I
just
wanted
to
say.
I
know
it's
been
a
long
road
between
when
you
first
started
to
gather
information
for
this
consolidated
plan,
this
five-year
plan,
that
is
in
coordination,
also
with
the
county
and
today,
and
so
so,
congratulations
you're
almost
there.
N
J
N
I
I
just
wanted
to
reiterate
that,
because
I
want
people
to
know
that
it's
not
too
late
that
this
is.
This
is
almost
there
right
in
terms
of
the
finish
line,
but
there's
still
an
opportunity
to
be
heard,
especially
if
they
represent
a
group
of
folks
who
are
impacted,
unhoused
community,
and
so
I
wanted
just
to
make
sure
that
they
heard
that.
N
The
second
thing
I
wanted
to
say
was:
I
really
appreciate
that
you
recognized
who,
in
terms
of
groups,
are
being
most
impacted
and
I'm
trying
to
find
a
page.
I
think
you
had.
Oh
28
of
black
african
american
households
spend
more
than
half,
and
so
this
is
for
the
city
of
san
jose.
I
I
think
that
we
have
a
very.
I
can't
remember
what
the
total
percentage
of
african-americans
are
in
our
city,
but
I
know
it's
relatively
small,
but
that
they
share
the
28.
N
Almost
a
third
of
households
that
have
more
than
half
of
their
income
on
housing
causes
is
alarming,
as
well
as
for
for
the
latino
households
which
we
suspected
and,
like
you
said,
you
hear
on
a
weekly
basis,
the
the
the
issues
that
happen
with
overcrowding
and
so
and
then
you
also
mentioned
pacific
island
residents
in
american
indian
alaskan
natives
reported
more
housing
problems
than
average.
How
did
those?
How
did
those
figures
help
you
develop
some
of
these
strategies?
I
wanted.
N
I
wanted
to
just
have
that
connection
between
the
data
that
you're
presenting
and
that
you
gather
and
and
strategies
you're
using
so
whether
you're
focused
more
in
some
latino
communities
or
some
of
those
grants
are
going
to
be
that's
going
to
be
taken
into
consideration
in
terms
of
of
areas
or
of
concentration.
So,
if
you
can
just
show
me
those
dots
sure.
J
So,
actually,
that's
a
really
good
question.
So
clearly,
one
of
the
things
we've
been
doing
is:
we've
been
working
with
the
covid19
rental
assistance
program
and
the
funding
that
we
have
been
providing
there.
We
have
been
very
clear
with
the
providers
that
are.
We
would
like
to
prioritize
where
the
funding
goes,
so
we
did
not
when
they
initially
came
to
us.
They
had
wanted
to
do.
J
As
I
said,
many
of
the
contracts
that
we're
doing
right
now
are
contracts
that
we
are
carrying
forward,
but
it
is
our
anticipation
that,
as
we
begin
to
rfp
these
new
funds
that
we
would
create
rfps,
that
would
ask
the
recipients
specifically.
How
did
they
address
these
particular
populations
and
groups
that
are
not
able
to
access
services
at
the
same
levels
as
other
people
and
ask
for
their
information
regarding
how
effective
they
are
in
impacted
communities.
N
Thank
you
thank
you
for
that.
I
appreciate
that
and
I
appreciate
hearing
that
that
this
is
gonna.
I
wouldn't
expect
anything
different
from
you
that
this
is
would
be
strategically
aligned
with
with
those
upcoming
rfps
that
you're
going
to
release.
So
I'm
happy
to
hear
that
the
last
question
that
I
had
well.
N
I've
got
to
say
that
I
know
that
you
have
your
work
cut
out
for
you
even
pre
pandemic
and
so
to
add.
This
piece,
which
makes
a
lot
of
sense
is,
is
you
know
it
will
be
a
challenge?
Is
there
going
to
be
additional
staff?
That's
going
to
provide
support
for
this
area?
How
are
you
all
going
to
handle
this
fourth
item
on
your
consolidated
plan.
J
So
one
of
the
things
that
we've
done
and
again
this
is
part
of
the
covet
19
work,
but
it
aligns
with
this
new
funding.
Category
is
the
funding
that
we
are
providing,
in
collaboration
with
the
office
of
economic
development,
which
are
these
small
business
loans
that
we're
funding,
and
in
that
case,
just
in
terms
of
your
previous
question,
we
are
doing
specific,
targeted
outreach
to
underrepresented
communities
to
ensure
that
they
know
in
multiple
languages
that
this
opportunity
exists.
J
So
that
again,
the
numbers
that
we
receive
are
aligned
with
the
amount
of
issues
that
we're
seeing
in
those
communities,
so
we're
doing
it
by
targeted
outreach,
so
we're
trying
to
partner
with
new
groups
so,
whether
it's
the
office
of
economic
development
or
we're
doing
more
out
try
to
find
a
homeless
provider
who
really
can
address
the
needs
of
homeless
people.
We
did
hear
some
speakers
say
no
job
training
is
not
necessary,
but
we
know
that
it
really
is.
J
And
what
we're
you
know
what
we're
challenged
with
is
finding
somebody
like
we
had
to
find
a
specific
outreach
people
that
really
wanted
to
do
the
kind
of
work
on
homelessness
with
past
path.
We
need
to
find
the
same
types
of
people
that
are
going
to
do
the
types
of
work
that
we
want
to
be
focused
on,
so
we
have
to
find
new
partnerships
in
order
to
create
and
implement
these
new
strategies
that
particular
strategy.
N
Wonderful
and
I
think
I
gave
you
a
referral
for
community
seva
they're,
an
absolutely
small,
grassroots,
driven
nonprofit,
but
and
they
provide
services
citywide,
so
I
hope
that
they
can
also
be
somehow
included.
They
do
this
on
their
own.
You
know
money,
and
so
I
think
that
expanding
their
capacity
would
be
great,
but
you
know
it
completely.
They
have
to
go
through
whatever
process
is
already
established.
N
So
I'm
glad
to
hear
that,
although
I
am
I'm
glad
to
to
hear
that
you
have
some
very
strategic
ways
of
aligning
what
you
found
in
terms
of
needs
to
to
some
of
these
goals
and
your
strategies,
and
so
then
I'm,
I
guess,
I'm
assuming
that
you
won't
have
additional
staff.
J
We
are,
we
did,
I
think
we
we're
gonna,
add
at
least
one
additional
staff
person
to
help
with
the
100
million
dollars
additional
money
we're
receiving
on
the
grand
side,
we're
also
adding
a
fiscal
person
that
can
help.
N
I'm
just
happy
I'm
happy
to
hear
that
you'll
have
additional
support
is
ultimately
what
I
was
looking
for,
because
I
know
that
development
has
its
own
needs
and
then,
of
course,
this
consolidated
plan
is
a
very
human
services
directed,
and
so
I
I
know
it
tears
you
into
two
to
completely
different
directions.
If
you
will
wonderful.
N
The
last
thing
I
wanted
to
ask
you
was:
I
know
that
that
we've
had
some
issues
with
rvs
that
have
been
parked
in
the
streets
and,
unfortunately,
the
owners
of
some
of
those
rvs
are
not
just
using
it
to
have
an
over
a
place
to
stay
overnight
and
put
a
roof
over
their
heads.
N
But
you
know
they've
just
created
some
chaos
for
some
of
the
residents,
and
I
know
many
of
them
have
been
towed
away
or
what
you
know
and
people
have
lost
their
their
opportunity
opportunity
to
have
a
roof
over
their
heads.
N
M
I
think
one
of
the
common
things
that
we
are
hearing
is
that
oftentimes
people
living
in
their
rv
don't
view
themselves
as
homeless.
They
purchase
their
rv.
This
is
their
place
of
residence.
One
of
the
things
that
the
esg
carers
is
going
to
allow
us
to
do
is
to
provide
some
funding
specifically
for
rv
support
services.
It's
lumped
in
with
that
trash
service
under
the
hygiene
and
infection
control,
but
we'll
be
able
to
provide
some
trash
removal
and
some
mobile
sanitation
services,
specifically
for
rvs
with
this
esg
cares
money.
N
Awesome-
and
I'm
glad
you
I
mentioned
the
the
cares
money.
The
asg
cares
money
in
that
soar
program
because
I
know
our
thompson.
Creek
neighborhood
has
their
community
of
house
their
own
house
community,
and
that
has
provided
a
lot
of
support
for
the
for
those
particular
folks
and
so
that
cohabitating
with
one
another
is
easier
because
everybody
is
at
home
right
anyways.
Thank
you
so
much
for
all
your
work
and
then,
hopefully
you
could
send
out
a
tweet
or
post
on
your
facebook.
N
How
folks
can
give
their
final
word
in
before
this
all
gets
solidified?
That
would
be
wonderful.
So
thank
you,
oh
and
then
there's
no
motion
correct.
K
Yeah,
thank
you
mary.
I
just
had
a
question
sort
of
along
the
same
lines
is
something
that
councilmember
rodriguez
touched
on,
and
jackie
mentioned
this
to
you
and
really
I
asked
this
question
just
in
the
spirit
of
it
seems
to
me
this
this
being
opening
up
the
hearing
and
gathering
input
from
us
and
from
community
members,
but
so
so
the
consolidated
plan
for
spending
priorities.
I
think
the
last
one
number
four
is
what
councilmember
adenos
mentioned:
strengthening
stabilizing
communities.
K
That
seems
to
me
to
be
one
of
the
categories
for
the
page,
nine
that
maybe
seems
a
little
bit
more,
not
as
sort
of
strictly
tied
to
housing.
If,
if
that's
a
good
way
to
put
it
right,
it
seems
a
little
bit
looser
with
regards
to
how
you
could
spend
that
money,
it's
prior,
yes
right
and
so,
and
so
what
I'm
curious
about?
Are
you
able
to
use
that
to
hire
staff?
K
J
We
can't
hire
staff,
there's
a
a
limitation
to
administration
on
how
much
we
can
hire
to
implement
programs
so
or
overseeing
or
manage
the
grants.
D
J
K
Yeah
and
I'll
explain,
explain
and
share,
I
think,
may
it
may
provide
some
clarity,
and
so
you
know
just
looking
at
you
know
some
of
the
categories
in
their
child
care
services,
obviously
all
worth
doing
right:
child
care
facilities,
development
and
then
you
had
talked
about
working
with
the
office
of
economic
development.
What
came
to
mind
for
me
is
in
reading
the
report
and
noticing
I
think
the
number
was
about
45
percent
of
the
residents
in
san
jose
are
rent
burdened
right.
K
And
so
with
that
in
mind,
obviously
it
seems
to
me
that
the
the
wages
that
people
earn
are
super
important
right
so
that,
because
they're
so
rent
burdened
every
penny
that
they
earn
is
even
that
much
more
important
right,
and
so
looking
at
that
and
then
reading
this
story
recently
as
it
relates
to
the
office
of
equality
assurance
and
not
potentially
not
having
enough
staff
to
enforce
some
of
the
wage
stuff
going
on
in
the
city.
K
I
was
just
thinking
that
if
there
was
some
nexus
there,
some
connection
that
could
be
made
between
this
category
and
really
making
certain
that
or
the
possibility
of
you
all
using
some
of
this
funding
to
plug
some
of
those
holes
to
make
sure
people
are
earning
enough
money
and
earning
the
money.
They've
earned
actually
getting
the
money
they've
earned
in
order
to
pay
that
rent
right
and
that's
what
I
was
thinking
about.
I'm
not
sure
what
your
thoughts
are
on
that
or
if
there
is
a
way
to
to
work.
Something
like
that
in.
K
I
know
there's
no
emotion,
but
just
consider
this
my
input,
I
just,
I
think,
there's
other
opportunities
within
other
departments
that
can,
I
think,
help
ease
some
of
the
burden
that
you
so
explicitly
mentioned
in
these
reports,
and
I
think
it
just
speaks
to
the
intersectionality,
as
we
often
say,
of
many
of
these
issues.
Right
and-
and
so
you
know,
if
you
all
can
get
creative
and
if
there's
anything
you
can
do
as
it
relates
to
those
things
I
think
it'd
be
worth
exploring.
I
just
thought
I'd
mention
that.
J
Sure
we'll
definitely
look
into
it.
Since
it's
part
of
the
public
comment,
we
we
actually
have
to
respond
to
every
public
comment
idea
in
our
public
comments,
so
we'll
definitely
look
into
it
and
I
would
absolutely
agree
with
you.
I've
been
saying
over
the
past
few
years
that
economic
development
is
actually
the
other
side
of
this
problem.
K
Yeah-
and
I
think
what
I
mentioned
even
takes
it
further
right:
it's
that
certainly
getting
people
good
wages,
good
jobs,
getting
them
into
those
those
those
lanes
sort
of
speak,
but
once
they
have
that,
how
do
we
make
certain
they're
actually
getting
paid?
What
they're
supposed
to
be
getting
paid
right?
And
I
think
that
is
sort
of
the
natural
extension
of
that
so
anyway,
I
I
I
thought
I
would
mention
that
and
just
for
clarification.
So,
as
you
said,
you
have
to
answer,
you
have
to
reply
to
every
public
comment.
G
Thank
you
mayor,
so
I
had
a
few
questions,
so
one
is
so
we're
spending
two
million
correct
on
homeless
prevention.
Out
of
these
funds.
J
G
And
then
so,
we've
had
some
conversations,
but
I
think
in
the
interest
of
public
discussion,
can
you
explain
why
we're
not?
I
mean
I
think
the
law
foundation
found
out
that
43
000
families
are
at
risk
of
eviction,
and
we
just
had
a
description
of
in
your
report
about
folks
that
are
paying
over
half
of
their
income
on
revs.
J
Focusing
some
of
this
money
on
ensuring
that
those
people
don't
end
up
back
on
the
streets.
And
so
it's
really
consistent
with
our
overall
plan
in
addressing
homelessness
for
people
who
are
actually
unhoused.
Now.
G
Thank
you
because
I
think,
and
I
don't
know
if
lee
is
still
on
a
call,
but
yes,
I
see
I
see
lee's
face,
but
when
the
government
relations
team
reports
back
to
us,
you
know
one
of
the
things
we
really
need
to
look
at
is
david.
G
Chu
has
a
bill,
but
what
are
the
other
efforts
all
of
the
efforts
going
on
because
it's
really
frightening
to
think
about
what
is
going
to
happen
and
how
our
community
is
going
to
physically
be
reshaped
when
people
are
evicted
and
don't
have
anywhere
to
go.
J
Yes,
so
we're
planning
on
coming
august
25th
with
a
full
report
out
on
where
we
are
with
the
eviction
moratorium.
We
are
looking
at
the
report
that
was
published.
We'll
give
you
an
update
on
all
the
bills,
what's
happening
with
the
state
of
the
federal
government.
Their
eviction
moratorium
just
was
lifted
this
past
week.
They
did
not
issue
a
new
one
that
only
applied
to
very
specific
narrow,
hud-based
programs,
but
we
will
be
coming
back
again
on
august
25th,
with
a
full
update.
G
Yeah,
thank
you.
I
you
know
the
county
just
lost
a
vote
two
to
three
on
a
potential
tax
to
to
pay
for
this
tsunami
that
we
all
know
that
has
been
coming
and
because
these
are
really
big
numbers
that
you
know.
Two
million
is
not
gonna,
it's
just
not
gonna
address,
and
so
we
need
to,
and
by
we
I
mean
everybody
in
government
needs
to
and
and
foundations,
and
our
other
partners
and
our
for-profit
partners
through
their
philanthropy
efforts,
but
really
at
the
end
of
the
day.
G
So
I
had
some
questions,
so
I
was
really
really
happy
to
see
that
you
have
new
outreach
positions
included
in
the
proposal
and
you
had
mentioned
it
before.
G
Was
it
june
30th.
I
can't
remember
it's
a
little
bit
of
a
blur,
but
when
you
talked
about
mental
health,
including
mental
health
and
outreach
teams,
so
I
see
outreach
specialists
case
managers,
mental
health,
counselors
and
drug
and
alcohol
counselors,
which
is
huge,
I
think,
frankly,
a
substance.
Abuse
epidemic
is
a
big
barrier
for
people
getting
help.
I
have,
and
I
and
mayor
and
other
folks
have
met
with
folks
hi.
G
I
have
met
with
different
county
folks.
I
know
I've
been
doing
it
since
I
started
on
the
council.
The
mayor
has
called
meetings
together
and
really
we
need
to
address
systems.
I
know
the
county
had
been
working
on
some
systems,
mapping
pre-covered
and
had
added
beds.
So,
for
example,
there
was
drug
detox,
so
there
were
detox
beds,
but
then
what?
So?
How
did
people
go
from
a
detox
bed
to
the
next
step
to
eventually
getting
into
a
program
right?
G
So
the
people
are
ready
and
safe
to
to
take
those
next
steps
that
I
think
we
all
are
rooting
for
them
to
take,
and
so
so
what
I
wanted
to
ask
was
how
we
are
coordinating
with
the
county's
behavioral
health
in
particular,
so
that
this
work
slots
into
those
systems,
because
my
biggest
fear
what's
been
happening
is
first
off
law
enforcement
ends
up
dealing
with
a
lot
of
this
stuff,
which
you
know
may
or
may
not
be
appropriate
and
and
a
lot
of
issues
aren't
getting
dealt
with
on
the
ground.
N
J
So
that's
a
place
where
we
now
have
a
real
opportunity,
with
the
new
community
plan
to
end
homelessness
that
we're
going
to
be
bringing
forward
for
your
consideration
on
august
25th,
there's
a
whole
new
section.
You
know
once
we
got
kind
of
the
basics
done
in
our
coordination.
We're
really
moving
on
to
the
next
step,
which
is
these
systems
that
you're
talking
about
that
are
frankly,
have
been
outside
of
both
the
city
of
hou,
the
city's
housing
department
and
the
county's
housing
support
of
the
housing
office.
J
Those
systems
lie
they're
still
in
the
county,
but
they
are
not
controlled
by
neither
myself
nor
key.
The
good
news
is
that
he
now
has
been
has
been
promoted
in
the
county
is
going
to
be
overseeing
this
entire
system
of
care,
and
given
that
new
role
that
he
has,
we
now
have
a
really
good
chance
of
actually
coordinating
those
systems
in
a
way
that
aligns
with
homelessness
and
ensures
that
we
can
have
access
to
services.
J
But
is
absolutely
one
of
our
focuses
that
we
have
to
get
those
systems
better
aligned
and
we
have
to
completely
understand
the
availability
of
the
system
to
begin
to
absorb
the
number
of
people
that
we
know
absolutely
need
the
help,
and
my
guess
is
right
now
that
those
systems
are
just
not
they're
not
available
to
the
extent
that
we
need
them.
G
Yeah
or
in
a
timely
way,
because
I'll
tell
you
like
an
eps
when
somebody's
in
there
for
an
hour
and
then
they
go
back
out
into
the
street.
You
know:
behavioral.
Health
may
not
know
that
that
person
really
went
to
eps
with
enough
time
to
really
do
an
adequate
assessment
so
that
they
can
get
into
a
program,
and
so
that's
great
news
about
key
and
I
would
just
suggest
I
think
this
is
going
to
come
between
the
county
reentry
committee
at
some
point.
To
do
a
presentation.
G
Beyond
just
behavioral
health
that
need
to
have
an
understanding
of
this
system
and
the
fact
that
the
city
is
stepping
up
in
a
really
huge
way
with
this
investment,
and
so
that
includes
probation
public
defender,
the
da's
office,
the
judges,
you
know
all
the
the
players
to
really
buy
into
what
we're
trying
to
do,
or
it's
not
going
to
be
successful.
So,
and
I
again,
I
offer
my
assistance
in
that
because
it
needs
to
be
successful.
G
L
A
Okay,
thank
you.
Any
final
questions
before
I
assume
we
don't
take
action.
Is
that
right?
This
simply
goes
on
next
week.
Okay,
so
thank
you,
jackie
and
thank
you
reagan
and
thank
you
riley
ella
and
georgia
for
your
guest
appearances.
A
J
Have
one
more
item
just
which
was-
and
maybe
I
missed
it,
but
it
was
just
making
sure
that
we
had
an
item
on
changing
the
public
participation
process.
A
A
Yes,
okay
and
I
do
want
to
make
a
brief
announcement.
I
know
this
was
not
I
I
was
told
this
was
not
made
earlier,
so
I
just
want
to
make
this
announcement
publicly.
Obviously,
very
belatedly
nor
freeman
has
been
appointed
interim
city
attorney.
I
think
it's
well
known
that
as
we
commemorated
honored
rick
earlier
today,
rick
will
be
retiring.
We
will
be
having
a
selection
process
with
council
in
the
interim.
Norah
friedman
will
be
serving
as
city
attorney
for
the
city
of
san
jose.
A
Okay,
we're
going
to
go
on
to
open
forum.
I
have
four
members
of
the
committee
who'd
like
to
speak.
Scott.
H
Largent
great,
thank
you,
everyone,
scott
largent.
This
is
a
very
interesting
meeting
to
listen
to
seems
like
we
got
a
lot
of
really
good
ideas
in
front
of
us.
We
got
a
hundred
million
dollars.
I
guess
coming
into
the
pool
right
here
and
hopefully
we
we
do
this
right
maya.
I
appreciate
I
apologize
for
calling
my
first
name.
I
don't
want
to
put
your
last
name.
I
I
what
you
said
is
about
that.
H
H
H
H
H
I
can't
live
near
any
of
these
type
of
encampments,
even
though
I
interact
with
people
during
the
day,
and
I
advocate
for
them,
I'm
meeting
a
lot
of
people
that
are
just
like
me
that
that
want
to
be
parents
that
were
previous
business
owners
that
fell
on
hard
times.
H
How
do
we
lift
these
people
back
up?
I'm
figuring
a
way
out
of
my
situation.
I
want
to
help
get
these
people
back
on
track.
We
all
fall
off
every
once
in
a
while
and-
and
I
really
think
we
need
to
just
do
more.
Please
do
more.
Thank
you.
F
Yeah
good
evening,
council,
I
wanted
to
talk
about
what
councilwoman
esparza
spoke
about
at
the
very
beginning
of
this
meeting.
I
heard
everything
I've
been
here
for
the
entire
meeting
and
what
she
talked
about
and,
first
of
all,
I
would
like
to
extend
you
my
deepest
sympathies
and
my
understanding
that
of
the
loss
that
you
incurred
as
a
result
of
that
savage
human
being
that
went
to
that
park
with
the
intention
of
killing
mexicans.
That's
what
was
on
his
mind.
He
wanted
to
kill
mexicans
period.
F
Okay,
I
went
with
rebecca
armendares,
who
is
a
candidate
for
city
council
for
the
city
of
gilroy,
and
we
both
went
to
kayla's
one
year
remembrance
and
it
was
held
at
five
wounds,
and
I
sat
there
and
I
watched
his
family
suffer,
and
I
had
just
dawned
on
me
that
I
was
sitting
across
from
the
mcdonald's
where
this
savage
police
officer
literally
drags
a
mexican
across
the
floor
like
she
was
like
he
was
the
slave
master
and
she
was
the
slave
and
then
kick
her
in
the
stomach,
whereas
the
where's,
the
that
officer,
didn't
know
whether
or
not
she
was
pregnant
and
he
proceeded
to
kick
her
in
the
stomach
and
it
just
dawned
on
me.
F
It's
like
what
is
happening.
What
is
going
on
in
my
city?
What
is
going
on
in
my
county,
where
this
kind
of
savage
be
steel,
sadistic
kind
of
behavior
can
go
on
and
we
don't
talk
about
it.
We
do
not
talk
about
it,
we're
afraid
of
it,
I'm
not
afraid
of
it.
I've
dealt
with
racism,
all
my
life.
I
come
from
generations
that
have
dealt
with
racism
and
I'm
here
and
I'm
not
going
to
tolerate
it
anymore.
F
P
Yeah
robert
gary,
listen,
I
I
keep
bringing
up
the
idea
that
we
need
to
have
like
a
a
committee
or
a
council
or
some
some
sort
of
group
of
people
that
are
unhoused
previously
unhoused,
formerly
on
house.
However,
you
want
to
wear
it
that
can
review
some
of
the
policies
that
the
city
is
planning
on
putting
in
place.
So
we
have
that
perspective
and
that
perspective
is
consistent
and
that
it
represents
a
much
wider
audience
of
people
that
are
living
in
under
these
conditions-
and
I
haven't
seen
anything
going
forward
on
that.
P
That's
really
pushing
to
make
things
better
for
the
unhoused,
but
it
just
seems
like
this
keeps
happening
over
and
over
again
and
yet
we're
we're
not
doing
anything
to
try
to
bring
this
kind
of
representation
to
council
so
that
the
council
has
a
better
idea
of
what's
going
on
out
on
the
streets,
and
I
I
know
that
there's
there's
talk
about
you,
know,
substance,
abuse
and
and
other
types
of
things
that
that
go
on
out
there.
P
That
aren't
addicted
to
anything
that
need
just
as
much
attention
and-
and
I
think
those
are
the
people
that
are
much
closer
to
being
able
to
become
productive
citizens
in
this
society
and
for
due
to
unforeseen
situations
that
have
brought
them
to
this
condition
they
find
it
very
difficult
to
get
out
of
and
when
we
keep
deciding
for
them.
P
What
is
good
for
them
and
not
involving
them
in
those
decisions
on
an
ongoing
basis,
then
we're
going
to
miss
the
mark,
and
I
I
I
don't
necessarily
have
to
be
the
person
that's
on
that
committee.
I
would
love
to
be
that
person
or
one
of
those
persons,
but
I
I
think
that
the
idea
of
not
doing
anything
is
is
going
to
cause
us
to
not
be
as
productive
as
we
would
like
to
be
with
whatever
projects
we
move
forward.
Thank
you.
E
E
The
vast
majority
of
people
that
you
see
on
the
streets
are
the
folks
that
choose
not
to
follow
the
rules
or
they
can't
so
we're
not
saying
they're
bad
people,
but
they
can't
stop
drinking.
They
can't
stop
doing
drugs.
I
get
that
some
of
you
live
in
this
fairytale
world
where
we
can
give
them
some
training
and
kumbaya
they're
done,
but
the
reality
is,
you
could
give
them
every
resource
they
might
use
it
up
until
you
know
they
get
through
some
kind
of
program
and
then
go
right
back.
E
So
if
you
think
that
you're
gonna
give
job
training
to
people
living
on
the
street
and
that's
going
to
bring
them
off
the
street
you're
living
in
disneyland,
it's
like
we're.
Acting
like
people,
don't
move
like
people,
don't
see
shelter.
You
guys
need
to
understand.
The
people
on
the
street
are
very
different
from
the
people
you
see
in
the
shelters,
the
people
who
can't
or
refuse
to
follow
the
rules.
You
can't
help
them
the
same
way.
E
Q
I
a
district
9
resident
and
I
am,
I
believe,
all
the
council
members
were
copied
on
my
email
a
couple
of
day
nights
ago
that
for
the
past
three
months
we
were
experiencing
a
lot
of
car
side
show
in
our
neighborhood
we.
Unfortunately,
the
level
of
responsiveness
from
the
police
department
was
not
enough.
Q
None
of
the
police
officers
or
law
enforcement
showed
up
on
that
night
after
we
made
a
call
on
july
8,
when
we
reached
out
to
the
police
department,
they
showed
up
maybe
four
or
five
officers,
but
they
showed
up
at
the
time
that
the
sideshow
was
done.
So
we
had
the
opportunity
to
talk
to
some
of
them
and
ask
them
what
the
issues
are.
Q
Q
When
you
talk
to
them,
they
are
afraid
of
getting
engaged
in
that,
and
they
are
telling
me
that
the
city
policies
not
to
chase
these
violators.
The
city
policy
is
not
to
just
get
engaged
because
we
don't
know
what's
going
on
in
that
crowd.
How
many
guns
are
in
that
crowd
and
at
the
end
of
the
day,
the
city
council
approved
an
ordinance
last
year
to
make
the
spectators
of
these
scenes
a
crime
and
a
fine
of
up
to
a
thousand
dollars.
Q
Just
can
someone
tell
me
how
many
spectators
were
fined
in
the
night
of
august
first
here?
None
because
the
police
department
doesn't
get
engaged,
so
I'm
not
going
to
stop
this
and
I'm
really
disappointed
at
the
way
that
the
city
is
handling
these
issues
and
especially
shows
we
are
desperately
need
your
help
and
in
a
petition
that
we
created
in
the
next
store.
There
are
a
bunch
of
options:
adding
cctv
cameras
getting
help
from
the
town
of
los
gatos
police
department,
because
we're
right
at
the
border.
Q
A
M
Kavi,
I
know
this
is
pam
foley
council,
member
for
district
nine.
J
Next
week
to
meet
and
discuss
solutions
and
way
that
we
might
be
able
to
address
this.
So
thank
you
for
coming
and
bringing
this
to
our
attention.
But
we
we
haven't
forgotten.
A
Okay,
mr.
C
Beekman
all
right,
thank
you.
I
feel
the
practices
of
of
a
of
a
local
community
democracy
that
tries
to
work
towards
and
listen
to,
the
voice
of
each
individual
compared
with
local
democracies
that
try
to
develop
its
ideas
more
as
a
body
of
voices
like
a
republic
can
be
an
important
way
to
understand
and
address
the
ideas
of
demilitarization,
defunding
reform
and
restructuring.
C
C
I
really
believe
it's
the
ideas
of
individual
democracy
that
we
need
to
talk
about
and
and
how
to
you
know,
create
a
new
push
past
our
ideas
of
democracy.
As
a
republic,
I
think
that's
key
for
ourselves
to
consider
what
we
can
do
for
ourselves
as
individual
local
communities
and
and
it's
democracy.
Thank
you
also.
I
wanted
to
add
with
his
much
time
I
got
22
seconds.
C
Ashkara
is
working
on
really
incredible
stuff
at
the
state
level
about
how
tenants
can
have
the
next
year
and
a
half
to
pay
off
their
their
their
their
their
rent
and
how
owners
there's
also
stuff
how
owners
can
and
can
pay
off
their
mortgages.
So
I
I
don't
like
the
mayor's
real
dour
talk
if
that's
what's
been
happening,
make
it
positive
work
with
ashkara
and
let's
talk
positive
in
san
jose.
Thank
you.
Thank
you.
That
means.