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From YouTube: MAR 3, 2020 | City Council
Description
City of San José, California
City Council meeting.
Pre-meeting citizen input on Agenda via eComment at https://sanjose.granicusideas.com/meetings.
View Agenda for this meeting at https://sanjose.legistar.com/View.ashx?M=A&ID=712177&GUID=9FB80970-5F34-4A02-8707-83949E9A16BB
A
Yep,
that
was
a
nice
warm-up,
I
like
to
I
like
to
call
this
meeting
to
order
for
the
afternoon
of
March
3rd
2020,
and
for
those
of
you
watching
this
at
home,
do
not
adjust
your
TV
I
am
NOT,
saying
Accardo
I
like
now
to
introduce
our
indicator.
Today's
invocation
will
be
given
by
the
mariachi
academy
of
music.
Councilmember
Perales
will
tell
us
more.
Thank.
B
You
very
much
and
our
our
guest
audience
was
treated
to
a
warm-up
already,
but
will
have
the
formal
presentation
momentarily
founded
in
2014.
The
mariachi
Academy
of
Music
has
its
roots
in
San,
Jose
and
Gilroy,
but
also
provides
instruction
in
cities
all
over
the
Bay
Area
and
reflects
the
diverse
backgrounds
and
cultures
of
the
area.
The
mariachi,
caddy
music
focuses
on
teaching
and
students
confidence
in
their
ability
to
play
a
range
of
music
styles
and
genres.
In
particular.
B
Their
focus
is
to
share
the
passion
and
history
of
traditional
mariachi
music,
so
that
it
may
remain
with
future
generations.
They
have
a
mission
to
create
better
musicians
through
the
art
of
performing
and
in
the
process.
Have
them
gain
the
confidence
and
self-esteem
they
need
to
become
successful
adults,
leaders
and
role
models
of
their
community.
Currently,
the
three
locations
with
open
enrollment
include
two
in
San
Jose
at
rocketship,
fuerza
and
rocketship
brilliant
minds
and
in
Gilroy
at
the
old
Gilroy.
B
A
C
C
Lymphedema
is
a
chronic
disease
that
results
in
disfiguring
swelling
in
one
or
more
parts
of
the
body.
Lymphedema
can
be
hereditary
or
acquired
as
a
result
of
surgery,
physical
trauma
or
cancer
treatment.
In
fact,
30%
of
women
who
survived
breast
cancer
will
develop
lymphedema
as
part
of
the
movement
to
raise
awareness
of
lymphatic
disease
organizations
like
lymphedema,
Education
and
Research
Center
observe
March.
Sixth,
as
world
lymphedema
day,
10
million
Americans
are
affected
by
lymphedema.
C
Unfortunately,
there
is
no
cure.
The
goal
of
lymphedema
day
is
to
make
finding
a
cure.
A
global
priority,
San
Jose
resident
and
my
district
six
resident
Rosaline
Lin
Seidel,
was
diagnosed
with
lymphedema
in
her
early
20s
prior
to
being
diagnosed,
Rosaleen
was
a
professional
Irish.
Dancer.
Lymphedema
is
typically
located
in
only
one
limb.
However,
Rosaleen
has
lymphedema
in
both
legs
feet:
arms,
hands,
torso
and
her
face.
She
manages
lymphedema
by
taking
medication
wearing
two
sets
of
compression
garments
24
hours
every
day
and
exercising
regularly.
C
Today
she
is
committed
to
educating
and
building
awareness
of
lymphedema.
Rosaleen
is
an
exemplary
person
who
survives
lymphedema
everyday.
She
inspires
us
to
advocate
for
those
who
are
diagnosed
with
lymphatic
disease.
I
now
invite
Rosaleen
to
come
forward
and
accept
the
proclamation
and
say
a
few
words.
D
G
H
Afternoon,
everyone
today
we
are
proclaiming
March
as
Women's
History
Month
in
San
Jose.
We
know
that
women's
contribution
to
literature,
teaching
the
social
justice
movements,
the
development
of
our
great
city
and
nation
have
been
largely
unrecognized,
it's
been
unrecorded
and
it's
even
been
lost.
The
attempt
to
remove
women's
impact
on
the
growth
of
our
community
is
even
more
perceptible
for
women
of
color.
These
accomplishments
are
lost
in
the
pages
of
our
history,
books,
newspapers
and
media.
H
Due
to
many
many
reasons,
we
can
only
imagine,
but
we
must
work
to
find
these
stories
and
tell
them
to
our
children
and
our
families
so
that
they
can
be
inspired
to
be
bold
and
courageous
so
that
our
young
girls
can
be
entrepreneurs
be
creative
and
building
the
fabric
that
makes
San
Jose
California
one
of
the
greatest
cities
in
the
nation.
This
very
City
Council
will
one
day
be
recorded
in
history,
for
having
five,
courageous
strong-willed.
H
This
project
demonstrates
the
importance
of
recording
the
story
of
women's
struggles
and
successes
in
history.
By
recording
these
stories,
we
ensure
that
they
are
able
to
live
in
history.
Thank
you
so
much
for
being
here
and
our
vice
mayor
before
you.
You
present
the
proclamation.
Would
you
care
to
say
a
few
words.
E
But
but
that's
the
thing
about
that's
the
thing
about
being
an
historian,
we
celebrate
and
we
study
all
parts
of
history,
as
you
mentioned,
our
exhibit
is
called
her
side
of
history,
I'm,
sorry,
her
side
of
the
story,
the
tales
of
California
pioneer
women.
This
was
created
by
the
California
pioneers
women's
association
in
San
Francisco.
It
hearts
back
to
the
50th
anniversary
of
California
being
founded
as
a
state
of
the
United
States.
E
They
were
going
to
celebrate
all
about
the
founding,
and
one
of
the
ladies,
whose
husband
was
being
a
part
of
celebration,
said
what
about
us?
What
about
the
women?
So
the
organization
just
started
to
collect
diaries
stories,
tales
they're,
all
harrowing.
They
came
across
either
across
the
isthmus
across
Panama
across
Nicaragua
came
around
South
America
and
it's
just
amazing.
The
journey
of
these
women's
take,
but
the
bigger
part
of
the
story
is
the
unknown
stories,
as
well
as
the
30
tales
of
as
women.
E
We
have
40
photographs
of
women
that
have
came
to
California
and
that's
all
we
have.
We
just
know
they
were
here
and
they
know
they
they
lived
and
they
breathe
and
they
had
children
and
husbands
and
they
had
families
and
that's
the
more
I
think
more
exciting
part
of
the
story
is
imagining
what
these
women's
lives
were
like
and
that's
that's
history,
just
making
sure
we
collect
every
story,
every
photograph,
every
piece
and
we
can
tell
it
to
the
next
generation.
Thank
you.
A
That
will
be
added
under
orders
of
the
day
and
it
requires
a
determination
by
two-thirds
vote
of
the
members
of
the
council
present
at
the
meeting.
And
if
it's
approved
it
will
be
heard
concurrently
with
item
3.1
report
of
the
city
manager.
If
I
can
get
a
motion
to
add
that
two
hours
of
the
day,
all
right,
it's
polluting.
Second,
it,
let's
vote
and
I,
will
be
showing
up
as
Samuel
Accardo.
A
Okay
on
to
are
there
any
other
changes
for
the
pretty
legitimate
forwards
of
the
day:
okay,
on
to
councilmember
Camus
who's,
going
to
do
an
adjournment
for
Vincent
tarp
Pete
Thank
You.
Vice
mayor
we're
turning
phase
meeting
in
honor
of
Vince
Harvey,
a
longtime
community
advocate
actually
a
district
10
appointee
I'd
like
to
recognize
Vince's
family
who's.
Here
in
the
audience,
thank
you
for
coming
today.
I
knew
Vince
personally
and
I'm
I'm
very
saddened
by
his
passing
Vince
Vince
James
tarp
II
was
a
was
born
in
1943
in
Long
Island
New
York.
A
A
Vince
received
his
BSC
in
economics
at
Mount,
st.
Mary's
College.
He
later
received
a
mini
MBA
from
Syracuse
University
in
Syracuse,
New
York
after
living
in
Pennsylvania
and
Michigan
during
his
tenure
at
Xerox
and
Memorex,
he
relocated
to
California
in
1982
and
worked
for
Panasonic
and
Samsung
amongst
other
local
companies.
Here
Vince
had
a
January
desire
to
improve
the
lives
of
others
and
give
back
to
his
community.
A
He
was
very
active
and
engaged
in
a
community,
including
serving
on
the
juvenile
justice
Commission
and
our
senior
citizens
Commission
for
many
years,
and
he
actually
didn't
just
serve.
He
actually
came
in
and
met
with
me
and
and
and
we
actually,
we-
he
informed
me
what
was
happening
in
the
Commission
one
of
the
one
of
the
better
commissioners
that
that
I've
appointed
Vince
also
tutored
through
the
San
Jose
Library
System
and
volunteered
with
the
Alzheimer's
Association
in
another.
Now
for
Nia,
he
volunteered
with
Second
Harvest
in
Silicon,
Valley
and
other
charitable
organizations
locally
as
well.
A
His
knowledge
of
World
War,
two
history
was
encyclopedic,
but
he
also
had
a
wealth
of
information
on
a
wide
range
of
subjects.
Through
his
love
of
reading,
he
had
a
passion
for
automotive,
speed
and
German
cars
from
what
I
understand
from
his
family,
although
he
loved
any
car
with
impressive
horsepower
and
good
handling.
A
A
I
Thank
You
vice
mayor
well
today
prepared
to
give
an
update
on
our
response
to
the
coronavirus,
Allstate
assay
a
few
comments
and
then
have
the
team.
Do
a
brief
presentation.
It's
important
that
we
reinforce
it.
The
city
of
San
Jose
is
coordinating
directly
with
dr.
Sarah,
Cody
and
County
Health
to
manage
information
response
and
public
education.
The
county
is
the
lead
agency
and
we
are
actively
in
communication
with
them.
Many
times
a
day,
our
city
staff
formerly
put
together
our
team
or
pandemic
management
team
on
January
24th.
I
The
first
order
of
business
was
really
to
revise
and
update
our
pandemic
response
to
align
with
Novell
coronavirus,
also
known
as
Co
vid
19.
The
plan
is
comprised
of
five
stages
of
increasingly
escalating
response.
We
began
at
stage
one
which
is
monitoring
level,
and
we
have
been
at
stage
three,
which
is
a
medium
risk
level.
The
management
team,
elevated
us
to
stage
three
on
Friday
after
news
broke,
that
there
was
a
third
confirmed,
County
case
of
unknown
transmission.
I
We
do
have
confidence
in
our
plan
to
ensure
the
safety
of
all
who
work
in
visit
city
facilities.
I
want
to
thank
our
team
for
their
diligence
and
we
must
all
continue
to
play
pay
close
attention
to
this
issue.
It
is
extremely
fluid.
The
health
of
our
employees,
residents
and
businesses
remains
our
highest
priority.
You
see
here
all
the
section
coordinators,
so
we
have
deputy
city
manager,
Kip
Harkness,
our
chief
of
staff,
Lee
Wilcox
fire.
Actually,
we
have
the
assistant
fire
chief.
Here
we
have
Ray
Reardon
our
director
emergency
management.
I
J
J
J
The
corona
virus,
now
known
as
kovat
19,
began
to
emerge
as
an
unusual
pneumonia
in
China
in
Wuhan,
late
December
2019
by
January
7th,
the
corona
virus
was
identified
and
by
the
23rd
of
January.
The
outbreak
in
China
was
significant,
though
at
that
time
the
world
health
organization
was
still
not
recommending
that
this
be
a
public
health
emergency
of
international
concern.
J
Despite
the
caution
on
the
World
Health
Organization's
part,
we
moved
ahead
the
next
day
with
implementing
our
pandemic
management
team
and
reviving,
as
the
city
manager
mentioned,
our
existing
pandemic
plan
and
renewing
and
refreshing
that,
in
light
of
what
we
were
learning
about,
the
Kove
advice
and
the
way
that
it
works,
January
30th,
who
did
in
fact,
declare
the
krona
BIOS
to
go
global
emergency
and
then
here
in
Santa,
Clara
County
on
the
31st
of
January
and
again
on
the
2nd
of
February.
We
got
our
first
local
cases
due
to
travel.
J
At
that
point,
we
escalated
to
stage
two
of
our
response
and
then
this
last
Friday
on
the
28th.
We
were
informed
of
the
first
likely
case
of
community
transmission
and
escalated
to
stage
three
of
the
response
and
I'll
talk
about
those
stages
and
what
they
mean
in
a
moment.
Right
now,
we
have
are
actually
up
to
I
think
about
11,
confirmed
cases
at
this
point
and
we've
just
heard
from
the
county,
and
we
are
prepared
for
progressive
response
and
further
escalation
as
soon
as
it's
deemed
appropriate.
J
We
are
expecting
some
communication
from
the
county
today
and
and
following
that
guidance,
we
will
respond
as
appropriate
once
we
receive
that
guidance
from
the
county.
So
what
is
our
plan?
Our
plan
has
four
priorities
and
I'm
actually
going
to
walk
from
the
bottom
up,
because
I
think
it's
probably
the
best
way
to
explain
it.
The
first
is
we
are
in
support
of
County
Public
Health.
They
are
the
lead
agency
in
this.
They
have
the
expertise
and
the
authority
when
it
comes
to
public
health
and
our
job
is
to
support
them
and
their
response
effort.
J
We
do
that
in
many
ways.
One
of
them
is
effective
communication,
amplifying
their
messages
and
making
sure
that
our
employees
understand
what's
going
on
and
are
able
to
be
kept
apprised
of
the
most
current
situation.
Our
core
function
in
an
emergency
like
this
is
actually
the
continuity
of
essential
city
operations.
So
if
the
admitted
epidemic
progresses
and
public
health
takes
measures
including
quarantine
in
areas
or
sealing
off
in,
what's
called
a
cordon
sanitaire
parts
of
the
city,
then
we
would
want
to
make
sure
that
people
continue
to
receive
water
wastewater
continues
to
work.
J
Fire
response
works,
police
response,
all
of
those
things
that
you
need
for
the
city
to
continue
to
operate.
So
that
is
the
core
function
that
we
have
in
this
case
is
making
sure
the
things
we
do
as
a
city
continue
to
operate.
In
order
to
do
that,
we
need
to
focus
on
our
top
priority,
which
is
protecting
our
people
to
make
sure
they
are
healthy
and
able
to
provide
those
essential
services.
J
So
that
is
the
derivation
and
the
logic
of
our
plan,
where
we
are
an
important
agency
with
a
high
level
of
responsibility,
but
not
the
lead
agency
so
specific
to
the
coronavirus,
because
each
each
each
disease
is
different
and
as
a
novel
virus,
it
is
by
definition
new
and
unknown.
We
have
been
working
to
adjust
our
escalations
to
what
we
know
or
think
we
know
about
the
the
virus
and
the
threat
that
it
poses.
J
So
you
see
here
a
five
stage
level
of
response
going
from
one
where
there
would
be
no
risk
to
the
local
population,
which
is
where
we
were
when
we
started
on
the
24th
all
the
way
up
to
five
extremely
high,
which
we,
where
we
would
be
shutting
down,
everything
that
is
not
essential
and
only
essential
services
would
be
functioning
where
we
are
right.
Now
is
three
where
we
do
not
have
major
montt
any
modifications
to
our
service
delivery,
but
we
are
telling
people
to
take
the
basic
self
protective
measures
of
washing
your
hands.
J
Frequently
try
to
stop
touching
your
face,
and
the
only
thing
that's
probably
new
or
different,
is
we
stopped
the
customary
handshaking
at
this
stage,
but
we
have
not
modified
services
or
service
delivery.
However,
we
are
rapidly
preparing
for
what
we
believe
is
a
very
soon
move
into
the
higher
stages.
Stage
four
is
where
you
begin
social
distancing
and
that
is
moving
people
apart
are
certain
people
apart
to
keep
them
from
spreading
the
disease
or
being
infected
and
other
measures
that
we
might
curtail
on
services
that
are
putting
people
potentially
at
risk.
F
Afternoon,
mayor
and
council
members
Rosario
Navas
director
of
communications,
thanks
Kip
I'm,
going
to
walk
you
through
our
city
communication
strategy
to
manage
our
response
to
kovat
19
at
this
stage.
So
at
this
stage
we
are
coordinating
with
the
County
of
Santa
Clara
Public
Health
lead,
Pio
and
epi
O
branch.
The
lead
Pio
is
in
the
public
health
department,
but
the
the
county's
Emergency
Operations
Center,
is
actively
involved
as
well.
We
participated
in
a
call
with
them
just
late
yesterday
and
will
be
continuing
to
coordinate
with
them
on
a
daily
basis.
F
As
Kip
mentioned,
we
have
virtually
activated
the
EPI
o
branch
at
this
time.
What
that
looks
like
for
us
is
about
40
different
staff
members
across
departments
in
several
different
units
related
to
situational
awareness,
our
joint
information
center
technical
communication
support
content,
development,
language
interpretation
and
access
our
website
unit,
internal
communications
and
social
media
units,
so
staff
has
been
activated
and
is
alternating
on
daily
shifts
between
our
blue
and
gold
shifts
as
we
speak,
the
communication
cascade
and
what
that
looks
like
currently
is
to
keep
all
of
these
different
audiences
informed.
F
So,
as
you
know,
we
are
keeping
you
the
City
Council
members
informed
our
senior
staff,
which
is
our
department,
heads
employees.
You
know
the
entire
work
force,
businesses,
community
partners,
visitors
and
media.
We
are
actively
coordinating
with
the
airport
in
particular,
and
team
San
Jose,
which
are
are
both
critical
audiences
for
us,
as
they
manage
visitors
to
and
from
San
Jose.
F
Some
of
our
special
populations
that
we
are
keeping
in
mind
and
developing
strategy
for
how
we're
going
to
outreach
to
at
this
time
is
the
senior
population,
unhoused
individuals
and
also
looking
at
any
impact
to
current
city
public
education
efforts.
The
census
2020,
which
we
know,
is
active
and
will
be
ramping
up
their
communications
in
this
next
month.
F
We
are
using
all
of
our
internal
and
external
communication
channels
and
deploying
them,
including
press
releases
and
social
media.
We
also
are
coordinating
with
the
facilities,
team
and
Public
Works
to
deploy
worksite
posters
here
at
City
Hall,
as
well
as
to
community
centers
and
libraries,
and
any
other
high
traffic
areas
where
we
do
anticipate
lots
of
public
traffic.
We
are
also
starting
to
receive
inquiries
from
the
public
to
different
departments.
F
So
we
will
be
supplying
our
all
of
our
employees
with
talking
points
and
messaging
about
the
county
and
the
CDC's
efforts,
but
as
well
as
what
we're
doing
on
a
city
level
to
respond.
And
then,
as
Kip
mentioned,
we
are
actively
preparing
for
the
next
stage,
which
is
stage
4
response
level,
where
we
do
anticipate
that
we
will
see
more
of
an
impact
to
city
operations.
And
so
we
were.
We
are
anticipating
how
we
will
be
communicating
to
those
different
audiences
and
cascading
information
as
it
becomes
available
from
the
county.
J
J
We've
been
doing
quite
a
bit
of
research
and
learning
reaching
out
to
colleagues
if,
for
example,
in
Singapore
and
to
understand
how
they
responded
there,
where
they've
been
very
effective
at
some
preventive
measures,
as
well
as
reaching
out
to
folks
in
Stanford
CDC
through
our
networks,
try
to
learn
and
be
able
to
do
more.
My
own
background
goes
back
30
years
as
a
started
out
as
a
community
health
worker
and
Peace
Corps
and
had
the
opportunity
when
I
was
in
Peace
Corps
headquarters,
to
represent
the
Peace
Corps
on
the
global
guinea
worm
eradication
team.
J
One
thing
that
I
would
add
that
we
are
doing
now
is:
we've
certainly
been
proactive
cleaning
of
hot
spots,
that's
sort
of
the
building
version
of
washing
your
hands,
and
we
are
doing
that
in
community
centers
libraries,
all
of
the
facilities
that
that
we
own
and
they're
recommending
all
the
ones
that
we
have
a
partnership
with,
do
the
same
and
follow
that.
We
know
that
the
likely
next
steps
will
include
social
distancing,
and
there
are
variety
of
forms
that
that
can
take
and
again
it
can
be
gradually
escalated.
J
One
of
the
things
we
are
preparing
to
do
is
increasing
our
capacity
for
people
to
work
remotely
and
to
telecommute.
We
know
that
that's
a
very
effective
way
of
people
to
be
able
to
be
productive
and
to
be
not
transmitting,
and
so
we
have
ordered
additional
computers
and
capability
around
that
and
are
ramping
up
that
function.
J
All
of
that
will
be
done
as
a
team
effort
and
we
will
communicate
as
in
as
close
to
real
time
as
we
can
on
significant
changes
and
continue
to
make
ourselves
available
for
you
to
you
as
often
as
necessary
for
this
type
of
dialogue
and
communication
with
that
alternate
back
to
the
city
manager.
For
any
last
words,
you
might
have
I.
I
K
You
very
much
I
really
appreciate
how
this
team
has
worked
so
diligently
and
really
astutely.
You
know,
as
Kip
pointed
out,
January
24th
really
beginning
the
planning
that
was
well
before
I.
Think
virtually
anybody
in
this
country
was
doing
much
of
preparing
for
what
we
know
now
is
a
very
serious
situation
throughout
the
nation.
So
thank
you
for
being
on
top
of
it
and
thank
you
for
pushing
so
hard
and
for
your
loin
us
to
take
I
know,
certainly
many
my
calls
at
all
hours
as
well
as
I'm,
guessing
with
my
colleagues
as
well.
K
G
L
J
Yes,
so,
under
the
existing
statutes,
the
public
health
officer,
dr.
Sarah
Cody,
is
the
one
who
would
have
authority
to
either
issue
guidance
to
schools
or
even
issue
direction
to
schools
on
shutting
down.
At
this
point,
the
guidance
that
she
has
issued
to
schools
is
that
they
really
dust
off
their
emergency
operations
plan
and
begin
to
think
about
what
they
will
do
in
cases
of
increased
absenteeism,
including
what
they
will
do
in
terms
of
e-learning
opportunities
and
support
of
both
their
faculty
and
their
students.
J
If
they
have
to
either
deal
with
a
high
volume
of
absenteeism
or
move
to
a
shutdown
situation,
she
has
not
issued
any
guidance
to
them
to
shut
down
or
change
their
operations
other
than
the
suggestion
that
that
has
been
made
consistently.
That
proactive
cleaning
is
are
always
a
good
idea
and
that
schools
should
be
doing
that
as
well
as
making
sure
that
hand-washing
facilities
are
available
and
space
for
hand-washing
and
breaks
for
hand-washing
are
made
available
to
schools.
M
To
conclusions
when
we
have,
when
you
think
about
this
more
rationally,
we
can
just
take
those
logical
steps
to
figure
out
what
to
do
next
and
I
think
we
need
to
be
very
clear
with
our
community
because
there's
just
some
really
large
misconceptions
out
there.
You
know
it
mainly
we've
seen
in
this
County
person-to-person
transmission
and
it's
not
surface
contact.
M
Of
course
we
have
to
take
the
measures
common-sense
measures
that
we
would
with
any
any
type
of
virus
and
so
of
course,
washing
our
hands
and
and
making
sure
we
we
use
sixty
percent
alcohol
antibacterial,
but
but
I
think
there's
some
folks,
especially
in
my
senior
community
and
I've,
seen
it
just
in
the
last
couple
of
days
that
and
I
kid
you
not
there's
somebody
who
had
a
like
a
black
light
in
their
purse.
You
know
just
to
see
like
this
stuff
on
a
surface
out
of
Starbucks.
M
M
So
I
just
wanted
to
share
that,
because
I
think
our
one
we
I
have
had
a
couple
of
experiences
this
week
and
I've
just
seen
some
of
the
extreme
precautions
that
people
are
taking
without
really
understanding
so
I
wanted
to.
Thank
you
thank
you
for,
for
helping
us
get
all
of
this
information
out
to
our
community
members
I'm
more
than
happy
to
to
facilitate
that
as
well.
So
thank
you.
Thank.
F
M
H
Thank
you
here
what
we
were
preparing
for
it:
earthquake
yeah,
no
yeah,
germ
warfare,
not
feeding
into
those
theories,
conspiracy
theories,
so
the
quite
a
couple
of
questions
keep
you
and
I
already
talked
about
it,
but
I
just
want
to
bring
it
up
in
case
you
might
have
new
information
or
it
might
be
relevant
to
other
folks.
That
might
be
listening
when,
of
course,
my
district
is
a
densely
populated
district,
and
so
is
you
know,
the
edges
of
councilman
rod
and
I
was,
and
of
course,
we
know,
take
3d7,
and
so
my
fear.
H
If
there
were
to
be
an
outbreak,
then
it's
gonna
be
like
a
wildfire
just
in
in
the
areas
where,
where
we
live
because
of
the
close
proximity
of
where
people
live,
so
I
just
want
to
be
able
to
put
that
out
there,
because
the
the
better,
the
the
mark
clearer
the
information
and
the
most
accurate
information
that
we
can
get
and
the
earlier
we
can
get
it
out
there,
the
better
without
causing
alarm,
unnecessary
alarm,
and
so
I
know
that
it's
always
like
this.
Very
it's
a
it's
a
balance.
H
It's
a
delicate
balance
in
terms
of
how
much,
how
do
you
get
information
out
there
without
sounding
off
your
alarms?
Right
as
a
council
member
I,
didn't
I
said
we
don't
need
I,
don't
know
what
you
detect
with
the
backlight,
but
you
know
we
don't
need
everybody
was
you
know
wanting
everybody
right,
but.
H
But
after
actually,
I
spoke
with
you,
I
went
in
stocked
up
on
on
Tylenol.
You
know,
because
I
just
wanted
to
make
sure
that
we
had
something
and
then
realized
that
once
I
got
to
the
grocery
store,
I
really
didn't
know
what
to
buy
I.
Just
you
know,
I
was
just
so
unprepared
in
terms
of
how
do
you
prepare
for
an
emergency
and
I?
You
know
I
kind
of
aimlessly
roamed
through
the
aisles
wondering
what
to
eat,
for
just
just
in
case
in
American
law
for
14
days
in
case
I
had
to
like
be
barricaded.
H
H
Potentially
Tagalog
I
don't
know
Punjabi,
but
that
is
so
concise
and
picture
friendly.
That
I
can
put
it
up
on
my
facebook.
I
can
put
it
up
on
my
Instagram
and
no
one
thinks
that
that
I'm,
putting
up
a
dissertation
and
I've
said
this.
The
the
the
simpler,
the
better
less
is
more
less
is
more.
This
is
more
and
in
the
last
thing,
I'm
gonna
say
is
and
I
don't
know.
If
you
can
answer
this
question,
maybe
this
is
for
the
experts,
but
I
think
that
you
have
enough
info
from
what
you've
been
researching.
H
So
it's
not
so
much
a
medical
question
as
it
is
how
you
identify
an
epidemic
versus
a
panda,
and
why
is
this
different
from
what
we've
been
hearing
others
when
they
say
well,
the
flu
kills
more
people
than
what
this
has
been
killed.
Why
is
this
alarming
us?
Why
are
we
more
I've,
never
seen
you
come
and
tell
us
hey
the
flus
here
you
may
have
to
quarantine
yourselves.
J
Thank
You
councilmember.
So
let
me
start
with
that.
Question.
I
also
want
to
address
your
point
around
communications
and
I'll
turn
much
of
that
over
to
Rosario.
So
just
a
little
bit
of
glossary
on
the
terminology
and
there's
a
lot
of
a
lot
of
jargon
and
lingo,
and
in
here
panic
pandemic
is
when
a
disease
is
moved
across
the
globe
and
is
affecting
multiple
continents
essentially
and
is
usually
applied
to
a
pattern
and
disease
that
isn't
normal.
J
So
we
don't
consider
the
annual
flu
a
pandemic,
because
we
know
that,
but
there
may
be
a
pandemic
flu,
that's
a
higher
level
of
virulence
or
a
high
level
of
infection
and
they
may
go
pandemic.
An
epidemic
is
a
local
incidence
that
is
a
high
rate
of
spread.
So
we
have
what
I
would
consider
a
pandemic
underway
now
but
locally.
We
have.
J
We
do
not
yet
have
an
epidemic,
we
have
a
cluster,
and
so,
when
we
get
to
a
local
epidemic
hour,
we
are
instant
essentially
included
in
that
larger
pandemic
is
a
way
to
think
about
it.
So
epidemic
is
just
local
pandemic
is
pan
meaning
across
all
our
global.
So
the
reason
that
we
are
paying
attention
to
this
more
than
we
are
paying
attention
to
seasonal
flu,
two
things
one.
We
do
pay
a
lot
of
attention
to
seasonal
flu
and
we
also
have
a
lot
of
pharmacological
methods
to
present
it
prevent
it.
F
Yes,
a
few
points.
Thank
you
very
much
council
member
for
sharing
your
your
input,
so
a
few
different
points
that
you
touched
on
that
I
want
to
address.
So
currently
our
communications
are
coming
from
the
centers
for
disease
and
Disease,
Control
and
Prevention,
and
and
they
have
been
the
one
of
the
key
agencies
that
that
has
been
supplying
agencies
like
ours,
with
some
clear
communications
and
available
in
different
languages.
F
I
think
that
you
bring
up
a
great
point
about
how
you
can
prepare
at
home,
and
so
I
do
think
that
there
are
some
information
gaps
based
on
what
the
CDC
is
sharing,
and
so
we
can
help
fill
those
in
and
make
that
content
mean
for
our
populations
here
in
San
Jose.
So
so
thank
you
for
sharing
your
insights
as
far
as
the
frequency
of
communication.
F
So
you
mentioned:
how
do
we
share
communication
regularly,
but
not
alarm
our
residents
here
locally
and
one
of
the
strategies
for
how
to
communicate
effectively
in
a
situation
like
this,
but
not
create
a
sense
of
alarm
or
urgency,
is
to
create
a
reliable
cadence.
So
we
can
establish
a
regular
rhythm
so
that
our
public's
know
when
they're
going
to
hear
from
the
city
and
that's
one
way
to
keep
them
regularly
informed,
but
also
to
not
create
a
sense
of
panic.
So
as
an
example
currently
on
our
social
media
networks,
we
are
sharing.
F
We
have
been
sharing
up
into
this
point.
Just
one
update
a
day
related
to
kovat,
19
I.
Think
that,
as
we
move
into
additional
response
stages,
we
are
going
to
have
to
escalate
that
frequency,
but
we
can
establish
a
regular
rhythm,
for
instance,
you
know
we
will
come
up
with
updates
at
10
a.m.
and
6
p.m.
and
that's
when
our
public's
can
expect
to
hear
from
us.
So
thank
you
very
much
for
your
feedback.
I
hope
that
helps
thank.
H
You
just
one
last
comment,
mr.
mayor,
if
I
may
you
know
everyone's
like
I
said
earlier,
everyone's
been
preparing
for
the
earthquake
and
no
one
was
preparing
for
this.
We
didn't
see
this
coming,
and
so
even
those
that
we
think
are
very
isolated.
We
had
a
trial
run
with
the
rolling
blackouts
people
started
preparing
a
little
bit
for
what
might
happen.
This
is
very
different.
This
this
is
that
invisible.
You
know,
danger
that
we
don't
see
coming
and
chappy
Jones
could
have
it
and
I'm.
Seeing
next
to
him.
E
H
That's
why
I
have
this
next
I
could
have,
but
but
true
right
I
mean
it's
this,
this
kind
of
thing
where
we're
right
next
to
each
other-
and
we
don't
know
so
so-
I
I
just
that,
because
I
I
hope
that
our
faith-based
Congress
Asians
are
being
taken
into
account.
You
know
when
Kip
called
me
on
a
Saturday
I
said
you
know
what
tomorrow
is
right:
it's
Sunday
where
10,000
people
gather
at
Our,
Lady
of
Waterloo
pit
and
they
drink
from
the
same
cup.
H
That's
frightening
to
me,
especially
when
you're
dealing
with
a
community
that
maybe
doesn't
have
all
the
information
or
that
that
may
be
led
in
a
different
direction
for
different
reasons,
all
valid
reasons,
but
they
need
to
have
that
information.
So
we
need
to
be
working
with
our
pre,
the
diocese
for
at
least
at
the
very
least
so
that
they
can
have
the
priests
and
the
pastors
can
have
direction
as
to
how
they
carry
out
their
masses.
H
Councilmember
Dave
Davis
just
shared
that
in
her
in
her
church
they
dip
versus
drink
I've,
never
been
to
one
like
that.
But
that
sounds
like
a
solution
to
me.
It's
it's
awesome,
Baalak
and
it
works,
and
so
so
so
I'm
just
that.
That's
a
real
concern
to
me,
because
there
really
is
a
lot
of
sharing
in
large
spaces
like
that
in
my
community
and
in
other
communities,
so
I
hope
that
we're
working
or
the
counties
working
to
get
the
word
out
to
to
leaders
of
large
networks
so
that
accurate
information
is
being.
H
Disseminated
to
their
to
their
networks,
and
then
I
heard
this
morning
that
that
even
in
games
in
high
schools
or
I
don't
know
if
it's
professional
games
they're
actually
asking
them
not
to
do
high-fives,
and
so,
if
we're
even
having
those
kind
of
concerns,
then
all
this
other
really
is
elevated.
So
I'm
thinking
about
the
gyms,
I'm
thinking
about
private,
gyms
and
I
think
about
the
YMCA's
I'm
thinking
about
that
kind
of
thing.
H
So
so
those
are
the
kinds
of
gatherings
that
I
know
that
sometimes
we
don't
think
about,
but
lots
of
people
gather
there
and-
and
so
I'll
just
leave
it
at
that.
But
but
thank
you
so
much
for
your
your
work
and
now
helping
us
deal
with
yet
another
potential
situation.
Oh.
The
last
thing.
This
is
definitely
the
last
thing.
H
I'll
say
as
we
as
we
look
at
whether
it
goes
from
three
to
a
four
to
five,
without
setting
off
the
alarms
and
being
alarmist
and
I
know
that
that
again,
this
is
a
delicate
dance
to
move
to
a
five
is
I
know
it
saves
lives,
potentially
puts
us
on
shutdown
but
like
councilmember.
As
far
as
I
said,
this
now
begins
to
hit
people's
pocketbooks
right
and
for
those
who
are
just
barely
hanging
on
it
could
potentially
mean
losing
the
roof
over
their
heads
or
really
put
their
families
at
risk.
H
Economically,
and
so
I
know
that
you
are
much
smarter
at
deciding
which
level
we're
going
to
be
at
in
the
next
few
days
or
the
next
few
weeks,
much
smarter
than
me,
because
you
can
have
all
the
information
and
you'll
be
very
diligent
in
deciding
that
some
people
want
to
exercise
extreme
caution,
but
we're
very
lucky.
We
can
work
virtually.
H
That's
the
blessing
that
all
of
us
have
it's
difficult
for
a
waiter
to
serve
a
table
from
his
house
or
someone
to
you
know
clean
the
bathroom,
virtually
it's
very
difficult
and
they
don't
get
paid.
You
don't
go
to
work,
you
don't
get
paid
they're,
not
on
salary
they're
on
hourly,
so
we
have
to
be
very
careful
on
how
we
impact
the
economy
as
we
as
we
move
from
three
to
four
or
five
okay.
Thank
you.
No.
N
Thank
you
mirror.
Last
Friday
I
held
a
press
conference
with
Assemblymember
Chiu,
urging
the
public
and
people
in
District
four
to
stay
calm
and
to
listen
to
our
public
health
officials
and
that
you
know
compared
to
the
flu.
The
flu
is
still
more
widespread
and
more
people
will
die
from
the
flu
this
year.
Then
then
coronavirus
and
to
basically
not
change
up
your
lifestyle
specifically
not
stop.
N
Don't
stop
patronizing
restaurants,
Asian
restaurants
in
particular,
because
of
just
fear
in
general,
and
then
later
that
day
we
had
another
case
of
community
transition
transmission
in
Santa,
Clara
County.
At
the
time
when
I
was
speaking,
there
was
only
I
think
there
were
33
known
cases
in
California.
24
of
them
were
people
who
were
sitting
on
a
plane
with
somebody
with
the
coronavirus.
N
And
then
that
afternoon
you
know
there
was
there
were
more
cases
of
that
in
Santa,
Clara
County,
so
I
felt
there's
a
bit
of
egg
on
my
face,
but
I
think
I
stand
by
what
I
said
at
that
press
conference,
because,
even
still
to
this
date,
this
we're
still
clearly
community
transmission
is
going
to
probably
tick
up.
You
know
exponentially
from
what
we're
where
we
are
now,
but
as
Kip
was
saying,
the
the
advice
for
public
health
officials
now
is
still
continue
about
your
day.
N
Maybe
stop
shaking
hands
like
Kip
said.
That's,
that's
the
thing
to
change:
stop
shaking
hands,
you
know,
don't
touch
your
face
with
your
fingers,
wash
your
hands
with
soap,
a
lot,
but
as
things
ramp
up
and
as
the
situation
changes
public
health
officials,
we
in
the
City
Council,
as
we
hear
from
them,
will
disseminate
that
information
to
you
best.
We
can
but
there's
no
reason
now
to
make
a
run
on
toilet
paper
or
make
a
run
on
antibacterial.
N
You
know
hand
sanitizer,
no
reason
to
make
a
run
on
these
masks
that
everybody
seems
to
want
to
wear
and
and
as
I
understand
it,
the
mask.
Doesn't
even
protect
you,
it's
probably
good,
if
you're
having
a
cold
or
under
the
weather,
to
wear
a
mask
to
prevent
spreading
your
germs
as
you're,
coughing
or
sneezing,
but
wearing
a
mask
in
and
of
itself
is
not
going
to
protect
you
if
you're
already
sitting
next
to
somebody
who
has
you
know
it
was
infected.
N
So
it's
important
that
we
don't
create
a
self-fulfilling
prophecy,
because
when
we
don't
eat
at
these
restaurants,
when
we
go
about
change
our
lives,
we
are
impacting
workers,
you
know
who
aren't
getting
the
wages,
who
aren't
getting
the
tips
who
might
have
their
shifts
cut
and
we
are
creating
this
down
spiral
in
our
economy
in
the
city
of
San
Jose.
Prior
to
that,
you
know,
naturally
happening
in
and
of
itself.
You
know
there
are
some
conferences
that
have
pulled
out
of
San
Jose
already,
and
these
conferences
aren't
scheduled
until
months
away.
N
N
So
we
can't
rely
on
volunteer
time.
You
know,
I
could
do
it,
but
then
I
got
other
things
to
do,
and
and
so
we
need
to
I
hope
in
the
future,
budgets
and
whatnot.
We
we
think
about
bringing
on
in
the
city
one
or
two
full-time
professional
translators,
for
whatever
language
we
need
and
when
we
you
know,
we'd
lie
in
the
county
to
disseminate.
There
are
things
I've
seen
the
County
stuff
and
it
sometimes
it's
good.
Sometimes
it's
not,
but
it's
always
verbose,
and
it's
always
like
lengthy.
N
It's
not
something
you
put
on
an
Instagram
or
Facebook
post
or
share
easily,
and
we
need
to
be
able
to
take
that
stuff
and
like
slice
and
dice
it
in
a
particularly
San
Jose
way.
You
know,
council
members
should
be
able
to
say
hey.
Can
you
just
make
me
a
like
a
Vietnamese
thing
or
Spanish
thing
with
these
three
bullet
points?
I,
don't
need
all
the
other
stuff.
I
know
my
people
is
not
are
gonna,
read
it
and
we
should
have
that
available
to
to
the
council.
N
Lastly,
I
guess
I'll
just
acknowledge
that
you
know,
even
as
this
is
ongoing
and
we
try
to
avoid
convening
in
in
large
groups,
you
can
still
interact
with
the
City
Council.
You
can
still
participate
in
these
public
hearings.
Today
is
the
first
meeting
that
we're
having
broadcast
live
on
YouTube,
so
hello,
everybody
out
there
in
YouTube
land
be
sure
to
add
me
in
the
comments
and
like
this
by
sitting
here,
and
you
can
add
all
that
in
post-production,
right,
Craig,
and
so
you
can
still
continue
here
and
we
will.
N
N
B
Was
gonna
end
it
because
I
do
think
counselor
at
Cosco
brought
up
a
good
point
and
but
I
think
I
double
checked
in
as
the
mayor
knows,
because
he
took
Eucharist
with
my
mother
this
weekend
here
downtown
at
the
Cathedral.
They
they
actually
haven't
been
giving
or
allowing
anybody
to
drink
from
the
cup.
They
do
that
regularly.
Every
year
during
the
flu
season,
so
I
they've
been
doing
that
for
the
last
two
months.
I
believe
it
would
be
the
same
and
our
lady
well
Lupe
I
think
that's.
B
Maybe
it's
not
I
thought
it
was
maybe
through
the
Catholic
Diocese,
but
I
do
think
that
it
would
be
worthwhile
that
the
Catholic
Diocese
you
know
put
out
that
message
and
if
that's
not
happening
at
other
churches,
I
do
think.
That's
also
good.
You
know
messaging,
so
I
know
that
happens
here
downtown,
but
I'm,
not
certain
about
others.
A.
K
I
know,
council
members
are
sparse
in
cross.
Gobos
raised
very
important
points
about
really
the
severe
economic
impacts,
particularly
to
low-income
residents
in
our
city.
We
know
an
awful
lot
of
folks
if
there's
a
school
shutdown,
and
that
means
their
parents
do
not
get
a
paycheck,
and
that
is
a
very
perilous
situation.
We
know
you
know.
K
The
the
council
had
proposed
potential
urgency
ordinance
that
would
prohibit
evictions
of
those
individuals
who
are
affected
by
the
federal
shutdown
we
are
looking
into
something
similar
here,
obviously,
would
have
to
be
targeted
and
focused,
and
we
don't
want
to
be
launching
it
until
it's
really
appropriate,
which
is
when
the
county
is
actually
giving
that
order.
No
we're
a
ways
off
from
that
I
believe
based
on
everything
we're
hearing
now
from
the
county,
but
we
certainly
are
preparing
all
that
trying
to
make
sure
that
legally
we're
in
Sound
position.
K
I
know
that
there
are
various
nonprofits
that
have
deeply
engaged,
of
course,
in
supporting
our
low-income
residents,
such
as
Sacred,
Heart
and
destination
home.
That
are
also
talking
about
what
contingency
plans
can
be
made
and
I
know
that
Lee
Wilcox
told
is
the
point
person
for
that
network
of
nonprofits,
and
if
you
have
ideas
for
them
or
for
us,
please
feel
free
to
come
forward
with
those
ideas
about
how
we
can
soften
the
blow
should.
K
In
fact,
we
need
to
escalate
to
those
much
more
restrictive
kinds
of
actions
that
are
in
place
right
now,
in
places
like
Milan
and
Tokyo,
where
we
know
there's
much
more
widespread
infection
rates.
So
we
know
there's
enormous
amount
of
disruption
that
results
from
these,
so
we
want
to
be
careful
and
how
we
do
it,
but
we
also
know
there
are
also
lives
to
be
saved,
and
that
makes
for
a
very
difficult
decision,
making
I
think,
certainly
for
a
public
health
folks.
K
We
continue
to
listen
to
their
good
advice,
as
well
as
the
advice
of
other
experts
throughout
the
country
who
are
weighing
in
about
exactly
when
and
how
it
to
do.
What
I
really
do
think
it's
a
great
idea
of
consumer
carrasco's
to
sort
of
have
a
stay
at
home
kit
for
those
who
are
forced
to
shelter
in
place
as
they
say.
We
know
that
self
isolation
is
one
of
the
consequences
as
things
escalate,
particularly
if
someone
in
the
family
is
diagnosed,
and
so
it
may
help.
K
If
we
have
a
discreet
list
of
things
that
may
prevent
the
run
at
Costco.
Well,
I
suspect.
That's
already
happened.
I
know.
That's
already
happened:
I've
heard
it's
a
war
zone
down
there,
but
the
extent
they're
able
to
replenish
their
shelves.
It
might
minimize
additional
disruption
of
the
extent
that
the
county
in
the
city
feel
comfortable
sort
of
articulating.
What
that
state
home
kit
looks
like
I
think
that
is
a
great
idea
anyway.
I
know
everybody's
working
overtime,
many
hours
to
try
and
prepare
put
plans
together.
I
really
appreciate
all
this,
this
effort.
K
I
L
L
I
wanted
to
ask
if
you
could
look
into
whether
we
could
use
the
FEMA
money
to
pay
back
rent
or
if
we
would
have
to
access
our
homeless
prevention
funding
through
our
housing
department
on
all
the
ways
that
we
could
do
that,
because
an
eviction
moratoriums
awesome,
but
the
back
rent
would
still
exist
and
that's
an
issue
that
you
know
then
would
affect
landlords,
especially
small
business,
like
it's.
Just
this
huge
trickle-down
thing
that
it's
something
that
I
think
we
should
look
into
sort
of
what
our
options
are
moving
forward.
Thank
you.
Yeah.
K
L
A
J
J
Don't
have
the
exact
numbers,
but
we
have
been
in
communication
with
County
throughout
the
day
on
the
results
of
the
testing
and
we'll
be
checking
within
with
them
a
little
bit
later
today,
to
get
a
hopefully
a
little
bit
more
extensive
sense
of
the
extent
of
their
testing,
but
it
has
been
rapidly
ramping
up,
especially
over
the
last
three
or
four
days.
Thank.
O
O
Hi,
thank
you.
San
Jose
is
preparing
for
a
second
and
third
wave
of
how
to
deal
with
the
corona
virus
and
it's
flu-like
conditions.
Many
of
us
have
had
to
make
important
adjustments
to
our
regular
lifestyle
patterns
and
choices
from
this
our
lives
too.
We
try
to
continue
to
get
to
work
the
same
at
this
time.
This
disease,
in
all
of
our
lives,
is
a
sad
development.
It
is
my
understanding
it
has
plateaued.
It
has
plateaued
to
containable
levels
in
China,
as
this
virus
may
be
in
its
first
stages
around
the
rest
of
the
world.
O
At
this
time,
I
hope,
good
efforts
from
people
and
governments
of
the
world
can
contain
it
as
well.
In
most
every
sense
of
the
term.
The
corona
virus
has
the
makings
of
a
pandemic
at
this
point,
but
is
important
to
learn
to
be
clear
about
this
virus
and
to
avoid
panic
and
hostility
with
much
difficulty
and
in
all
effort
and
all
the
efforts
there
has
been
to
contain
the
virus
in
China
and
all
the
positive
efforts
to
ask
for
an
end
to
any
racist
diatribes
and
sediments
about
people
in
countries
that
contract
this
virus.
O
It
has
the
ability
for
everyday
people
to
reevaluate
and
consider
their
own
ideals,
and
that
can
offer
the
legal
precedents
and
guidelines
to
ask
meaningful
and
relevant
and
important
questions
of
state,
federal
and
international
governments
and
the
UN
at
this
time,
as
well
with
15
seconds
I
just
wanted
to
offer
that
San
Jose
health
clinics
have
been
putting
up
bullet
points
to
see.
If
you
have
the
signs
of
the
sickness
of
this
blue
and
and
it's
a
really
good
model
to
follow,
I
think
it's
helped
me
a
lot.
Thank
you.
Thank
you.
M
P
All
right,
counselor
councilman
arenas,
told
us
to
trust
in
the
CDC
I.
Do
not
agree
with
that
at
all
and
I've
been
telling
many
about
a
broadcast.
Alan
keyes
had
on
February
27th
fast
forward
two
hours
into
Infowars,
February
27th,
and
you
can
pick
it
up.
It's
a
powerful
interview
and
they
found
this
stuff
called
chlorine
dioxide.
I
haven't
heard
one
word
about
chlorine
dioxide
and
yet,
if
you
listen
to
this
interview
that
aired
at
that
time,
you'll
learn
more
about
it
and
every
one
of
you
I
believe,
definitely
will
be
talking
differently
next
week.
P
God
it
works
in
very,
very
mysterious
ways,
but
this
stuff
is
a
byproduct.
Evidently
they
found
it
in
the
eighteen,
eighteen
eleven
and
it's
a
byproduct
of
sodium
chlorite,
not
sodium
chloride,
which
is
salt
right,
but
it's
very
plentiful
and
the
guy
this
forgot
his
name
anyway.
He
mixed
it
with
stomach
acid,
basically
four
percent
hydrochloric
acid
and
it
turned
into
the
chlorine
dioxide.
Well,
this
stuff
kills
malaria
in
a
hundred
percent
of
the
time.
In
one
day,
I
know
it
sounds
crazy.
I
can
see
vice-mayor
kind,
I,
don't
blame
you
I
I,
agree.
P
I
mean
I'm
kind
of
skeptic:
I
kills
malaria
in
in
one
actually
less
than
one
day
all
the
time.
He
kills
it
in
two
hours,
which
is
a
parasite.
It's
not
a
virus,
it's
a
parasite,
but
it
kills
it.
Okay
and
if
you
I
was
going
to
CBS
today
and
I
said
DM
the
Clorox
wipes,
because
it
says
they
had
the
800
number
said
it
kills
the
virus
and
he
kind
of
laughs
and
yeah
good
luck
or
something
on
that,
and
it
was
gone.
P
You
know,
but
it's
different
from
Clorox
you're,
not
to
drink
Clorox,
of
course.
But
when
it
comes
to
chlorine
dioxide,
you
do
drink
it.
That's
how
you
kill
it
and
you'll
have
to
hear
the
interview
through
12
seconds.
So
the
main
thing
is,
though
you
know,
Jesus
said
unless
you
believe
I
am
you'll
die
in
your
sins,
so
believe
in
Jesus
Christ,
because
if
you
die
we're
all
gonna
die,
but.
Q
Mayor
members
of
council
I
like
the
fact
that
there's
five
women
and
five
men
on
the
council,
it
provides
a
very
a
balanced
approach
to
the
issues
that
we
face.
As
a
city,
you
have
the
it
balances
the
masculine
and
feminine
energies
in
the
setting
of
policy
and
I
saw
that
displayed
today.
Q
Women
are
the
bearers
of
life,
they're,
the
nurturers
of
life,
and
they
are
the
protectors
of
life
and
I
saw
that
demonstrated
here
today
and
so
I
appreciate
that
one
man,
one
man,
stubborn,
a
one-
man,
stubborn
and
a
willful
woman-
is
another
man's
Thea,
because
that's
how
it
might
be
as
work,
they
were
bold
and
without
them
the
men
anyways
I'd
like
to
caution.
The
council.
Q
Fear
is
a
virus
in
and
of
itself
it
infects
the
mind
it
infects
the
perceptions
and
it
affects
the
ability
to
deal
with
any
type
of
situation.
Rationally.
There's
a
there's
precedent
for
Fears
having
a
hydraulic
effect
and
the
administration
of
policy,
and
so
I
would
caution
the
council
that,
whenever
the
way
that
you
respond
in
the
setting
of
the
protocols
that
you
keep
that
in
mind,
because
there's
a
tendency
to
politicize
these
particular
issues
against
vulnerable
citizens
that
do
not
have
the
ability
to
protect
themselves.
That's
your
job.
Q
R
Oh
no
worries
that
tends
to
and
right
Sam,
so
thank
you,
everybody
Scott
Largent.
It
was
very
interesting
to
hear
the
comment
about
the
Starbucks.
You
know
periodically
I
like
the
testy
tasty
beverage
over
there
and
that
place
right
now
as
of
this
morning,
going
over
there.
If
we
had
the
coronavirus
here
in
San
Jose
that
would
spread
like
fire,
it
would
have
made
its
way
all
the
way
over
here.
It
would
have
made
its
way
all
the
way
through
every
homeless,
shelter.
R
Here
you
have
people
over
there
that
are
not
washing
they're,
not
cleaning
themselves.
They're
tearing
that
place
apart
law
enforcement
was
there
this
morning
there's
nothing.
They
could
do,
there's
several
mentally
ill
people
that
are
out
there
coned
al.
You
know
the
one
that
grabs
all
the
traffic
cones
there's
been
doing
this
for
a
year.
You
should
see
what
she's
spreading
around
that
Starbucks
right
now.
Okay,
we've
got
right
here.
Paul
ladder
is
his
name
he's
the
regional
manager
of
the
Starbucks.
R
You
might
want
to
give
this
man
a
call
he's
fed
up
about
what's
happening
to
his
store
over
there
and
he
wants
us
to
stop
so
to
all
the
lower
businesses
down
here.
This
stuff
is
gonna,
spread
and
spread
and
spread.
Where
is
the
bathing
for
people?
Where
are
the
bathrooms?
Where
is
the
hand
sanitizers
and
I'm
talking
about
for
the
homeless,
because
they're
using
your
bathrooms
at
City,
Hall
and
I
have
now
been
following
them,
because
I've
been
down
here
for
two
weeks
to
figure
out
where
everybody
goes
because,
there's
no
day
shelters.
R
Okay,
they
start
off
at
City
Hall
over.
Here
they
go
over
to
the
Starbucks.
They
go
up
and
down
the
streets.
They
urinate
they
defecate.
Then
they
make
it
over
to
the
county.
Building
over
there
they
go
up
and
down
the
light
rails.
There's
urine,
there's
I
mean
the
stuff
is
nasty.
It's
everywhere,
and
the
comment
about
the
blacklight
Wow
a
counter
at
Starbucks
they're
cleaning
that
counter
non-stop
and
I'm
just
wondering
we
should
bring
in
portable
cleaners
and
showers
grace
Baptists
over
there
right
now.
R
K
You
all
right,
I,
believe
those
are
all
the
cards
than
anyone
else
wants
to
speak.
Okay,
thank
you.
Then.
There's
no
motion
required
here.
This
was
for
our
information.
I,
really
appreciate
again
information
from
staff
and
all
the
hard
work
will
move
on.
Then
we
are
on
we've
already
heard.
The
consent
calendar
is
that
right:
okay,
we're
on
to
item
three
point:
three,
which
is
approval
of
the
new
city
council
policy
on
suicide
prevention,
and
there
is
not
the
presentation.
Is
that
right,
no
presentation?
K
P
Mayor
and
council,
thank
you
for
this
opportunity
to
speak.
I
just
wanted
to
take
a
moment
to
thank
you
all
city
staff,
councilmember
Perales,
for
champion
in
its
policy.
It
came
forward
in
2017
and
it's
been
a
long
project,
but
I
think
what
staff
has
produced
here
really
leverages
what
the
city,
the
city's
unique
relationship
with
residents,
in
order
to
raise
awareness
about
suicide
and
suicide
prevention
and
helped
us
a
lot
save
lives
in
the
city
of
San
Jose.
So
I
just
wanted
to
thank
all
of
you
and
staff.
P
C
G
Cardo
and
councilmembers,
my
name
is
Mary
gal
owner
I'm,
the
executive
director
for
project
safety
net.
It's
a
Community
Coalition
dedicated
to
youth
well-being
and
suicide
prevention
based
in
Palo
Alto,
and
even
though
I
work
in
palatal
I
am
a
San
Jose
resident
and
three
years
ago,
as
Paul
mentioned,
the
city
of
San
Jose
entertained
the
possibility
of
adopting
the
suicide
prevention
policy
and
I
look
forward
to
the
council
today
to
endorsing
it
and
approving
it.
G
Youth-
have
died
by
suicide
since
this
was
first
introduced
and
as
someone
who
is
a
public
health
interpret
some
public
health,
professional
perspective
and
community
health
Edie,
as
you've
heard
in
the
news
and
and
based
on
conversation
before
the
nation
is
considering
100
cases
of
coronavirus
as
a
crisis.
So,
knowing
that
150
youth
have
died
from
suicide,
I
would
hope
he
would
have
that
same
level
of
passion
and
attention
and
how
the
city
of
Palo
Alto
has
adopted.
The
suicide
prevention
has
helped
to
elevate
the
issue.
G
G
K
Q
I
was
very
pleased,
councilman
Perales,
when
I
saw
this
on
the
on
the
agenda.
It
it
demonstrated
to
me
that
there
was
a
there
was
a
more
humane
way
of
dealing
with
this
social
ill
on
a
person.
42
percent
of
the
people
that
have
been
killed
by
police
officers
were
having
a
mental
health
crisis.
You
know
I've
been
around
people
that
have
committed
suicide.
All
of
my
life
I'm
very
familiar
with
it,
and
a
lot
of
what
happens
is
a
person.
It's
about
power.
A
person
doesn't
feel
they.
Q
They
start
feeling
a
sense
of
incompetency.
They
don't
have
power
in
order
to
affect
the
changes
in
their
life,
and
so
what
they
do
is
they
start
isolating
themselves
and
as
that
isolation
progresses.
The
the
feelings
of
inadequacy
and
competency
and
potency
begin
to
diminish,
and
what
suicide
is.
Is
the
sufferers
way
of
streeting
the
only
power
that
they
have
and
that's
to
stop
the
pain?
That's
their
goal?
Q
They
want
to
just
stop
the
pain
you
know,
and
some
people
have
actually
committed
suicide,
because
that
was
their
goal
in
their
attempt
to
stop
the
pain
they
actually
ended
up
taking
their
life,
but
they're
not
here,
to
tell
you
that
I
am
that's.
Why
I'm
here
you
know,
and
so
connecting
that
to
poverty
with
Maslow's
hierarchy
of
needs,
safety
needs
individuals
want
to
feel
physically
and
psychologically
safe
and
secure.
This
also
includes
meeting
basic
physiological
needs,
such
as
thirst
and
hunger.
P
You
thank
you
Meryl
Accardo
and
the
council
for
putting
this
item
on
the
agenda.
Let
me
start
because
I
don't
want
to
be
remiss
for
something.
Mr.
Escobar
said
to
me
I
think.
Today,
all
of
you
received
a
coalition
letter.
We've
got
a
whole
group
of
people
in
Santa,
Clara
County
that
are
interested
in
this
issue,
and
that
makes
perfect
sense
because
a
study
done
in
2011
what
it
showed
was.
More
than
half
of
Californians
have
had
their
lives
impacting
by
suicide.
P
So
I
know
people
in
this
room
right
now,
whether
I
know
them
or
not
have
had
their
lives
impacted
by
this
issue.
This
is
a
chart
ten
years
of
in
California
of
suicides.
What
it
shows
is
the
numbers
going
up
up
and
up
like
so
you
want
to
talk
about
a
public
health
matter
that
has
actual
deaths.
This
is
that
matter,
a
a
report,
not
a
report.
The
letter
was
issued
yesterday
because
a
group
that
people
are
going
to
be
in
Capitol
building
tomorrow
and
28th
Dean
stated
just
came
out
for
California.
P
P
One
of
the
few
counties
in
the
state
of
California
that's
reducing
deaths.
Is
this
county
and
part
of
the
reason?
Why
that's
happening
is
you?
Can
you
can
list?
We
can
list
a
thousand
programs,
but
it's
because
of
public
awareness.
It's
because
of
people
like
you
doing,
actions
like
this,
the
SATA
folks
know
there's
something
that
can
be
done
and
we'll
address
it.
So
I'm
grateful
again.
P
One
last
comment
on
the
policy
itself:
I
think
you
did
a
great
job
with
it,
including
listing
not
just
citizen
involvement
but
looking
at
your
own
community,
your
own
staff,
because
we
know
that
there
have
been
deaths
in
certain
professions
and
we
know
that
letting
that
go
under
addressed
won't
be
helpful,
so
I'm
grateful
for
the
things
you
put
in
the
policy
and
I
hope
you
in
Annesley
adopt
it.
Thank
you.
Thank.
K
E
O
Hello,
thank
you.
I
wanted
to
thank
you
for
this
policy
work.
You
know
with
the
events
that
happened
at
San,
Jose,
State
Library
in
the
past
few
years.
You
know
definitely
a
thank
you
and
that
I
was
surprised
that
suicide
rates
are
going
down
here
in
Santa,
Clara
County
and
that
I,
you
know,
there's
a
lot
of
caring
people
and
issues
women's
issues,
in
fact
that
are
worked
on
here
in
Santa,
Clara
County
that
I
wonder
as
played
a
factor
in
that.
Maybe
it
can
help
with
the
domestic
violence
issues
and
and
the
like.
O
My
best
friend
died
a
suicide
back
in
1997
and
it
was
sad
and
it
was
it
was
before
9/11
and
I
just
were
kind
of
in
a
new
era.
Now,
and
things
are
just
wham
bam,
explosive,
exciting,
Wow,
jeepers,
neighbors,
I,
don't
know
what
to
say,
but
people
I
think
are
thinking
about
suicide
more
now
and
because
of
9/11,
it's
just
invited
this
crazy
way
of
thinking
and
that's
you
know
my
work
with
you
know.
O
There's
the
technology
ordinance
and
it's
like
is-
is
really
to
create
a
sense
of
community
spirit
and
something
that
you
can
rely
on.
It's
comforting,
it's
it's
good
democratic
practices.
It
talks
about
our
future
and
I
and
I'm
I.
Thank
you
for
sitting
up
here
with
my
patients.
Listening
to
me
talk
about
this
every
week
and
the
things
that
I
talk
about
are
the
things
that
me
and
my
friend,
who's
passed
away.
These
are
the
things
we
used
to
always
talk
about
and
just
like
very
important
in
a
part
of
me
and
thank
you.
R
They're,
not
getting
adequate
services
care
and
people
are
just
ignoring
them.
They
are,
they
are
basically
committing
suicide
in
front
of
us.
Is
this
gonna
apply
to
them?
I
am
very
frustrated.
You
can
understand
that
I
made
my
way
up
to
your
office
again.
Sam
this
morning,
I
was
trying
to
provide
more
videos
of
the
mentally
ill
and
homeless
right
here,
I
have
probably
30
or
40
videos
per
person
out
there
right
now.
They're
all
meth
addicts,
they're
all
smoking,
toxic
methamphetamines,
that's
coming
out
of
Mexican
super
labs
and
they
are
going
absolutely
crazy.
R
R
We
can
pull
him
off
the
streets,
so
we
can
help
the
normal
homeless
population
because
the
people
out
there
are
messing
it
up
or
everybody
right
now,
I'm
a
compassionate
person,
but
this
has
to
stop
this
morning
was
so
brutal
at
the
Starbucks
and
kongou
her
creation
of
what
she
built
out
in
front
of
there.
She
does
it
across
from
City
Hall.
She
does
it
right
in
front
of
an
elementary
school.
This
is
what
this
woman
has
been
doing
for
a
year
straight
and
you
all
must
be
very
frustrated.
R
B
Yeah,
thank
you
very
much
mayor.
Thank
you
to
our
community
members
that
came
out
again
today,
culminating
three
years
worth
of
work
and
partnership
with
our
office,
especially
Victor,
Kathy
and
Paul
up
there.
Thank
you
so
much
for
your
patience
and
and
for
being
able
to
persist,
and
it
really
excited
about
what
staff
has
presented
us
with
today,
and
thank
you
to
Sarah
and
leave
from
the
city
manager's
office
for
your
work
on
crafting
this
policy
and,
as
we
heard
from
the
speaker's
today,
certainly
no
stress
or
no
snow
secret
to
us.
B
B
Suicides
are
a
tragic
outcome
when
the
mental
health
needs
are
not
given
the
attention
that
is
required
and,
in
fact,
Scott.
You
bring
up
a
good
amount
of
points
right
in
regards
to
the
mental
health
needs
of
everybody
in
our
community
and
I
know.
You've
spent
some
time
over
the
years
hollering
at
the
chief
with
your
megaphone
but
I.
B
I
also
appreciate
the
emphasis
on
partnerships,
as
they
provide
approved,
to
be
effective
in
reducing
the
incidence
of
suicide
attempts.
One
example
is
here
at
Martin,
Luther,
King,
jr.
library,
after
repeated
suicide
attempts
there
within
the
building
from
the
the
top
floor
and
some
of
the
top
floors,
the
University
and
the
city
work
together
on
preventative
barriers
and
since
then,
there's
been
a
dramatic
reduction
in
regards
to
attempts
at
least
happening
there
within
Martin,
Luther,
King,
jr.
library,
and
that
speaks
to
the
partnership
and
really
taking
action
to
be
able
to
do
something.
B
But
that's
just
physical
barriers
right.
Our
attempt
here
is
now
to
actually
be
able
to
provide
more
upfront
resources
before
we
actually
get
to
just
you
know,
deterring
somebody
from
a
particular
location
and
I
know.
Certainly
in
my
years
as
a
police
officer,
it
was
one
of
the
most
alarming
lessons
that
I
learned
the
high
rate
of
suicide
amongst
officers
and
specifically
amongst
the
children
of
officers
and
when
I
was,
was
a
new
officer
and
learning
some
of
those
trends.
B
It
was
alarming
and
that's
not
a
message
that
that
is
pleasing
to
bring
back
to
your
loved
ones
at
home,
but
the
police
department
did
a
good
job
in
regards
to
trying
to
educate
officers
on
how
to
deal
with
that.
Unfortunately,
it
only
came
up
at
times
when
actually
somebody
had
attempted
or
committed
suicide
I
think
that
we
need
to
have
this
type
of
information
readily
available
to
specifically
our
employees,
but
also
to
our
community
at
large.
B
In
to
Scott's
question,
there
is
a
focus
in
the
section
on
city
employees,
of
focus
on
city
facilities,
but
also
focus
on
city
residents
and
and
certainly
we're
not
going
to
be
able
to
to
tap
every
single
individual
and
not
all
individuals
out
there
in
our
community
that
are
suffering
or
only
suffering
from
mental
illness,
especially
within
our
homeless
community.
But
this
is
absolutely
the
start
that
we
needed
and
the
other
element
being
the
coordination,
as
I
stated
already
with
our
other
agencies.
B
D
Thank
you.
I
was
really
moved
to
see
this
on
our
agenda
today.
Many
of
and
thank
you
to
those
in
the
audience
who
spoke
on
this
issue
with
passion
and
understanding.
It's
you
in
the
course
of
one's
life.
We
come
across
many,
not
many,
but
too
many
people
want
as
too
many
who
have
committed
suicide
because
they
didn't
see
another
way
out
for
them.
D
I'm
no
expert
on
mental
health,
but
I
really
think
that
this
is
another
way
that
we
can
help
those
who
are
so
desperately
in
need,
and
some
we
don't
even
know
that
they're
in
need,
because
they
go
about
their
day-to-day
lives
as
if
everything
is
normal
even
to
their
closest
friends.
They
don't
really
know
that
they
are
in
crisis.
D
We
have
a
crisis
among
our
youth,
particularly
those
who
are
just
out
of
high
school,
who
are
trans,
dazed,
transitioning
into
college
and
the
working
world
and
not
sure
where
they
want
to
be
in
life
or
not
sure,
seeing
other
people
successful
and
they're
concerned
about
their
own
success
and
they
end
up
taking
their
own
lives
as
because
life
seems
hopeless
to
them.
So
I
truly
appreciate
this
memo
and
this
resolution,
of
course,
I
support
it
100%
a
hundred
and
twenty
ten
two
hundred
percent.
D
This
is
really
really
important
that
we
talk
about
this
as
a
public
health
crisis.
It
truly
is
a
real
public
health
crisis
when
we
hear
every
day
that
our
students
are
in
crisis,
I
worry
about
our
children
and
how
they
may
not
make
it
next
month
because
of
the
stresses
they
feel
in
college
or
applying
for
College
and
the
stress
that
they
show
to
their
family
and
the
lack
of
acceptance.
D
L
You
I
like
to
thank
everyone
that
came
out
today
and
for
the
team
that
worked
on
this
and
councilmember
promise
for
bringing
this
forward.
Thank
you
for
every
death
from
suicide.
There
are
eight
emergency
visits
for
self-harm,
so
this
is
suicide
claims
twice
as
many
deaths
nationally
as
homicide,
and
we
know
that
suicide
is
not
an
issue
that
impacts
all
communities
equally,
our
youth,
in
particular
LGBTQ
youth,
are
at
much
higher
risk.
L
This
was
an
issue
that
I
was
not
aware
of
until
last
year
and
former
school
board
member
and
very
close
to
the
schools
in
my
district
and
so
going
out
and
visiting
one
of
them,
I
learned
that
there
had
been
eight
or
nine
suicide
attempts
at
a
school
and
they
were
all
LGBTQ
youth
and
thankfully,
none
were
successful,
but
it's
a
huge
issue.
It's
also
a
huge
issue
in
our
veteran
community,
something
I
have
personally
experienced
our
older
residents
and
in
the
african-american
community
and
the
toll
that
this
takes
on
families
and
the
communities.
L
The
loss,
I
think
is
immeasurable
and
I
agree
that
it's
imperative
that
we
coordinate
closely
with
the
county
to
achieve
the
goals
in
the
plan
that's
been
put
together.
Having
said
that,
I
do
have
one
question
I'd
like
to
know
a
little
bit
more
about
the
tracking
and
the
reporting
for
implementation
of
the
policy.
What
is
the
administration's
plan
for
providing
updates
to
ensure
that
we,
the
council,
has
the
most
up-to-date
information?
This
is
going
to
go
to
piss
viz
right
and
are
we
coordinating
anything
around
the
county's
suicide
prevention,
annual
reports.
M
From
the
city
manager's
office,
we
are
coordinating
with
the
county.
I've
worked
closely
with
the
county's
suicide
prevention
manager,
the
resources,
as
well
as
as
well
as
coordinating
a
safe
messaging
training
for
our
communication
staff,
as
requested
by
councilmember
Fidelis.
We
will
be
reporting
annually
to
the
piz
fills
committee.
We'd
be
happy
to
share
any
updates
on
the
county
plan.
I
believe
that
they
produce
an
annual
report
on
their
implementation.
L
That
would
be
great,
and
particularly
as
a
way
of
encouraging
other
cities
in
the
county
to
implement
something
similar.
It
would
be
great
to
have
a
county
plan,
the
city's
report
and
hopefully
or
the
san
jose's
report
and
others
can
join
in
and
then
I
also
wanted
to
echo
the
comments
for
my
colleague,
councilmember
Foley.
L
L
I
was
personally
at
a
loss
and
reached
out
to
community
members
to
for
some
help
and
to
bring
some
resources,
because
not
all
our
schools
are
resourced
in
the
same
way,
particularly
in
the
East
Side
we
have,
but
not
exclusively
in
the
East
Side.
We
have
a
schools
or
dealing
with
a
lot
of
challenges,
particularly
right
now
with
enrollment
going
down,
and
they
may
not
all
have
social
workers
or
have
agreements
with
nonprofits
like
the
Bill
Wilson
Center
to
come
in.
L
M
Thank
you.
I
also
want
to
echo
my
gratitude
to
staff
and
and
to
councilmember
Perales
for
making
sure
that
this
very
difficult
subject
stayed
on
our
priority
list
and
that
we
moved
forward
with
it
and
so
I
wanted
to
just
bring
up
a
couple
of
points.
I
know
that
in
our
police
auditor's
report,
we
saw,
unfortunately,
the
connection
between
suicide
by
police
in
some
situations
and
I
and
I.
Think
it's
important,
of
course,
to
make
sure
that
if
it's
not
already
included,
I
know
that
the
police
department
will
be
included
in
all
of
this.
M
M
Excuse
me
fourteen,
and
that
has
nothing
to
do
with
a
me-too
movement
or
the
the
different
rape
definition,
because
this
is
an
8-year
incline,
so
we
need
to
make
sure
that
we
connect
those
dots
with
suicide.
Those
are
those
are
survivors
that
are
living
with
trauma.
Many
of
them
are
female,
predominantly
female,
in
young
women
of
color,
but
they're,
also
young
men
and
and
men.
M
So
we
need
to
make
sure
that
in
our
protocols,
in
the
way
that
we,
when
we
respond
to
this
type
of
crime,
that
there
is
an
opportunity
at
a
very
appropriate
time
to
also
disseminate
information
to
those
clients
or
to
make
sure
that
those
clients
are
connected
with
with
with
a
service
or
support
network
and
many
times
our
sexual
assault.
Survivors
don't
want
an
exam
right.
They
don't
want
a
sexual
assault,
examine
when
you
get
connected
to
a
sexual-assault
exam.
M
You
actually
get
connected
to
a
network,
and
so
what
we've
seen
in
these
joint
meetings
with
the
county
is
that
not
every
survivor
is
getting
a
sexual-assault
exam
and
unfortunately,
those
are
missed.
Opportunities
for
us
to
connect
them
with
the
network
and
not
feel
alone
and
to
be
able
to
deal
with
some
of
the
trauma
or
were
there
to
speak
to
somebody.
So
I
want
to
make
sure
that
we
we
connect
all
the
dots,
especially
with
what
we're
seeing
currently
within
our
own
system,
and
so
I'm.
H
Thank
You
mayor
very
quickly,
I
just
wanted
to
really
acknowledge
staff
for
working
on
this,
but
I
want
to
technology.
Councilmember,
Perales,
you've
been
so
steadfast
and
diligent,
since,
let
me
make
sure
I
got
it
right
since
2017
I
think
it
was
when
you
brought
it
forward
to
priority
and
the
community.
Was
there
really
making
sure
that
that
this
was
on
our
radar?
And
it's
all
I
want
to
just
acknowledge
your
efforts
and
and
really
elevating
this
so
that
we
all
really
understood
the
issue.
H
I
think
we
all
knew
what
it
was,
but
I
think
that
you
really
just
pushed
us
right
over
that
edge
and
made
sure
that
we
didn't
forget
about
it.
So
thank
you.
So
much
for
doing
that
and
I
want
to
acknowledge
the
audience.
The
members
that
came
out
to
speak,
especially
mr.
Beakman
we've
seen
you
just
about
every
council
session
committee
meeting
in
special
session
that
there
has
been,
and
it's
nice
to
see
you
mr.
Beakman
so
involved,
but
having
you
share
that
today.
H
It's
a
very
quick,
very
rapid
things
are
coming
at
us
at
100
miles
an
hour,
and
so
it's
very
difficult
to
to
experience
this
and
and
for
those
who
don't
have
those
those
resources.
Sometimes
the
individuals
see
this
as
the
only
way
out,
but
nonetheless
leave
so
many
unanswered
questions
for
family
members
and
for
friends
and
and
so
so,
thank
you
so
much
and
I'm
just
gonna
leave
it
at
that.
I
will
absolutely
be
supporting
this.
K
Thank
you,
I
want
to
thank
everyone
for
their
heartfelt
comments
and
sharing
their
own
experiences.
I
want
to
thank
Cosmoprof,
earliness
effort
and
for
the
many
members
of
the
community
who
have
been
advocating
persistently,
we
know
there's
much
more
work
to
do,
but
we
really
appreciate
the
work.
That's
gotten
us
here
this
far.
So
thank
you
very
much
all
right
on
motion.
Let's
vote.
K
S
We
go
alright
Thank
You
mayor
vice
mayor
council
for
having
this
opportunity
to
engage
you
with
regards
to
our
policy
recommendations
for
the
use
of
the
UAV.
You
know
really
what
we're
trying
to
do,
and
there's
police
departments
always
trying
to
do
is
really
looking
at
everything
that
have
force
multipliers
and
how
we
keep
our
community
safe
and
our
officers
safe
as
we
go
about
our
mission
to
keep
the
city
safe.
S
What
we're
looking
for
really
is
trying
to
catch
up
with
this
new
policy
and
catching
up
to
the
industry
standard
on
whether
to
part
what
other
departments
in
the
state
and
nationally
are
doing
with
their
UAV
systems
with
me
is
Special
Operations,
captain
Jason
Dwyer
and
our
merge
commander,
Steve
Liguria,
lieutenant
Steve
Floreal
and
with
that
I
will
turn
over
to
lieutenant
loriel
for
the
presentation.
Thank
you.
T
T
Thereafter,
there
was
outreach
that
was
conducted
by
the
neighborhood
Commission
and
also
much
discussion
between
the
council
and
the
police
department.
2015.
We
moved
forward
with
a
pilot
program
that
was
drafted.
It
took
some
time
for
officers
to
get
trained
to
be
qualified.
Pilots
to
fly,
UA
s's
product
program
has
initiated
last
year
with
the
purchase
of
our
first
drone,
or
excuse
me
UAS,
that
was
in
May
of
2000
proximately
May
of
2019.
We
had
our
first
flight
here
it
is
2020
and
we
were
coming
to
the
end
of
the
pilot
program.
T
Our
current
status.
We
have
one
UAS,
we've
conducted
19
flights,
which
include
training
and
actual
events,
and
we
currently
have
trained
nine
trained
pilots
that
are
fa,
part
107,
qualified
and
part
107
is
a
term
that's
used
to
describe
a
remote
pilot
license.
We
also
need
that
because
we
are
paid
to
fly
these
things.
So
technically
we're
commercial
and
that's
why
we
also
need
that
sort
of.
T
Chronological
chronologically,
we
started
with
the
pilot
program
and
this
kind
of
sequence
of
events,
and
why
we're
here
today
we're
trying
to
move
forward
with
the
department
policy,
and
once
we
get
the
department
policy,
we
can
then
move
forward
and
try
to
get
a
FAA
Khoa
as
it's
commonly
called,
which
is
a
certificate
of
authorization,
and
what
that
will
allow
us
to
do
is
operate
in
different
parameters
than
the
general
public
can
it'll
allow
us
to
fly
at
nighttime
beyond
visual
line
of
sight.
T
If
we
request
it,
the
requirement
for
a
visual
observer
can
be
waived
at
times
we
KITT
are
allowed
to
fly.
One
pilot
can
fly
multiple
UAS
is.
We
can
also
not
have
to
Ryle
yield
the
right-of-way.
We
can
operate
over
crowds
to
monitor
large
crowds
and
possible
aggressors
that
might
come
in
there
and
do
harm
to
them.
T
We
can
have
greater
airspace
restrictions
lifted
and
also
operation
limitations
such
as
altitude,
speed
and
visibility
and
cloud
cover
can
also
be
increased,
so
we
can
fly
more
times
this
policy
addresses
authorized
purposes
and
inside
the
policy
there
is
a
list
of
authorized
purposes.
If
you
want
to
take
a
look
at
that,
it
also
describes
authorized
employees
again.
T
They
have
to
be
trained
part
107,
we're
also
going
to
put
them
through
a
if
you
will
a
qualification
course
of
our
own
at
our
bomb
range,
where
we
have
to
take
an
show
us
and
demonstrate
the
skills
that
they
can
fly
this
aircraft
and
not
crash
it
or
crash
into
objects.
Also,
this
policy
includes
safety
procedures
such
as
pre-flight
checklist
checking
of
the
of
the
device,
and
also
notifying
FAA
that
we're
going
to
fly,
training
and
accountability.
The
training
element
is
in
there.
Accountability
is
in
there
as
the
merge
commander.
T
This
program
falls
under
me
and
I'm
responsible
for
its
accountability,
monitoring
and
auditing
of
the
use
we
currently
have
a
system
on.
We
have
a
spreadsheet
that
monitors
all
flights
that
we
have
moving
ahead
in
the
future.
There
are
programs
out
there
that
are
web-based
that,
once
you
fly
your
aircraft,
you
land
it
you
plug
it
into
a
USB.
This
information
is
then
uploaded
to
the
software.
It
collects
all
type
of
data,
such
as
the
type
of
aircraft
you're
flying
the
drone.
T
Policy
addresses
previous
major
concerns
requirements,
first
of
which
is
the
completion
of
the
pilot
program.
The
pilot
program
asks
that
once
we
completed
it,
that
we
put
together
our
policy
and
then
presented
it
to
City
Council,
which
is
what
we're
doing
today:
FAA
approval
and
regulations.
Again,
if
we're
gonna
move
forward
with
a
Khoa,
we
have
to
have
this
policy
in
place.
We've
attempted
to
start
the
process
for
an
application,
but
if
you
don't
have
a
a
permanent
policy
in
place,
you
can't
move
forward
logging
of
flights.
T
We
have
been
doing
that
as
requested
for
the
pilot
program
and
that
information
is
posted
on
the
web
and
can
be
viewed
today,
random
surveillance
that
is
addressed
in
the
policy
of
allowed
flights
and
also
prohibited
flights.
We
do
not
allow
random
surveillance
non
weaponizing
of
the
UAS
that
will
not
occur.
We
do
not
intend
a
weapon
weaponize
a
UAS,
and
nor
can
they
be
weaponized.
T
We're
gonna
incorporate
camera
tech
that
is
consistent
with
air
3,
which
is
our
department
helicopter.
When
I
say
consistent.
We're
talking
about
telephoto
lens,
which
our
Department
helicopter
has
FLIR,
which
is
forward-looking,
infra-red,
and
you
guys
have
all
seen
that
on
YouTube
or
helicopter
videos
that
we
provided
also,
the
u.s.
is
have
the
capability
through
software
to
track
objects,
whether
that's
a
car,
a
person,
a
dangerous
animal,
and
what
that
does
is
it
makes
it
easier
for
the
pilot
to
actually
fly
the
device
and
keep
it
keep
his
eye
on.
What
he's
looking.
T
T
That
just
happened
this
past
Sunday
for
events
like
that
we'd
like
to
do,
is
have
our
Jones
available,
we're
not
there
to
watch
the
crowd
and
the
rally
they
have
their
first
men
right
to
freedom
of
speech,
but
there
are
people
that
want
to
do
harm
them
and
that's
what
we're
there
to
protect
as
those
people
that
are
trying
to
voice
their
opinion
in
their
first
men
right.
There
may
be
people
in
the
crowd
that
want
to
be
agitators.
T
There
may
be
available,
vehicle-borne
attacks,
we
need
to
worry
about
and
we
got
to
watch
those
outlying
areas
also
night
flights
once
we
get
the
the
KOA
one
of
the
restrictions
that
lifted
is
that
we
can
fly
at
night.
Currently,
we
cannot
so
none
of
our
flights
have
been
after
the
Sun
went
down.
We'd
like
to
see
our
detectives
and
our
Bureau
investigations
acquire
these
UAS
s,
they've
actually
requested
it.
You
can
look
at
post
event.
T
Incidents
such
as
major
traffic
accidents,
they'd
like
to
fly
the
UAS
and
gather
data
from
up
in
the
air,
give
them
a
better
visual
and
also
documentation
of
what
occurred
the
Homicide
Unit
would
like
to
use
it
for
crime.
Scene
investigations
also
gather
data
and
get
a
better
picture
of
what
happened
and
later
for
court
testimony.
T
Ideally
in
patrol
we're
gonna
outfit
each
division
with
the
minimum
of
one
UAS,
so
they're
out
there
on
a
daily
basis,
every
shift
24/7
they'll
be
available.
Unfortunately,
our
helicopter
is
not
available
24/7,
but
these
will
help
supplement
that
and
they're
a
force,
multiplier
best
practice
and
industry
standards.
That
officers
are
checked
out
these
devices
and
they
have
them
in
their
vehicles.
My
goal
is
to
have
at
least
30
trained
pilots.
Again
we
have
nine
right
now.
My
goal
is
to
have
30
more
pilots
than
devices
that
way
at
24
7.
T
Moving
ahead,
if
we
can
pass
this
policy,
we
will
be
the
first
department
in
the
city
of
San
Jose
to
go
operational.
We
will
open
the
door
for
other
city
departments.
I
know,
there's
a
lot
of
people
watching
today
and
all
the
fire
departments
here,
I've
heard
it
from
Environmental
Services.
There's
a
lot
of
people
want
to
use
these
devices
to
help
us
in
the
future.
I
believe
our
policy
is
it's
safe,
it's
legal!
It
protects
privacy
and
increases
productivity
of
our
officers,
improves
officer
safety
and
provides
Public
Safety.
O
Five
years
since
the
drone
policy
is
finally
developed,
it
is
frustrating
to
have
taken
this
long.
We've
all
gone
through
a
lot
of
trial
and
error
to
arrive
at
this
policy
after
this
fight
past
five
year,
put
for
San
Jose
to
be
an
innovation
leader
with
technology,
I
hope
the
remainder
of
the
la
carte,
oh
and
mr.
administration,
and
all
of
San
Jose
will
be
considering
how
technology
can
work
more
hand-in-hand
with
open
and
accountable
technology
practices.
Thank
you
for
this
drone
policy.
O
Today,
it
is
accountability
that
I
feel
can
better
define
technology
innovation
at
this
time.
Yet
the
mayor
and
the
city
government
are
too
afraid
to
talk
about
this
natural
symbiotic
relationship
more
openly
the
surveillance,
the
technology
or
in
slanted
in
San
Jose
about
five
years
ago,
about
the
same
time
as
the
drone
program
I,
thank
you
and
an
incredible
acknowledgement
that
a
city
government
version
of
the
surveillance
and
technology
ordinance
made
the
top
25
of
priority
choices.
This
year
you
have
issues
of
traffic
calming
and
City
public
transit
practices.
O
Third
and
fourth,
on
your
priority
setting
this
year,
these
possible
ideas
from
the
state
that
include
vision.
Zero
ideals
seem
a
perfect
match
for
tech
accountability,
as
both
these
ideas
can
work
towards
and
not
exclusively
towards
civil
protections,
neighborhood
safety
and
sustainability.
I
think
we
are
all
milling
our
lives
in
our
thinking
since
2001,
public
oversight,
practices
based
on
peace,
openness,
human
rights,
civil
rights
and
civil
protections
can
give
the
everyday
public
of
the
local
community
a
good
guideline
process
to
address
federal,
international
and
UN
governments.
O
At
this
time
in
human
history,
there
is
simply
the
ideas
of
hope,
enjoyment
and
better
learning
of
good
democratic
practices
and
good
sustainability,
community
sustainability
with
responsible,
accountable
technology
practices.
This
is
how
to
try
to
return
to
the
ideas
of
we
are
San,
Jose
and
I
feel
we
can
better
define
technology
innovation
at
this
time.
Thank
you.
Thank.
T
R
Thank
you.
Thank
you
good
afternoon.
Everyone.
We
got
a
lot
of
interesting
things
today.
Wasn't
planning
on
even
coming
today:
I
I'm,
not
sure
what
the
deputy
Chiefs
name
is,
but
when
it
seemed
like
kind
of
slipped
out
him
saying
drone
and
we
were
calling
it
now,
an
unmanned
aircraft
system
I
fully
support
this
technology.
I
think
we
should
have
it,
but
I
think
we
should
just
say
what
it
is
and
it's
the
same
thing
with
the
cellphone
tower
simulator.
R
We
kind
of
snuck
that
thing
through
in
a
way
and
we
gave
it
a
special
little
name.
It's
really
hard
to
find
it
when
you're
digging
through
old
council
agendas
and
the
you
know
all
the
other
information
about
what
you
guys
purchased
from
Harris
Corporation
I
just
wish
it
was
just
open,
so
people
would
understand
it.
I've
been
digging
through
your
guys's
agendas
for
the
last
seven
or
eight
years.
Trying
to
find
that
stuff.
R
You
guys
purchased
it
for
600
grand
I
mean
you
guys
have
a
an
agreement
with
Harris
Corporation
I,
just
like
this
stuff
to
be
out
front
and
I,
don't
like
non-disclosure
agreements
being
signed
with
companies
like
that
I
think
that's
kind
of
Shady.
We
did
that
with
the
cell
phone
tower
simulator
now.
Are
we
doing
that
with
these
drones?
So
maybe
we
can't
discuss
the
technology
and
what
it's
actually
doing,
the
manufacturers
of
all
these
products
used
to
be
customers
of
mine,
so
I'm,
very
familiar
with
them
and
I
just
think.
Q
Q
The
euphemistic
language
to
make
more
palatable,
not
triggering
civil
liberty
issues
is
evidenced
if
you
change
the
name
from
drone
which
automatically
it
has
connotations
attached
to
it,
but
it's
almost
like
there
is
knowledge
that
it
would
trigger
that
connotation
and
that's
why
the
language
has
changed.
That
in
itself
tells
you
that
there's
knowledge
that
something
is
may
be
amiss
a
little
bit.
So
the
other
thing
is
facial
recognition
technology
that
wasn't
mentioned
you
know.
Is
it
going
to
have
it?
What
is
going
to
be
done
with
the
facial
recognition
technology?
Q
Is
it
going
to
be
coupled
with
other
technologies?
I
think
that,
just
as
a
cautionary
measure
that
sometimes
the
technology
advances
further
than
the
laws
ability
to
rectify
or
to
foresee
any
problems,
it
may
happen
in
the
future.
So,
once
again,
chief
Garcia
I
respect
what
you're
doing
and
I
respect
your
the
responsibility
of
protecting
the
whole
city
as
a
whole.
Q
T
K
I
just
had
two
questions
or
concerns.
One
was
on
page
six
under
be
little
pre-fight
responsibilities.
I
know
that
these
standards
can
often
create
standards
for
liability.
That
is
for
determining
when
someone
is
operating
a
drone
negligently
that
subjects
the
city
to
obviously
to
liability
and
here's.
What
that
sentence
reason
be
no
person
may
operate
a
UAS
over
a
human
being,
except
for
operations
were,
is
necessary
to
safeguard
a
human
life.
A
human
being
is
directly
participating.
K
The
operation,
the
human
being
is
located
under
a
covered
structure
or
the
human
being
is
inside
a
station
or
a
vehicle
that
can
provide
reasonable
protection
and
I
guess
what
I'm
concerned
about
is
I
can
imagine
dozens
of
scenarios
where
a
human
being
could
be
considered
to
be.
The
drone
could
be
considered
to
be
over
the
human
being.
K
Maybe
it's
a
big
parking
lot.
Human
beings
on
one
side,
drone
somewhere
else
and
may
or
may
not
be
directly
over,
but
it's
still
over
and
there
may
be
no
risk
of
harm,
but
we
could
be
creating
some
essentially
some
negative
standard
because
we're
operating
the
drone
in
that
case
I'm
also
thinking,
for
example,
where
is
being
operated
and
it
needs
to
cross
a
road,
and
there
may
be
somebody
driving
I.
K
Just
don't
know
that
we
want
to
make
it
this
open-ended
and
I
just
want
to
be
interested
in
your
thoughts
and
maybe
make
a
suggestion
that
we
may
want
to
narrow
more
carefully
what
we
mean
by
over,
because
a
drone
is
necessarily
going
to
be
over.
Everyone
and
I
could
imagine
how
a
lawyer
could
get
into
court
and
start
drawing
all
kinds
of
essentially
stretching
it
beyond.
I.
Think
your
intended
words.
T
So
on
that
section,
as
far
as
flying
over
people,
that's
the
one
thing
that
the
KOA
does
allow
us
to
do,
and
you
can
think
of
in
terms
of
everyday
life
or
helicopter
when
it's
out
there
it's
flying
over
people
when
there's
planes
flying
the
path
downtown
the
land
right
there
flying
over
people.
Our
policy
outlines
that
our
pilots
should
not
be
flying
too
low
as
to
obstruct
people
or
hit
objects
or
interfere
with
people
they're
also
language.
It
talks
about.
T
If
we
lose
control,
we
should
be
able
to
much
like
a
helicopter
that
loses
power.
They
still
want
to
guide
it
down,
yeah
right,
so
that's
kind
of
what
we
want
to
do.
If
it's
a
large.
If
there's
a
large
group,
much
like
the
Bernie
Sanders
rally
last
week,
we're
gonna
end
up
flying
over
people,
as
our
helicopter
was
last
weekend
right.
G
T
Did
have
conversation
we've
had
some
emails
go
back
and
forth
with
Miguel
Bernal
for
mismanagement,
so
we
talked
about
insurance
aspects
of
it
yeah.
Some
of
the
insurance
aspects
talk
about
liability
coverage,
including
claims
for
bodily
injury,
property
damage,
personal
injury
and
also
claims
and
include
invasion
of
privacy.
If
people
make
those
claims,
we're
always
gonna
do
our
best
practice
and
our
best
to
get
warrants
when
needed.
If
we're
not
operating
under
exigent
circumstances
to
be
flying
in
a
legal
manner
where
we're
at
is
flying.
T
You
know
human
beings,
I'm
gonna
read
one
of
the
sentences.
I'm,
not
sure.
If
this
is
one
of
the
ones
you're
looking
at
or
not
in
Section
B,
the
human
being
is
directly
participating
in
the
operation
yeah.
That
would
be
that's
the
opportunity
or
any
City
yeah
city
employee.
That's
there
and
they
know.
What's
going
on
yeah.
T
Furedi
we're
doing
a
demonstration
flight,
community,
policing
and
we're
out
of
school
or
coffee
with
a
cop.
We
happen
to
be
flying
this
thing.
We're
gonna,
make
everybody
aware
they
were
flying.
This
you're
now
participate
in
this
event,
please
look
up
and
be
advised.
You
know
where
it's
at
we're.
Gonna
do
our
best
not
to
fight
over
people
and
I
fly
it
at
people.
Keep
the
speeds
low
things
of
that
nature.
Yeah.
K
T
K
Mean
I'm
just
imagining
this
going
down
the
road
to
some
civil
suit
right
and
and
as
we
obviously
must,
because
we
end
up
hearing
these
cases
all
the
time
in
closed
session
and
some
lawyers
saying
well,
did
they
have
any
specific
information
that
led
them
to
believe
anybody
who's
at
risk
of
harm?
And
if
the
case
is
no-
and
this
is
just
a
standard
operation
as
sort
of
a
general
safety,
then
is
this
necessary
to
safeguard
a
human
life
that
may
be
disputable.
K
I
just
think
you
probably
want
language
that
is
not
so
blanket
about
operating
over
human
beings,
because
I
think
you're
going
to
need
to
operate
this
over
a
human
being,
I
think
the
bottom
line.
Is
you
don't
want
to
operate
it
in
a
way
it's
unsafe
to
humans?
Right?
You
don't
want
to
scare
people,
you
don't
want
to
hurt
anybody,
and
so
I,
just
I
believe
that
concern
with
you
and
to
the
attorney
to
work
out
because
I
know
we
won't
hash
it
all
out
here.
S
K
Well,
it
might
say
that
you
should
not
operate
over
a
human
except
in
these
circumstances,
but
to
say
you
may
not
or
you
must
not,
it's
pretty
blanket
prohibition,
and
that
means
if
it
doesn't
fit
squarely
in
one
of
those
exceptions,
there's
gonna
be
a
gotcha
experience
and
I.
Think
you
can
imagine
scenarios
where
you're
gonna
need
to
operate
one
of
these
over
people
in
some
way,
maybe
they're,
driving
or
whatever
it
might
be,
and
it's
not
gonna
fit
squarely
in
the
exception
and
you're
gonna
be
stuck
yeah.
K
E
S
K
S
K
Second
thing:
I'd
suggest
and
again
I'm.
Sorry.
This
is
the
lawyer
coming
out
in
me:
it's
it's
kind
of
a
disease
that
we
know.
There
are
some
very
specific
Fourth
Amendment
constitutional
protections
for
the
home
and
I
think
not
expecting
every
officer
to
be
having
their
constitutional
case
law
guidebook
in
their
hand
when
they're
operating
these
things,
I
think
it
would
probably
be
helpful
to
have
a
specific
set
of
prohibitions
or
guidelines
around
when
a
drone
can
take
an
image
from
within
a
home
or
in
a
backyard,
but
particularly
within
a
dwelling.
K
That's
occupied
because
I
think
we're
gonna
have
all
kinds
of
Fourth
Amendment
issues.
If
we
don't
clarify
that
a
hassle
can
only
happen
if
you
get
a
warrant
or
you
got,
consent
of
the
owner
or
you've
got
an
exigent
circumstance.
You
know
one
of
those
Fourth
Amendment
exceptions,
because
otherwise
I
just
can
see
this
going
badly
or
someone
will
say:
well,
you
don't
even
have
a
set
of
policies
that
clearly
tells
you,
when
you
can
and
can't
take
an
image
inside
a
home
or
view
inside
a
home
so
again,
I
just
throw
that
out
there.
E
I
think
that's
something
we
can
look
at
in
terms
of
it.
We
have
a
private
residence,
a
specific
section
but
I
think
the
intent
here,
I
and-
and
if
you
you
addressed
it
in
terms
of
the
you
know,
the
search
warrant
and
or
exigent
circumstances,
I
think
maybe
there's
something
we
need
with
respect
to
private
residence,
and
so
we
can
look
at
right,
yeah
and
we
would.
We
would
treat
that
as
well.
I
have
to
I'd
have
to
talk
to
Carl
and
I.
Guess
you
guys
need
to
chime
in
on
this.
We.
T
T
As
the
SWAT
commander
merge
commander,
we
have
plans
of
using
drones
internally
to
search
houses
because
it
has
already
other
agencies
doing
that
and
it
increases
officer
safety
immensely
with
that
said,
we're
gonna
seek
a
search
warrant
before
we
fly
a
drone
into
a
house
because
you're
gathering
all
that
imagery
and
you're
looking
at
it.
So
we're
absolutely
gonna,
get
search,
warrants
and
respect
that
Fourth
Amendment
right,
I
appreciate.
K
That
believe
me,
I,
do
I
just
suspect
as
a
person
who
is
woken
up,
magistrates
at
3:00
in
the
morning
to
get
search
warrants
that
with
a
barricaded
suspect,
you
may
not
have
the
time
and
you
may
need
an
exigent
circumstances
exception
or
a
consent
exception.
If
it's
a
home,
for
example,
the
woman
says
yeah
he's
in
there,
but
you
have
my
consent.
I
think
you're,
just
gonna
want
to
give
yourself
something
some
of
those
basic
constitutional.
These
are
all
constitutionally
allowed,
so
just
put
it
in
writing.
L
T
World
con
was
about
a
year
and
a
half
ago,
which
started
the
Convention
Center,
and
we
had
a
lot
of
Intel
coming
in
that
people
wanted
to
protest.
It
just
kind
of
mushroomed
into
something
else.
I
became
a
planned
event.
You
know,
what's
gonna
happen
to
have
something
we
would
like
to
use
it
on.
You
know,
looking
back
at
some
of
the
bigger
events
that
we
have
historically,
a
Cinco
DeMayo
weekend
is
something
we
may
plan
to
have
it
just
to
watch
crowd,
control
and
make
sure
traffic
control
issues
don't
get
out
of
hand.
T
So
those
are
some
of
the
pre
planned
events,
and
you
know
honestly,
we
have
the
turkey
trot.
We
have
color
runs
when
you
have
these
mass
gatherings
of
people
where
they
can
be
affected
and
I
know
right
now
we're
taking
steps
to
do
some
critical
infrastructure
upgrades
to
protect
our
citizens
when
they're.
At
these
events,
this
is
one
of
those
upgrades
that
give
us
gives
us
forewarning
and
intelligence,
real,
real-time
intelligence,
where
we
can
act
and
make
the
entire
event
safer.
So.
S
L
I
hear
you
and
I
get
that
I'm
actually
trying
to
so
what
I'm
saying
is
not
like:
hey
we're
gonna
have
put
up
a
drone
at
this
event
at
this
time,
I'm
not
saying
that
what
I'm
saying
is
that
we
need
to
start
talking
about
this.
If
it
is
it
gonna
be
at
public
events
like
hey.
This
is
a
tool
in
the
toolbox.
L
So
again
we
don't
freak
the
wrong
people
out
right,
I
think
that's
a
real,
a
genuine
issue
and
then
I
had
another
question
around
post
incident,
crime,
scene,
preservation
and
documentation
so
in
terms
of
post
incident
crime
scene.
So,
presumably
whatever
the
issue
is
it's
safe
and
you're
using
a
drone?
Can
you
give
me
an
example
of
what
that
would
be
yeah.
T
T
Large
scene,
you
think
of
a
major
intersection
where
they
do
all
they
can
on
the
ground,
but
for
vehicle
accidents,
you're
always
required
to
do
a
sketch
and
that's
from
the
sky.
If
you
will,
if
you
could
get
that
imagery
on
a
drone
and
then
use
that
later
in
court,
it
would
be
huge
so
that
after
after
the
event
has
occurred,
and
that
investigative
step
is
huge
same
thing
with
going
into
houses
or
a
homicide
scene,
that's
outside
maybe
a
park,
and
it's
a
huge
area.
T
You're
gonna
want
to
document
the
area
as
much
as
you
can.
You
can
never
document
too
much
and
you
only
get
one
chance
to
do
it
because,
after
you
leave
that
homicide
scene,
if
you
will,
is
contaminate
it.
So
it's
a
great
tool
to
take
it
up
in
the
air
about
100
feet,
get
a
picture
of
every
single
thing
you
can
and
preserve
that
for
later.
Okay,.
L
And
can
you
describe
actually,
can
you
talk
about
night
operations?
So
this
is
an
issue
I
hear
about
quite
a
bit
when
it
comes
to
the
helicopter
in
district
7,
and
it
was
an
issue
almost
a
few
months
ago,
where
I
got
a
lot
of
calls
from
residents
because
it
had
in
fact
usage
of
it
had
in
fact
gone
up,
and
it's
there's
a
balance
in
the
fact
that
obviously
it
was
needed
right.
E
L
So
that
is
there,
and
so
can
you
talk
about
night
operations
because
it
really
we
have
in
that
require
the
use
of
tools
available
to
us,
but
then,
on
the
other
side,
we
also
have
neighborhoods
that
live
with
that,
and
you
know
the
people
that
aren't
doing
those
things
are
still
feeling
like.
They
live
in
a
place
where
there's
a
helicopter
overhead
for
four
hours
every
night
right
and
so
can
you
talk
a
little
bit
about
night
operations,
what
that
would
mean
and
how
that
could
impact
a
neighborhood.
T
Yeah,
thank
you
for
the
question.
I'd
say
the
first
thing.
The
most
important
is
the
drone.
It's
probably
a
thousand
times
quieter
than
a
helicopter.
Once
it
goes
up
to
about
50-100
feet,
you
don't
even
know
it's
there.
I
will
use
an
example.
We
had
a
barricaded
suspect,
probably
three.
Four
weeks
ago
off
of
thali
Road
east
of
white.
L
T
Helicopter
was
out
there,
for
you,
know,
I
showed
up
at
4:30
5
o'clock
and
had
tactical
command
of
that
event.
We
used
our
helicopter
extensively
that
day
it
was
out
there
for
probably
about
four
flights
when
they
went
back
and
landed.
The
you
know
the
third
time
at
about
midnight.
I
called
him
in
the
hangar,
because
this
brings
up
another
topic
of
pilot
fatigue
and
I
called
him
in
the
hangar
and
said
how
you
guys
doing
how
much
time
you
have,
and
they
said
well,
probably
FAA.
T
We
got
about
an
hour
left
so
I
had
no
I
had
to
start
using
my
helicopter
very
judiciously
and
make
sure
I
didn't
bring
them
out
and
waste
our
time.
We
had
a
drone
that
day
and
we
did
fly
that
day,
but
as
soon
as
the
Sun
went
down,
we
had
to
land
it
because
we
don't
have
that
capability
right
now,
because
we're
not
authorized
by
the
FAA.
Once
we
get
that
authorization,
it's
going
to
make
life
easier
on
our
helicopter
pilots
and
our
officers
and
the
community
they're,
not
even
gonna
notice
itself.
T
They
might
even
think
that
we've
left
the
area
because
they're
not
going
to
hear
it.
It's
not
making
a
lot
of
a
lot
of
noise,
but
it
doesn't
have
a
huge
spotlight.
Most
of
them
don't
have
lights
at
all.
So
your
concerns,
the
community
I
think
they'll
be
happy
that
we're
flying
these
at
nighttime
and
again
they're
available
24/7
when
the
helicopter
is
not
there.
So.
T
L
D
S
L
You
treat
it
like
an
FAA
right
because
they're
federal
right
regulations,
so
you're
not
gonna,
have
I
guess
what
I'm
getting
at
is
they're
not
gonna
have
two
drones
in
the
same
place:
one
operated
by
the
sheriff
like
say:
if
you're,
an
alum,
Rock,
Park
something's
happen
there
and
you're
not
gonna
have
one
by
the
share
it
you're.
Obviously,
gonna
coordinate
on-site
you're,
not
gonna.
Have
random
drones
going
around
I
guess
is
what
I'm
getting
at
yeah.
S
So,
but
we
would
definitely,
as
we
all
do
in
everything
one
of
the
things-
and
you
mentioned
the
helicopter
and
apart
from
some
of
the
very
valid
points
that
the
mayor
made
with
regards
to
a
UAV
UAS
having
the
the
functionality
it
has,
is
because
it's
a
much
smaller.
It
really
is
literally
almost
like
having
the
same
technological
capabilities,
as
our
helicopter
has
just
in
a
very
small
version,
whether
from
the
from
the
optics
of
it
from
the
the
lens
from
the
all.
S
A
Thank
You
Mira,
and
thank
you
for
that
presentation.
I
just
want
to
go
back
to
some
of
the
speakers,
and
actually
some
of
my
colleagues
have
alluded
to
the
issue
around
transparency
and
with
a
lack
of
transparency.
Obviously,
misinformation
fear
distrust
fills
that
vacuum.
So
can
you
tell
us
how
you're
gonna
ensure
that
we
have
transparency?
Absolutely.
S
Thank
you
for
the
question
vice
mayor
I
mean
one
of
the
things
that
we
we
want
to
do.
Obviously
we
want
to
be
able
to
use
the
U
UAS
when
we
needed
to
serve
our
public
and
keep
our
officers
in
our
community
safe,
first
and
foremost.
Having
said
that,
the
way
we
gain
trust
is
by
letting
the
community
know
when
we
use
it.
We
just
we
have.
S
You
can
go
on
our
website
today
and
you
can
see
listed
when
our
flights
went
up
and
the
reason
they
went
up
and
we're
going
to
continue
to
do
that.
Another
thing
that
we
can
do
as
well
is:
we
can
come
back
quarterly
in
our
up
and
our
operations
report
to
piss,
fists
and
again
report
out
how
many
times
we
use
it.
We
certainly
have
nothing
to
hide
nothing
to
fear
for
the
reasons
we
want
to
use
this
technology
and
that's
and
we
want
to
be
as
transparent
in
our
use
as
possible
to
the
community.
A
One
of
the
things
that
drives
the
fear
is
the
fear
of
invasion
of
privacy.
Do
we
have
I
know
this?
This
technology
is
being
deployed
in
other
police
departments.
Are
there
use
cases
or
examples
that
we
could
share
with
the
community
in
terms
of
how
these
drones
have
been
used
to
solve?
You
know
different
situations
or
how
are
they
over
deployed?
Do
we
have
any
specific
examples
that
we
could
share.
T
Thank
you
for
the
question
yeah.
There
are
many
examples:
I'm
going
to
bring
up
to
LaVista
Police
Department,
because
they're
literally
the
national
leader
on
the
use
of
UAS,
and
they
would
have
a
partnership
with
FAA.
They
deploy
drones
us
keep
saying
drones,
that's
just
the
layman's
terms
at
UAS
is
from
the
top
of
their
Police
Department
to
a
majority
of
their
calls
to
ylvis'
is
about
the
quarter
of
our
size
quarter,
population
about
a
third
there.
If
you
go
on
their
website,
they
attribute
assisting
with
hundreds
of
arrests
for
the
past
three
years.
T
T
These
devices
have
the
capability
of
dropping
items
and
you
think
well,
what
are
they?
Gonna
drop?
We're
not
gonna
weaponize
it,
but
if
the
fire
department
has
us
is-
and
we
have
them
and
there's
people
that
are
stuck
and
they're
doing
a
swift
water,
rescue
and
somebody's
stuck
on
our
island.
In
the
middle
of
a
river,
they
can
fly
a
UAS
out.
There
fly
it
down
in
the
ground
and
drop
off
a
thermal
blanket
water,
a
cell
phone,
so
we
communicate
with
them.
B
Thank
you
very
much,
so
I,
don't
think.
Scott
is
still
here,
but
I
was
gonna
point
it
out
in
the
definitions,
page
of
the
UAS
unit,
standard
operating
procedures,
definition
for
the
unmanned
aircraft,
youäôre
unmanned
aerial,
vehicle,
UAV
and
aircraft
that
is
intended
to
navigate
in
the
air
without
an
onboard
pilot.
Also,
alternatively,
called
remotely
piloted
aircraft
RPA
or
remotely
operated
vehicle,
ROV
or
drone,
so
I,
don't
think
we're
hiding
it.
B
It's
just,
unfortunately,
there's
too
many
damn
names
for
these,
and
yes,
it
is
true
that
the
the
layman's
term
is
drone
that
you
so
many
of
us
use.
You
know
personally
right,
they're,
not
too
scary.
I
know
that
so
many
use
them
for
their
own
weddings.
Right,
though,
hire
a
drone
to
fly
over
their
heads
and
the
wedding
party's
heads
it's
becoming
more
and
more
common.
Certainly
you
see
them
with
the
general
public
using
them
on
a
regular
basis,
but
I
do
appreciate
the
policies
and
the
intent
here
of
the
policies.
B
I
know
that
we
mentioned
a
little
bit
about
the
potential
for
other
departments
that
may
have
an
interest.
I
know
that
here
in
the
memo
on
page
three,
it
states
in
the
middle
there,
the
use
of
the
UAS
will
be
prohibited
under
the
following
circumstances.
The
first
one
for
activities
did
not
have
a
legitimate
law
enforcement
purpose.
B
So
I
know
that
for
other
departments
purposes
you
know
looking
into
you
know
at
our
wastewater
treatment,
plant
right
and
and
the
opportunities
you
know
that
that
we
have
to
really
utilize
them,
I'm,
just
kind
of
curious
from
the
city,
manager's
standpoint
or
city
attorney.
This
sounds
like
this
is
just
from
the
police
department's
policy,
so
they're
sort
of
restricting
themselves.
B
What
does
that
look
like,
though,
if
that
language
is
in
there
within
the
police
department?
Are
we
setting
ourselves
up
for
a
little
bit
of
failure
with
our
other
departments
that
may
want
to
use
it?
And
now
it's
you
know,
that's
something
that
needs
to
come
out
so
I'm
just
curious
in
that
regard.
Yeah.
I
I
think
we
certainly
see
application
beyond
the
police
department
in
our
future,
and
you
know
Dolan's
here
in
the
audience
they
can
kind
of
help
describe
where,
where
this
is
on
our
technology
roadmap
for
citywide
deployment,
we
do
plan
on
tackling
the
privacy
issues
as
well
along
the
way
I
happen
to
have
met
the
city
manager
in
Chula
Vista
numerous
times
and
am
personally
excited
about
the
opportunities
that
drones
present
to
us
from
an
operational
standpoint.
So
I
don't
see
this
policy
as
containing
us
anyway.
B
Great,
thank
you
and
I.
Do
look
forward
to
this
tool.
I
think
it's
again,
there's
so
many
individuals
in
our
general
public
using
it
for
other
reasons,
I
do
think
this
is
a
tremendous
tool
that
we
should
have
at
our
disposal
and
I
do
appreciate
all
the
the
work
that
went
into
crafting
the
policy.
I
know
that
we
we
were
really
delayed
in
regards
to
the
FAA,
but
I
do
think.
We
know
that
there
were
a
number
of
instances
over
the
last
couple
years.
B
S
E
B
Am
perfectly
obviously
fine
with
that?
That's
why
I
brought
that
up
as
an
issue
so
and
I
I,
think
I,
don't
know
if
we're
trying
to
craft
some
of
these
pieces
here,
for
if
we're
gonna
make
these
amendments
and
accept
it
with
those
or
if
we're
gonna,
ask
that
maybe
we
have
this
come
back,
you
know
in
a
more
final
form,
so
I'm
I'm
I
won't
try
to
craft
a
motion
at
the
moment,
but
I
would
like
that
that
be
an
addition
or
a
change
into
it.
So
I
appreciate
you
bringing
that
up.
S
E
What
I
envision
is
to
take
the
comments
if
the
the
mayor's
comments
and
your
comments
and
any
other
comments
and
to
the
extent
we
need
to
tweak
the
language,
we
could
do
that
and
then
you
know,
obviously
it's
gonna
be
reported
back
to
his
face
on
a
regular
basis.
So
you
you
know,
then
the
council
would
be
aware
of
it,
but
but
it
gives
us
the
flexibility
to
get
the
grant,
funding
and
move.
N
E
B
K
H
L
K
K
Q
Also
from
the
horseshoe
with
regard
to
housing,
I'd
really
like
to
see
some
coordination
between
for
the
public
between
newsome's
proposals
to
put
he's
given
land
away
for
a
dollar.
You
know
and
there's
already
been
trailers
delivered
to
Stockton
Antioch,
Sonoma
County,
and
so
these
cities
are
far
more
progressive
than
we
are
in
in
going
through
the
process
and
the
bureaucracy
to
obtain
it
and
to
operate
them,
and
so
I
I
think
the
the
urgency
of
the
of
the
poverty
that
creates
homelessness
in
the
city.
Q
You
know
that
it
pretty
much
it
demands
it.
You
know,
there's
and
so
I,
don't
know
what
needs
to
happen
for
the
city
itself
to
see
this
issue
and
respond
to
it
in
a
way
that
is
commiserate
to
how
dangerous
it
is
to
live
out
there
on
the
streets
living
out
there
homeless,
living
out
there
in
poverty
and
and
also
the
way
that
we're
framing
it
we're
talking
about
having
a
housing
crisis.
So
that
implies
that
if
we
just
build
enough
homes,
the
problem
will
go
away
and
it
seems
like
we're.
Q
There's
more
like
it's
it's,
it
seems
like
you
know
and
there's
a
precedent
for
this.
Where
more
and
more
wealth
is
accumulated,
we
have
more
and
more
poverty
that
doesn't
make
sense.
To
me,
I
mean
there's
so
there's
something
wrong
with
the
map.
There
there's
something
wrong
with
the
equation,
and
I
really
would
encourage
the
council
to
to
maybe
put
some
kind
of
emergency
order
to
we're,
just
as
a
collective.
The
council
put
something
in
place
rather
than
going
through
the
votes
again.
Thank
you.
Thank
you.
C
Thank
you
for
reviewing
this
resolution
today.
I
am
the
program
director
for
the
HIV
and
AIDS
services
program
out
the
health
trust
I've
been
with
the
agency
for
nearly
five
years
now,
and
working
in
HIV
prevention
and
care
for
nearly
20
and
I
have
seen
firsthand
over
and
over
the
issues
that
not
only
living
with
HIV
having
a
chronic
health
condition
caused
for
some
of
our
most
vulnerable
community
members,
but
also
the
ever
increasing
cost
of
living,
especially
here
in
the
city
of
San
Jose
in
Santa
Clara
County.
C
This
grant
award
is
truly
crucial
for
services
here
in
the
community
to
support
those
vulnerable
community
members
and
sustain
housing
for
individuals
who
may
be
disabled
or
on
fixed
income
and
unable
to
afford
the
cost
of
living.
Here
in
the
city,
we
currently
have
approximately
fifteen
to
sixteen
hundred
individuals
living
with
HIV,
who
are
eligible
for
Ryan
White
services,
which
means
they
have
an
income
and
annual
income
of
five
hundred
percent
of
the
federal
poverty
line
or
below,
which
is
only
about
sixty
to
sixty
three
thousand
dollars
a
year.
C
If
any
of
you
who've
ever
tried
to
live
in
this
city.
On
that
amount
alone,
it's
really
challenging,
and
this
sustained
funding
going
forward
will
allow
us
to
not
only
support
permanent
supportive
housing
for
over
a
dozen
households,
but
we
will
also
be
able
to
provide
supportive
services
by
way
of
medical
case
management
support
for
we
estimate
about
sixty
to
sixty-five
individuals
over
a
three-year
period.
K
You
very
much
thank
you
for
your
work,
all
right.
Returning
to
Council
in
response
to
mr.
Soto's
concern
that
we
had
actually
taken
seven
months
to
negotiate
the
construction
of
a
tiny
home
site
and
the
Caltrans
land.
We
were
I,
think
the
I
think
because
we
were
the
pioneers.
We
were
the
ones
that
took
the
most
time
doing
it.
Unfortunately,
the
governor
wasn't
happy
to
hear
how
long
it
took,
but
we
have
finally
secured
that
lease
and
we
are
under
I
believe
underway
under
construction
on
that
site
and
we're
looking
at
others
as
well.
D
Thank
you.
I
really
appreciate
this
coming
before
council
and
the
work
of
the
Health
Trust
in
administering
these
funds.
This
is
a
decrease
over
funds
from
our
previous
grant.
So
it
appears
that
we're
able
to
assist
less
people
so
I'm
curious,
but
the
need
is
greater
than
that.
So
how
do
we
identify
the
individuals
who
benefit
from
the
services
and
from
the
household
rent
assistance?
How
do
how
are
they
selected?
How
are
they
notified?
How
do
we
become
aware
of
them?
D
E
E
E
D
E
D
O
Hello,
you
will
be
deferring
an
item
today
on
a
sale
transfer
upon
land
in
the
bay
tidal
areas
to
valley
water
for
a
levee
construction
project.
It
is
a
project
that
will
work
or
with
the
city
of
Santa
Clara,
with
now
official
problems
of
sea
level
rise
along
the
bay
at
this
time,
including
along
the
101
in
880
interchange.
I,
am
curious
if
this
project
will
have
any
relationship
to
the
measure
be
green
sustainability,
funding
needed
for
the
North
San
Jose
highway,
interchange,
project,
provincial
higher
income
housing
in
this
area.
O
All
of
these
projects
need
a
good
relationship
with
the
city
of
Santa
Clara.
At
this
time.
With
all
of
this
in
mind,
it
would
simple.
I
would
like
to
simply
note
and
for
people
to
be
aware
at
this
time,
at
the
upcoming
VTA
administration
and
Finance
ANF
meeting
this
Thursday
March
5th
at
4
p.m.
there
is
an
item
that
may
want
to
examine
and
expand
the
requirements
for
supermajority
voting
when
it
will
be
in
the
affirmative.
Green
says
till
sustainability
measures
a
and
B
were
used.
As
voting
examples,
I
find
this
VTA
item.
O
This
Thursday
is
language
and
its
possible
intentions
unsettling
to
conclude,
to
quote
the
words
of
John
Lennon
and
Yoko
Ono
wars
over.
If
you
want
it,
I
think
we
have
mellowed
our
thinking
a
lot
since
2001,
considering
how
we
used
to
talk
about
terrorism
and
national
security
priorities
in
the
public
space,
and
please
consider
how
we
used
to
talk
about
terrorism
and
and
national
security
priorities
in
the
public
space.
O
As
recently
as
2014
I
apologize
to
our
community
can
realize
here
in
2020,
we
have
been
practicing
together
for
years
now:
good
human
rights
and
civil
rights
practices
and
guidelines.
They
are
ideas
and
how
we
can
all
better
work
together
and
more
open,
trusting
and
friendly
terms
towards
care,
peace
and
better
reasoning,
good
luck
to
everyone
of
San,
Jose
and
Santa,
Clara
County
in
2020,
and
and
how
we
can
work
together
toward
these
good
ideas
and
practices
in
2020.
Thank
you.
Thank
you.
Q
Paul
Soto
from
the
horseshoe
I
went
to
the
Planning
Commission
and
I
discovered
that
four
people
out
of
seven
are
on
the
Planning
Commission
from
district
6
I
mean
that's
just
I
mean
that
I'm
not
gonna
participate
in
this
masquerade
or
in
this
charade
I
mean
that's,
that's
just
foul.
You
know
and
there's
a
there's,
a
historical
context
for
that,
and
what
I'm
saying
is
that
the
redlining
policies
we
all
agreed
has
happened.
It's
accumulated
wealth
in
Willow
Glen,
specifically
Willow
Glen
district
6.
Q
Now
the
people
that
now
have
power
or
exercising
that
power
within
that
Planning
Commission,
that
advises
the
council
and
in
this
I,
mean
to
sit
there
and
look
at
me
and
tell
me
well
what
you're
seeing
is
not
really
what
you're
seeing
I
mean
ain't.
Nobody
David
Copperfield
on
this
on
this
Council,
you
know
you're,
not
creating
any
illusions:
I
see
what
I
see
and
I
know
what
I
know
and
I'm
not
gonna,
be
conned
into
thinking
anything
different.
Q
When
I
asked
you
a
mere
la
carte
Oh
at
connection
regarding
whether
or
not
you
agreed
that
the
redlining
policies
that
happen
in
the
end
is
that
that
are
associated
with
it,
whether
or
not
that
is
a
fact
that
it
was
true
that
it
happened
in
this
city.
You
agree
and
rightfully
so.
These
are
objective
facts,
but
when
you're
stacking,
the
deck
with
four
members
on
that
Planning
Commission
and
one
of
them
is
Oliverio,
they
kind
of
the
kind
of
power
that
he
can
exert.
Q
The
kind
of
influence
that
he
has
accumulated
throughout
his
tenure
here
is
being
exerted
there
and
that's,
not.
Okay,
that's
not
acceptable
man,
but
there's
too
many
of
my
homeboys
in
the
creek
right
now
that
were
deprived
of
the
ability
to
inherit
ancestral
wealth
because
of
those
kinds
of
policies.
E
So
I,
my
name
is
Nicholas
Robinson
and
I
am
here
and
I'm
deeply
concerned
in
regards
to
your
guys's
assault
investigation
unit
with
the
San
Jose
Police
Department
January
3rd
28th
this
year,
ez8
motel,
which
I
believe
Hoffa
gifts
on
1st
Street
next
to
the
great
station,
which
I
believe
is
in
councilmember
Wallace's
district
I
was
a
victim
on
victim
of
assault
and
I
do
believe
it
was
after
business
hours
or
normal
business
hours.
I
wait
until
Monday
to
call
and
follow
up
and
find
out
where
who
is
assigned.
E
The
investigation
I
find
out
that
it
was
closed
out
due
to
lack
of
resources.
I
go
to
the
DA's
office
and
the
very
next
day
find
out
that
it
was
closed
out
due
to
lack
of
evidence.
I
hear
three
different
things
from
three
different
people,
one
on
one
of
them
being
the
ipas
office.
I
do
believe
that
there
is
extreme
bias
involved
and
they
do
not
see
me
as
a
victim.
They
see
me
as
more
as
a
suspect
and
I.
Don't
feel
that
that
is
fair.
Yes,
there
is
current.
E
You
know,
perpetrator,
suspect
on,
however
I'm,
not
that's
not
what
I'm
talking
about
I'm
talking
about
the
when
I
was
a
victim
and
I
feel
that
this
is
extreme
than
justice.
I
feel
like
I'm,
not
even
get
the
justice
that
I
deserve,
and
I
am
now
forced
or
I
feel,
like
I'm
forced
to
have
to
hire
and
retain
an
attorney
for
an
issue
that
I
shouldn't
have
to,
and
I
would
appreciate
you
guys.
You
know
looking
into
this
and
you
know
talking
with
them
and
and
in
regards
to
this.
This
is
ridiculous.
Thank
you.
E
K
K
E
Good
afternoon,
council
members,
my
name
is
Tom
Skinner
and
with
me
today
is
dar
ends,
and
we
know
that
the
enforcement
of
the
minimum
wage
policy
in
San
Jose
is
important
to
the
council
and
it's
one
of
the
top
priorities
this
year
and
we
have
a
story
about
a
minimum
wage
complaint
that
was
filed
on
Miss
enza's
behalf
in
January
of
2019,
from
April
1st
2015
to
January
15th
of
this
year.
This
ends
worked
as
a
property
manager.
A
few
blocks
away
from
here
at
metro,
walk
apartments,
which
is
right
next
to
a
meals.
E
Restaurant
on
2nd,
between
William
and
read
in
additionally.
Miss
ends
worked
for
the
owner
of
that
property,
cleaning
other
properties
that
he
owns
in
San
Jose.
This
ends
was
not
paid
for
her
labor
for
the
first
two
years
of
her
employment
and
beginning
in
November
2017.
She
was
compensated
under
the
table
for
about
$400
per
month,
which
was
far
less
than
the
amount
of
hours
that
she
worked.
Now
a
complaint
was
submitted
to
the
office
of
a
quality
assurance
in
January
2019
Oh,
a
tried
left,
a
voicemail
with
the
owner
on
February
24th
2019.
E
No
response
oay,
then
left
and
the
owner's
name
is
Mike
Bauer.
The
OEA
then
left
another
voicemail
on
March
5th
2019,
no
response
on
July
24th
Oh
AAA
sent
a
letter
to
the
owner
requesting
for
requesting
employment
and
payroll
records,
no
response
on
September
16th,
2019
Oh
a
a
again
requested
employment
and
payroll
records
from
the
employer.
No
response
now
the
employer
is,
has
terminated,
miss
enza's
employment
and
is
now
seeking
to
a
victor
while
continuing
to
Stonewall
oh
yeas
investigation.
This
is
wrong.
E
I
have
called
Oh
a
many
times,
trying
to
plead
with
them
for
an
enforcement
action.
Additionally,
I
have
called
the
City
Attorney's
Office
many
times,
pleading
with
the
City
Attorney's
Office
for
an
injunction
against
the
eviction.
Unfortunately,
City
Hall
has
abandoned
missense.
So
we
are.
This
is
one
of
our
last
options
here
to
plead
with
the
council
sir-sir
right.
K
I
K
R
Thank
you.
Everyone
Scott
Largent
had
a
little
problem
where
I
was
living
at
so
rather
than
having
a
confrontation
or
anything
or
even
police
presence.
I
kind
of
couch
served
for
the
last
nine
or
ten
days,
I'm
getting
my
stuff
on
Friday
kind
of
kind
of
homeless
in
a
way
for
a
short
period
of
time,
so
kind
of
working
things
out
stated
to
buddy's
place
and
then,
since
I
was
down
here,
I
went
ahead.
Robert
Aguirre
said
why?
R
Don't
you
go
over
and
stay
at
Grace
Baptist,
so
I
went
over
there
and
stayed
at
the
shelter
now
before
when
I
was
homeless,
it
was
motor
home
or
encampment.
So
it's
kind
of
in
the
first
experience,
I
I,
think
race
is
a
nice
place
to
stay
out
there.
I
just
do
think
they
need
more
resources.
I
know
where
I
think
we
talked
about
doing
a
homeless
navigation
center
there,
which
is
great
my
concern
there.
R
Those
are
the
people
that
are
trying
to
get
out
of
their
situations:
okay,
they're,
not
the
extreme,
extremely
mentally
ill
or
the
meth
addicts
that
I
talk
about
all
the
time.
They're,
really
not
at
these
shelters.
They're
really
not
down
at
the
overnight
warming
locations.
They
are
kind
of
centralized
right
here
in
the
downtown
area.
Okay
and
they're,
the
ones
that
are
just
wrecking
San,
Jose
they're,
destroying
right
here
I
have
a
two
terabyte
hard
drive
of
all
these
people
that
have
been
doing
this.
R
Okay,
these
are
the
ones
that
are
not
going
to
court
they're
not
going
to
their
appointments.
They're
not
on
GA
they're,
not
on
assistants,
and
the
bizarre
stuff
that
they
are
doing
is
absolutely
shocking
and
I've
only
put
up
about
5%
of
that
online.
Some
of
the
stuff
I
just
don't
even
want
to
put
up
there.
It's
so
bad,
there's
a
gentleman
over
there.
He
thought
his
testicles
were
on
fire
and
they
were
evil
and
he
wanted
to
tear
them
off,
and
then
he
takes
his
hand
and
he
starts
putting
it
it.
R
You
know
it
was
just
shocking
and
then
he's
putting
this
all
over
the
telephone
pole,
and
then
he
goes
into
Starbucks
and
spreads.
It
I
mean
it
was
just
shocking
and
and
this
morning
I
made
another
video
I
just
can't
now
it's
overwhelming
I
can't
keep
up
with
it.
I,
don't
even
have
the
storage
space
for
any
of
this
stuff
anymore.
It's
shocking
and
you're
not
trying
to
wrap
these
people
out.