►
From YouTube: APR 5, 2022 | City Council
Description
City of San José, California
City Council of April 5, 2022
Pre-meeting citizen input on Agenda via eComment at https://sanjose.granicusideas.com/meetings.
This public meeting will be held at San José City Hall and also accessible via Zoom Webinar. For information on public participation via Zoom, please refer to the linked meeting agenda below.
Agenda https://sanjose.legistar.com/View.ashx?M=A&ID=952967&GUID=3D8E31F2-56F2-4D95-A48F-A96776B0D0BA
A
A
A
A
B
B
B
C
B
All
right
thanks
everybody
for
joining,
and
I
know
we
have
several
colleagues
who
need
to
be
home
for,
for
various
reasons
having
to
do
with
family
and
health.
We're
asking
everyone,
obviously,
with
the
exceptions
made
for
bathroom
breaks
and
obvious
needs
to
deal
with
the
with
small
ones
in
the
home.
If
we
could
all
just
sort
of
keep
our
cameras
on,
I
know
they're
members
of
the
public
who
would
like
to
be
able
to
see
that
we're
still
with
them.
So
we
appreciate
that
from
my
colleagues.
A
Yes,
thank
you
so
much
it's
exciting
to
welcome
our
berryessa
school
district
family
from
morel
middle
school
here
today
for
a
little
musical
interlude
and
also
to
acknowledge
the
great
work
that
that
school's,
been
doing.
The
morel
middle
school
has
often
been
seen
as
a
little
bit
underperforming
school
in
our
district,
but
just
last
year
we
were
so
excited
that
morel
middle
school
was
one
of
three
middle
schools
in
santa
clara
county
named
a
distinguished
school.
So
we
were
very
honored
about
that.
A
I
was
able
to
present
them
with
accommodation
from
the
council
office
last
month
at
a
school
board
meeting
and
now
I'm
excited
to
have
them
here
to
present
their
music
department.
The
berryessa
school
district
has
taken
the
music
program
very,
very
seriously
and
never
cut
the
program,
while
many
other
school
districts
around
the
county
and
state
have
done
so
so.
A
Music
starts
in
third
grade
in
berryessa
and,
as
a
result,
our
middle
school
music
program
is
is
quite
advanced
as
you'll
see,
and
I'm
excited
about
the
video
that
they've
put
together
to
show
their
performance
we're
here.
Today
we
have
the
superintendent,
dr
roxanne
fuentes
and
principal
of
merle
middle
school,
mr
carroll,
who
will
just
give
a
brief
introduction
of
our
performance.
E
All
right
well,
thank
you
very
much
for
having
us
this
afternoon.
E
It's
a
pleasure
to
be
here
and
to
represent
marine
middle
school
and
the
berries
union
school
district,
our
band
orchestra
and
choir
is
exceptional,
and
one
of
the
the
positives
that
have
come
out
of
distance
learning
is
that
we
have
collaborated
our
instrumental
and
our
choir
program,
and
so
what
you'll
see
today
is
one
of
those
collaborations
I'd
like
to
thank
our
hard-working
students
for
putting
today's
video
together
and
then
also
our
teachers,
mr
rydeen,
and
miss
nguyen
for
all
their
dedication
to
our
students
as
well.
So
please
enjoy.
A
A
A
A
A
B
Thank
you
both
for
all
that
you
do
for
our
kids
and
I
hope
you
report
back
to
standing
ovation
better
than
kermit
coming
from
the
morrow
middle
school
orchestra,
all
right.
We
we
have
a
few
commendations
to
present,
so
I'm
going
to
first
ask
our
environmental
services
department
and
integrated
waste
management
staff.
You
know
valerie
osmond,
I
believe,
is
here
with
a
whole
lot
of
team
members.
B
B
B
All
right,
so
why
are
we
all
here?
You
might
ask.
Well
we're
going
to
be
celebrating
earth
day
in
just
a
few
days
here
on
april
22nd,
I
believe
it's
the
52nd
earth
day.
My
math
is
right
and
earth
month,
of
course,
is
april,
and
it's
not
about
getting
everybody
to
drive
a
tesla,
though
I'm
sure
we'd
all
be
happy
to
to
do
so,
and
I'm
happy
to
upgrade
my
chevy
volt
anytime.
Anybody
wants
to
give
me
a
set
of
keys,
but
actually
it's
a
lot
harder
work
than
that.
B
Their
teams
are
doing
this
every
single
day
in
our
community,
along
with
partnership
with
city
staff,
and
we
at
city
san
jose
are
proud
to
have
a
diversion
of
74
of
our
waste
from
the
landfill.
That
means
that's
what
we
are
recycling
and
soon
we
hope
to
be
composting
right
on
its
way.
We're
doing
some
we're
doing
some
composting
now,
but
that's
gonna
be
much
more
universal
in
just
a
matter
of
months
and
there's
a
very
big
transition
underway.
This
is
an
enormous
effort.
B
You
probably
noticed
there
was
no
interruption
in
service
through
a
pandemic
that
interrupted
a
lot
of
things
in
our
lives.
In
fact,
I
don't
know
anybody.
It
didn't
have
something
severely
interrupted,
but
every
week
that
waste
in
recycling
got
picked
up
and
we
are
grateful
for
the
very
hardened
work
and
the
dedication
of
all
the
folks
behind
me
now,
I
I
wanted
to
first
just
identify
a
few
of
the
city
staff
who
are
are
involved
in
this
effort
on
a
daily
basis:
jeff
anderson,
alana
lowry,
donna,
thurman,
peggy,
horning,
prob
jack
power.
B
Forgive
me
if
I
just
mispronounced
your
last
name,
probably
did
I
get
it
close,
all
right,
I'm
getting
there:
okay,
junko,
roman
alyssa,
rice,
wilson,
emmy,
mendoza,
jerry,
nelson
anthony
guerra
and
lindy
stankoff
and,
of
course,
a
whole
lot
of
folks
who
work
for
four
great
companies
who
are
serving
us
every
day,
and
so
we
have
individual
accommodations
for
each
of
the
companies
that
are
on
their
way
and
so
we'll
be
getting
those
to
each
of
you.
D
Thank
you
so
much
mayor.
Yes,
I
just
want
to
reiterate
what
mayor
has
already
said.
We
are
so
proud
to
be
working
with
these
great
partners
that
he
mentioned,
and
also
I'm
proud
of
our
city
team
that
has
kept
service
uninterrupted
during
a
time
when
things
have
been
very
unpredictable
and
not
always
very
reliable.
D
We
have
had
very
dependable
service
and
seen
some
great
partnerships
form
out
of
this
these
last
couple
of
years.
So
thank
you
so
much
to
everybody.
I
am
also
very
I'm
happy
to
share
that.
We
are
composting,
so
we
are
already
collecting
in
the
garbage
system
we're
pulling
out
those
food
waste
and
organics
and
and
composting
those
so
really
great
program,
and
thank
you
to
all
of
you.
B
B
C
C
A
commendation
to
russ
danielson
russ,
if
you're
here,
I
think
you
have
a
few-
you
folks
give
them
applause
now
and
applause
after
so
and
russ.
I
know
you're
here
with
victoria
corey
and
brenda.
They
can
certainly
come
down
as
well.
They
want
to
come
down
yeah.
You
can
come
down
now,
yeah.
C
C
Russ
danielson
is
a
long-time
district
2
resident
who
has
spent
the
last
few
years,
cleaning
up
monterey
road
and
if
you've
been
watching
any
of
these
meetings,
you
know
that
cleaning
up
monterey
road
and
really
making
it
the
gateway
to
san
jose
has
really
been
one
of
my
priorities.
Since
I've
been
in
office
now,
russ
was
introduced
to
our
office
back
in
2017
when
he
contacted
us
via
snail
mail.
C
C
C
If
you
can
imagine
that
ross
and
his
dedicated
team
have
picked
up
12
tons
of
garbage
12
tons
of
garbage,
if
you
can
believe
that
half
ton
of
recyclables
and
logged
over
765
volunteer
hours
over
765,
volunteer
hours,
russ
has
shown
exceptional
effort,
leading
by
example,
to
keep
our
city
beautiful
and
cared
for
and
for
his
selfless
dedication
of
the
clean,
safe
san
jose.
We
present
this
commendation
to
russ
danielson
who's
here
today.
Share
a
few
words.
Give
him
a
round
of
applause.
A
Thank
you
very
much
councilman
jimenez,
mayor
locato
and
the
entire
city
council.
I'll
just
cover
just
a
couple
things
that
they
didn't
cover.
We
call
ourselves
concerned
citizens.
Initially,
we
thought
we'd,
maybe
have
a
cool
name
like
titans
of
trash
or
guardians
of
the
garbage
galaxy.
A
Well,
we
thought
we'd
act
a
little
bit
more
mature,
so
we
we
chose
that
because
we
are
indeed
concerned
citizens
proud
to
have
my
wife,
brenda
danielson
here,
corey
leblanc
and
her
sister
victoria
bartz,
both
hard-working
faithful
volunteers
as
they
said,
recovered.
We
go
10
miles
south
and
then
we
come
10
miles
back
takes
about
a
year
to
do
it.
A
A
How
does
it
get
there?
Well
junk
falls
off
trucks
thrown
out
windows,
people
dump
at
night,
that's
probably
our
biggest
thing,
and
certainly
there's
some
homeless
items
too.
As
I
said,
there's
nothing
old.
Now
we
picked
all
that
up,
but
unfortunately,
trash
is
still
arriving
daily,
so
we're
still
at
it.
We
work
the
first
wednesday
and
third
saturday
of
each
month,
we'll
continue
to
go
out
there
to
keep
our
community
a
little
bit
cleaner.
Thank
you.
B
B
Thank
you
for
all
that
you
do
russ
all
right.
Councilmember
foley
is
going
to
join
me
in
just
a
moment
because
we
are
going
to
honor
mike
and
susan
hennessey.
Oh
there.
G
G
G
G
They
are
district
9
residents
and
I
am,
I
am
proud
to
call
them.
District
9
residents
and
residents
of
the
city
of
san
jose
mike
hennessey,
has
been
the
custom,
car,
restoration
and
auto
repair
business
for
over
35
years.
Mike's
successes
in
the
industry
have
yielded
several
prestigious
automotive
awards
to
include
winner
of
seven
top
awards,
including
emmy
awards
for
his
car
guy
channel
and
media
publications.
G
At
this
event,
mike
and
susan
recognize
community
heroes,
in
addition,
bring
together
the
valley's
car
enthusiasts
and
their
vehicles
to
the
airport
for
a
car
show,
along
with
other
various
entertainment
and
activities,
proceeds
from
that
event
are
used
to
improve
lives
through
donations
to
food
bank
banks
like
the
second
harvest,
food
bank
and
other
charitable
organizations,
and
that's
continuing
again
this
year
together.
This
incredible
husband
and
wife
duo
have
continued
to
look
for
ways
to
support
those
who
served
our
community.
G
Our
veterans,
in
collaboration
with
the
united
veterans
council
of
santa
clara
county
mike
and
susan
developed
scripted
and
produced
both
the
memorial
day
and
veterans
day.
Events
during
the
pandemic
years,
these
important
virtual
events
allowed
our
veterans
to
continue
to
be
remembered
and
recognized
during
a
time
when
gathering
in
large
numbers
could
have
serious
consequences.
G
I'm
humbled
to
have
this
opportunity
to
honor
mike
and
susan
hennessey
for
their
service
to
our
community,
whether
they're
leading
food
and
toy
drives
or
supporting
numerous
community
charitable
charitable
organizations
such
as
second
harvest
food
bank,
toys
for
tots,
ronald
mcdonald
house
or
the
lord's
pantry
mike
and
susan
hennessy's
generosity
are
a
true
reflection
of
their
strength
and
character.
Their
love
of
country,
duty
and
service
to
all
our
fellow
man,
and
before
I
introduce
you,
we
have
a
special
guest
online
mark.
Ibanez
is
here
to
say
a
few
words
mark
you.
There.
B
C
Good,
I
was
never
a
technological
genius
I'll
tell
you
that
hey,
I
just
wanted
to
say
real
quick.
I
have
the
honor
of
being
the
emcee
at
the
veterans
parade
this
past
fall
and
I
met
mike
one
time
and
he
stood
out
to
me
so
boldly
as
a
take
charge.
Guy
life
of
the
party
he
made
me
feel
comfortable
right
away,
meeting
a
lot
of
new
people,
and
I
could
tell
right
off
the
bat
that
he
was
one
to
not
sit
around.
He
made
things
happen.
C
He
makes
things
happen
in
your
community
and
I'm
just
honored
that
he
would
even
think
of
me
to
to
be
on
and
mike
and
susan.
You
are
one
heck
of
a
one,
two
punch,
and
I
appreciate
you
and
I
hope
to
see
it
next
year's
parade
and
keep
on
rocking,
because
everybody
in
that
community
down.
There
feels
your
presence
and
it's
invaluable
you're
one
in
a
million
you
and
your
dynamic
wife.
Thank
you
for
having
me.
I
appreciate
you
from
the
bottom
of
my
heart.
C
I
don't
really
know
what
to
say,
I
think
marquis
bonnie
has
stole
the
show
ray
watts
and
myself.
We
took
all
the
work
to
get
him
to
come
to
do
the
parade
and
the
only
thing
I'm
disappointed
on
the
garbage
people
there's
more
of
them
than
some
of
my
guests.
So
I
gotta
get
a
bigger
email.
I
I
get
set
out,
I
say
adele,
I
see
you
o'neill.
I
see
everybody
dan
mounts
here.
C
C
This
is
not
a
money
thing
with
susan
and
I,
and
I
don't
think
anybody
else
looks
at
it.
That
way.
I
always
felt
if
everybody
it's
hard
to
say
this.
If
everybody
gave
a
dollar
a
month
into
some
program,
I
don't
know
what
it
is.
We
got
a
lot
of
people
out
here
and
it
adds
up
so
much.
C
I
thought
about
running
for
office,
one
time
and
I
kind
of
said,
I'm
not
afraid
to
run
I'm
afraid
to
win,
and
you
know-
and
you
know
politics
these
folks
work
hard.
Not
everybody's
gonna
agree
with
them
all
the
time,
but
you
know
they
have
they're
working
hard
and
I
hope
people
respect
it.
Sometimes
it
could
be
like
two
fleas
arguing
who
owns
the
dog.
C
You
know
and
I
feel
sorry
for
some
of
the
ways
you
go
through,
but
they
work
real
hard
and
I
want
to
thank
them
for
what
they've
done
for
susan
and
I-
and
I
can't
do
events
without
their
permission-
keep
this
in
mind.
So
I
still
want
to
be
on
the
good
side
of
things
and
we
get
general
hill
house.
I
know
is
out
here
and
he's
kind
of
one
of
the
stars
of
a
lot
of
shows.
C
We
do
we
get
hugh
o'neal,
of
course,
and
a
lot
of
I
hope
I
know
I'm
not
going
to
catch
everybody's
name,
and
I
can't
do
nothing
without
my
wife,
susan
and
I
came
into
a
little
medical
issue
recently
and
and
I'm
going
through
the
chemo
stuff
and
I
got
ray
watts's
hair
cut.
C
I
only
that's
the
reason
I
wore
a
hat,
so
I
don't
mean
to
be
disrespectful
at
all,
but
I'm
going
to
beat
the
hell
out
of
this
thing
like
nobody's
business
and
seeing
mark
you
bonnie's,
I
mean
you,
don't
get
that
every
day
mayor
you,
you
don't
get
that
every
day
you
get
other
things
but
we're
getting
mark.
You
bought
us
to
give
us
a
call.
I
was
kind
of
neat
but
I'll
be
up
here
all
day.
So
thank
you
very
much
for
the
award
and
susan.
Do
you
want.
D
J
D
C
C
B
All
right
we're
on
the
orders
of
the
days.
Anyone
on
the
council
have
any
changes
to
the
printed
agenda
and
tony
I'm
not
yep
up
on
my
screen.
So
if
you
could
tell
me
if
you
see
any
raised
hands,
I
appreciate
it.
B
Okay,
all
right,
I
don't
see
any
changes
suggested
by
any
indications
on
the
diocese,
so
we'll
move
forward
then
to
the
closed
session
report,
nora.
D
B
Right:
okay,
we're
on
to
the
on
the
consent
calendar.
Are
there
any
items
that
the
council
would
like
to
pull
from
consent.
B
Other
items,
tony:
are
you
able
to
see
any
hints.
B
Okay,
let's
go
to
212
now
and
for
folks
who
are
following
along
at
home.
2.12
is
the
the
2021
collaborative
approaches
towards
preventing
and
addressing
hate
demonstration
projects.
K
You
thank
you
mayor,
so
I
I
just
wanted
to
comment
on
this.
I
think
we
have
the
time
today
where
I
wanted
to
pull
it
and
highlight
this
issue.
I
wanted
to
thank
sjpd
for
really
prioritizing
this
work
and
thank
the
city,
other
city
staff
that
have
really
prioritized
hate
crimes,
increasing
public
safety,
increasing
education
to
identify
and
report
hate
crimes,
as
well
as
support
the
investigation
and
prosecution
of
these
cases.
K
The
da's
office
has
also
participated
in.
I
think
this
is
really
important.
Work
and
our
office
of
racial
equality
produces
the
books
as
well,
and
I
just
wanted
to
mention
that
the
santa
clara
county,
hate
crime
prevention
and
inclusion
task
force
will
be
making
some
recommendations
as
well
on
how
to
how
to
really
again
improve
our
education
so
that
the
public
can
identify
it
and
report
it,
because
so
much
of
hate
incidents
and
even
hate
crimes.
B
Okay-
and
there
was
a
second
from
councilman
davis-
okay,
all
right
any
comments.
Let's
go
to
public
comment.
First,.
B
Okay
and
none
from
my
colleagues
let's
vote
then
yes.
A
D
A
D
B
Great.
Thank
you
all
right
on
to
10.1,
which
is
land
use,
consent,
calendar.
D
D
L
K
B
M
M
At
times,
it
seems
that
words
are
not
enough
to
capture
what
we
have
endured
as
a
community.
We
produced
a
video
that
I
would
like
to
share
to
show
the
tremendous
work
that
our
employees
and
partners
provided
throughout
the
pandemic
and
continue
to
do
so
today.
So
if
we
can
queue
up
the
video
I'd
love
to
show
that
to
everybody.
C
C
M
B
Yeah,
I
just
wanted
to
say
a
very,
very
big
thank
you
to
the
entire
city
team
and
I
say
team
because
I
know
it
was
often
members
of
our
of
our
city
workforce
that
were
doing
the
work
in
the
heavy
lifting
and
sometimes
it
was
partners
and
we
were
providing
the
connective
tissue
or
the
the
organizing,
but
there's
so
much
work.
B
That
has
been
done,
and
I
know
we've
got
a
very
tired
workforce
right
now,
folks
have
been
through
a
lot
and
they've
really
carried
an
incredible
burden,
but
I
do
want
to
just
very
briefly
summarize
a
few
of
the
highlights,
as
I
think
we
recognize
what
we've
been
through
together.
Certainly,
it
has
been
an
incredibly
trying
time
for
our
community,
but
there's
much
to
celebrate
through
this
adversity.
B
We
worked
through
a
coalition
of
nonprofits
and
schools
and
school
districts
delivered
more
than
228
meals,
countywide
over
two
years
to
our
most
vulnerable
members
of
the
community.
We
hosted
dozens
of
vaccination
sites
and
mobile
vaccination
clinics.
I
think
you
saw
some
firefighters
in
action
on
that
video
and
partnership
with
40
care
providers.
B
We
were
the
first
city
united
states
to
announce
an
eviction,
more
poor
moratorium
to
protect
struggling
families,
and
we
collectively
raised
more
than
30
million
dollars
for
rent
relief
in
the
early
months
of
the
pandemic
and
combined
that
with
many
more
millions
of
federal
funds
and
state
dollars
and
set
up
two
rental
assistance.
Centers
with
community
partners
helping
more
than
12
881
households
stay
in
their
homes.
B
That's
a
lot
of
families
that
struggled
and
needed
that
rental
assistance
used
a
lot
of
combinations
of
corporate
donations
and
federal
grants,
distribute
funds
to
small
businesses
nearly
500,
I
think
499
exactly
all
are
owned
by
lower
modest
income,
individuals
in
our
city
and
families
and
we
kept
their
help.
Keep
those
businesses
going
in
addition
to
the
alfresco
and
abierto
efforts,
which
we
partnered
with
many
local
restaurants
and
cafes
and
arts
organizations
to
bring
commerce
and
creativity
out
to
our
sidewalks
and
parking
lots
and
parks,
and
in
20
in
august
of
2020.
B
There's
a
lot
of
work.
Holy
mackerel
august
of
2020.
We
launched
san
jose
access
and
a
city-wide
initiative
that
it
really
accelerated
our
our
efforts
to
overcome
the
digital
divide
and
within
a
year
we
had
connected
more
than
100
000
residents
through
the
development
of
community,
wi-fi
and
distribution
of
devices
led
by
our
library
team.
Putting
us
on
track
to
connect
more
than
300
000
residents
by
the
end
of
this
year.
B
In
case
you're
wondering
that's
equivalent
to
the
city,
the
sizes,
st
louis
or
pittsburgh,
and
then
we
launched
finally
a
resilience
score
using
some
federal
money
and
that
has
engaged
nearly
500
young
adults
in
our
community,
helping
to
support
our
city
and
our
community
through
these
tough
times
and
really
proud
of
those
young
people
and
all
they're
doing
in
food
distribution
and
helping
to
address
learning
loss
and
so
many
other
ways.
So
I
just
wanted
to
summarize
with
a
very
lengthy
thank
you
for
your
patience
with
my
the
length
of
this
description.
M
I
really
want
to
send
a
huge
thank
you
out
to
the
department
of
parks,
recreation,
neighborhood
services,
effectively
known
as
prns,
and
the
city
managers,
emergency
public
information
office
for
capturing
the
essence
through
this
video
of
the
astonishing
strength
and
fortitude
put
forth
by
san
jose
employees
and
our
community
during
the
pandemic,
in
particular,
I'd
like
to
thank
daniel
lazzo,
public
information
manager
for
prns
john,
a
mayan,
videographer
and
recreation
leader
for
prns,
elizabeth
castro,
public
information
representative
for
prns
and
demetria
masado,
our
emergency
public
information
manager
for
covid
response
and
recovery,
and,
most
importantly,
I
want
to
thank
you
all
of
our
dedicated
city
employees
to
continue
to
provide
much
needed
resources
and
services
to
the
community
while
also
delivering
our
daily
civic
services,
I'm
so
proud,
honored
and
humbled
to
be
among
our
compassionate
workforce,
who
go
above
and
beyond,
to
serve
our
extraordinary
community
every
day.
K
K
When
the
two-year
anniversary
came,
it
was
a
really
reflective
time
because
we've
been
through
so
much
the
past
two
years
and
I'm
really
proud
of
our
city,
I'm
proud
of
our
city
staff,
I'm
proud
of
our
residents,
I'm
proud
of
our
partners,
because
we
stepped
up
and
looked
out
for
each
other
at
some
really
scary,
scary
times,
winston
churchill
says
we
make
a
living
by
what
we
get,
but
we
make
a
life
by
what
we
give
and
it's
the
people
of
the
city
that
gave
it
life
literally
and
figuratively
these
past
two
years
we
had
some
really
vulnerable
people,
a
lot
of
deaths,
a
lot
of
a
lot
of
fear,
a
lot
of
uncertainty,
the
fire
department
who
never
stopped
working,
went
to
people's
homes,
who
couldn't
come
to
vaccination
sites
pr
and
asks
well.
K
K
B
All
said,
thank
you
guys.
Remember
all
right,
colleagues
like
to
offer
comments
all
right.
Let's,
let's
move
forward
then
item
3.3
is
the
urgency
ordinance
repealing
chapter
9.61
of
title
ix
of
the
san
jose
municipal
code
regarding
base
coverings.
O
Hi
mayor,
there's
no
presentation
but
just
some
quick
framing
and
then.
O
It
back
to
you
so
good
afternoon,
honorable
mayor
council
members,
members
of
the
public
and
city
staff,
dolan
beckel,
director
of
the
office
of
civic
innovation,
here
to
briefly
frame
the
recommendation
to
adopt
an
urgency
ordinance
that
would
repeal
chapter
9.61
of
title
9
of
the
city's
muni
code
regarding
the
mandatory
wearing
of
face
coverings
during
the
covet
health
emergency,
so
sort
of
some
quick
framing
early
very
early
in
the
pandemic
june
2020,
the
city
of
san
jose
council
approved
ordinance
304-8,
which
required
the
wearing
of
face
coverings
for
all
individuals
in
the
city
of
san
jose
outside
of
their
residence,
in
order
to
help
reduce
the
spread
of
covet
19
and
mitigate
the
impact
on
the
public
and
the
delivery
of
our
critical
city
services.
O
San
jose
was
one
of
the
first
local
governments
in
act
such
a
requirement.
Later
in
the
pandemic
august
2021,
the
santa
clara
county
health
officer
issued
the
order
to
mandate
the
use
of
face
covering
indoors,
with
the
recent
transition
by
the
santa
clara
county
health
officer
from
a
mandate
to
a
strong
recommendation
to
wear
face
covering
indoors.
It
makes
sense
to
repeal
our
ordinance
to
align
with
the
county
and
state
and
federal
and
minimize
any
confusion
with
the
public.
O
B
A
G
B
F
D
F
B
G
B
All
right,
3.5
are
actions
related
to
approvals
needed
for
the
sale.
The
parking
lot
of
the
town
park
towers,
affordable
housing,
development.
B
There
is
no
presentation
I'll
move
approval
for
a
second
okay.
Second
councilman
applause,
any
comments,
all
right:
let's
go
to
the
public.
B
B
All
right,
I'm
not
seeing
my
colleagues
leap
to
their
to
their
their
hands.
So
are
there
any
comments
from
the
public
tony
nope?
Okay?
Is
there
a
motion.
K
A
hand
raised
this
is
on
four
point:
one
yeah.
K
Response
yeah
not
to
be
a
downer
or
slow
it
down,
but
I
just
had
a
question
I
I
know
that
the
so
the
grant
pays
for
three
years
and
then
two
years
and
then
we,
the
city,
then
takes
on
the
maintenance.
I
just
wanted
to
ask
really
quickly.
Technology
changes
so
quickly
are,
is
oes
state
cal
oes?
Are
they
committed
to
this
technology
and
providing
support
for
if,
if
there
are
big
changes,
do
you
see
any
big
changes
coming
after
that.
C
Thank
you,
councilmember
ray
riordan
director
of
the
office
of
emergency
management,
excellent
question
this.
Actually,
the
delivery
of
this
unit
is
part
of
the
cal
oes
system
and
yes,
the
for
the
first
three
years.
The
upgrades
will
be
provided
and
then,
after
that,
the
ongoing
upgrades.
This
is
a
pretty
solid
piece
of
equipment.
A
C
B
All
right,
thank
you.
Okay,
let's
vote
then.
D
B
E
D
F
Yeah,
thank
you,
mayor
john
russo,
the
director
of
department
of
transportation
with
me
today
to
present
jessica,
zhang,
deputy
director
of
the
department,
ramses
media
division
manager
and
laura
stuccinsky,
the
main
author
and
project
manager,
just
a
little
bit
of
context
on
the
emerging
mobility
action
plan.
F
It's
one
of
a
series
of
planning
documents
that
we'll
be
bringing
towards
forward
to
city
council
over
the
next
couple
of
months,
all
of
which
are
intended
to
actually
get
us
closer
to
the
many
goals
that
are
outlined
either
in
the
general
plan,
the
climate,
smart
plan
or
equity
initiatives.
F
F
I
think
everybody
can
remember
five
years
ago
when
e-scooters
landed
on
our
streets
and
we
had
to
kind
of
retroactively
scramble
to
actually
put
in
place
permitting
regimen
for
both
safety
and
the
business
practices
to
make
sure
that
those
e-scooters
are
working.
So
one
of
the
main
objectives
is
actually
get
ahead
of
some
of
these
other
technologies
are
going
to
be
coming
our
way.
Another
really
important
element
of
what
we're
trying
to
do
is
actually
go
out
and
engage
the
community
in
a
very
deep
way
to
just
understand
what
some
of
the
concerns
are.
F
What
some
of
the
barriers
have
been
to
actually
access
these
kinds
of
technologies?
I
think
we
we
did
that
very
well.
We
had
a
lot
of
lessons
learned
which
we'll
talk
about
today,
so
we
want
to
use
those
lessons
as
we
craft
going
forward,
and
the
last
thing
really
is
to
build
this
plan
framework
so
that
we
can
use
those
lessons
learned
and
all
the
data
we
collected
to
actually
put
in
place,
implement
implementable
action
items
to
actually
get
ready
for
new
technologies
and
try
out
how
these
things
are
going
to
work.
F
The
the
plan
itself
will
be
used
by
us,
the
community,
the
technology
companies
that
will
be
deploying
many
of
these
and
then
also
for
the
funding
agencies
that,
hopefully,
will
come
through
with
funding
for
some
of
these
implementation
plans.
So
we'd
like
to
get
ready
for
presentation,
I
think
rams
is
ready
to
go.
E
Good
afternoon,
mayor
council
and
members
of
the
public,
francis
madu
division
manager
of
planning
policy,
sustainability,
department
of
transportation,
it's
a
new
quick
intro
john
said
most
of
what
I
was
going
to
say
so
we're
good.
E
This
plan
was
developed
on
the
backs
of
a
lot
of
experience
that
we've
been
gaining
in
dot
over
the
last
few
years
with
various
new
technologies,
scooters,
sidewalk,
delivery,
robots
av
pilots
and
not
only
the
techno,
the
technical
things
we've
learned
from
that,
but
also
what
it
means
to
interact
with
these
companies
when
they're
ready
to
work
with
us,
whether
when
they're
not
ready
to
work
with
us,
which
is
actually
most
of
the
time
and
and
yeah
bringing
a
lot
of
those
relationships
and
knowledge.
Those
processes
have
brought
in
here.
E
What
does
it
mean
to
really
look
at
transportation
from
the
perspective
of
those
who
have
not
been
served
by
the
transportation
services
in
the
past,
or
have
not
been
involved
in
planning
processes
in
the
past
right
and
coming
to
any
community?
And
talking
about
questions
like
what
do
we
do
with
emerging
mobility?
E
What
happens
is
the
larger
panacea
of
questions
around
the
topic?
Get
opened
up
right,
and
so
we
really
worked
with
a
very,
very
dedicated
group
in
our
equity
task
force,
to
dig
into
those
questions
and
bring
what
they
brought
to
the
table
to
this
report
and
not
only
to
this
report
but
to
our
further
processes.
We're
going
to
use
beyond
that
not
only
for
emerging
mobility,
but
actually
for
the
rest
of
our
transportation
planning,
and
that's
a
really
important
thing
to
highlight
here.
E
What's
coming
out
of
this
report,
new
processes
for
us
to
properly
deal
with
bringing
emerging
mobilities
to
our
city
now
equity
is
not
only
an
outcome.
It's
a
process
right
and
making
sure
that,
when
scooters
land
on
the
street
that
they
don't
only
serve
folks
who
have
suits
on
or
have
a
large
higher
incomes
is
really
important.
E
These
companies
will
survive
on
their
own
a
lot
of
cases
when
they're
only
focused
on
high
income
users
and
those
who
have
means
what's
our
role
as
a
city
within
that
marketplace.
That's
part
of
what
we're
trying
to
ask
in
this
plan
and
what
we've
hoped
to
have
brought
to
council
for
consideration,
and
the
last
thing
is
we
do
have
some
pilots
and
programs,
of
course,
that
we
are
recommending
as
pieces
that
we're
gonna
step
forward
with
laura
will
get
into
those.
Can
we
move
to
the
next
slide?
E
You
have
flicker
there
we
go
a
green
one.
There
we
go
not
working
yeah
there.
We
go
okay
and
just
a
really
quick
thing:
I'll
go
back
one
there
we
go.
Is
it
gonna
work
go
back
one.
So,
as
john
said
we're
coming
this
year.
Sorry,
the
back
clicker
is
not
working.
So
there
we
go,
got
it
nope
this
year,
we're
coming
to
council
with
a
a
a
strategic
set
of
transportation
planning
efforts,
including
the
move.
San
jose
plan,
which
is
our
was
formerly
called.
E
The
access
and
mobility
plan,
which
is
our
city-wide
strategy
set.
An
emerging
mobility
plan
is
a
one,
let's
say
chapter
of
that
overall
book
right
and
it
focuses
on
this
one
set
of
things
that
we're
looking
at,
which
is
these
new
types
of
technologies
and
business
models
that
are
coming
to
us
all
right.
These
other
types
of
transportation
plans
will
fit
within
the
umbrella
of
this
move
san
jose
soon,
and
with
that,
I'm
going
to
pass
it
off
to.
I
When
we
stay
immersive
mobility,
we
talk
about
a
wide
range
of
services
and
technologies
that
are
currently
available,
and
some
that
are
on
the
horizon,
such
as
ride
hailing
and
on-demand
shuttles
car
sharing,
scooter,
sharing
bike,
sharing
delivery,
drones
that
are
not
just
for
packages
for
also
potentially
for
people
robotic
car
sharing
and
ride.
Hailing,
and
also
automated
shuttles,
there's
also
the
pilots.
I
As
ramses
had
mentioned,
we've
had
a
number
of
them
over
the
years,
including
and
testing
technologies
that
prevent
scooters
from
getting
on
sideways
walks
to
partnering,
with
companies
on
automated
vehicles
and
delivery
robots.
The
pilots
have
helped
us
understand
about
the
potential
and
risks
of
these
news
technologies.
I
We're
also
aware
that
many
in
our
communities
have
not
been
able
to
access
these
technologies
and
they're
wary
of
them.
Our
aim
is
to
position
the
city
to
guide
these
typically
privately
owned
services,
to
advance
public
good,
to
ensure
that
all
san
jose
residents,
particularly
the
cities
historically
marginalized
communities,
can
benefit
from
them
to
do
that.
We
centered
racial
equity
in
this
planning
process.
I
I
We
also
employed
a
variety
of
strategies:
immediately:
engage
the
city's
black
indigenous
latino
and
asian
community
surface
communities,
as
well
as
other
marginalized
communities.
In
this
planning
process,
for
instance,
we
conducted
a
number
of
focus
groups
over
the
course
of
the
project,
including
several,
with
lgbtq
youth
members
of
the
muweka
ohlone
tribe
and
people
with
disabilities
to
ensure
we
were
hearing
from
communities
not
represented
on
the
task
force.
I
I
I
I
In
the
early
1960s
interstate
construction,
the
interstate
280
construction
was
underway
in
san
jose.
The
massive
project
destroyed
numerous
homes
of
businesses
that
were
in
its
path,
principally
low
income
and
communities
of
color.
The
decision
to
route
the
highway
to
these
neighborhoods
was
not
random.
These
neighborhoods
had
seen
decades
of
disinvestment
in
large
part
because
they
had
redline
in
the
1930s.
I
What
this
meant
is
that
residents
in
these
neighborhoods
could
not
get
loans
to
purchase
homes
and
those
who
own
property
could
not
get
loans
to
renovate
or
repair
them.
The
building
stuck
on
these
neighborhoods
gradually
declined,
causing
these
neighborhoods
to
be
viewed
as
blighted
and
hence
right
for
redevelopment.
I
I
Likewise,
the
city's
residential
zoning
has
helped
maintain
segregation
by
severely
restricting
where
and
how
much
multi-family
housing
could
be
built.
The
pink
areas
of
this
map
are
areas
zoned
for
single-family
homes.
The
blue
areas
are
other
residential
zones,
including
multi-family,
which
is
typically
more
affordable.
Housing.
I
San
jose's
freeways
were
designed
to
facilitate
travel
by
auto,
which
became
the
dominant
means
of
travel
after
world
war
ii
with
the
car
people
could
live
further
from
their
jobs.
Having
the
car
became
critical
to
accessing
opportunities,
but
owning
a
car
is
expensive,
which
is
a
problem
if
you're
already
struggling
to
find
affordable
housing.
The
small
purple
wedge
in
this
pie
chart
represents
the
most
affordable
parts
in
the
city.
Currently.
I
I
I
Toxic
pollution
and
public
safety,
among
others,
they
pressed
d.o.t
to
collaborate
more
closely
with
other
city
departments
and
public
agencies
to
improve
the
city's
transportation
system
as
a
means
of
addressing
these
bigger
issues.
For
example,
they
said
the
city
and
bta
should
improve
public
transit
to
expand
where
and
how
much
affordable
housing
is
built
in
san
jose.
I
Improving
public
transit
is
essential,
they
said.
Currently,
it
simply
doesn't
work
for
a
lot
of
people.
Buses
don't
go
where
they
need
to
where
they
need
to
go
or
where
they
need
to
get
there.
They
run
too
infrequently.
They
cost
too
much.
It
takes
too
long
to
get
where
you're
going
and
the
bus
stop
may
be
too
far
from
your
home.
I
That
was
what
consistent
and,
however,
they
did
not
see
emerging
mobility
as
a
viable
option,
particularly
the
services
are
available
in
san
jose,
such
as
ride
hailing
electric
scooters,
bike
share
and
car
share.
They
said
the
services
were
too
expensive.
It
didn't
meet
the
needs
of
many
in
their
communities
such
as
parents
who
need
to
transport
groceries
or
children.
They
may
not
have
a
smartphone
or
credit
card
or
a
driver's
license,
all
of
which
are
required
to
use
these
services.
I
I
I
After
hearing
about
innovative
approaches
being
tested
in
other
cities,
the
task
force
concluded
that
done
right.
Emerging
mobility
could
be
helpful,
particularly
the
services
were
designed
by
and
for
the
community
and
complemented
public
transit.
They
could
take
the
form
of
on-demand
neighborhood
shuttles.
I
I
The
first
is
to
offer
a
broader
array
of
emerging
mobility
services
that
meet
a
wider
variety
of
needs,
such
as
people
for
just
people
who
are
seniors,
people
who
are
disabled
and
working
families
with
with
kids,
making
it
easier
to
pay
for
these
services,
both
affordable
and
payment
options
that
don't
require
you
to
have
a
credit
card
or
a
bank
account
or
a
smartphone
that
we
collaborate
with
our
communities.
Our
communities
made
it
very
clear
to
us
that
they
want
the
city
and
private
companies
to
work
with
them
to
design,
execute
and
evaluate
programs.
I
I
They'd,
like
the
community
organizations
to
be
paid
to
help
promote
these
programs
in
their
communities,
companies
should
give
them
vouchers
to
share
with
residents.
They
can
try
out
their
services.
The
city
and
companies
should
educate
people
on
how
to
safely
use
these
services
and,
last
but
not
least,
workforce
training.
They
would
really
like
to
see
workforce
training
and
local
hire
requirements
for
emerging
mobility
services,
particularly
for
jobs
that
pay
well
and
have
a
future.
I
I
I
Just
wanted
to
simply
thank
again
some
of
the
people
who
helped
us
on
this
project
on
our
equity
task
force.
Other
community
members
who
participated
in
interviews,
focus
groups,
our
consultants
and
our
advisory
committees,
both
technical
and
public,
and
to
members
of
our
city
staff,
who
helped
us
with
the
research
on
this
project.
B
H
A
Hi,
laura
beekman
here,
happy
meeting
council
meeting
today,
beginning
of
april
hi,
everyone
hello
to
brenda
who
the
previous
public
comment
person
she
hasn't
been
around
for
a
while,
it's
nice
to
hear
her
voice
boy.
This
is
it.
We
are,
I
think,
officially
at
kind
of
the
second
stage
of
development
in
our
lives
about
the
future
of
technology
in
a
community
you're.
A
Doing
some
really
interesting
work
here
and
you've
had
a
lot
of
study
sessions
with
with
with
all
parts
of
the
community,
and
you
know,
you've
developed
your
own
staff
that
that
is
more
trying
to
be
more
accessible
to
public
concerns
and
needs.
A
So
good
luck
in
in
how
we
actually
work
towards
our
stage
three,
it's
a
really
interesting
hopeful
future.
You
guys
are
doing
some
good,
beginning
work
here.
Thank
you
and,
let's
just
you
know,
keep
it
moving
and
just
think
you
know.
Civil
protections
is
a
really
important
concept
and
I
just
think
we're
we're
doing
some
good
stuff
keep
up
the
good
work
and
yeah
there's
a
future
of
peace
and
an
open
democracy.
That's
possible.
We
can
continue
to
build
upon.
Thank
you.
P
Hi,
thank
you.
I'm
sorry
that
I'm
not!
I
don't
have
a
better,
more
informed
question,
but
I
was
attended.
I
attended
another
meeting
yesterday
at
the
city
and
the
transportation
and
environment
committee
was
there
with
a
report
and
I
am
really
confused
at
this
point.
I
don't
know
how
that
report.
The
move,
san,
jose
and
supportive
policies,
update
kind
of
either
coincides
with
this
or
not.
P
I
I'm
trying
to
figure
out
what
question
I'm
trying
to
ask,
because
yesterday
I
was
really
concerned
that
it
it
seems
it
appears
to
me
to
be
that
we
are
actually
changing
our
direction
of
our
general
plan
quite
a
bit
and
if
it's
in
good
ways
and
we've
incorporated
all
of
these-
you
know
equity,
outlooks
and
and
looking
at
things
from
a
different
point
of
view,
that's
great
but
boy.
I
wish
we
could
just
talk
plainly.
P
You
know
I
I
am
confused
and
when
I
read
these
memos
and
when
I'm
hearing
these
reports,
what
I'm
on
the
top
surface,
it
all
sounds
good
under
underneath
it.
I
just
want
you
to
know
from
the
public's
perspective.
It
feels
a
lot
like
what
we're
saying
is.
Our
general
plan
was
a
disaster.
It
didn't
work,
we
had
to
keep
changing
it
and
changing
it
and
changing
it.
We
made
some
big
mistakes.
P
A
lot
was
kind
of
learned
at
the
expense
of
of
what
we're,
seeing
today
in
our
city,
which
is
homelessness,
which
is
a
lot
of
despair,
inequity
and
and
so
forth.
So
I
really
wish
we
would
talk
plain
in
these
reports
did.
Are
we
steering
away
from
our
general
plan
and
a
lot
of
these
things
that
the
department
of
transport
excuse
me,
transportation,
environment
committee
and
like
emerging
mobility,
action
plan
and
all
that
are
we
moving
away
from
some
of
the
core
principles
behind
our
general
plan,
because
we
learned
lessons.
D
K
Thank
you.
I
I
just
wanted
to
thank
the
team
for
all
their
work.
When
you
say
you've
collaborated
with
the
community,
you
really
have
there
has
been
resident
input.
K
It's
community-based
non-profits
as
well,
but
actual
residents
were
a
part
of
this
process
and
that's
something
that
I
think
often
we
miss
that
as
a
city
and
that
was
really
embedded
in
that
process
in
this
process,
and
I
think
that's
really
important,
because
we
do
need
different
approaches
for
different
neighborhoods
things
that
are
going
to
work
in
district
7
are
going
to
be
very
different
and
say
district
9,
right
and-
and
so
I
just
wanted
to
thank
you
for
that
and
and
recognizing
that
we
do
need
different
strategies
across
the
board.
K
I
I
think
before
covid
we
had
a
lengthy
discussion
about
charging
stations
and
the
need
for
the
state
to
give
a
grant
so
that,
as
our
city
is
built
out,
as
opportunities
are
created
that
swaths
of
the
city,
entire
swathes
of
the
city,
would
be
aren't
left
behind
and-
and
I
think
this
work
is
really
important,
and
so
I
just
want
to
acknowledge
that
and
that
it
we
help
homeowners.
K
G
B
Okay,
I
wanted
to
raise.
I'm
sorry
casper
folly,
go
ahead,
you
can
go
first
if
you'd
like.
No,
please
I'm
sorry.
I
missed
your
name
because
my
my
computer
screen
is
blocking
it.
Sorry
about
that.
No.
G
No
worries
I
I
want
to
thank
the
committee
too,
I
or
the
staff
too
for
your
report.
I
think
it's
really
helping
moving
us
forward
this
in
conjunction
with
the
move,
san
jose
plan
or
the
the
overarching
move.
San
jose
plan
will
really
help
us
define
and
create
a
transportation
system
or
that
is
accessible
by
all
of
our
community.
G
I'm
glad
to
see
in
the
equity,
comm
equity
task
force
that
it
was
involved
that
you
had
people
with
lived
experiences
who
were
able
to
help
out
and
craft
this
plan,
but
I
have
a
couple
of
questions
for
you,
so
I
I
mean
I'm
really
excited
to
see
this
come
forward.
I
I
ho
co
hosted
a
town
hall
with
ramses
on
move
san
jose
just
last
week,
and
we
had
many
from
the
disability
community
there
and
representatives
from
senior
community.
I
The
we
did
not
have
someone
on
the
equity
task,
bus
who
was
themselves
disabled,
which
is
why
we
had
focus
groups
to
make
sure
that
we
were
hearing
from
those
communities.
We
did
a
wide
recruitment.
We
had
about
60
applicants
from
the
equity
task
force,
so
a
number
of
wonderful
people
who
wanted
to
participate.
I
G
I
would
encourage
you
to
reach
out
to
them,
as,
as
I
know
you
have
already,
but
to
make
sure
that
they
are
involved
at
every
step
of
the
conversation.
They
have
a
motto,
nothing
about
us
without
us
and
it
could
be
that
they
didn't
have
access
to
the
task
force
common
conversations
that
you
were
having.
G
So
we
have
to
make
sure
that
maybe
it's
technology
they
don't
have
or
we
they
have
the
technology,
but
we're
not
communicating
in
for
visually
impaired
or
hearing
impaired,
and
we
need
to
make
sure
that
we
can
do
all
of
that
and
reach
out
to
all
of
our
community
and-
and
I
know
you're
aware
of
this-
but
I
just
want
to
keep
putting
it
out
there
as
also
an
equity
issue,
that
we
need
to
make
sure
that
we
involve
those
with
disabilities
and
older
adults
and
there's
an
intersectionality
too
between
older
adults
or
those
with
disabilities
and
those
in
marginalized
communities.
G
G
J
Thank
you
very
good
question.
This
is
jessica,
zhang
deputy
director
for
the
department
of
transportation.
Our
our
system
for
bike
share
bay.
Wheels
operated
by
lyft
is
a
regional
system,
as
probably
many
people
know,
but
maybe
not
all,
and
in
some
places,
namely
in
oakland.
They
have
done
some
of
those
pilots
to
expand
services,
to
include
more
explicitly
people
with
certain
types
of
disabilities
to
have
bikes
that
are
accessible
for
them,
as
well
as
more
cargo
bike,
setups
with
groceries,
etc.
J
What
I
will
also
offer
is
that
there
is
work
to
be
done
to
get
those
options
more
readily
available
and
sustainable
from
a
financial
perspective,
so
that
is
not
currently
a
system,
that's
borne
out
simply
by
the
market
and
so
it.
But
it
is
something
that
the
bay
area
is
working
on
and
we're
looking
at
those
pilots
that
were
done
in
the
east
bay
to
see
how
we
can
build
upon
them.
If
we
can
have
supplementary
funding.
G
So
it's
a
it's
a
little
bit
like
our
transportation
system.
It's
all
market,
driven,
if
you're
not
using
it,
that
the
bus
lines
are
are
dropped,
but
then
people
can't
get
around
because
their
bus
line
line
is
dropped
or
in
our
transit
first
priorities
that
we've
talked
about
it
takes
longer
to
get
anywhere
on
mass
transit
than
it
does
in
an
automobile.
So
people
choose
their
automobiles.
G
J
Yes,
I
I
will
say
that
that
is
exactly
the
type
of
pilot
program
that
we're
looking
from
this
plan
to
to
launch.
I
will
also
offer
that,
in
addition
to
the
financial
sustainability,
there
are
technical,
sustain
technical
issues,
because
in
the
oakland
experience
it
was
hard
to
actually
get
to
one
of
those
bikes.
When
you
were
the
person
who
needed
it
right.
J
We
are
looking
and
in
the
report,
unfortunately,
it's
rather
in
the
back,
but
there
are
different
pilot
programs
with
funding
sources.
Potential
funding
sources
identified,
federal
grants,
some
of
which
are
administered
at
the
regional
level
and
state
grants
that
particularly
support
emerging
mobility
and
fill
the
gaps
that
we
see.
G
B
Thank
you
all
right.
I
had
a
few
questions
about
about
some
of
the
recommendations
and
john
thanks
for
your
email.
I
just
saw
that
in
response
to
some
of
the
concerns
I
had
raised
earlier
offline,
so
the
recommendations
are
listed
in
chapter
eight
include,
for
example,
a
first
mile
last
mile
mobility
connector,
I
think
we'd
all
agree.
B
That's
really
essential
to
be
able
to
get
more
of
our
community
connected
to
transit
and
some
of
the
emerging
fixed
transit
that
we
have
as
well
as
buses,
and
certainly
agree
with
the
recommendation
that
we
should
target
statistics,
three
four
district,
seven,
where
we
think
we
have
some
transit
and
certainly
a
lot
of
community
members
that
could
use
better
connections.
I'm
sure
there
are
other
parts
to
say
as
well.
We
should
be
looking
carefully
at,
but
all
we
get
on
pages
8-15
is
hey
to
be
continued,
we'll
figure
it
out.
B
B
This
is
what
we
got
to
go
do
and
I
don't
feel
like
I
got
that
from
reading
this
report,
and
I'm
just
wondering
did
we
demand
enough
of
our
consultants
where
we
get
done
with
this
very
voluminous
report,
lots
of
beautiful
pictures,
some
of
them
by
the
way
not
taken
in
san
jose
but
anyway.
Nonetheless,
it
is
what
it
is
and
we
don't
yet
know
what
project
we
should
be
applying
for
next.
F
Well,
it's
a
very
you
know.
It's
really
good
comment
mayor
to
the
generous
logan
director.
The
the
report
does
go
into
some
specific
recommendations
of
some
pilot
projects
that
we
think
are
achievable
in
the
nearer
terms
we
do
want
to.
We
do
want
to
move
forward
if
your
council
is
proven
will
approve
this
tonight.
F
What
we
did
learn
from
this
report
is
really
the
basics
of
what
we
need
to
be
doing,
both
on
the
technology
side
and
the
community
side
and
the
operational
side,
and
and
really
the
feasibility
side
of
a
number
of
these
things.
So
we
learned
a
lot
from
our
outreach,
the
community,
our
outreach
to
the
technology
companies
that
may
be
interested
in
coming
here.
F
Perhaps
we
can
return
to
either
the
tne
committee
or
council
here
to
actually
spell
those
out
in
some
more
detail,
because
that's
what
the
intention
of
this
is-
and
I
know
that
that's
part
of
what
your
comments
earlier
was.
Was
it
really
get
this
more
actionable,
and
I
think
we
really
have
a
really
well
done
plan
with
the
basics
of
understanding
the
whole
landscape
here
with
this
and
seeing
what
other
cities
are
doing,
what
other
technologies
are
being
deployed
elsewhere,
so
I
think
we
have
the
basics
of
what
we
need
to
do.
F
J
J
There
are
a
series
of
appendices
on
the
project's
website
that
do
they're.
You
know,
perhaps
not
perfect,
but
they
do
go
into
more
detail
with
some
starting
point
scopes
for
the
potential
pilots
that
do
really
give
us
some
a
little
bit
more
of
what
you're
looking
for.
I
believe
in
terms
of
where
to
start
how
to
scope
it,
what
the
tasks
are
and
how
to
get
these
off
the
ground
quickly.
B
F
F
In
some
of
the
appendices
right
they're
on
the
website,
the
memo
references
that
and
they're,
this
is
pretty
voluminous
the
appendices
themselves.
Okay,
a
lot
of
back
updates.
B
Appreciate
that
I
haven't
seen
in
this
dependency,
so
I
just
read
the
report
wondering
okay
great
now
I
mean
kind
of
like
I
mentioned
to
you
earlier
now.
How
are
we
going
to
help
a
spanish-speaking
mom
with
two
kids
who
lives
in
pata,
arroyo
or
or
mckinley
bonita,
get
her
kids
to
school
and
get
herself
to
work,
and
I
don't
feel
like
this
report
told
me:
okay,
we
got
a
plan
and-
and
I
guess
that's
my
concern-
I
feel
like
we're
still
kind
of
very
thirty
thousand
foot
level.
Yeah.
F
And
mayor,
I
we
really
actually
appreciate
the
thinking
you
put
into
the
the
making
these
planning
documents
more
actionable
and
actually
getting
something
out
of
them,
and
I
pointed
that
out
that
yeah
very
helpful.
I
think
that
we
have
done
that.
It
may
not
be
in
the
memo
or
the
actual
plan,
but
it's
in
some
of
our
appendices.
Okay,
that
we
have
that
ready
to
go.
Should
council
approve
this
plan,
we're
going
to
try
to
move
forward,
and
I
think
really.
Another
big
important
point
I
think
I
touched
on
opening
remarks.
F
Is
this
really
well
done?
Plan
is
going
to
be
very
helpful
for
our
funding
agencies
to
see
what
we
have
done
as
we
built
this
framework
up
to
be
able
to
really
do
this
with
community
and
so
that,
whatever
technology
that
we
want
to
deploy
together
with
private
sector,
really
hits
and
approved
and
really
is
something
that
serves
all
parts
of
the
community
and
that's
important
to
our
funding
partners.
And
so
I
think
this
plan
is
really
going
to
set
that
table
very
nicely
for
that.
B
Okay,
appreciate
that
and
then
going
to
one
other
thing
we
I
know
we
talked
about
offline
this
decision
around
using
betty
ann
gardens,
as
I
think
this
autonomous
shared
pilot
is
really
important,
and
I
think
it's
important
that
we
do
a
lot
of
these
and
hopefully
we
can
find
a
way
to
scale
it
because
I
think,
that's
I'm
sorry
not
autonomous
again,
I'm
sorry,
electric
shared
mobility
with
electric
cars
that
folks
can
participate
in
car
sharing
arrangements
on
and-
and
certainly
you
know,
certainly
nothing
against
any
community
members
live
in
bettingham
gardens.
B
It's
obviously,
I
live
only
a
mile
two
miles
away
from
there,
but
it's
it's
right.
Next,
to
the
only
bart
station
we've
got
in
the
entire
city
and,
as
you
explained,
transform
is
really
pushing
to
do
this
pilot
somewhere.
That
was
transit
rich.
It
sounds
like,
and
I'm
just
trying
to
understand,
better
the
rationale
for
that
and
why
we
wouldn't
have
wanted
to
try
to
do
the
pilot
in
a
place
where
we
knew
people
were
frankly
more
stranded
and
we've
got
a
lot
of
low-income
communities
that
are
stranded
far
from
fixed
transit.
F
Yeah,
I
I
we
agree.
I
think
what
we
probably
would
be
beneficial
is
actually
have
one
of
the
team.
Explain
how
that
particular
project
came
about
and
and
in
the
context
of
working
with
our
third
party
partners
on
it
and
then
being
able
to
compete
well
for
the
grants
that
we're
actually
going
after
so
sometimes
they
don't
fit
perfectly
into
some
of
the
other
ones.
F
J
Right
exactly,
but
I
think
for
for
context
for
people
who
aren't
familiar
with
transform
it's
a
bay
area
non-profit
and
the
metropolitan
transportation
commission
applied
for
a
three-city
pilot
program
to
do
electric
car
sharing
and
mobility
hubs
in
san
jose,
as
well
as
in
san
francisco
and
the
east
bay
richmond,
and
so
we
partnered
with
them
to
get
that
funding.
J
They
chose
betty
ann
gardens
because
of
kind
of
two
fundamental
things.
One
is
a
functional
partnership
with
first
community
housing
who
who
owns
and
operates
that
site
and
second,
the
location
near
transit.
We
very
much
appreciate
what
the
mayor
said
that
people
are
not
stranded
and
at
the
same
time,
with
that
access
to
transit.
J
They
can
truly
live
there
without
owning
a
car
because
they
can
access
a
car
when
they
need
it.
They
can
access
transit
when
they
need
it.
So
it's
a
different
perspective
on
how
to
enable
people
to
have
a
car
like
life.
We
would
love
to
learn
from
that
and
apply
it
in
places
without
that
kind
of
transit,
because
that
does
truly
get
people
the
last
mile
and
two,
and
so
that
that
came
about
through
funding.
In
2017.
J
they
did
a
really
robust
community
needs
assessment,
they're
installing
chargers.
Today
they
have
a
charging
car
sharing
partner
envoy
on
board
and
they'll
start
that
program.
Laura
is
actually
our
representative
to
the
advisory
board
there.
So
we're
constantly
going
to
be.
You
know,
learning
both
from
what
what
has
been
slow
right
in
getting
that
going
and
also
what
works
and
the
community
needs
assessment
was
pretty
foundational.
B
Thank
you
yeah
thanks
for
explaining
that
so
we'll
we'll
keep
digging
in
to
try
to
expand
more
pilots
in
other
parts
of
the
city.
I
look
forward
to
that.
B
B
B
B
E
Yeah,
we
don't
see
that
as
really
part
of
the
same
scope
of
what
this
plan
is.
I
mean
this
plan
is
talking
about
in
new
technologies
kind
of
coming
to
the
right
of
way.
That's
a
major
infrastructure
project
right
and
so.
Well,
I
hear
it
it's
autonomous
right,
we're
definitely
going
for
an
autonomous
system,
and
I
understand
the
overlap
that
you're
going
for
there.
That
project
in
itself
is
just
so
much
larger,
yeah
and
and
of
a
different
just
of
a
totally
different
nature.
I
think
it's
as
simple
as
that.
B
Okay-
and
I
I
saw
some
data-
I'm
sorry
to
get
in
a
small
point,
but
this
was
something
that
puzzled
me
I'll.
Try
to
find
the
page
here
it
had
to
do
with
the
bike
share
it's
on
page
5.10,
I'm
sorry
5-10,
which
is
the
equivalent
of
page
76
for
those
of
us
who
are
scrolling
through
online
and
it's
got
a
graph
and
it
shows
the
bike
share
traffic
in
san
jose
and
it
suggests
we'll
kind
of
commence
it
with
san
francisco
and
way
ahead
of
brooklyn
oakland.
J
Yeah
great
question,
so
this
particular
slide
and
graph
is
actually
the
bike
share
for
all
program
and
san
jose.
A
J
We're
not,
although
our
ridership
last,
I
knew,
was
higher
than
the
east
bay
system.
B
B
That's
good,
it's
good
to
hear,
because
I
know
they're
yeah
and
we're
all
trying
to
keep
their
the
infrastructure
in
place.
I
know
it's
important,
so
thank
you
for
that
and
then.
Finally,
the
sidewalk
detection
technology
is
something
that
we've
been
working
on
for
several
years
and
got
interrupted
by
the
pandemic,
and
it's
been
challenging.
B
It
sounds
as
though
what
we've
settled
on
now
is-
or
I
guess
the
companies
have
settled
on-
is
we're.
Gonna
just
have
a
speed
regulator.
That
slows
them
down
to
five
miles
an
hour
on
sidewalks
and
that's
for
a
few
of
them,
but
not
for
all
of
them
right
is
that.
E
So
we've
had
trouble
yeah
with
that
program
right
and
and
it's
a
technology
problem
that
still
hasn't
been
solved.
Yeah.
There
are
no
systems
that
can
be
deployed
at
scale
to
detect
exactly
where
those
scooters
are
and
a
false
negative
in
this
system
is
incredibly
dangerous
and
we've
had-
and
maybe
you've
experienced
this
riding
around
the
scooters.
Sometimes
the
gps
gates,
kind
of
float
and
you're
riding
on
the
side
of
san
jose
state
and
all
of
a
sudden.
E
The
technology
problem
is
a
lot
more
challenging
than
we
had
thought
at
first
right,
and
so
we
are
having
companies
try
very,
very
hard
and
we're
having
a
little
more
success
with
some
than
others.
But
it
is
not
kind
of
a
ready-made
solution
that
we
can
just
deploy
and
kind
of
ask
everyone
to
do,
and
so
we're
continuing
to
to
work
with
the
companies
to
to
trying
to
figure
this
problem
out.
But
it
is
not
something
that
is
is
solved
in
a
holistic
way.
B
B
E
I
J
Two
of
them
are
using
basically
gps
based
technology
with
some
other
additions
and
then
one
is
using
totally
different
technology
and
they
actually
have
pretty
different
results,
good
things
in
some
directions
for
the
different
technologies.
So
it
really
has
depended
widely
in
what
we're.
Looking
for.
B
Okay,
great
now,
you've
inspired
me
I'll
get
out
there
do
some
wheelies
councilman
esparza
no
spin
left
on
okay,
I'll.
B
A
D
A
B
Thank
you
thanks.
Everybody
for
your
hard
work,
appreciate
it.
Okay
item
8.2
are
actions
related
to
real
property
located
at
park
avenue
between
south
america
and
market
street.
We
do
have
a
presentation
on
this
item.
This
is
the
final
item
of
the
day.
R
Good
afternoon,
mayor
and
council
nancy
klein
director
office
of
economic
development,
and
we
are
very
excited
to
be
here
today
to
share
with
you
completed,
work
and
ask
for
approval
related
to
items
that
staff
has
gotten
direction
on
for
from
council
previously
kevin.
Would
you
please
move
to
the
next
slide,
I'm
here?
R
First
of
all,
with
kevin
ice
yen,
bui
from
real
estate
and
of
particular
note
cameron
day
from
the
city
attorney's
office,
whose
skill
and
patience
really
made
it
possible
for
us
to
partner
extremely
well
well
with
the
property
owner,
jay
paul
and
just
wanted
to
meant
to
come.
Commend
to
you.
The
partnership
public-private
partnership
between
jay,
paul
and
the
city
been
very
collaborative
and
very
cooperative.
R
As
mentioned
on
this
slide,
we
had
previously
discussed
orders
of
commendation,
condemnation,
a
surplus,
sale
authorization
along
with
identification
of
fair
market
value
for
the
property
all
related
to
moving
forward
on
the
city
view
project,
which
we'll
talk
about
a
little
more
in
just
a
minute,
and
also
adding
that,
through
this
transaction,
the
city
will
receive
5.9
million
dollars
roughly
and
that
staff
is
requesting
three
up
to
three
million
dollars
be
allocated
to
the
park,
avenue
reconfiguration
project,
which
we'll
show
you
a
slide
on
in
just
a
moment.
Next
slide.
R
It
notes
that
the
project
was
approved,
the
development
permit
in
june
of
2020
and
that
there
are
14
348
square
feet
of
park,
avenue
land
that
is
needed
for
the
project
to
be
completed,
and
this
also
allows
getting
the
the
square
footage
on
the
right-of-way
also
allows
a
reconfiguration
of
park
avenue
and
the
real
property
purchase,
as
noted,
was
previously
authorized
on
november
3rd
2020,
and
that
the
conditional
vacation
was
approved
april
3rd
2021.,
as
the
council
has
heard
items
recently.
R
Please
I
I
just
wanted
to
to
mention
that
on
park
avenue
the
middle
of
the
slide
and
to
the
right,
we
will
be
home,
excited
to
be
home
to
the
city
view
at
3.8
million
square
feet
and
200
parks
little
over
about
a
million
square
feet
and
the
park
habitat
project
adjacent
at
approximately
a
million
square
feet.
All
three
projects
happening
in
one
small
area
will
be
stellar
designed
by
all
and
incredibly
exciting,
and
the
the
additional
innovation
is
what
you
see
here,
which
is
the
reconfiguration
of
park
avenue.
R
It
will
be
a
deep,
beautiful
dive
into
green
streets
that
forward
net
zero
goals,
as
well
as
making
sure
that
pedestrians
and
bicyclists
have
an
excellent
experience
that
that
segment
of
the
street
is
on
is
between
market
and
almaden
and
will
serve
as
a
model
for
the
intended
goal
to
stretch
all
the
way
to
dear
don-
and
I
do
want
to
give
a
shout
out
to
blagey
zalalich,
who
has
been
the
inventor
and
cheerleader
for
the
park
avenue
project
to
date,
and
with
that
I'll
turn.
The
presentation
over
to
kevin
ice.
L
Hello,
kevin
ice,
real
estate
manager
so
to
accomplish
the
vision
for
the
park
avenue
reconfiguration
project,
the
city
will
need
to
vacate
and
transfer
this
14
000
square
foot
parcel
to
jay
paul.
The
transfer
area
will
be
privately
owned,
public
open
space
or
popos,
as
it's
called
after
the
reconfiguration
jay
paul
will
pay
for
the
park
avenue
pedestrian
improvements
in
the
transit,
the
transfer
area.
L
So
the
city
needed
to
consolidate
ownership
of
the
14
000
square
foot
area.
It
was
all
city
right-of-way,
but
title
determined
that
people
from
the
1800s
owned
the
underlying
property
or
fee
interests
for
the
parcels
shown
in
the
colored
areas.
So
the
red
hatched
area
was
city
owned
and
all
of
the
colored
parcels
to
the
south
of
that
needed
to
be
acquired
through
eminent
domain
litigation.
L
So
the
next
steps
will
be
that
the
city
will
sell
the
14,
000
square
foot
area
to
jay
paul
for
5.95
million
or
413
dollars
a
foot
as
authorized
in
a
prior
action
in
2020
to
complete
the
eminent
domain
litigation.
The
city
needed
to
pay
1.689
million
in
payments
to
identified
heirs
and
to
the
state.
In
the
instance
where
no
heirs
were
found,
the
developer
paid
the
city,
the
1.689
million,
as
an
advance
against
the
ultimate
sale.
L
So
the
city
didn't
need
to
come
out
of
pocket
to
acquire
the
parcels
so
crediting
this
early
payment
against
the
sale
price.
The
developer
will
owe
the
city
an
additional
4.236
million
at
transfer.
L
L
So
once
the
conditions
are
met,
we'll
complete
the
vacation
and
process
the
sale,
the
net
proceeds
from
the
sale
will
be
recognized
in
the
general
fund.
The
the
park
avenue
reconfiguration
project
will
require
the
landowners
to
pay
for
improvements
to
the
pedestrian
spaces
in
front
of
their
properties.
L
So
jay
paul
will
pay
for
the
improvements
in
front
of
city
view
and
200
park.
West
bank
will
pay
for
the
improvements
in
front
of
park,
habitat
and
the
city
will
need
to
pay
for
the
improvements
in
front
of
the
tech
museum
parcel.
So
when
we
return
to
recognize
the
revenue
from
the
sale
will
recommend
allocating
up
to
three
million
out
of
the
proceeds
to
cover
the
obligation.
The
city's
obligation
for
the
tech
parcel,
and
that
concludes
our
presentation
and
staff
are
available
for
questions.
B
All
right,
thank
you,
kevin.
Thank
you,
nancy.
Thank
you,
cameron,
thanks
also
to
steve
choi
and
sam
young
and
tiffany
pong
and
everyone
who
has
worked
so
hard
on
this.
This
has
been,
I
know
very
complex,
and
it's
been
quite
a
history
lesson,
and
I
know
this
isn't
the
first
time
we've
had
these
history
lessons.
I
want
to
come
back
to
that
in
a
moment,
but
let's
first
go
to
the
public,
and
if
you
have
any
comments.
D
I
have
no
hands
up,
but
I
wanted
to
note
that
councilmember
cross
goes
like
notified
me
that
she's
been
on
the
meeting
on
the
attendee
side
on
her
phone,
oh
and
would
like
to
vote
yes
for
the
items
for
which
she's
been
marked
absent.
I
have
given
her
permission
to
talk
so
she'll
be
able
to
unmute
at
will.
Okay.
B
D
D
Thing
no
just
I
wanted
to
note
that
out
loud
because
I
got
the
text,
so
all
of
the
votes
have
been
unanimous,
so
it's
11-0,
not
10-0.
She
can
now
unmute
at
will
whenever
she
needs
to
I'm
leaving
her
permission
to
do
that.
I
just
wanted
to
note
that,
for
you
guys
and
for
the
record
and
there's
no
other
public
members
who
want
to
speak
on
this
item
so
back
to
council.
B
Okay,
great
then
we'll
go
to
council.
I've
got
a
couple
questions,
but
first
of
all
we'll
go
to
counselor
peralta.
I
I
do
want
to
just
say
a
very
big.
Thank
you
to
jay
paul.
This
is
a
massive
investment
in
our
city
and
it
is
great
to
see
the
first
tower.
B
We've
seen
glass
on
the
tower
now
and
it
really
looks
beautiful
and
I
think
this
reconfiguration
park
is
gonna,
be
fantastic,
really
agree
with
everything
you
said
nancy.
It's
gonna
be
great
to
see
all
that
greenery
right
in
our
downtown.
It's
it's
just
a
beautiful
enhancement
to
our
downtown
skyline.
So
thank
you
to
everyone
for
their
hard
work
on
this
and
unwinding
a
very
difficult
knot
and
jay
paul
for
their
patience
and
persistence
for
all
this
councilman
yeah.
L
Thank
you
and
that's
it.
That's
all.
F
It's
a
tremendous
investment,
something
we've
waited
over
a
decade
for,
and
so
just
excited
with
this
opportunity.
Thank
you
to
city
staff.
L
B
All
right
motion,
and
a
second
from
customer
davis,
all
right
any
other
comments.
I
I
just
had
one
question:
I
guess
maybe
this
is
going
to
be
a
law
school
quiz
question
here
for
the
cameron
and
nora.
I
I
mean
we
keep
encountering
this
challenge.
We
had
it
with
google.
I
know
we're
going
to
have
it
again.
B
We
got
some
land
that
we
think
is
in
the
right
of
way
that
somebody
back
in
1842
owned-
and
I
mean
I
know
this
question
of
property
ownership-
is-
is
not
a
purely
objective
one,
because
there
are
plenty
of
folks
who
will
tell
us
that
the
actual
owners
were
none
of
those
folks
but
actual
actually
members
of
the
ohlone
tribe.
So
my
question
is
way
back
in
law
school
days.
They
tell
you
in
property
law
about
this
thing
about
adverse
possession.
B
If
it
was
open
and
notorious
that
you
possessed
a
piece
of
land
and
then
you
qualify
satisfied
all
these
other
requirements.
Rule
against
perpetuities
never
never
get
this
one
right,
but
in
any
event
whatever
it
is,
if
you
squat
on
the
land
long
enough,
eventually
it's
yours
and
there's
a
lot
of
requirements
involved.
Well,
we've
been
squatting
on
a
lot
of
public
land.
D
I'll
I'll,
let
cameron
it
is
adverse
possession.
Oh.
D
It
doesn't
necessarily
apply
here
and
cameron.
Do
you
want
to
talk
about
par
part
of
the
issue
that
we're
facing
is
what
lenders
require
and
and
that's
the
driver
for
a
lot
of
this,
but
go
ahead.
L
Sure
so,
yes,
adverse
session
is
the
legal
doctrine
where
you
can
take
someone
else's
property
through
use
and
if
I
recall
going
back
to
law
school,
there's
five
five
elements
of
it,
one
of
which
is
paying
taxes
on
that
land,
which
we
don't
do.
So
I
think
governments
have
a
very
strong
hurdle
to
come
to
cover
to
adverse
possess
private
party
land,
so
I
don't
think
that's
typically
allowed.
Secondly,
is
here
there's
just
like
you
said
it
could
be
the
illonies?
L
It
really
comes
down
to
what's
insurable,
because
it's
what
the
grand
tour
will
take
or
the
grantee
will
take
so
for
here
it
would
be
jay
paul,
probably
not
willing
to
take
this
unless
title's
insuring
it,
and
so,
while
legally,
we
could
argue
in
an
imminent
domain
proceeding
or
a
quiet
title
proceeding
that
we
have
the
rights
to
this
land
through
the
demonstrated
title
history,
and
I
think
that
we're
probably
able
to
do
that
in
order
to
really
secure
it.
L
B
L
L
There
are
other
things
that
people
have
done
by
the
maps
and
that's
how
we
got
into
this
situation
here
is
these
right-of-ways
were
created
using
a
map
and
there
are
certain
rights
that
go
with
making
a
map,
but
there's
also
ways
that
you
can
say
you
don't
have
a
fee
interest.
You
only
have
a
use
or
a
limited
restricted
use,
and
therefore
other
manners
are
much
more
we'll
say,
final
and
complete
and
securing
that
key
interest
in
into
the
city.
D
And
mayor,
I
would
point
out
that,
for
most
of
the
city,
the
adjacent
landowner
owns
the
land
pretty
much
to
the
middle
of
the
street
and
we
just
have
an
easement.
So
it's.
B
B
Okay,
so
there's
no
easy
way
out
we're
stuck
all
right.
Then,
let's,
let's
vote
on
the
motion.
D
B
A
B
B
All
right,
thank
you,
we're
done
with
our
work
today,
but
we
do
have
open
forum,
so
any
member
of
the
community
like
to
speak
is
welcome
to
do
so
on
any
item.
That's
not
on
the
agenda.
Everyone
has
two
minutes
to
speak.
Thank
you.
Tony.
A
Hi
claire
beekman,
thanks
for
the
meeting
today
it
was
a
very
short
meeting.
I
guess
just
an
overall
view
that
in
the
past
weekend
you
know
it's
really
been
asked
that
you
know
the
war
in
ukraine
may
be
going
on
for
like
into
the
end
of
this
year
next
year.
I
hope
it
doesn't
do
that.
I
hope
we
can
all
be
working
towards
ideas
of
peace
and
and
community.
A
What
is
the
future
of
community
for
the
future
of
ukraine
and
I
think
by
the
end
of
april,
I
think
we
should
have
some
really
important
options
to
understand
just
how
to
develop
the
future
of
ukraine
in
terms
of
local
community
process,
which
is
what
we
do
here
here
in
san
jose
in
the
bay
area:
racial
equity.
A
A
How
they're
going
to
have
to
rebuild
so
good
luck
to
them
to
everyone
and
how
we
can
just
simply
talk
about
peace
and
really
ask
all
sides
to
want
to
work
towards
ideas
of
peace
for
the
future
of
ukraine
and
its
local
communities
and
how
we
go
about
cleaning
up
things
and
to
quickly
offer
you
know
the
work
I
do
with
technology,
open
public
policies
and
its
accountability.
A
It's
a
shared
process.
I
mean
I
really
want.
I
hope
it
can
be
a
part
of
all
the
good
practices
that
are
available
now
and
it's
not
dominating
one
thing
over
another.
It's
learning
to
work
hand
in
hand,
and
in
those
terms,
it
is
just
incredibly
awesome
in
what
it
needs
to
be
about.
The
future
of
technology
is
not
just
the
technology
itself,
it
is
how
we
have
open
public
policies
and
it's
good
practices.
A
That's
the
innovation.
It
really
really
is-
and
I
hope,
we're
learning
those
lessons
and
I
need
to
learn
to
start
to
say
that
brings
about
community
participation
and
a
community
future
where
the
community
is
much
more
involved,
with
public
oversight
and
decision
making
of
our
government
and
that's
interesting,
interesting
future.
Good
luck
to
everyone.
Thank
you.
D
P
Borders
hi.
Thank
you.
Last
wednesday.
I
attended
the
planning
director
hearing
meeting
and
I
was
really
concerned
because
a
site
development
permit
was
approved
for
a
project
and
I'll.
Just
let
you
know
the
project
was
basically
two
large
buildings,
totaling
286
something
thousand
square
feet,
demolish
those
and
then
build
another
one
for
302
000
square
feet
so
basically
bulldozing
two
down
building
one
big
one.
P
That's
all
fine
and
dandy,
but
I
wanted
to
let
you
guys
know
that
227
trees
will
be
removed
in
order
to
make
that
happen
and
148
of
those
trees
are
ordinance.
Size,
79
are
non-ordinance
sized
trees
and,
as
we
talk
about
our
declining
tree
canopy
it
it
actually
kind
of
hurts
my
heart
to
think
that
227
trees
are
going
to
be
removed
to
build
this
large
industrial
building
and
they
don't
even
know
it
wasn't
documented.
Who
would
even
lease
the
property
there
hasn't
been
anybody
that's
committed
to
that.
P
D
Hi,
my
name
is
deborah
st
julian
and
I'm
a
faith
outreach
volunteer
with
showing
up
for
racial
justice
at
sacred
heart.
I've
lived
in
district
2
for
36
years,
and
I've
worked
as
a
nurse
practitioner
for
over
30
years,
and
I
consider
police
violence
and
the
disproportionate,
proportionate
violence
to
black
indigenous
and
people
of
color
to
be
a
moral
and
spiritual
crisis
and
a
public
health
crisis,
and
I'm
speaking
today
to
ask
the
san
jose
city,
council
and
san
jose
pd
to
do
better
around
community
and
public
safety.
D
The
san
jose
pd
is
supposed
to
make
us
feel
safer
and
said.
We
know
by
statistics
and
recent
occurrences
that
if
you
inhabit
a
black
or
brown
body
in
san
jose,
you
have
an
increased
chance
of
being
pulled
into
the
police
jail
system
and
in
many
cases
being
injured
or
killed.
Unfortunately,
we
have
the
recent
example
of
kion
green.
I
am
asking
you
to
offer
public
safety
and
community
safety
to
all
the
people
you
serve
by
committing
to
real
transparency
and
accountability.
D
I'm
asking
you
to
stop
treating
victims
of
police
violence
like
criminals,
release
body
cam
footage
as
it
is
and
create
a
trauma
relief
fund
for
all
victims
of
violence,
including
victims
of
police
violence.
In
this
season
of
lent.
I
implore
you
to
be
brave
to
turn
towards
truth,
transparency
and
accountability.
Thank
you,
christopher
logan.
S
My
name
is
chris
logan
and
I
live
in
district
10.
I'm
a
community
organizer
at
sacred
heart
community
service,
where
we
serve
over
55
000
individuals
per
year,
speaking
today
to
denounce
the
actions
of
police
officers
who
are
equipped
to
shoot
innocent
black
men,
particularly
in
the
case
of
keon
green
as
a
black
man.
S
As
a
result,
we
have
trained
our
management
to
handle
most
incidents
in-house
to
avoid
tragedy
from
happening
on
our
grounds.
Elected
officials
must
be
transparent
and
accountable
to
the
people
they
represent
in
cases
of
police
shootings.
We
demand
our
elected
officials
to
balance
gun
violence
in
all
this
forms,
especially
gun
violence
by
police
officers.
S
We
also
demand
that
sjpd
stop
releasing
misleading
information
about
victims
of
police
violence,
violence,
sjpd
to
stop
treating
victims
of
police
violence
like
criminals
such
as
handcuffing
victims
to
beds
and
interrogating
family
members.
We
demand
sjpd
release
the
body
cam
footage,
as
is
unedited
without
captions,
and
any
other
information
required
by
sb1421
in
a
timely
manner,
and
we
also
asked
the
city
of
san
jose
to
create
a
trauma
relief
fund
for
the
victims
of
all
violence,
especially
in
cases
of
officer
involved.
Shooting.
Thank
you.
D
I'm
a
local
water
industry,
five,
my
name
is
hector
handels
and
I
am
a
member
of
hotel
and
luna
night.
The
man
justice
for
kyung
green
kang
was
shot
the
morning
of
march
28th
by
sap
the
officer
he
did
not
commit
any
crimes,
in
fact
that
he
actually
stopped
the
crime
but
yeah
still
shot
by
the
sapd,
and
so
he's
like
khan.
Green,
have
been
ignored
by
south
syriza
for
far
too
often,
and
especially
members
in
the
black
and
brown
community.
D
Now,
with
the
men,
sapd
start
producing
misleading
information
about
the
victims
of
police
violence,
we
demand
sapd,
stop
treating
victims
of
police
violence.
That
criminals,
for
example,
can
hand
cover
them
to
the
hospital.
We
demand
sapd
release
the
body
cam
footage,
as
is
without
any
edits.
We
demand
cities,
they
create
a
trauma,
be
fun
for
the
victims
of
our
violence,
especially
of
that
of
police
officer
guidance,
unless
he
would
demand
city
of
san
jose,
effective,
the
announced
governance
and
all
forms.
Thank
you.
N
N
Students
of
the
js
department
are
organizing,
on
behalf
with
hero
10,
to
demand
justice,
transparency
and
accountability
for
our
former
student
survivor.
Kion
green.
This
matters
to
our
community,
because
these
acts
of
police
violence
subjected
to
black
indigenous
communities
of
color
are
unjust,
dehumanizing
and
heinous.
You
all
have
seen
from
a
national
to
a
local,
a
local
reaction
of
2020
george
floyd
uprisings.
N
However,
as
a
council
continue
to
turn
away
when
police
violence
occurs
in
our
communities,
we
demand
sjpd,
stop
releasing
misleading
information
about
victims
of
police
violence,
sjpd
stopped
treating
victims
of
police
violence
like
criminals
such
as
handcuffing
victims
to
their
beds
and
interrogating
family
members
shape.
We
demand
sjpb
release
the
body
count
footage,
as
is
unedited
without
any
captions,
and
any
other
information
required
by
sb
1421
in
a
timely
manner.
N
We
are
watching.
We
are
frustrated,
we
are
hurting.
We
will
continue
to
condemn
police
violence
and
its
injustice,
as
you
all
should
too,
as
a
council.
Instead
of
abandoning
our
communities
in
times
of
injustice
and
enabling
the
cycle
of
police
violence
and
its
injustices,
black
lives
matter
end
of
comment.
Q
Justice
surge
at
sacred
heart
community
service.
When
I
was
younger,
I
used
to
believe
that
police
did
everything
they
could
to
protect
everyone
in
our
community,
but
now
I
know
better,
have
we
seen
police
violence
enacted
against
marginalized
community
members
and
black
indigenous
and
people
of
color
time
and
time
again,
particularly
talking
today
about
sjpd,
with
no
justice,
transparency
or
accountability?
Q
Most
recently,
in
the
case
of
keyon
green
as
our
elected
officials,
you
have
a
responsibility
to
denounce
gun
violence
in
all
its
forms
and
to
hold
your
fellow
public
servants
accountable.
I
joined
the
countless
others
demanding
the
release
of
truthful
and
unbiased
information
about
the
victims
of
police
violence,
demanding
the
treatment
of
victims
of
police
violence
with
respect
care
and
dignity
and
providing
funding
for
trauma
relief
for
victims,
especially
in
the
case
of
officer-involved
shootings.
It
should
go
without
saying
that
body
cam
footage
should
be
released,
unedited
in
full
immediately.
Q
I'm
also
echoing
the
comments
and
demands
of
the
members
of
showing
up
for
racial
justice,
sacred
heart
community
service,
hero,
10
and
the
justice
studies
department
know
that
we
are
all
here.
As
our
last
speaker
said,
we
are
watching
and
we
hope
that
you
do
the
right
thing
and
upholding
the
spirit
of
racial
justice
that
you
claim
that
you
value.
Thank
you.
H
Hi,
my
name
is
rupani.
I'm
calling
today
to
demand
that
the
city
council
acknowledge
the
pain
and
trauma
that
was
inflicted
by
sjpd
on
kyon
green
last
sunday
and
that
the
city
council
take
action
to
follow
the
demands
of
kyon
green,
his
family
and
the
public
after
yet
another
incident
of
racist
sjpd
violence.
H
I
also
ask
that
the
mayor
rescind
and
apologize
to
the
green
family
for
his
response,
following
the
shooting,
where
he
made
excuses
for
the
officer
who
inexcusably
shot
kion
green
four
times
within
seconds
of
arriving
on
the
she
on
the
scene.
The
mayor
said
we
learn
more
information
in
the
days
and
weeks
following
police
brutality.
That
is
immediately
clear,
but
he
fails
to
acknowledge
that.
H
The
reason
for
this
is
that
police
deliberately
withhold
information,
spread
misinformation
and
slander
victims
in
order
to
protect
officers
who
commit
racist
violence
in
this
case,
as
in
many
previous
cases,
the
police's
withholding
of
information
and
treatment
of
kyon
green
as
a
criminal,
further
exacerbated
the
trauma
experienced
by
kyon,
green
and
his
family.
This
trauma
demands
reparations
addition
to
firing
prosecuting
the
officer
responsible
and
creating
a
trauma
relief
fund
for
victims
of
police
violence.
H
The
city
must
also
commit
to
adopting
and
investing
in
recommendations
that
are
going
to
come
out
of
the
rex
committee,
which
are
focused
on
replacing
police
with
real,
tangible
community
services
that
keep
people
safe.
Instead
of
inflicting
horrific
violence
against
our
black
and
brown
community
members.
N
It
is
beyond
disturbing
that
the
police
shot
an
innocent
man
within
seconds
of
entering
lavix
without
knowing
or
understanding
the
situation
at
hand,
they
shot
a
man
who
disarmed
and
de-escalated
a
gunman,
which
is
something
that
the
police
should
be
doing
themselves.
A
badge
should
not
shield
police
officers
from
accountability.
N
N
We
as
a
community
demand
that
sjpd
release
the
body
cam
footage,
as
is
unedited
and
without
captions,
and
any
other
information
required
by
sb
1421
in
a
timely
manner
and
when
I
say
a
timely
manner,
I
don't
mean
years
from
now.
I
don't
mean
months
from
now.
We
want
weeks.
We
need
it
in
a
timely
manner
in
order
to
hold
police
accountable.
I
yield
the
rest
of
my
time.
H
Good
afternoon
my
name
is
sandra
asher
and
I'm
a
long
time
resident
of
almaden
valley
in
district
10,
a
member
of
the
safety
for
all
disability
justice
coalition,
as
well
as
a
member
of
serge
and
rex
at
sacred
heart.
Is
it
any
surprise
that
parents
of
special
needs
children
like
me,
do
not
feel
safe
with
sjpd
around?
H
I'm
outraged
that
in
our
city,
a
college
student
has
the
skills
to
peacefully
de-escalate
a
situation,
and
our
police
officers
do
not
rather
time
and
again,
sjpd
has
shown
that
they
only
know
how
to
shoot
first
and
treat
everyone
they
encounter
as
a
criminal.
They
never
take
accountability
for
their
actions.
What
tone
does
this
set
for
our
city
are
any
of
you
parents?
Would
you
expect
your
children
not
to
take
responsibility
for
their
actions?
Of
course
not.
H
We
must
stop
releasing
misleading
information
about
victims
of
police,
violence
and
sjpd
must
stop
treating
these
victims
like
criminals.
Sjpd
should
release
the
name
of
the
officer
who
shot
kahn
green
and
they
that
officer,
should
be
fired
and
prevented
from
working
for
any
other
law
enforcement
agency.
H
As
elected
officials,
you
must
be
transparent
and
accountable
to
the
people
you
represent
in
cases
of
police
shootings.
We
demand
our
elected
officials
to
denounce
gun
violence
in
all
its
forms.
It's
time
that
city
council
steps
up
and
supports
real
change
time
for
a
complete
overhaul
of
how
we
oversee
our
police
force
as
clearly
they
cannot
hold
themselves
accountable.
Thank
you.
Q
Hello,
my
name
is
kiana
simmons
and
I'm
an
organizer
with
hero
tent
and
a
resident
of
d3.
I'm
sure
everyone
on
the
council
is
aware
of
the
brutal
police
shooting
that
took
place.
Two
sundays
ago
I
love
victoria
otakuria,
one
block
away
from
sjsu,
as
my
community
has
laid
out.
The
police
within
seconds
of
arriving
on
scene,
shot
john
green
four
times.
Q
He
is
a
college
student
who
goes
to
contra
costa
college,
he's
a
captain
captain
of
his
football
team
and
that
night
on
sunday
at
lavix
he
disarmed
someone
peacefully,
which
is
something
that
the
police
have
consistently
failed
to
do
as
a
reward.
He
was
shot
four
times
and
is
in
the
hospital
where
he
currently
stays.
Q
Q
We
demand
that
sjpd
stop
releasing
misleading
information
about
victims
of
police
violence.
We
demand
that
sjpd
release
the
body
cam
footage,
as
is
unedited
without
captions,
and
any
other
information
required
by
sb
14
21
in
a
timely
matter,
and
I
just
want
to
add
on
to
that
as
well.
In
their
press
conference,
the
police-
they
did
not
show
the
community
footage
that
was
there,
but
they
showed
the
stills
that
looked
incriminating,
those
those
half
a
second
stills
that
they
were
able
to
capture.
Q
Q
D
H
Hello,
my
name
is
camila
and
I'm
a
member
with
the
party
for
socialism
and
liberation
and
a
local
voter
with
district
9..
I
am
a
san
jose
native
and
I
am
infuriated
by
the
recent
behavior
of
san
jose
police
department.
I
too
demand,
as
long
as
with
the
community
san
jose
police
department,
to
stop
releasing
misleading
information
about
victims
of
police,
violence
for
san
jose
police
department
to
stop
treating
victims
of
police
violence
like
criminals
and
for
san
jose
police
department
to
release
the
body
cam
footage
as
it
is
immediately.
H
H
I
am
the
reverend
samantha
evans
and
I'm
a
minister
member
of
the
presbytery
of
san
jose
and
I
live
in
district
six,
I'm
also
an
active
member
of
the
pact
and
on
behalf
of
pact,
serving
on
the
reimagining
public
safety
committee
of
the
city
of
san
jose,
I'm
here
to
speak
in
condemnation
of
the
unjust
police,
killing
of
kion
green
as
a
person
of
faith.
I
am
deeply
committed
to
the
flourishing
of
my
community
at
the
core
of
my
tradition.
H
Is
the
commitment
to
work
for
the
physical,
spiritual,
emotional
and
communal
well-being
being
every
single
member
of
our
city,
and
I
cannot
be
silent
because,
as
the
apostle
paul
writes,
when
one
member
of
the
body
suffers,
the
entire
body
suffers
with
it.
You
may
think
that,
because
you
do
not
personally
know,
okay
on
green,
that
you
yourself
are
not
suffering,
but
you
would
be
wrong
for
whether
you
know
him
or
not.
He,
whether
you
see
or
not,
is
your
brother.
H
H
Our
body
is
sick
and
the
only
way
to
become
whole
again
to
become
well
again
is
to
reckon
with
this
evil
in
the
system
and
root
it
out.
We
are
one
body
whether
we
like
it
or
not,
and
the
health
of
our
entire
community
will
depend
on
our
willingness
to
re-imagine
a
society
built
on
compassion
instead
of
fear
care
instead
of
violence
and
cooperation
instead
of
gross
othering.
H
M
Hello,
my
name
is
crystal
calhoun,
I'm
the
mother,
I'm
a
black
woman,
I'm
the
mother
of
three
three
black
sons.
I
have
15
grandkids,
I'm
the
elder
leader
of
the
san
jose
unified
equity
coalition
and
what
happened
to
keon
green
is.
I
feel
like
that.
You
know
he
was
he's
my
son,
but
I
feel
like
everybody's
our
children,
so
he's
my
son.
So
as
soon
as
I
heard
about
what
happened
and
like
what
keanu
said
three
seconds,
you
cannot
make
a
rational
decision
on
nothing.
In
three
seconds.
M
San
jose
police
has
been
known
for
this
criminal
violence
february
24th
this
year,
spotlight
newspaper
did
an
article
said
that
san
jose
police
are
some
of
the
most
racist
cops
in
entire
bay
area
and
they're
very
cruel
to
brown
and
black
people.
That
was
in
the
paper.
That's
not
my
statement,
but
what
I
want
and
what
everybody
wants
was.
We
want
racial
justice
for
keon,
green
and
his
family.
We
want
the
body
cam
footage
shown
right
away
and
not
like
they
said
in
the
edited
diversion.
M
We
want
the
san
jose
the
police
to
go
and
do
some
real,
real
racial
training.
We
want
the
police
to
stop
victimizing
the
victims
after
they're
the
victims
of
this,
this
young,
brave
young
man,
a
college
student,
was
in
there
and
he
helped
save
lives
and
within
three
seconds
san
jose
police
came
in
there
to
shoot
him
up
some.
They
need
to
stop
treating
black
people
brown
people,
indigenous
queer
people
like
that.
We
all
need
spirit.
We
all
need
the
truth
to
be
told.
M
I
have
15
grandkids,
I'm
shaking
in
my
boots
every
time
they
leave
the
house
because
of
san
jose
police,
I'm
more
afraid
of
them
than
the
ones
down
the
street.
Black
lives
matter
all
lives
matter,
and
we
need
the
politicians
to
start
standing
up
for
this
and
mayor
clicarto.
You
stopped
making
the
victims
the
bad
guy.
Here.
Nobody
even
knew
what
it
was
until
you
started
saying
mean
things
about
this
kid.
D
L
Yes,
thank
you.
My
name
is
sharat
lin,
I'm
a
member
of
human
agenda
and
I've
been
active
in
the
community
for
for
decades,
and
I
want
to
address
two
things.
One
is,
of
course,
the
the
killing
of
of
keon
green.
I
mean
this
is
absolutely
an
outrage.
This
is
a
criminal
act
and
it
needs
to
be
prosecuted.
L
We
need
the
body
cam,
footage,
unedited
and
in
terms
of
going
forward
what's
needed
in
order
to
solve
this
is
is
to
have
remember
that
this
is
not
just
you
know,
one
bad
cop,
it's
also
about
a
system
and
so
to
reform
that
system
first.
The
first
thing
we
need
is
proper
training
and
the
kind
of
training
the
you
know,
racial
sensitivity,
training
that's
needed
is
not
just
from
some.
L
So
that's
one
thing:
the
other
thing
I
want
to
addresses
is
mayday.
Vivacaii
has
been
arranged
on
on
may
1st,
which
it
conflicts
with
the
may
day
parade
the
mayday
march
that
we
have
every
year
ever
since
2006..
L
So
I
want
the
council
to
be
aware
of
that
and,
to
you
know,
one
way
of
addressing
this
is
first
of
all
avoid
the
conflict
in
the
future
and
number
two
make
a
proclamation
may
first
is
may
day,
because
that's
what
the
people
in
this
community
want.
Thank
you.
D
Q
Hi,
my
name
is
emma
hartung,
I'm
a
member
of
surge
at
sacred
heart
and
I
also
live
in
district
3..
I
just
think
it's
really
important
for
the
city
council
to
really
sit
with
the
realities
that
folks
are
sharing
today,
of
just
how
scared
people
are,
especially
our
black
and
latino
community
members
here
in
san
jose
young
people
right.
Q
One
of
the
most
recent
grads
recently
mentioned
just
like
students
who
just
might
normally
frequent
lyvics,
which
is
like
a
known
san,
jose
institution
right
just
how
scared
people
are
of
the
risk
of
being
shot
down
by
san
jose
police
just
for
living
their
lives.
Nevertheless,
imagine
if
they
decide
to
actually
be
brave
and
intervene
in
a
situation.
Q
So
specifically,
I'm
here
today
to
urge
the
city
of
san
jose
to
listen
to
people
who
are
taking
the
time
out
of
their
day
to
voice
their
concerns
and
their
fear
to
you
and
to
create
a
trauma
relief
fund
for
victims
of
all
violence,
specifically
of
police
violence
and
officer-involved
shootings
in
san
jose,
as
well
as
to
hold
san
jose
pd
accountable
to
stop
releasing
these
falsehoods
about
their
victims,
to
stop
handcuffing
victims
to
hospital
beds
and
interrogating
their
family
members,
as
well
as
to
release
body
cam
footage
in
a
timely
manner.
H
H
Hi
good
evening,
my
name
is
elle.
Like
the
letter
I
am
a
resident
of
district
3
and
also
a
member
of
hero
tent.
I
wanted
to
use
my
time
to
echo
what
a
lot
of
our
community
members
are
imploring
for
the
city
council.
H
What
happened
with
the
shooting
of
khaong
green
by
sj
police
is
unacceptable.
It's
horrifying.
It's
despicable,
and
it's
just
another
example
of
a
repeated
behavior,
of
a
repeated
pattern
within
sjpd
of
shooting
first
and
asking
questions
later.
H
I
also
find
it
disrespectful
for
the
council
to
be
talking
among
themselves
walking
around
while
people
are
speaking
physically
in
front
of
them.
It's
almost
as
if
this
is
nothing.
All
of
this
is
nothing
it's
like
a
big
joke,
because
it
we've
known
the
answer
for
so
long.
We
need
police
accountability.
H
We
need
body
cam
footage
to
be
released
in
a
timely
manner.
We
need
people
to
stop
treating
victims
of
police
violence
like
criminals
like
like
they're
animals
like
they
did
something
wrong
when
literally
keon
green
disarmed,
the
gunman,
something
that
other
community
members
pointed
out
that
san
jose
police
cannot
do
all
they
do
is
escalate
the
situation
and
put
our
mem
our
community
members
in
danger.
H
So
many
people
are
telling
you
in
their
face
that
they
are
not.
They
do
not
feel
safe
because
of
the
current
systems.
So
I
join
my
fellow
community
members
in
these.
These
demands
of
releasing
the
unedited
body
cam
footage
without
captions
reparations
for
all
victims
and
families
of
police
violence,
especially
kayon
greene,
and
to
fire
the
officer
who
shot
k
on
green
and
demand
that
he
never
serves
on
another
police
force.
L
A
D
A
Hi,
thank
you.
My
name
is
derek.
I
am
a
member
or
sorry
staff
organizer
with
sacred
heart
for
the
rex
committee,
or
race,
equity
and
community
safety,
and
I
won't
belabor
the
the
the
moment
here,
because
I
really
do
want
you
all
to
hear
out
the
community
members,
the
residents,
the
people
who
live
here
in
this
beautiful
city
who
have
been
calling
for
these
changes,
calling
for
the
release
of
the
body,
cam,
footage,
unedited
and
ensuring
that
justice
is
truly
done
for
keon,
green
and
his
family.
A
I
I
just
want
to
say
that
it
does
give
me
a
bit
of
ptsd
to
be
on
this
phone
talking
about
this,
so
I
implore
you
to
reach
out
to
the
family.
You
just
you.
No
cameras,
no
pretense,
but
just
to
hear
from
the
family
and
see
what
they
need,
because
it's
clear
that,
in
the
midst
of
all
of
this,
the
one
focus
that
we
keep
bringing
our
eyes
back
on
to
is
blame
and
what
I
would
love
for
the
city
of
san
jose
to
do
in
this
situation.
B
A
Yeah
good
afternoon,
council
members,
I'm
roman
rodriguez,
I'm
not
from
san
jose,
but
I
live
in
turlock
california
and
the
case
of
kyon
queen
shooks
me
really
hard,
because
I've
been
holding
police
all
around
the
area
accountable,
including
the
cases
of
trevor
siever
from
modesto
california.
We've
been
shot
the
same
way
by
a
police
officer,
seven
times
when
he
was
suffering
a
mental
crisis
and
also
angela
quinto
from
antioch
california
and
counts
other
victims
of
police
violence.
A
I
implore
you
to
that.
You
stop
promoting
the
gas
line,
propaganda
against
kion
green,
because
this
is
the
same
tactic
that
modesto
police
use
against
receiver
and
antioch
against
angelo
quinto
when
they
die
in
the
hands
of
police
violence
and
as
as
a
person
of
color.
A
This
puts
a
lot
of
fear
and
breaking
trust
between
the
communities
that
fully
supposed
to
serve
and
the
police
themselves,
and
I'm
urging
you
to
start
defunding
that
excessive
budget
from
san
jose
police
and
start
putting
that
money
towards
a
reparations
fund
for
police
violence,
victims
and
plea,
and
do
something
against
that
officer,
because
he
really
needs
to
be
charged
with
felonies.
His
name
be
released
to
public
and
release
the
footage.
A
The
unedited
footage,
because
we're
getting
tired
of
hearing
more
police
violence,
we're
tired
of
the
propaganda,
the
gaslighting
and
the
more
budget
going
towards
police
instead
of
investing
in
people
with
other
alternatives
that
makes
community
safer.
So
for
the
sake
of
the
community
and
all
over
california,
start
apologizing
to
the
green
family.
Right
now,
stop
the
propaganda
against
him,
treat
him
as
a
hero
and
start
holding
that
police
officer
accountable
and
fire
him
and
charge
for
felonies
and
be
prosecuted,
because
we
cannot
rely
on
police
to
investigate
the
police.
C
Well,
this
is
what
happens
when
you
have
online
training
courses.
You
know
this
is
always
the
case,
they're
always
going
to
say,
they're
not
trained
enough,
even
though
these
people
make
hundreds
of
thousands
of
dollars
a
year.
This
is
nothing
new
in
san
jose.
These
people
talk
about
it's
only
brown
and
black
people.
Trust
me
they
do
it
to
people
like
who
look
like
me
and
I'm
white
on
rice.
I've
had
cops,
pull
guns
on
me
and
pull
the
hammer
back.
D
C
If
you've
ever
had
someone
pull
the
hammer
back
when
they
point
a
gun
at
you,
let
me
tell
you
something:
it
is
not
what
you
want
to
ever
experience,
let
alone
get
shot.
So
now
this
city
council,
they
have
no
money
for
training,
they
have
online
training,
but
guess
what
they're
gonna
have
speed
cameras?
That's
gonna,
keep
down
everybody,
keep
in
mind.
This
city
is
equal
opportunity,
oppression.
It's
it's
not
just
a
couple
races
they
like
to
they
like
to
squeeze
everybody.
They
can,
whether
it's
the
cops
or
the
city
council.
C
I
can
tell
you
because
I've
experienced
it
personally.
Secondly,
they
they
want
to
have
more
traffic
cops.
They
want
50
traffic
cops
like
they
used
to
have
back
in
the
old
days.
Let
me
tell
you
something
in
downtown
san
jose
back
in
those
days.
They
were,
they
had
undercover
cops
pulling
people
over
in
plain
clothes.
That's
not
that's!
No
joke!
I
also
that's.
When
I
had
a
gun
pulled
on
me
and
a
pullover
downtown
san
jose.
C
They
were
always
on
people
all
the
time,
but
that
they
want
to
go
back
to
that
because
they
want
to
revenue.
You
man,
they
want
to
revenue
every
shade
of
the
rainbow.
I
could
tell
you
that's
what
they
wanted,
not
only
they
want
to
revenue
you,
they
want
to
keep
you
down
whether
it's
a
picture
of
you
driving
10
miles
over
the
speed
limit
or
pulling
you
over.
Everybody
should
be
against
the
expansion
of
t-e-u.
H
Hi,
my
name
is
elizabeth
and
I'm
a
member
of
the
race,
equity
and
community
safety
committee
at
sacred
heart
community
service
and
live
in
downtown
san
jose
district
3..
It
is
extremely
important
to
me,
as
a
woman
who
is
black
and
latina,
that
police
do
better.
I've
been
taught
my
whole
life
to
watch
out
for
the
police.
I
watch
the
police
watch
me
as
they
watch
and
racially
profile.
H
Members
of
my
family,
friends
and
other
members
of
my
community
is
absolutely
unacceptable
that
a
black
man
who
acted
heroically
to
stop
gun
violence
be
shot
four
times
within
four
seconds
and
have
his
life
forever
changed.
This
is
outrageous.
This
is
frightening.
He
could
have
died
too
many
black
lives
have
been
lost
and
forever
changed
because
police
is,
the
police
are
failing
to
protect
and
serve
our
community.
H
If
only
police
did
what
kion
green
did.
If
an
unarmed
untrained
civilian
can
stop
gun
violence,
then
why
can't
the
police?
How
can
we
ever
expect
to
trust
the
police?
There
needs
to
be
more
transparency
and
better
training.
It's
not
right
that
we
expect.
We
are
expected
to
spend
our
tax
dollars
on
a
government
institution
that
results
in
black
and
brown
people
being
disproportionately
targeted,
attacked
and
insulted
by
assaulted
by
the
police.
H
We
demand
that
sjpd
stop
releasing
misleading
information
about
victims
of
police
violence,
stop
treating
victims
of
police
violence
like
criminals,
release
a
bicam
footage,
as
is
unedited,
and
that
the
city
of
san
jose
developed
a
trauma
relief
fund
for
the
victims
of
all
of
all
violence,
especially
on
cases
involving
officer-related
shooting
elected
officials
must
be
transparent
and
accountable
to
the
people
they
represent
in
the
cases
of
police
shootings.
We
demand
our
elected
officials,
denounce
gun
violence
in
all
its
forms.
H
N
C
C
Sjpd
and
local
government
need
to
be
held
accountable
for
their
flagrant
disregard
for
human
life.
We
demand
that
sjpd
stop
releasing
misleading
information
about
victims
of
police
violence.
We
demand
sjp
to
stop
treating
victims
of
police
violence
like
criminals
and
to
also
release
the
body
cam
footage,
as
is
unedited,
and
more
than
more
than
an
apology.
We
also
demand
the
city
of
san
jose
to
create
a
trauma
relief
fund
for
the
victims
of
all
of
all
violence.
L
Q
Hello
hi,
my
name
is
cynthia
wonderjee.
I
am
a
former
member
of
district
one
in
san
jose,
but
I
went
to
san
jose
state.
I
spent
probably
like
seven
eight
years
living
in
san
jose.
I
plan
to
move
back
in
san
jose.
It's
my
city.
Man
is
what
I'm
trying
to
say.
I'm
actually
an
immigrant
from
cameroon
and
I've
been
in
america
for
about
18
years,
and
I
can
tell
you
the
entire
time
I've
been
in
america.
Q
I've
been
afraid
for
my
life
right,
not
only
afraid
that
someone
would
hurt
me
because
of
my
race
or
my
gender
or
my
gender
or
my
orientation,
but
but
afraid
that
I
would
never
get
justice,
especially
if
it's
by
a
police
officer
every
person
in
my
family
as
a
me
and
all
five
of
my
older
siblings
have
been
told
how
to
act
in
front
of
a
police
officer,
and
I'm
telling
you
this
because
everyone
has
already
said
the
demands.
You
know,
release
the
body.
Q
Cam
footage
get
some
justice,
but
I'm
telling
you
personally
how
it's
affecting
me.
I
am
a
27
year
old
engineer
in
silicon
valley.
I
did
all
the
things
that
you're
supposed
to
do
as
an
immigrant.
I
worked
hard.
I
got
a
job,
I
work
at
a
large
company
and
I
still
fear
for
my
life,
and
I
don't
know
if
that
fear
is
ever
going
to
go
away.
Q
There's
no
way
that
you
can
be
a
here,
be
a
hero
and
be
black,
and
it
makes
me
wonder
because
y'all
increase
the
police
budget,
but
where
is
all
that
training
going
to
if
us,
as
black
people,
have
more
training
in
10
situations
than
police
officers
that
take
three
seconds
to
shoot?
Someone.
D
M
M
M
You
need
to
rev
I'm
asking
that
all
negative
images
of
kion
is
immediately
removed
from
all
sites,
because
the
police
are
doing
these
steel
images
that
make
it
look
like
he's
the
criminal
when
he
actually
saved
many
lives
that
night
and
no
one
is
stating
that
I
want
the
police
chief
to
go
back
on
in
another
press
conference
and
apologize
to
the
green
family.
M
M
D
D
Yes,
hello,
my
name
is
alondra
ordaz
from
district
6
a
23
year
old,
latina
woman,
and
I
am
here
to
demand
justice
for
k
on
green.
We
demand
sgpd,
stop
releasing
misleading
information
about
victims
of
police
violence
as
cpd
stopped
treating
victims
of
police
violence
like
criminals,
sgpd
released
the
body,
cam
footage,
unedited
and
without
captions
of
and
any
other
information
required
by
sb
1421
in
a
timely
manner.
City.
D
H
Hi
everyone-
my
name,
is
nancy,
I'm
with
the
party
for
socialism
and
liberation,
and
I
want
to
start
calling
this.
What
it
really
is,
and
that
was
an
attempted
murder.
Thankfully,
k
on
green
is
still
alive
and
recovering
and
we
pray
him
a
speedy
recovery,
but
that's
what
it
was.
It
was
an
attempted
murder
by
the
fascist
police
in
sjpd,
and
we
must
demand
you.
A
city
council
have
to
take
responsibility
for
the
complete
incompetence
of
sjpd.
H
Why
did
they
do
this?
They
they
did
it
because
they
know
they
can
get
away
with
it.
They
did
it
because
they
know
that
there
is
no
accountability.
You,
the
mayor,
samuel
carter,
the
mayor,
you
always
give
them
a
pass.
When
this
happens,
it's
happened
too
many
times
when
we
had
an
action
at
city
hall,
we
read
out
more
than
20
more
than
20
names.
20
names
of
people
have
been
called
more
than
that
more
than
that
of
people
who
have
been
killed
by
sjpd,
and
that
is
way
too
many
names.
H
You
need
to
take
accountability.
This
cannot
keep
happening.
There's
875
million
dollars
of
our
taxpayer,
money
that
goes
to
pd
and
they're,
not
even
trained
to
de-escalate
a
fight.
They
shoot
somebody
after
three
seconds.
It
is
unbelievable.
I
cannot
imagine
that
this
has
happened
in
our
community
and
I
want
you
to
know
that
if
we
don't
get
no
justice,
you
won't
get
no
peace.
Thank
you.
M
Yes,
my
name
is
jesse,
I'm
a
member
of
district
3
and
I'm
also
a
part
of
hero
10,
and
I
want
to
join
everyone
else
on
this
call
and
calling
for
justice
for
kaon,
green
and
his
family.
I
think
that
tweets
from
mayor
lecardo
immediately
following
the
shooting
are
absolutely
disgusting,
and
I
hope
mayor
licardo
that
the
first
thing
that
you
do
when
you
speak
to
his
family
is
apologize
for
your
statements
and
your
actions
surrounding
this
shooting.
M
Thank
god
he
is
alive
and
the
city
needs
to
be
held
responsible
for
these
actions
of
this
police
officer,
because
it's
very
clear
that
this
is
a
systemic
problem.
This
is
not
a
problem
of
one
individual
officer,
but
this
is
the
problem
of
the
entire
system
of
the
police.
Here
in
san
jose,
I
was
at
san
jose
state
yesterday,
talking
to
students
and
students
there,
particularly
black
students
on
campus
at
san
jose
state,
are
afraid
and
that's
on
you.
M
That's
on
you
as
city
council
members,
as
elected
leaders
of
the
community,
you
need
to
change
that.
You
need
to
change
the
police
department
so
that
students,
so
that
everyone
can
feel
safe
in
our
community.
You
should
be
releasing
the
body
cam
footage
immediately.
You
should
be
listening
to
k
on
green's
family
and
the
demands
of
his
family.
You
should
be
compensating
this
young
man
for
the
horrible
injuries
that
he's
sustained
from
this
justice
for
keon
green
black
lives
matter.
Q
Hi,
my
name
is
olamide
abiose
and
I'm
a
student
at
stanford
university.
I
was
horrified
to
learn
about
the
shooting
of
keon
green
someone
who
bravely
did
the
job
that
police
are
incapable
of
doing
he
safely,
de-escalated
a
fight
and
helped
keep
his
community
safe,
but
the
sj
pd
sjpd,
shot
him
four
times
and
later
chained
him
to
a
hospital
bed.
The
mayor
and
other
officials
completely
dehumanized
him
in
later
public
statements,
while
treating
the
trigger-happy
cops
as
heroes.
This
shoot
first
asked
questions
later
is
not
a
one-off
exception
to
the
rule.
Q
It's
policing
working
exactly
as
it's
designed,
there's
no
reforming
an
inherently
racist
institution
where
all
black
and
brown
people
are
guilty
until
proven
innocent
and
as
a
black
woman.
I
find
it
deeply
sick
and
hypocritical
that
this
city's
leadership
has
made
countless
empty
professions
of
black
lives
mattering,
but
has
no
words
of
condemnation
for
what
happened
to
keon
green,
it's
abhorrent,
but
not
surprising.
That
sjpd
has
consistently
re-traumatized
keon
and
his
family
and
has
taken
no
accountability
for
its
actions.
Q
H
With
hero
10
and
the
rex
committee,
at
sacred
heart,
I've
been
here
before,
and
I'm
here
yet
again
to
demand
that
the
city
of
san
jose
recognize
the
violent
racist
impact
of
sjpd
and
on
our
community
in
san
jose.
We
should
not
have
to
be
grateful
that
we
did
not
have
to
add
keon
green's
name
to
the
list
of
dozens
that
have
lost
their
lives
at
the
hands
of
sjpd
in
the
last
few
decades.
The
more
this
happens,
the
more
we
cannot
ignore.
H
The
pattern
of
literal
premeditated
murder,
mayor
licardo's,
tweets
after
the
incident
aimed
to
paint
the
police
as
heroes
for
wielding
their
guns
without
discretion,
but
the
real
hero
in
this
situation
was
keon
green,
who
disarmed
a
gunman
with
no
violence
at
all.
We
as
a
community
are
so
tired
of
seeing
our
friends
and
family
criminalized
while
sjpd
are
the
real
criminals
and
the
mayor
and
city
council
stand
complicit
in
solidarity
with
the
organizations
here
today.
H
I
call
on
city
council
to
release
body
cam
footage
unedited,
create
a
trauma
relief
fund
for
all
victims
of
officer-involved
shootings
and
end
practices
of
criminalizing
victims
and
abusing
their
families.
I
demand
a
direct
apology
from
mayor
located
for
his
dismissive
language
regarding
the
incident
and
demand
the
removal
of
any
officers
involved.
I
see
on
the
screen
that
the
city
council
deems
abusive
language
it's
inappropriate
today,
while
we
believe
abusive
treatment
and
violence
from
sjpd
is
unacceptable.
D
Hi,
my
name
is
lonnie.
I'm
a
san
jose
resident
in
district
two
and
I'd
like
to
comment
on
the
k
on
green
shooting.
My
very
diverse
south
san
jose
neighborhood
has
its
share
of
problems,
but
overall
I
feel
safe,
but
it's
important
that
the
whole
community
feel
safe.
D
The
canned
green
shooting
demonstrates
what
can
happen
when
officers
shoot
first
and
ask
questions
later.
This
incident
must
be
investigated.
Public
transparency
is
essential
body.
Cam
footage
must
be
released.
Unedited
the
san
jose
police
must
be
held
accountable
and
I
hold
you
are
elected
representatives
accountable
as
well.
Thank
you,
andrew
siegler,.
S
Hi
there,
my
name
is
the
mayor
and
council
members
of
san
jose.
My
name
is
andrew
ziegler,
I'm
a
member
of
surge
at
state
sacred
heart
and
I'm
a
voter
living
in
downtown
san
jose
district
3..
I
would
like
to
comment
on
the
racist
police
shooting
of
chaom
green.
I
have
a
mental
health
disability.
The
first
time
I
had
an
episode.
I
was
faced
with
several
police
officers,
shouting
confusing
and
conflicting
orders
at
me.
I
considered
myself
lucky
to
be
here
unscathed
today.
S
City
of
san
jose
create
a
trauma
relief
fund
for
the
victims
of
violence,
especially
cases
of
officer
involved,
shootings
and
elected
officials
must
be
transparent
and
accountable
to
the
people
they
represent
in
cases
of
police
shootings.
We
demand
our
elected
officials,
denounce
gun
violence
in
all
of
its
forms.
Additionally,
there
needs
to
be
a
personal
private
apology
to
the
green
family
and
a
public
apology
to
them
as
well.
Q
Yes,
this
is
not
the
first
time
that
I
have
attended
a
council
meeting
on
in
san
jose.
I
am
here
to
reiterate
that
body.
Cam
footage
needs
to
be
released
unedited
more
than
just
a
private
apology.
A
public
apology
needs
to
go
to
the
family
k
on
green,
the
council
members.
I'm
sure
you
guys
get
to
go
home
comfortable
to
your
families.
D
My
name
is
mary
helen
dougherty.
I
live
in
district
3
downtown
and
I'm
a
member
of
showing
up
for
racial
justice
at
sacred
heart.
We
need
your
value-driven
leadership
to
get
the
san
jose
police
department
to
be
accountable.
The
police
must
stop
treating
victims
of
violence
like
criminals.
These
victims
are
our
neighbors
and
our
children.
D
A
Hey,
can
you
guys
hear
me?
Yes,
hey
thanks
for
your
time
my
name
is
shashwath
khandare,
I'm
grew
up
in
cupertino.
I
live
in
morgan
hill
had
a
lot
of
family
members
and
friends
who
went
to
san
jose
state.
I've
been
to
la
victoria
a
lot,
I'm
a
member
of
hero
tent
as
well,
and
just
want
to
reiterate
what
everybody
else
has
been
saying
about:
the
racist,
systemic
police,
violence
that
sjpd
inflicts
on
the
community,
and
I
think
you
know
everything
has
been
said.
A
I
just
want
to
ask
a
question
like
who's
really
in
charge.
Is
the
council
afraid
to
hold
the
police
accountable?
Are
they
afraid
that
the
police
will
inflict
violence
upon
them
and
their
families
if
they
try
to
hold
the
police
accountable
like
who's?
Really,
the
dog
and
who's
really
wagging
the
tail
here,
and
if
the
council
is
afraid
or
unwilling
to
hold
the
police
accountable,
then
like,
we
have
like
serious
problems
like
all.
A
You
need
to
go,
and
we,
like
all
of
you,
need
to
be
replaced
by
people
who
aren't
afraid
and
who
are
willing
to
represent
the
people
and
make
sure
that
justice
is
served,
and
you
know,
get
rid
of
all
the
racist
police
officers
and
administrators
and
hold
them
accountable
for
their
murders
and
their
dishonesty
and
the
way
they
frame
all
these
situations
and
try
to
play
themselves
off
as
the
heroes
when
they're
really
just
a
bunch
of
yahoos.
A
It's
terrifying
like
this
is
not
the
society
that
I
want
to
live
in
like
yeah.
Sorry,
thanks
for
your
time,.