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From YouTube: NOV 16, 2021 | City Council Evening Session
Description
City of San José, California
City Council Evening Session of November 16, 2021
Pre-meeting citizen input on Agenda via eComment at https://sanjose.granicusideas.com/meetings.
This public meeting will be held at San José City Hall and also accessible via Zoom Webinar. For information on public participation via Zoom, please refer to the linked meeting agenda below.
Agenda https://sanjose.legistar.com/View.ashx?M=A&ID=890218&GUID=0D4A070C-E40C-4892-A608-08956EEAAAAF
A
Just
one
moment
tony,
I
think
we
may
have
sorry.
D
D
Recommendation
coyote
valley
is
not
just
plots
of
land
to
be
monetized;
it's
it's
a
precious
natural
resource,
floodplain
that
protects
our
city,
cleans
our
air
and
purifies
our
water.
It's
a
refuge
for
wildlife,
an
escape
for
all
of
us
to
get
away
to
nature,
a
link
to
our
agricultural
past
and
the
earth.
D
F
I
urge
you
to
support
the
staff
recommendations
for
coyote
and
for
the
study.
I
hope
the
scope
can
comment
on
the
importance
of
preserving
the
rule
character
of
coyote
and
respect
the
wildlife
connectivity.
F
I
had
the
privilege
of
working
for
charlotte
powers
and
when
she
took
office
in
1992
mayor
hammer
appointed
her
to
the
general
plan
2020.,
I
remember
driving
out
to
what
we
lovingly
called
lake
tandem
at
the
time
and
charlotte,
and
I
look
at
each
other
going.
This
will
probably
never
happen
enough
time
enough
money.
Let's
give
some
certainty
to
everybody.
Thank
you.
D
G
I
love
spina
farms,
dune,
don't
destroy
it,
please
sabina
farms
is
great
and
that
whale.
D
D
I've
seen
our
children
suffering
with
worsening
obesity
and
mental
health
problems
over
the
past
year
and
a
half
through
the
covet
pandemic,
and
I
can
tell
you
that
our
children
desperately
need
more
access
to
nature
in
our
city,
not
less
so
that
they
can
have
the
many
physical
and
mental
health
benefits
that
that
nature
offers.
Coyote
valley
is
critically
important
to
san
jose.
It
needs
to
be
protected
so
that
families
can
access
nature
for
their
health
and
well-being,
and
so
that
children
can
have
the
opportu.
D
Hello,
my
name
is
daschle
leeds,
I'm
the
conservation
assistant
for
the
sierra
club,
lumber
prieta
chapter.
We
support
the
staff
recommendations
in
the
memo
from
mayor
licardo
and
council
members,
jimenez
perales,
following
cohen,
regarding
the
study
for
land
uses
east
of
monterey
road.
We
urge
the
council
to
ensure
that
wildlife,
connectivity
and
biodiversity
is
protected
and
expanded.
Coyote
valley
is
one
of
the
last
remaining
landscape
linkages
between
the
santa
cruz
mountains
and
the
rest
of
california.
Without
the
ability
to
migrate
out
of
the
mountains,
mountain
lions
and
other
species
will
suffer
from
genetic
isolation.
D
I
grew
up
in
the
santa
cruz
mountains
and
I've
seen
them
outline
with
my
own
eyes,
despite
its
size,
it
vanished
into
the
forest
like
a
ghost.
These
beings
are
awe-inspiring,
coyote
valley
provides
habitat
wildlife,
mobility,
flood
protection,
climate
resilience
and
physical
and
mental
health
benefits
for
our
community.
We
have
supported
the
protection
of
coyote
valley
for
decades,
and
we
are
thankful
for
the
ongoing
efforts
of
other
community
members
and
organizations
who
have
also
fought
to
protect
this
beautiful
and
essential
ecosystem.
Thank
you.
B
H
All
right
good
evening,
I'm
justin
lardonwa,
I'm
a
san
jose
planning,
commissioner,
and
I
voted
with
the
minority
in
favor
of
approving
the
staff
recommendation.
But
I'm
speaking
tonight
as
an
individual
coyote
valley
is
an
irreplaceable
natural
resource
and
we
need
to
preserve
it
for
future
generations
for
wildlife
and
flood
mitigation
in
a
wider
sense.
This
item
is.
F
F
California
has
over
46
billion
dollars
in
ag
income,
and
you
might
think
it's
nuts,
but
it's
literally
over
10
billion
dollars
worth
of
nuts
that
we
grow
here
in
california.
I'm
a
farmer
I
heard
someone
said:
where
are
the
farmers
who
want
to
farm
there?
Here
we
are.
We
are
here
and
even
I
would
say,
with
all
that
money,
it's
still
not
worth
taking
away
the
open
space
and
the
habitat
for
the
animals
for
the
wildlife
for
the
birds
in
coyote
valley,.
C
Members,
my
name
is
doug
block
and
I'm
here
on
behalf
of
the
teamsters
union,
ufcw
local
5
and
the
south
bay
labor
council.
I
want
to
add
the
voice
of
workers
to
the
open
space
advocates.
Speaking
in
support
of
the
staff
recommendations.
Tonight,
amazon
is
creating
a
downward
pressure
on
the
wages
and
working
conditions
of
union
members
in
your
community.
C
G
Hi,
I
am
ariana
a
high
schooler
from
san
jose
and
as
a
mother's
out
bryant
youth
activist.
I
urge
you
to
protect
our
climate
by
voting
in
favor
of
rezoning,
coyote
valley
for
agriculture
and
open
space.
This
matters
to
me,
because
I
frequent
this
area
with
my
mom
and
friends.
It
is
only
a
short
drive
for
me
to
run
around
the
four
mile
hilly
loop
to
train
for
cross
country.
G
Another
reason
is
that
to
me,
animals
are
like
pure
souls
of
humans
and
it
would
destroy
me
to
see
their
homes
and
migrating
areas
taken
over
by
a
company
who
doesn't
have
true
interest
in
being
sustainable.
As
that
doesn't
make
money,
don't
be
the
reason
this
happens
to
this
super
important
and
meaningful
area.
Coyote
valley
plays
an
important
role
in
absorbing
carbon
emissions
and
in
protecting
downtown
san
jose
from
flooding
and
smog,
and
so
I
urge
you
to
please
follow
the
recommendation
of
the
general
task.
D
Hi,
my
name
is
jennifer
durking
and
I
appreciate
the
opportunity
to
speak
tonight.
I'm
a
member
of
the
california
native
plant
society
and
I
hope
you
will
vote
to
protect
coyote
valley
for
future
generations
of
people,
animals,
pollinators
and
plants.
All
of
these
play
a
key
role
in
fighting
climate
change
at
a
dire
time
in
our
history.
As
someone
who
was
born
in
san
jose
in
the
1960s,
I've
seen
a
tremendous
change
across
our
region,
orchards,
grasslands,
entire
hillsides,
have
been
lost
to
developments.
The
wealth
we've
generated
has
also
created
significant
ecological
deficits.
D
When
I
was
a
professional
fundraiser
at
danza
college,
I
saw
faculty
and
students
at
the
ker
center
gathering
data
to
protect
the
land,
and
it
was
there
that
I
learned
that
coyote
valley
provides
critical
wildlife
corridor
between
the
santa
cruz
mountains
and
the
diablo
range.
I
hope
you
will
save
this
land
for
future
generations.
Thank
you.
C
D
D
I'm
actually
a
bit
sad
and
disappointed
that
in
these
times
we
live
in
when
the
entire
world
is
debating
climate
change
and
the
absolute
need
for
shifting
to
an
environmentally
responsible
plan
for
future
growth.
We
are
here
in
san
jose,
discussing
discussing
a
potential
betrayal
of
our
values
and
betrayal
of
our
children's
future.
D
Coyote
valley
needs
to
be
protected.
We
are
all
stewards
of
these
lands
and
we
were
all
collectively
responsible
for
our
children's
futures.
We
seem
to
be
great
at
talking
about
how
much
we
care
and
how
much
we
are
doing
to
be
more
sustainable
and
to
develop
better
to
consume
less,
to
build
a
better
future
here,
linda,
followed.
B
F
Hi,
linda
ruthruff,
with
the
santa
clara
valley,
chapter
of
the
california
native
plant
society
and
district
one
resident
the
world
is
in
a
biodiversity
crisis.
We
are
in
the
midst
of
an
insect
apocalypse.
Songbird
populations
are
crashing
worldwide,
more
and
more
plants
and
animals
are
teetering
on
the
brink
of
extinction.
F
We
need
to
decide
who
we
will
be
as
a
community
will
we
do
our
part
to
stem
the
loss
of
biodiversity,
or
will
we
continue
to
pave
over
lands
needed
for
survival
of
the
plants
and
creatures?
We
sell
share
the
planet
with
san
jose
voters,
the
task
force,
your
staff
and
all
the
community
members
who
sent
in
emails
have
made
it
clear
they
want
to
help
heal
the
earth
they
want
you
to
protect
coyote
valley,
please
protect
the
last
of
our
valley
floor
habitat.
Please
vote
yes
to
protect
coyote
value
valley.
Thank
you.
G
G
I
am
a
protector
of
these
lands
that
my
ancestors
have
bled
into.
Several
members
of
your
council
have
done
their
duty,
but
as
usual,
they
are
in
the
minority.
This
is
addressed
to
the
rest
of
you
now.
Let
me
be
clear:
I'm
not
here
to
speak
to
you
of
profit,
the
economy,
to
bribe
you
toward
justice.
I
am
here
to
remind
and
warn
you
this
land
has
nothing
to
prove
to
you.
This
land
owes
us
nothing
and
we
owe
it
our
very
life.
We
own
nothing
and
this
charade
needs
to
end.
G
D
This
plan
adequately
acknowledges
our
needs
and
in
our
best
interest
regarding
the
warehouse
proposal,
it
is
a
disastrous
idea
that
hypocritically
ignores
our
city's
progression
towards
climate
resilience
from
our
city
city's
vehicle
miles,
child
policy
to
our
climate
accord,
goal
of
carbon
neutrality
by
2030..
Please
consider
us
youth
in
the
green
future
and
making
a
decision.
Thank
you
for
your
time.
G
Hi,
my
name
is
jacqueline
and
I
have
recently
graduated
from
uc
santa
barbara
with
a
degree
in
environmental
studies.
More
importantly,
I
am
a
member
of
the
san
jose
community
growing
up.
I
went
to
del
robley
elementary
davis,
middle
school
and
oak
grove
high
school,
but
I
wasn't
introduced
to
nature
until
my
stepdad
exposed
us
to
hiking
when
I
was
eight,
I
remember
walking
alongside
coyote
creek
and
my
stepdad
saying
I'll,
give
you
five
dollars
if
you
find
an
animal
bigger
than
a
bread
box.
G
This
is
where
my
love
for
animals
and
the
environment
started,
but
it
wasn't
until
I
started
college
that
I
realized
that
this
exposure
was
incredibly
influential
to
my
current
passions
for
environmental
conservation
to
me,
coyote
valley
and
the
other
open
spaces
like
it
are
vital
to
my
childhood.
Well,
while
I
am
extremely
lucky
to
have
been
exposed
to
nature
above
my
stepdad,
I'm
sure
there
are
many
others
who
weren't
given
this
opportunity,
destroying
the
little
bits
of
open
land
we
have
left
in.
G
D
Honorable,
mayor
and
city
council,
my
name
is:
louise
jackson,
I'm
an
emeritus
professor
and
cooperative
extension
specialist
at
uc
davis
for
30
years.
I've
studied
vegetable
crop
systems
in
central
california.
In
my
opinion,
agricultural
viability
in
the
coyote
valley
would
increase.
If
the
high
quality
farmland
would
transitioned
to
small
scale
diversified
organic
production,
the
high
cash
value
crops
would
be
locally
successful.
Economically,
there
are
many
young
farmers
who
jump
at
the
chance
to
farm
in
coyote
valley.
Organic
production
is
compatible
with
the
production
protection
of
natural
ecosystems
nearby.
D
Our
research
has
shown
lower
greenhouse
gas
emissions
in
organic
than
in
conventional
systems.
Funding
for
the
transition
could
come
from
the
state's
climate,
smart
agriculture
programs,
other
small
scale,
diversified
organic
farms
on
the
urban
edge,
such
as
soil-borne
farms
in
sacramento,
could
help
provide
templates
for
this
type
of
transition.
Thank
you.
C
Mike
saturday
pac
san
jose,
we
advocate
for
the
preservation
of
the
unique
places
and
culture
that
tell
the
story
of
who
we
are.
We
also
believe
in
fixing
our
jobs,
housing
and
balance
through
high
density
development
at
the
city's
historic
core.
Sadly,
we've
had
to
accept
the
loss
of
many
historic
places
at
our
core.
We
do
so
because
we
count
on
san
jose's
resolve
to
fight
for
the
open
space.
C
That
is
the
context
that
frames
our
beloved
silicon
valley,
jobs
that
might
have
been
in
coyote
valley
will
be
developed
downtown
if
council
bows
to
pressure
of
those
seeking
a
windfall
profit
in
coyote
valley,
trust
will
be
lost
by
those
of
us
who
chose
to
support
projects
such
as
downtown
west
and
our
belief
in
the
ability
to
find
a
meat
in
the
middle
approach
to
being
good
neighbors,
once
known
as
the
valley
of
the
heart's
delight.
The
soil
and
the
environment
here
is
excellent.
C
Hi
this
is
kerry,
carlson
speaking
on
behalf
of
michael
king,
thank
you
mayor
and
members
of
the
city
council.
I
would
like
to
point
out
that
existing
businesses
that
serve
the
community
are
already
operating
on
current
zoning
of
coyote
valley.
We
are
a
family-owned
trucking
business
that
has
taken
over
previous
heavy
industrial
use
of
a
lumber
yard
that
existed
there
for
50
years.
We
serve
the
local
community,
as
well
as
the
limited
agricultural
uses
in
coyote
valley.
C
If
our
zoning
has
changed,
it
would
put
our
family-owned
business
out
of
business
and
result
in
inverse
condemnation
of
our
land.
Low-Bed
trucking
would
then
have
to
come
from
outside
the
area,
resulting
in
an
increase
in
greenhouse
gases,
opposite
of
what
the
plan
hopes
to
achieve.
I
plea.
I
really
hope
that
you
take
into
consideration
the
existing
business
owners
that
are
trying
to
operate
in
coyote
valley.
Thank
you.
G
Hi,
my
name
is
anna
budman,
I'm
a
lifelong
resident
of
san
jose
and
I'm
a
high
school
senior,
and
I'm
here
with
mothers
out
front.
Please
vote
yes
to
protect
coyote
valley,
my
generation
and
our
future.
Children
are
the
ones
who
will
suffer
the
effects
of
climate
change
and
we
need
the
climate
resilience
that
an
undeveloped,
coyote
valley
will
provide.
It
will
protect
san
jose
from
flooding,
provide
a
place
to
grow
food
close
to
the
city
and
help
wild
animals
survive
its
wetlands
absorb
carbon
from
the
atmosphere.
G
People
are
making
arguments
about
the
economy,
but
what
we
really
need
to
take
into
account
is
the
fact
that
the
economy,
as
we
know
it,
will
radically
change
with
the
climate
disaster
if
we
do
not
take
action
and
if
we
do
not
take
action
now,
so
please
vote
yes
and
please
don't
destroy
our
climate.
Thank
you.
D
D
coyeti
valley
could
play
a
huge
role
in
reaching
san
jose's
aggressive
and
very
necessary
climate
target
plants.
Naturally
remove
carbon
from
the
atmosphere
through
photosynthesis.
Farmers
doing
regenerative.
Agriculture
in
the
valley
will
accelerate
carbon
removal
from
the
atmosphere.
It
could
be
one
of
the
most
cost
effective
ways
to
remove
emissions
from
the
atmosphere.
D
Regenerative
agriculture
would
also
greatly
increase
the
soil's
ability
to
absorb
flood
waters
and
continue
to
reduce
flood
damage
in
downtown
and
elsewhere.
It
makes
farms
more
drought,
tolerant
increases
productivity
lowers
costs
which
increases
profitability,
as
well
as
food,
local
food
security
vote
for
our
young
people's
future.
Thank
you.
C
C
The
existing
maintenance
facility
on
stockton
should
be
re-zoned
for
her
for
housing,
preferably
affordable
staff,
completely
missed
the
planning
commission's
concern
about
the
loss
of
opportunity
for
reverse
commuting
staff,
also
completely
failed
to
recognize
that
the
majority
of
traffic
on
marijuana,
moderate
highway
and
santa
teresa
originate
in
san
benito
and
monterey
counties
the
entire
west
of
centuries.
Above
the
speech
theme,
it
should
be
projected
from
anything,
including
agriculture.
Thank
you.
C
C
C
F
Hi
good
evening,
everyone,
my
name,
is
mara
von
chuck.
I
live
in
san
jose
in
district
six,
I'm
an
environmental
educator
and
a
naturalist.
I
lead
bioblitz
events,
which
are
nature
exploration,
events
for
families
in
coyote
valley
and
in
parks
in
san
jose,
such
as
elm
rock
park,
kelly
park,
helio
parks
and
many
others.
I
collaborate
with
organizations
such
as
santa
clara
valley,
audubon
society,
kipkate,
creek,
beautiful
and
osa.
F
I
teach
thousands
of
people
about
our
local
nature
and
why
it's
important
to
protect
it.
During
the
events
I
organize,
combined
with
other
citizen
scientist
data,
we
already
documented
over
1
000
species
that
live
in
chaotic
valley
alone.
All
our
data
is
available
on
the
inauguralist
app.
You
can
all
explore
that
my
family
and
I
love
coyote
valley
and
would
like
to
protect
it.
I
would
like
to
ask
you
to
approve
the
staff
recommendation
and
join
us
on
our
next
violence.
The
babblitz
club.
G
Good
evening,
mayor
licardo
and
council
members,
my
name
is
annika.
As
a
high
school
student,
I
was
excited
to
hear
that
san
jose
has
committed
to
becoming
carbon
neutral
by
2030..
I
ask
you
to
continue
your
climate
leadership
by
adopting
the
staff
recommendation
of
rezoning,
coyote
valley
valley
for
agriculture
and
open
space.
G
Two
years
ago,
I,
along
with
other
mothers
out
front
volunteers,
knocked
on
doors
in
the
olinder
neighborhood,
which
had
been
hit
hard
by
the
2017
flood.
Every
neighborhood,
who
answered
signed
a
postcard,
urging
you
to
protect
them
by
preserving
coyote
valley
as
a
vital
flood
absorption
plane.
You
listened
to
us
then,
and
we
are
hoping
you
will
listen
to
us
now.
If
you
do
not
vote
to
protect
coyote
valley,
a
huge
warehouse
likely
to
be
built
on
it
will
emit
pollution
that
will
seep
into
the
groundwater
connected
to
our
opera
for
drinking
water.
G
D
Good
evening,
mayor
and
council
members,
my
name
is
emily
schwing
and
I'm
here
representing
the
resolution
and
the
sea
safe
authority
collective
tonight.
I
urge
you
to
support
the
city
staff
and
general
plan
task
force,
recommendations
for
permanent
protection
of
the
coyote
valley
region
as
open
space
and
agriculture.
D
Coyote
valley
is
prime
farmland
that
has,
and
can
continue
to
provide
san
jose
residents.
Local
fresh
produce,
the
7,
400
acres
of
agricultural
land
could
eventually
generate
50
million
per
year
and
benefit
san
jose
by
providing
access
to
fresh,
sustainable
and
culturally
significant
produce.
Coyote
valley
is
one
of
the
last
permitting
locations
in
san
jose.
D
That
is
large
enough
to
implement
a
local
regenerative
agricultural
effort,
which
would
include
farming
and
grazing
practices
that,
among
other
benefits,
can
help
san
jose
reach
its
climate
goals
by
rebuilding
soil
organic
matter,
resulting
in
both
carbon
downdraw
and
improving
the
water
cycle.
Thank
you
for
your
consideration.
D
Good
evening,
council
members-
and
thank
you
very
much
for
letting
me
comment,
my
name
is
karen
coppett.
I
live
in
the
rose
garden,
which
is
in
council
member
dev,
davis's
district
six.
I
was
born
here
in
santa
clara
county
and
grew
up
going
to
coyote
valley,
all
my
life.
I
I
love
it.
It's
so
incredibly
beautiful,
I'm
a
recently
retired
senior
water
conservation,
specialist
from
the
santa
clara
valley,
water,
district
and
as
such,
water
resources
weigh
heavily
upon
my
mind
and
mean
a
lot
to
me.
D
As
you
know,
we
are
in
the
middle
of
an
epic
drought,
so
this
valley
means
more
to
us
right
now
than
it
ever
has
before.
Coyote
valley
provides
natural
protection
from
flooding
and
protects
an
important
aquifer.
I
urge
you
to
please
support
staff
recommendation
and
redistrict
it
for
redesignate
it
for
open
space
and
agriculture.
Thank
you.
So
much.
B
D
I
agree
with
the
other
speakers
who
have
been
articulating:
the
value
of
coyote
valley
for
biodiversity,
recreation,
water
sources,
flood
protection
and
food
security,
and
we've
also
heard
from
current
land
owners
and
businesses.
Who've
been
here
for
oh
a
generation
or
two
as
have
I,
but
what
I'm
much
more
interested
in
is
how
the
native
people
of
this
land
would
like
coyote
valley
to
be
managed
the
people
who
stewarded
it
much
more
successfully
than
we
have
for
thousands
of
years.
D
D
Thank
you.
Building
in
a
green
field
will
always
be
easier.
A
distribution
center
is
not
compatible
with
wildlife
crossings,
as
per
ab-948.
Coyote
valley
has
been
recognized
as
a
resource
of
statewide
significance.
The
goal
of
conserving
30
percent
of
california's
natural
and
working
lands
is
going
to
take
resolve
once
the
land's
developed.
It
is
permanently
gone
for
uses
supporting
wild
or
agricultural
life.
C
D
Speaking
tonight
to
voice
our
support
for
the
coyote
valley,
general
plan
amendments,
and
we
also
wanted
to
highlight
the
severe
consequences
of
a
2.3
million
square
foot,
warehouse
distribution
center
with
500
semi-truck
dock
bays
in
the
coyote
valley.
First,
distribution
centers
are
very
inefficient
from
an
economic
development
standpoint.
D
The
industrial
employment
density
for
distribution
warehouse
centers
is
very
low.
This
means
a
lot
of
land
is
required
to
generate
a
relatively
small
number
of
jobs.
Furthermore,
distribution
center
jobs
are
rapidly
being
replaced
with
automation
and
robots.
Many
of
the
jobs
initially
created
by
these
developments
will
cease
to
exist
in
the
near
future.
My
wife
susie
will
continue
our
statement
during
her
comment
period.
B
D
Emissions
from
diesel
engines
contribute
to
the
production
of
ground
level,
ozone
with
damages
crops,
trees
and
other
vegetation.
On
sunday
we
visited
the
coyote
valley
open
space
preserve.
It
was
wonderful
to
see
so
many
people
and
families
enjoying
the
rolling
hills,
wildlife
and
fresh
air.
The
coyote
valley,
open
space
preserve,
is
very
close
to
the
proposed
warehouse
and
distribution
center
development.
The
noise
pollution
and
traffic
created
by
this
development
would
create
numerous
negative
externalities
for
our
existing
open
space
preserves
wildlife,
climate
and
all
the
residents
of
santa
clara
county
to
protect
our
environment
residents
and.
C
Thank
you
for
the
opportunity
and
I
really
appreciate
the
work.
What
has
been
done
by
the
the
staff
recommendation
team
recently
there
was
a
charade
of
cop26
where
they
were
talking
about
saving
the
planet
and
saving
the
the
future
generations,
but
I
think
the
the
planning
commission
is
completely
missed
that
point
and
I
complete.
C
I
completely
think
that
once
you
destroy
something,
it's
very
difficult
to
get
it
back
once
it's
destroyed,
it's
destroyed
forever
and
I
think
the
coyote
is
one
of
that
piece
of
land
which
we
should
be
preserving
for
the
future
generations
to
come.
The
late
stephen
hawkings
gave
us
an
ultimatum
that
the
humans
must
leave
the
earth
within
the
next
hundred
years,
and
I
think
so
the
planning
committee
has
voted
on,
destroying
it
and
leading
the
brigade
in
getting
us
there
at
the
earliest
time
possible.
C
G
D
Dear
city
council,
my
name
is
juan
estrada,
while
I
recently
joined
the
staff
at
green
foothills
and
am
an
active
community
leader,
I'm
speaking
tonight
as
a
general
plan
review
task
force.
Member
tonight
is
an
opportunity
for
you
to
once
again
demonstrate
that
san
jose
possesses
the
courage
and
wisdom
to
take
bold
action
to
benefit
everyone
now
tomorrow
and
perhaps
forever.
D
Protecting
coyote
valley
is
both
an
environmental
and
an
equity
issue.
Past
development
relied
on
sprawl
into
open
space,
resulting
in
inequitable
impacts.
41
local
leaders
signed
an
equity
and
inclusion
letter
supporting
protecting
coyote
valley
over
2400
community
members
have
written
to
you
in
support.
D
Hello,
fred,
buzzo
san
jose
director
for
spur
good
evening
mayor
and
council
members,
so
san
jose
is
on
the
cusp
of
deepening
its
commitment
to
growing
up
rather
than
growing
out,
and
you
have
a
unique
and
critical
opportunity
to
concentrate
growth
within
its
existing
urbanized
areas
rather
than
sprawling
out
further.
And
we
want
to
commend
the
planning
staff
for
embracing
the
vision
that
michael
outlined
earlier.
D
G
G
It
wasn't
until
I
visited
coyote
valley
when
I
walked
along
its
trails
and
absorbed
its
beautiful
scenery
that
I
truly
found
the
magic
of
this
place.
Coyote
valley
is
a
green
cruel
that
has
contributed
to
the
memories
of
many
and
offer
an
escape
from
the
hyper
competitive
environment.
That
is
silicon
valley.
G
Coyote
valley
could
nurture
many
more
happy
moments
to
many
more
people
for
many
more
years,
but
only
if
we
protect
it.
I
urge
the
city
to
please
do
not
allow
the
construction
of
warehouses
in
this
beloved
place.
It
will
destroy
its
beauty.
Please
seriously
consider
the
environmental
implications.
Thank
you.
D
D
C
Good
evening
I'm
al
victor's
land
use
consultant.
The
planning
department
has
recommended
that
over
200
acres
of
industrial
parks
only
be
retained
within
coyote
valley,
that
property
and
the
20
126
acres
at
the
corner
of
santa
teresa
and
bailey
are
far
far
different
from
the
rest
of
the
coyote
valley.
Many
people
have
talked
about
these
differences.
C
J
Good
evening,
I'm
fred
lester
an
owner
of
the
42
acres
known
as
spina
farms
on
bailey
avenue
in
1969.
My
family
invested
in
this
land
solely
for
this
industrial
park.
Zoning
with
the
intention
to
develop
it.
Since
this
time
the
ibm
campus
calpine
plan
and
gavilan
college
annex
were
approved,
measure
t
secured
50
million
dollars
of
taxpayer
funds
rewarded
to
just
two
billionaire
developers
in
coyote,
with
no
funding
left
to
secure
smaller
neighboring
lands,
these
billionaires
more
than
tripled
their
initial
investments.
J
C
C
B
C
Excellent
well,
thank
you
all
the
mayor,
honored
mayor
honored,
council
members.
Thank
you
so
much
for
allowing
me
to
speak
here.
C
So
I'm
a
resident
of
the
south
bay
and
I
was
born
in
san
jose
in
1999
and
grew
up
here.
It's
been
a
really
nice
spot
and
you
know
growing
up
here.
It's
been
really
nice,
seeing
the
difference
between
san
jose
and
the
south
bay,
and
I'd
really
appreciate
it
for
the
other
generations
to
just
see
what
it's
like
when
the
land
is
taken
care
of
by
the
people
that
have
grown
there
and
lived
there
for
thousands
of
years.
C
So
I
just
I
really
appreciate
if
you
listen
to
the
native
voices
out
there,
the
ama
matsun
people
and
pay
attention.
K
C
D
Good
evening
I'm
tom
foster
and
I
represent
the
foster
family
members-
we've
owned
property
in
the
valley
for
over
50
years,
and
there
is
a
reason
why
the
planning
commission
denied
the
recommendation.
It's
not
because
they're
hawkish
pro-development
lack
concern
for
the
environment,
just
the
opposite.
I
heard
a
lot
of
concern
about
the
environment.
They
rejected
it
because
they
had
concerns
that
agriculture
is
not
viable,
and
that
was
after
the
city
planning
staff
had
given
them
a
one-hour
presentation
full
of
glossy
pictures
and
stories.
No
analysis,
no
facts.
D
It
he
doesn't
believe
ag's
bible,
so
this
is
a
taking.
The
planning
commission
also
recognized
that
the
owners
have
not
been
involved
in
the
discussion,
no
landowners
that
I
know
of
have
been
involved,
and
I
hoped
you
read
my
letter
and
I
hoped
it
shocked
you-
that
I've
had
a
total
of
six
minutes
of
public
comment
time
to
provide
input
how's
that
a
fair
process.
D
B
C
Thanks
for
the
time,
if
all
you
do
tonight
is
approve
the
memo
by
the
mayor
and
the
council,
members
you'll
leave
much
of
coyote
valley,
open
space
unprotected
from
development
that
might
be
approved
by
future
city
council.
If
you
want
to
implement
your
vision
and
make
it
permanent,
you
need
to
do
more.
There's
only
one
way
to
ensure
the
open
space
goes
in,
county
valley
will
be
successful,
you
need
to
own
the
land
or
the
development
rates.
C
C
D
Hi,
my
name
is
jenny,
green,
I'm
a
volunteer
with
mother's
outfront,
and
I
work
at
green
foothills,
I'm
here
tonight
as
a
san
jose
resident
and
the
mother
of
two
daughters.
Please
vote
yes
to
protect
coyote
valley.
In
2019,
I
went
door
to
door
with
others
out
front
to
talk
with
people
in
the
san
jose
neighborhoods
that
had
flooded.
In
2017,
we
talked
to
hundreds
of
people
and
nearly
every
person
that
we
spoke
with
supported,
preserving
coyote
valley
as
open
space
and
farmland.
D
Many
of
them
signed
postcards
that
we
sent
to
city
council
to
show
you
how
much
public
support
there
is
for
this.
I
have
never
done
a
door
knocking
campaign
that
was
as
popular
as
this
people
do
not
want
downtown
to
flood
people
in
san
jose
strongly
want
to
preserve
coyote
valley
for
open
space
and
farmland.
We
all
have
a
big
stake
in
preserving
those
lands.
Please
vote
in
favor
of
the
staff
recommendation.
B
D
D
F
Thank
you.
I'm
carol
watts
president
of
the
league
of
women
voters
of
san
jose
santa
clara,
as
detailed
in
our
letter
to
you
of
11
11.
We
strongly
urge
you
to
vote
yes
without
delay
on
the
staff
recommendations.
San
jose
has
wisely
made
significant
investments
in
coyote
valley
and
voted
to
go
carbon
neutral
by
2030..
F
Please
approve
further
protections
for
our
rural
open
space,
be
sure
you
make
the
decision
that
will
positively
affect
the
most
people
in
our
city
region
and
the
world
for
the
long-term
future,
listen
to
the
people
who
are
testifying
and
recognize
our
statements
in
your
discussions
tonight.
Please
assess
all
major
claims.
For
example,
what
if
any
kind
of
agriculture
is
viable?
Can
the
valley
aid
in
reducing
greenhouse
gas
emissions
to
help
the
planet
to
support
human
life?
F
D
Ricardo
council
members,
jimenez,
perales,
foley
and
cohen,
we
believe
you
can
have
a
vibrant
jobs-rich
economic
development
that
is
within
the
urban
boundary
that
is
infill,
that
is
near
transit
and
that
protection
of
coyote
valley
is
still
consistent
with
those
economic
development
goals.
We
support
supporting
the
staff
recommendations
and
we
believe
that
you
know,
as
a
general
plan
task
force
member
who
voted
for
these
changes.
We
urge
the
council
to
adopt
them
and
to
support
the
memo.
Thank
you.
D
Oh,
I'm
sorry
thank
you.
This
is
gina
whitney
I'm
in
district
two.
I
am
very
strongly
in
support
of
preserving
the
protecting
coyote
valley
from
industrial
development.
E
Year
ago,
we
voted
to
pass
measure
t
with
a
whopping
82
percent
of
the
vote,
and
not
just
a
yes
vote
with
no
price,
but
with
the
knowledge
and
approval
of
the
cost
of
the
parcel
tax
to
be
picked
up.
The
voters
so
listening
to
the
comments
of
the
100
or
so
people
here
today
is
not
is
necessary.
Given
that
you,
the
voters
of
the
county,
have
already
spoken.
So
please.
D
D
From
sdsu-
and
I
am
here
today
to
ask
you
to
vote
to
approve
the
staff
recommendations
for
the
coyote
valley
general
plan,
amendment
coyote
valley
is
critically
important
and
needs
to
be
protected
for
climate
resilience
at
luna.
We
focus
on
providing
information
and
resources
for
the
immigrant
community
and
we
have
learned
that
for
years
there
have
been
many
barriers
for
the
latino
latinx
community
to
enjoy
open
space.
Coyote
valley
is
not
only
one
of
the
closest
open
spaces
for
the.
D
C
Good
evening,
council,
members
and
mayor,
my
name
is
joe
baranowski,
I'm
a
morgan
hill
resident
and
president
of
the
morgan
hill
responsible
growth
coalition.
I
assume
some
of
you
attended
the
league
of
california
city's
annual
conference
in
september
in
the
approved
resolution
asking
the
state
legislator
to
pass
legislation
that
provides
for
a
fair
and
equitable
distribution
of
local
sales
tax.
You
may
recall
hearing
that
one
big
rig
truck
is
equal
to
about
8
000
passenger
vehicles
when
it
comes
to
impact
on
pavement
and
street
maintenance.
This
isn't
a
hypothetical
issue.
C
For
example,
the
city
of
kent
washington
had
to
pass
an
emergency
ordinance
to
ban
distribution
centers
when
their
state
tax
law
changed
because
their
street
maintenance
costs
were
threatening
to
bankrupt
their
city.
While
you
are
considering
the
broader
issue
of
zoning,
not
a
particular
use,
we
all
know
what
is
targeted
to
go
there.
Not
only
does
distribution
warehousing
not
make
sense
from
an
environmental
viewpoint,
but
it
makes
no
sense
from
an
economic
sense,
please,
whatever
you
do,
don't
allow
distribution
and
warehousing
in
coyote
valley.
Thank
you.
L
Evening
I
wanted
to
thank
those.
D
C
Hello
good
evening,
council
members,
honorable
mayor
san
carlos,
just
wanted
to
really
encourage
the
staff
to
please
move
forward
to
protect
coyote
valley.
C
C
B
F
Hello,
my
name
is
shaolin.
We
are
the
farmer
in
morgan
hill
in
coyote
valleys.
So
I
all
hear
all
the
people
that
you
you
guys.
Okay,
that's
right!
We
care
for
the
next
generation,
but
who
care
about
the
farmer
over
here
who
have
been
like
my
uncle
living
here
more
than
40
years
and
right
now,
day
and
day,
everything's
so
expensive.
F
The
whole
total
living
over
here
for
the
farmers
living
is
not
sustainable
anymore.
We
don't
even
have
the
right
internet
for
our
property
over
here
so
who
care
about
here.
If
you
guys
care
about
good,
take
it
over,
buy
it
over,
take
it
as
a
city,
public
land
and
then
pay
the
farmer
out
here
or
come
here
who
enjoy
the
life
here,
enjoy
your
saturday
sunday
over
here,
pay
for
the
ticket
come
here,
pay
for
the
ticket
and
then
enjoy
your
life.
F
C
G
C
C
A
C
To
build
them
a
facility
on
this
site
that
would
generate
thousands
of
jobs
and
millions
of
dollars
of
revenues
for
the
city
of
san
jose.
This
is
a
real-time
project
that
will
bring
significant
economic
activity
to
the
city.
What
I
can
also
tell
you
is
that
this
tenant
is
on
a
path
to
powering
its
operations.
C
C
C
You
know
that
because
the
city
raised
96
million
dollars
to
buy
the
brandenburg
and
sebrato
properties
right
across
the
road
rather
than
just
redesignating
them,
agriculture
doing
right
means
treating
all
property
owners
equally
and
fairly.
If
you
want
to
preserve
the
ncb
properties,
you
should
deny
staff's
recommendation
and
take
time
to
raise
the
money
to
acquire
the
properties
for
their
fair
market
value.
C
G
Good
evening,
mayor
locado,
council
members,
this
is
actually
karina
who
called
earlier.
I
am
I'm
a
san
jose
resident
and
middle
school
student.
I
urge
you
to
work
to
rezone
coyote
valley
for
agriculture
and
open
space.
This
is
very
important
to
kids.
Like
me,
for
drawing
carbon
out
of
the
air
and
helping
stabilize
the
climate
too
much
open
space
has
been
paved
over
already
and
we
need
to
preserve
what
little
is
left.
In
addition,
wildlife
uses
coyote
valley
as
a
link
between
habitat,
which
is
irreplaceable,
and
we
should
act
as
good
stewards
to
protect
it.
K
C
D
My
name
is
megan
fluke
and
I'm
the
executive
director
of
green
foothills
and
a
san
jose
resident.
I
want
to
recognize
and
thank
the
2500
people
who
sent
letters
to
the
san
jose
city
council,
asking
you
to
approve
staff
recommendations
for
the
coyote
valley,
general
plan
amendments
they've
done
this
over
the
past
week
and
a
half.
This
is
an
unprecedented
amount
of
support
on
such
an
important
issue.
D
G
G
We've
already
heard
several
accounts
of
the
true
benefit
that
this
place
provides
for
our
community,
but
so
I'm
not
going
to
repeat
those
things.
Sorry,
I'm
a
bit
nervous,
but
I
just
want
you
to
kind
of
double
check
and
use
los
angeles
as
an
example,
a
place
that
has
in
the
past.
G
You
know
overexpanded
and
in
turn,
has
you
know,
had
major
detrimental
impacts
to
our
wildlife
in
the
area
griffith
park.
Being
a
primary
example
of
what
happens
when
you
cut
off
several
ranges
from
each
other
and
the
negative
impact
it
has
on
wildlife
as
well
as
our
communities.
So
please
just
do
what
you
can
to
protect
coyote
valley.
This
is
a
first
step.
It's
not
the
final
one,
but
thanks
bye.
D
Hi,
I'm
victoria
resident
in
coyote
valley,
please
vote
to
approve
the
staff
recommendations
for
coyote
valley,
general
plan
amendments.
County
valley
is
critically
important
and
needs
to
be
protected
for
climate
resilience,
wildlife,
habitat
and
connectivity,
flood
and
groundwater
protection
and
open
space
in
farmland.
D
Good
evening,
mayor
and
council
members,
I
strongly
support
the
staff
in
general
plan
recommendations
to
further
pursue
preserve
coyote
valley.
I
am
so
impressed
and
I
hope
you
are
too
by
the
large
number
of
my
fellow
residents
who
have
taken
the
time
to
speak
up.
I
understand
there
have
been
thousands
of
emails
plus
those
making
comments
tonight
about
the
importance
of
coyote
valley
for
climate
resilience,
flood
protection,
wildlife
corridors
aquifer,
recharge,
local,
sustainable
agriculture
and
recreation.
D
These
voices
echo
the
overwhelming
support
by
san
jose
residents
in
2018
for
measure
t,
which
included
fifty
thousand
dollars
for
protection
of
natural
infrastructure.
Now
is
the
time
to
add
further
protections
for
this
irreplaceable
resource.
Thank
you.
D
Good
evening,
everyone,
my
name,
is
sharon
luna
and
I
live
in
san
martin.
I
would
like
to
ask
you
to
please
support
your
staff
report
and
recommendations
to
protect
the
beautiful
coyote
valley.
I
remember
when
san
jose
was
growing
and
growing
and
growing,
and
there
was
always
coyote
valley-
is
going
to
become
the
next
cisco
apple
and
then
through
efforts.
D
There
are
farmers
on
that
land,
but
coyote
valley
is
beautiful,
pristine
and
if
we
are
truly
serious
about
protecting
our
climate
and
our
environment,
we
need
to
stop
and
think
what
can
we
do
to
do
that,
and
that
is
why
I
would
like
you
to
please
support
again
your
staff
report
and
their
recommendations.
Thank
you.
J
I
Yes,
also
from
horseshoe
one
of
the
joys
that
my
father
had
he
retired
from
ibm
down
there
in
coyote
valley
and
was
that
he
would
come
home
and
he
had
a
smile
on
his
face.
I
remember
when
he
told
me-
and
he
said,
I'm
working
in
the
same
field
that
I
used
to
pick
fruit
when
I
was
a
little
boy
and
that
was
like,
like
a
like,
like
a
revelation
to
him,
you
know
that's
how
connected
we
are
to
the
to
the
orchards
around
here.
I
L
Thank
you.
I
want
to
thank
everyone
who
commented
tonight
and
I
also
want
to
thank
staff
for
their
work
on
this
issue.
I
didn't
know
I
was
going
to
be
first,
so
congratulations
not
prepared
for
that.
This
item
is
a
difficult
one.
L
For
me,
I
have
hiked
both
the
east
and
west
ranges
surrounding
coyote
valley
and
find
it
to
be
very
beautiful
and
peaceful
and
have
many
fond
experiences
recollections
from
there
not
not
least
seeing
the
checker
spot,
butterfly
learning
what
miners
lettuce
is
and
frankly,
laughing
at
my
son,
who
was
scared
of
a
tired
old
bull
one
day
on
a
hike,
it's
a
beautiful
area
and
it's
an
important
green
resource
for
those
of
us
who
are
urban
dwellers.
L
L
L
So
some
of
you
may
know
I
was
born
and
raised
in
north
dakota,
which
is
a
rural
area
with
many
farmers,
and
I
have
extended
family
members
who
have
farmed
and
do
farm
and
my
uncle
actually,
this
year
his
entire
feed
corn
crop
was
ruined.
L
L
L
What
the
memo
writers
make
their
motion
and
then
I
I
would
actually
ask
if
they
could
include
a
recommendation
as
well
to
come
back
to
the
transportation
and
environment
committee
in
six
months
with
a
report
on
funding
options
or
opportunities
to
purchase
the
properties,
as
we
have
done
already
in
in
coyote
valley,
for
some
other
property
owners.
If
we
wanted
to.
If
we
want
to
preserve
that,
I'd
also
like
to
make
just
a
couple
of
other
points,
I
think
in
the
study
that
is
to
come,
which
I
assume
will
pass.
L
L
L
So
those
are
my
comments
I
have
one
more
would
like
to
ask
if
an
inclusion
of
potential
use
of
larger
properties
for
solar
farms
could
also
be
included
in
in
the
motion
that's
made,
there
was
an
article
in
the
mercury
news
over
the
weekend.
Some
of
you
may
have
seen
it
about
how
solar
facilities
and
agriculture
uses
can
be
combined,
and
perhaps
that
could
be
something
that
that
we
could
even
look
at
for
san
jose
clean
energy
in
promoting
locally
sourced
renewable
energy
as
part
of
the
preservation
of
coyote
valley.
O
Thank
you
vice
mayor
and
was
jotting
down
some
of
the
asks,
as
it
relates
to
the
motion.
I
I
have
some
questions,
but
I
think
I
think
that
some
of
those
may
be
included,
and
so
at
least
in
in
the
motion
I'll
make.
O
So
I
just
wanted
to
first
thank
every
single
person
organization
that
has
contributed
to
the
conversation
around
coyote
valley,
from
the
long-standing
landowners
to
district
2
residents
who
care
deeply
about
this
space,
as
well
as
to
residents
all
around
san
jose
and,
of
course,
many
of
the
environmental
folks
that
show
up
time
and
again
as
it
relates
to
these
topics.
O
Excuse
me,
I
also
want
to
say
thank
you
to
the
mayor.
I
know
he's
not
sure
where
he
is
but
appreciate.
His
leadership
on
the
issue
and
his
staff
has
consistently
been
in
a
good
worked
in
a
good
collaborative
nature
with
my
team,
as
it
relates
to
this
issue.
Special.
Thank
you
to
helen
chapman
for
my
team,
who
really
has,
in
my
mind,
kept
coyote
valley,
front
and
center
during
my
time
in
office.
So
I
very
much
appreciate
that.
O
What
I
would
also
like
to
say
is
that
you
know
I
think
about
just
some
of
the
differences
that
have
been
expressed
as
it
relates
to
the
future
of
the
valley
and
what
people
want
to
see
there.
O
O
I
think
this
morning
during
closed
session,
we
got
some
information
about
what
some
opinions
are
of
different
experts
and-
and
it
was
striking
to
me
that
in
one
case,
two
different
folks
from
one
university
said
different
things
as
it
relates
to
the
viability
of
agriculture,
and
the
other
thing
that
I
think
has
stood
out
to
me
is
just
the
way
it's
been
described
to
me
by
some
of
the
landowners
or
actually
one
land
or
landowner.
Specifically,
the
gentleman
that's
standing
up
in
the
back,
mr
sasso.
O
I
think
he
he's
explained
it
to
me
very
aptly
and
really
described
farming
as
spokes
on
a
wheel
and
each
spoke
representing
a
critical
component
to
make
agriculture
viable
spokes,
such
as
water,
a
market
labor
force,
and
certainly
I've,
never
farmed
in
my
life.
But
the
analogy
seems
apt
to
me.
I
think
it
really
painted
a
picture
for
me
as
to
what's
needed
to
get
some
of
the
stuff
off
the
ground.
O
O
Lastly,
let
me
just
say
that,
during
the
course
of
my
many
meetings
with
the
landowners,
I've
come
to
see
the
eastern
side
of
monterey.
Road
as
uniquely
different
in
that
uses
are
buried,
and
I
think,
as
anyone
that's
read
the
memo.
You
know
we
need
to
conduct
a
study
and
I'm
certainly
supportive
of
that
to
determine
which
uses
are
appropriate
in
the
language.
O
O
The
study
will
occur
and
we
will
have
all
the
appropriate
conversations
in
partnership
and
I'll
say
that
again,
in
partnership
with
the
landowners
on
the
eastern
side
of
the
monterey
corridor,
because
I,
like
many
of
you
that
have
stated,
do
believe
that
it
is
the
southern
gateway
to
the
city,
and
I
want
to
make
sure
that
all
the
efforts
my
office
is
putting
in
all
the
efforts
of
the
city
to
really
make
that
a
corridor.
We
can
all
be
proud
of.
O
I
think
is
going
to
really
take
the
effort
of
all
the
different
stakeholders,
including
the
landowners,
so
I
think
that's
going
to
be
very
important
with
that
I'll
make
a
motion
to
approve
our
memorandum
and
I
think
in
the
to
council
member
davis's
point
I
think,
in
the
memo
we
did
touch
on
it
coming
back
before
t
and
e,
but
we
didn't
specify
when,
and
so
I
guess
I'd
defer
to
to
staff
as
to
whether
you
think
six
months.
I
think
it
was
council
member
davis
that
you
had
mentioned
or
asked
for.
L
So
it's
a
it's
a
an
additional
and
ask
about
the
funding
options
and
opportunities
to
purchase
the
properties.
O
I
understand
so
yeah
because,
okay,
so
yeah,
I
I'd
be
open
yeah.
I
think
I'll
include
that
in
the
in
the
memo
in
the
motion.
I
think
that's
fine
as
it
relates
to
the
solar
panel
in
a
study
as
it
relates
to
that
I
think
it'd
be
that'll
sit
well
within
some
of
the
broad,
the
broader
study.
That's
going
to
be
done.
I
think
it's
worth
exploring
that.
So
if
we
need
to
be
prescriptive,
certainly
I'll
say
it
that
the
my
intention
is
to
include
that.
L
Second,
thank
you.
Can
I
ask
for
one
more
the
addition
of
the
pd
zoning
to
cover
all
the
properties
east
of
monterey,
not
just
the
part.
O
P
Sorry
so
so
we
have,
we
do
have
a
pd
zoning
on
the
portion
of
east
coyote
that
is
proposed
before
you
tonight
on
the
portion
of
east
county,
that
is
in
the
urban
reserve.
That's
to
to
continue
to
allow
uses
that
the
general
plan
currently
allows
in
that
area.
The
general
plan
does
not
allow
private
recreation
uses
in
this.
The
southern
portion
of
the
monterey
highway
corridor,
that's
outside
the
urban
reserve.
P
So
yes,
well,
once
the
studies
done,
there
could
be
recommendations
that
come
out.
I
would
imagine
that
would
recommend
extending
that
zoning
and
actually
adding
additional
uses
most
likely
to
that
zoning
or
changing
it
entirely
to
be
more
flexible
perhaps,
but
we
don't
have
environmental
clearance
for
the
council
to
extend
that
zoning
into
the
green
belt.
P
So
that
would
be,
as
you
know,
would
be.
A
certain
would
be
in
involve
environmental
clearance,
a
budget
and
all
that
we
would
recommend
that
that
be
done
as
part
of
the
larger
study
effort,
when
we
can
work
with
the
stakeholders
out
there
and
come
back
with
recommendations
on
the
overall
zoning
for
the
area,
there
will
have
to
be
a
zoning
in
the
per
state
law.
We
can't
just
have
these
general
plan
policies.
We
will
have
to
bring
a
zoning
back
to
council.
O
So
I
would
say,
given
that
response
council
remember
davis,
I'm
not
going
to
be
including
it,
but
I
appreciate
the
recommendation
I
I
did
have
one
question
as
you
were
talking
it
had
forgotten.
I
wanted
to
ask
you
about
this
so
in
arma
and
I'm
curious
as
to
your
understanding
some
of
the
language
in
the
memo
on
page
three.
Actually
on
page
two,
it's
essentially
one
b
and
if
you
go
to
the
towards
the
end
of
the
paragraph,
it
says
and
it
talks
about
the
pd
zoning.
O
I
believe-
and
it
says
also
clarify
that
this
study
will
apply
to
all
parcels
within
the
city
of
san
jose
within
a
designated
depth.
So
my
understanding
of
that
the
way
I
thought
when
I
signed
on
to
this
is
the
monterey
corridor,
obviously
going
from
there
sort
of
back
in
that
depth.
Is
that
going
to
be
part
of
the
study
or
do
you
have
something
in
mind
as
it
relates
to
the
depth
of
of
of
where
the
study
is
sort
of
going
to
encompass
and
what
we're
going
to
look
at.
P
Well,
I
mean
yeah,
we
didn't
when
we
talked
about
doing
a
study,
we
didn't
define,
okay,
adapt.
I
think
that's
we
just
that
would
be
determined
as
part
of
the
study
about
what's
appropriate
in
terms
of
maybe
more
flexibility.
Is
it
the
all
the
land
between
monterey
highway
and
the
creek?
Is
it
more
limited
towards
the
areas
that
are
right
up
against
monterey
highway?
That
sort
of
would
be
figured
out
as
part
of
the
study.
O
O
Q
Thank
you
first,
I
want
to
thank
all
of
the
speakers
both
present
in
the
chambers
and
also
virtually,
and
in
particular
I
want
to
thank
mr
sasso
for
his
personal
tour
of
the
coyote
valley
area.
Thank
you
for
driving
me
and
my
policy
aid
around.
So
we
could
experience
and
understand
what
was
going
on
in
coyote
valley.
Q
We
will
not
reach
these
goals
if
we
do
not
take
bold
steps
now
and
preserve
the
coyote
valley.
Expanding
our
urban
growth
even
further
into
the
coyote
valley,
contributes
to
the
issue
of
urban
sprawl
and
increased
greenhouse
gas
emission.
It's
time
to
walk
the
walk.
Silicon
valley
was
once
known
as
the
valley
of
hearts
delight.
As
many
have
said
today,
we
have
a
proud
agricultural
tradition
here
in
san
jose.
An
approving
staff's
recommendation
ensures
that
agriculture
also
has
a
future
in
san
jose.
Q
The
coyote
valley
is
a
gem
in
the
south
bay
and
one
of
the
very
few
parts
of
san
jose
san
jose
that
hasn't
been
touched
by
urban
sprawl
and
whoever
sang
joni
mitchell's
song.
It's
now
an
ear
worm
in
my
head
that
I
will
continue
to
carry
with
me.
Pave
paradise,
put
up
a
parking
lot.
We
can't
have
that
the
preservation
of
this
unique
and
important
resource
needs
to
be
a
priority.
Q
Q
I
want
to
share
with
you
some
of
my
background
in
a
prior
life.
I
actually
worked
at
bendage
farms,
many
of
you
old
timers
up.
There
know
who,
where
bandage
farms
is
or
was
on,
mckeen
road,
and
it
was
famous
for
apricots
and
cherries.
I
worked
there
but
lived
in
san
martin
and
drove
every
day
down
santa
teresa
to
pick
up
bailey
road
to
connect
to
mckeen.
Q
Q
Q
I
appreciate
the
concerns
of
the
property
owners
in
the
coyote
valley
valley
and,
like
council
member
jimenez
I
commit
to
including
them
in
discussions
and
debates
as
we
go
forward.
I
agree
that
they
should
be
properly
compensated
and,
doing
so
may
be
a
difficult
process,
but
it
is
something
we
should
work
towards.
Q
There
are
undeniable
environmental
and
social
benefits
in
preserving
the
land
and
coyote
valley,
but
I'm
excited
to
see
the
idea
around
environmental
credits
and
how
that
might
benefit
the
property
owners
and
in
and
in
the
end
result
in
the
preservation
of
the
land.
So
I
have
some
questions
and
one
really
is
about
the
environmental
credits.
How
do
you
see
those
working?
How
do
you
see
the
landowners
benefiting
from
those?
P
Yeah,
so
so
the
way
the
credits
are
in
so
they're
a
work
in
progress,
but
the
concept
that's
being
developed
and
there's
been
some
time
spent
on
this,
actually
is
that
credits
would
be
purchased
by
developers
who
who
need
environmental
mitigation
that
are
building
in
the
more
urban
part
of
the
city,
and
they
could
buy
credits
as
a
way
to
mitigate
environmental
impacts
and
those
those
credits
would
go
into
a
bank
they'd
most
likely
be
managed
by
a
third
party,
and
then
those
credits,
the
money
from
the
those
credits
that's
generated
from
those
credits,
could
be
used
for
one
of
three
things:
it
could
be
used
to
restore
land.
P
It
could
be
used
to
purchase
additional
land
that
to
preserve
it
for
climate
sequestration,
by
open
space,
different
open
space
agencies,
it
could
also
be
used
to
provide
to
purchase
scenic
easements
or
development
rights
by
private
property
owners
that
have
other
uses
of
their
land
that
they
want
to
retain
egg
or
otherwise,
that
sort
of
recognizing
the
the
value
of
that
land
for
carbon
sequestration
and
their
willingness
to
preserve
it,
so
that
there
would
essentially
be
a
way
to
purchase
development
rights
from
private
property
owners.
P
I
don't
so
that
this
is
a
body
of
work
that,
at
this
point,
is
being
led
by
exactly
open
space
authority
and
a
consultant,
so
we'd
have
to
check
with
them
on
the
schedule,
but
I
anticipate
we
we'd
have
something
to
report
back
in
about
probably
about
six
months
of
where
we're
at
with
that
is
my
guess.
P
We
do
have
a
staff
person
on
our
side
that
will
be
taking
this
work
over
it's
our
climate,
smart
staff
person
in
the
in
a
new
part
of
the
year,
so
that's
sort
of
an
estimate
of
I
think
when
we
would
have
something
to
report
on.
We
could
probably
we
could
report
back
on
the
work
that
we're
doing
sooner
than
that
I
think,
to
actually
bring
back
something
for
council.
Consideration
would
probably
be
more
than
six
months.
Q
Do
you
envision?
That
sounds
just
to
be
frank,
a
little
pie
in
the
sky
and
a
little
not
realistic
for
the
landowners,
if
I'm
sitting
there
up
in
the
top
of
the
chambers
and
listening
to
secret
sequestration,
credits
and
timing,
and
all
that
it
sounds
like
it
really
depends
on
a
developer.
Who
has
the
need,
then
the
money
goes
into
the
bank
and
the
quote-unquote
bank,
and
then
the
bank
is
distributed.
P
They
do
not
want
to
develop
their
land
and
they're
willing
to
to
maintain
it
in
a
more
open
space
or
agricultural
fashion,
and
if
they're,
if,
if
they
were,
then
they
there
would
be
an
opportunity
for
someone
to
purchase
essentially
their
the
the
climate
sequestration
or
the
develop
the
development
rights
or
a
scenic
easement
on
their
property,
essentially
some
kind
of
easement
on
the
property,
probably
a
climate
easement
on
their
property,
and
that
there
would
be
an
exchange
of
money
through
that
now
you
know
we
don't
anticipate
it's
going
to
the
amount
of
money
is
still
tbd.
P
Q
Okay,
so
when
we're
meeting
with
the
property
owners
in
relation
to
the
eastern
part
of
the
coyote
valley
and
or
any
of
the
other
landowners,
I
would
highly
encourage
us
to
engage
them
in
the
the
credit
conversation,
because
I'm
I'm
a
simple
person,
but
I
understand
math
and
I'm
understanding,
I
understand
property
values
and
what
that
might
mean
and
I'm
not
connecting
exactly
how
that's
going
to
work
out
for
them.
So
I
want
to
be
fair
to
them.
Q
I
am,
I
am
not
hesitant
in
any
way
in
voting
in
support
of
the
memo
that
we
have,
but
I
want
to
be
fair
to
the
property
owners
and
I
want
to
make
sure
that
their
voices
are
heard
and
that
we
embrace
them
in
conversation
and
discussion
as
much
as
possible.
Okay.
So
that's
that's
that
question
nora.
I
do
have
a
question
for
you
and
I
did
tell
you.
Q
B
If
you,
if
you
want
a
further
recitation
veers
on
the
phone
she
can
answer,
but
the
short
answer
is
we've
concluded.
It
has
not.
Q
And
read
it:
I.
Q
Q
Everyone
for
being
here
and
commenting
and
for
the
time
that
you've
spent
with
me,
showing
your
properties
and
your
love
for
the
for
the
area
and
the
history
that
you
have
for
that
area
as
well.
I
it
is
not
lost
on
me
and
I've
spent
a
lot
of
time
down
there
in
in
my
younger
years,
really
enjoying
it
when
I
worked
at
vintage
farms,
which
is
not
that
far
away.
So
with
that,
I'm
I'm.
I'm
conclude
my
comments.
Thank
you.
Vice
mayor.
K
Thank
you
vice
mayor
thanks
to
staff,
for
all
of
the
work
and
to
all
of
our
members,
the
public
who
came
out
to
speak
tonight
appreciate
all
the
commentary
and
great
dialogue
amongst
my
colleagues
here
I
got
in
the
line
to
speak
a
little
late,
so
I
feel,
like
many
of
my
comments
were,
were
made,
but
I
also
had
the
pleasure
of
a
tour
with
mr
sasso
and
a
tour
with
the
osa
and
enjoyed
seeing
the
valley
from
both
perspectives.
K
K
I
think
council
members,
davis
and
foley
asked
most
of
my
questions
or
expressed
some
of
my
sentiments,
but
I
think
we've
got
the
right
end
goal
in
mind
here
and
I'll
be
I'll,
be
also
joining
in
the
vote
and
appreciate
the
memo
from
the
mayor
and
colleagues
on
the
study
of
the
monterey
corridor.
K
I
do
think
as
we
move
forward
here,
and
there
is
this
loss
of
value
to
moving
forward
for
landowners.
It
is
critical
that
we
do
our
utmost
to
to
be
fair
to
those
landowners
and
to
figure
out
economically
viable
uses
of
the
land,
and
I
think
we'd
all
prefer
that
that
be
agriculture,
low-impact
tourism.
K
P
Yeah,
I
mean
we're
definitely
willing
to
be
to
meet
with
the
property
nurse.
I
think
I
think
we
won't
have
really
undertaken
a
whole
lot
of
work
yet
on
the
study
itself,
but
at
least
we
can
get
their
thoughts
and
what
the
scope
might
be,
for
example,
which
would
help
us
then
develop
a
budget
which
I
think
the
memo
says,
come
back
in
february
with
a
budget,
so
that
that
would
be
helpful
for
that
process.
K
Great
I'd
certainly
like
to
see
us
do
that
and
that
that
sounds
good.
I
think
it's
critical
that
we
as
we
move
forward
here,
that
we
bring
people
together
and
and
that
we
really
truly
engage
our
stakeholders
and
listen
to
all
of
our
stakeholders.
And
ultimately
the
test
of
this,
in
my
mind,
is,
is
that
we
we
preserve
the
land
for
future
generations
and
protect
the
environment,
but
that,
if
we're
saying
that
that
we
can
do
this,
because
agriculture
can
be
viable,
then
we'd
better.
K
Do
the
work
to
make
it
viable,
and
if
we
can't,
then
we
need
to
admit
that
we
were
wrong
and
do
something
else.
So
I
just
I
I
you
know:
I've
met
with
enough
of
the
landowners
to
feel
quite
strongly
that
we
need
to
do
right
by
them
and
really
deeply
engage
them
in
the
process.
Michael
on
this
question
about
the
climate
easement
that
councilman
foley,
dug
into
a
little
bit,
you
mentioned
that
we
would
be
able
to
offer
some
value
above
the
value
of
the
land
for
agriculture.
K
P
Yeah,
so
I
mean
we're
not
really
talking
about
transfer
development
right,
so
I
just
want
to
say
that
specifically
and
also
responding
to
councilmember
foley
at
this
point,
it's
a
concept
that
then
the
math
has
still
to
be
generated,
so
we
don't
have
the
math
yet
so
that
that's
important,
I
understand
the
property
owners
are
going
to
want
to
understand
that
I
do
too,
and
so
that's
that's
sort
of
the
next
body
of
work
that
would
would
be
undertaken
is
understand
like
well.
P
What
are
we
actually
talking
about
here
and
how
much
money
could
we
actually
expect
to
be
generated
from
this
program?
One
aspect
of
the
program
I
didn't
mention
is
that
there
could
be
corporations
that
are
wanting
to
be
good
corporate
citizens
that
have
net
gh
or
net
zero
ghg
emission
goals,
and
this
would
be
an
opportunity
for
them
to
purchase
climate
purchase,
climate
credits,
which
then
could
be
used
to
buy
sort
of
climate
easements.
K
Okay
and
then
I
was
interested
to
hear
that
in
the
some
of
the
portions
of
land
governed
by
the
county,
that
there's
more
flexible
use
is
something
I
heard
in
the
staff
report,
and
I
was
just
hoping
you
could
expand
on
that
a
little
bit
and
tell
us
what
we.
What
if
anything,
we've
learned
from
the
county
at
this
point
and
how
we
can
partner
with
them,
as
we
sort
of
try
to
figure
out
how
to
rationalize
land,
use,
moving
forward
and
support.
Some
of
these
agritourism
uses
we're
discussing.
P
P
They
allow
events
and
retail
sales
associated
to
farmland,
which
our
code
currently
does
not
allow
and
and
other
I
can't
give
you
specifics-
I
mean
we
can
bring
michael
meehan
and
if,
if
we
want
from
the
county,
it
can
give
you
more
specifics,
but
there
are
other
types
of
more
commercial
businesses
that
are
support.
Agriculture
that
would
be
allowed
that
our
code
does
not
allow.
P
So
ours
are
very
limited
to
more
ag
type
uses
and-
and
you
know,
open
space
uses
and
some
very
limited
wreck
uses,
but
so
we
we
agree.
We
think
it's
time
to
to
align
it
with
the
county
and
really
allow
more
flexibility.
There
yeah
well
also
with
the
goal
of
making
ag
more
viable
and
preserving
it,
for
those
type
of
use
is
not
with
the
idea
of
of
paving
it
over
right.
P
K
We
may
do
some
initial
research
say:
oh
the
county's
done
some
things
that
we
really
like,
but
we
just
don't
have
time
to
con
to
continue
to
evolve.
This
we've
got
all
these
other
things
that
we're
worried
about.
We've
got
all
this
development
in
downtown,
so
it
just
ends
up
taking
three
four
five.
You
know
it
just
drags
on.
Are
we
able
to
if
we
want
to
conform
to
what
they're
doing
are
there
strategies
for
accelerating
that.
P
No,
no,
no,
this.
This
is
the
zoning
code
work.
So
this
is
this.
The
general
plan
like
if
the
council
moves
forward
with
the
recommendation
tonight,
you
don't
need
to
do
general
plan
update,
there's
no
need
for
another,
four-year
review,
it's
just
a
matter
of
getting
into
our
our
our
basically
our
inbox
of
things
that
the
zoning
ordinance
team
would
do
so
we'll
have
to
figure
out.
You
know
when
we
could
tackle
that.
I
would
think
that
that's
something
we
could.
P
We
could
tackle
next
calendar
year,
but
I
have
to
you
know
I
don't
want
to
overly
promise.
We
have
to
sit
down
and
sort
of
figure
that
out
with
all
the
other
things
not
just
related
to
coyote
valley,
because
you
actually
have
a
number
of
actions
on
coyote
valley
and
other
things
that
we're
doing,
but
I
think
we
could
do
something
we
could
initiate
next
calendar
year.
K
Okay,
thank
you.
Thank
you
again
for
the
presentation,
all
the
work
up
till
now
and
again
I
just
want
to
thank
all
the
members
of
the
public
on
all
sides
of
the
issue
who
came
out
this
evening
to
express
your
heartfelt
views
and
I'm
really
hopeful
that
we
can
come
together
and
and
move
forward
in
a
way
that
that
is
fair
to
everyone.
So
thank
you
all
again.
H
Council
member
pros
yeah
thank
you
mayor
and
I'll
start
with,
echoing
some
of
the
thanks
to
our
city
staff,
especially
you
michael
and
robert,
as
well,
for
getting
us
here
and
all
the
speakers,
those
that
are
here
with
us
and
the
joint
over
zoom
and
the
stakeholders
that
we
know
that
that
our
property
owners
out
there
in
the
valley
and
those
that
are
advocates
for
our
community
in
open
space,
specifically
we've
set
out
for
quite
some
time
to
be
able
to
to
carry
out
the
vision
of
preserving
coyote
valley,
and
that
has
been
described
several
times
as
we
know
tonight
at
a
gem
remaining
here
in
in
the
santa
clara
valley.
H
I
understand
that
this
has
been
a
difficult
discussion,
especially
for
property
owners
who
have
expressed
their
concerns,
especially
for
the
future
of
their
their
properties.
I
also
have
to
thank
mr
sasso
for
the
the
invitation
and
and
had
an
opportunity
to
go
out
there
and
visit
a
number
of
the
properties
and
be
able
to
to
have
a
better
understanding
of
of
the
area.
H
I
understand
concerns
and
and
know
now
that
many
of
individuals
there
had
parcels
of
lands.
C
H
Of
these
land
and
their
families
for
many
generations
and
have
had
varying
plans
for
what
they
may
want
to
have
done
or
what,
where
it
hoped
to
do
with
with
the
properties
there,
I'm
supportive,
as
I
signed
on
to
the
the
the
memo
in
regards
to
specifically
the
the
east
corridor,
there
monterey
road
being
able
to
explore
additional
compatible
uses,
and
I
know
there
are
a
lot
of
discussions
around
the
evaluation
that
we
we've
had
now
here
on
the
dais,
and
I
sympathize
and
and
can
support
the
the
motion
that
includes
councilmember
davis's
amendment.
H
But
ultimately,
I
think
what
we
are
doing
today
is
not
about
economic
development,
and
that
should
should
be
clear.
It's
it's.
It's
not
an
economic
development
decision.
It
is
rather
a
land
use
decision,
and
I
mean,
as
council
member
foley,
I
think,
questioned,
and
when
we
got,
albeit
a
quick
answer.
I
think
the
reality
is
is,
though,
we've
also
understood
some
of
the
legal
parameters
of
of
that
decision
in
the
authorities
that
we,
as
a
council
have
to
be
able
to
make.
Here.
H
We
make
these
types
of
land
use
decisions,
all
the
time
that
happen
to
affect
individual
property
values
and-
and
we
need
to
do
so
by
determining
the
best
use
of
them
for
both
the
city
and
and
the
community
as
a
whole.
They're
they're,
not
all
done
on
an
individual
basis
of
of
what
may
be
the
best
economic
viability
for
an
individual
landowner
and
and
that
doesn't
make
it
an
easy
decision.
H
H
And
I
think
here
we've
we've
had
and
we've
made
a
statement
for
a
while,
but
but
we
really
can
stop
and
draw
the
line
in
in
the
coyote
valley
area.
H
There
is
a
lot
the
coyote
valley
has
to
offer
and
that
we
can
preserve
there
specifically,
including
our
wildlife
ecosystem,
and
I
actually
would
like
to
ask
a
confirmation
from
councilmember
jimenez
maker
of
the
motion
that
the
study,
we'll
conduct
will
also
include
consideration
of
that
wildlife
connectivity,
especially
as
we
know
crossing
that
monterey
corridor
there
in
in
in
the
101
area.
O
H
I
also
you
know,
understand
and
appreciate
the
analysis
and
the
study
that
have
been
provided
by
the
county
and
hearing
from
various
agricultural
operators
that
agriculture
is
not
only
viable,
but
it
is,
it
is
needed
throughout
the
area
and
recognizing
there
are
challenges
to
that.
As
councilmember
jimenez
pointed
out,
I
think
from
mr
sasso's
description
of
a
spoke.
It's
it's
more
than
just
the
land
itself
for
land
use.
H
There
are
a
lot
of
variables
that
that
go
into
making
agriculture
viable
and
work
and
look
forward
to
that
continued
discussion
and
further
analysis
on
that,
and
with
that,
that's
why
I
will
be
supporting
the
the
motion
that
we
have
here
and
was
happy
to
be
able
to
co-sign
onto
the
memo
with
the
mayor
and
council
members,
jimenez
cohen,
in
fully
doing
what
I
think
is
best
for
our
city.
Thanks.
R
Thank
you,
and
just
like
I
want
to
echo
the
thanks
that
everyone
else
has
given
to
staff
and
and
to
all
the
members
of
the
public
for
their
passionate
testimony
tonight.
R
It's
one
thing
is
clear
that
no
matter
who
was
speaking
of
the
area,
no
matter
which
support,
I
I'm
not
convinced
that
there's
really
two
sides
in
this
issue,
but
just
various
opinions
about
how
to
proceed,
but
it's
clear
that
everyone
loves
the
land
and
loves
coyote
valley,
and
it's
really
important
to
figure
out
how
to
best
preserve
the
area
for
future
generations
to
continue
to
enjoy
it.
Yeah
councilmember
foley,
said
really
a
lot
about
the
environmental
importance
of
this
area
and
gave
most
of
the
the
arguments
for
it.
R
One
thing
that
wasn't
mentioned
was
the
importance
of
the
watershed
in
that
area
as
well-
and
I
know
you
know
the
mayor's
talked
before
about
you-
know
learning
about
the
importance,
especially
when
we
had
flooding
about
how
important
it
is
to
preserve
that
that
watershed
around
coyote
creek.
It's
also
important
to
know
that
the
the
water
level
is
pretty
pretty
close
to
the
surface
in
that
area.
R
So
it's
really
important
that
we
don't
pave
over
too
much
of
it,
that
we
prese
that
we
have
the
way
to
percolate
percolate,
water
back
into
the
aquifer
under
under
coyote
valley.
That's
why
these
investigations
of
how
we
use
that
land
you
know,
preserves
the
ability
to
continue
to
have
that
benefit
of
that
watershed
in
that
area.
That
also
is
is
another
thing
that
will
be
helpful
for
proceeding
with
agricultural
uses.
R
Is
that
that
more
readily
available
water
there,
as
we
there's
a
lot
of
connections
between
a
lot
of
things
that
we
do
as
a
council
as
we
proceed
with
trying
to
to
purify
water
and
recharge
our
aquifers
we'll
be
recharging.
The
aquifers,
particularly
in
the
coyote
valley
area,
and
all
those
things,
will
help
in
the
future,
the
accessibility
of
of
water
and
helping
to
make
that
land
more
viable
for
these
kinds
of
uses.
So
I
think
that's
important
just
to
to
also
talk
about
some
of
those
benefits
of
that
land.
R
I
think
a
couple.
A
lot
of
questions
were
asked
about
the
climate,
credit
approach
or
the
credit
approach.
I'm
not
gonna
ask
more
questions
about
it,
except
just
to
say
I'm
always
skeptical
about
that,
partly
for
a
variety
of
reasons-
and
I
think
we
talked
about
this
a
little
bit
last
week
in
our
climate,
smart
discussion,
how
to
balance,
how
many
credits
are
the
right
amount
to
do
and
and
how
we
move
forward
with
development
across
the
entire
city.
R
That's
not
going
to
rely
on
credits
if
we're
going
to
get
to
our
goal
of
carbon
neutrality
by
2030
credits
are
going
to
have
to
be
phased
out
over
time.
We're
not
going
to
be
able
to
to
tolerate
any
developments
that
are
going
to
deviate
from
that
ultimate
goal.
It's
important
to
have
those
credits
early
on
and
incentivizing
and
moving
people
in
this
in
this
direction.
R
But
you
know
I'm
not
convinced
that
that's
a
good
long-term
strategy
and
I
would
hope
that
we
have
lots
of
partners
in
helping
us
find
ways
to
compensate
and
purchase
land
where
we
need
to.
I
think
that,
just
like
we've
done
for
other
parts
of
coyote
valley,
we
can
find
ways-
and
I'm
I'm
glad.
Councilmember
davis
talked
about
that
in
her
amendment
to
the
motion,
so
I'm
happy
to
to
support
the
motion.
R
I'm
glad
that
I
was
part
of
the
group
on
the
memo
because
it
helped
me
understand
the
issues
a
lot
better
moving
into
this,
and
I-
and
I
know
that
that
was
part
of
the
problem
with
the
planning
commission.
I,
while
I'm
not
here,
to
defend
them
or
say
anything
about
them,
there's
a
lot
of
depth
of
information.
You
need
to
make
a
smart
decision
on
that,
and
I
know
that.
R
I
think
that
several
members
of
that
commission
expressed
that
they
just
didn't
feel
like
they
had
the
information
that
they
needed
to
recommend
one
way
or
the
other,
and
I
think
we
as
a
council
have
more
information
than
they
probably
had
and
have
had
the
benefit
of
folks
on
our
staffs
working
on
this
a
lot
longer
than
some
of
them
were
exposed
to
it.
So
I
know
that
there
was
some
skepticism
there
that
they
really
were
ready
on
some
of
the
issues
that
we've
delved
into
today.
S
Thank
you.
I
also
want
to
just
thank
everybody
for
coming
to
city
hall
or
staying
on
the
line
for
how
many
ever
hours
you've
you've
stayed
on
the
line
to
express
the
opinions
that
you
had
either
to
support
some
of
the
landowners
or
to
support
some
of
the
environmentalists
either
way.
S
S
I
heard
loud
and
clear:
there's
an
agricultural
legacy
with
some
of
these
landowners,
and
I
heard
the
passion
in
your
voice
just
as
well
as
I
heard
the
passion
and
the
voices
of
a
lot
of
our
environmentalists
and
advocates
to
protect
this
land,
to
keep
it
and
and
one
of
the
things
that
that
really
struck
me
that
somebody
said,
and
they
said
it
a
lot
more
eloquently
than
I'm
gonna
say
right
now,
but
just
this
person
said
to
you,
you
like
it,
you
want
it,
you
buy
it,
and
I
thought
you
know
this
is.
S
There
is
a
value
in
this
land
and
landowners
should
be
compensated
for
it.
I
I
was
absolutely
supportive
of
the
motion
that
megan
float
made
during
our
general
plan
task
force
to
support
staff
recommendations
last
year.
It
feels
like
so
long
ago,
and
one
of
the
things
that
that
I
as
I
was
listening
to
everybody
all
the
public
comments.
S
I
I
guess
I
didn't
realize
how
this
impacted,
the
the
farmers
and
the
land
owners
and
that
agricultural
legacy
that
they
bring
with
them,
and
it
made
me
think
back
of
to
my
own
family.
My
you
know
my
my
parents
come
from
a
farm
in
mexico,
where
it's
very
arid
and
one
of
their
greatest
desires
was
to
purchase
a
piece
of
land
in
mexico
and
retire
there
and
farm.
S
It
was
a
lot
of
work
and
my
dad
straddled
between
once
he
retired
he
straddled
between
living
here
in
san
jose
and
living
in
home
state
of
sacatecas
and
and
he
would
constantly
replace
irrigation
systems
and
try
many
different
things
to
just
really
work
that
land
he
finally
got
to
that
and
and
he
planted
there's
a
specific
kind
of
chili
that
you
dry
out
in
sheds
and
huge
these
huge
sheds
that
you
have
near
some
of
these
farm
towns
and
he
almost
got
to
the
end
of
this
whole
cycle
of
you
know,
from
from
watering
and
growing
and
and
having
folks
pick
and
bring
bring
it
back
in.
S
Take
it
to
one
of
these
huge,
huge
sheds
that
that
are
created
for
this
purpose
to
dry
out
these
chilies
only
to
find
that
you
know
weeks
or
months
later.
I
can't
remember
exactly
how
long
it
took
to
dehydrate
these
chilies,
but
they
they
molded,
and
all
of
that
work
was
just
thrown
out
the
window.
S
Obviously
my
my
dad
didn't
rely
on
that
money
to
for
living
costs,
but
it
was
a
passion
of
his
and
it
was.
It
was
hard
to
see
that
in
his
face
you
know
it's,
I
it's
like
a
little
like
a
little
boy
who
just
lost
his
dog.
You
know
it
it.
S
It
hurt
in
a
way
that
I
hadn't
seen
my
dad
hurt,
as
I
always
saw
him
at
a
very
strong
man,
and
so
so
I
understand
that
piece
of
of
the
land
use
and-
and
I
just
want
to
let
those
those
farmers
and
those
landowners
know
that
everybody's
perspective
is
being
heard
today.
S
There
is
a
value
in
your
land,
whether
it's
with
this
agricultural
tourism,
or
you
know
the
bobcats
that
are
crossing
and
I'm
glad
you
mentioned
this
council
member
perales
and
I
think,
is
mark
land
lampherb
and
no
I'm
gonna,
say
his
name
incorrectly,
and
he
sent
me
a
map
of
of
the
crossings
of
the
bobcats
from
one
side
of
the
101
and
one
to
the
other
and
and
back
and
forth
from
monterey
highway.
And
it
is
amazing
to
see
the
kind
of
wildlife
connectivity
that
is
out
there.
S
That
is
happening
every
day.
You
know
unbeknownst
to
us
who
are
sitting
here
at
city
hall,
trying
to
dodge
traffic
and
and
that
wildlife
is
trying
to
dodge
traffic
just
as
well
and
and
it's
because
of
them,
and
and
that
we
want
to
make
sure
that
we
continue
to
hold
as
much
land
as
we
can
for
them
and
so
that
generations
to
come
can
continue
to
appreciate
the
wildlife
next
to
us,
as
well
as
the
land
and
the
different
land
uses.
S
So
I
look
forward
to
seeing
how
this
study
looks
the
different,
the
potential
for
for
the
land
to
to
be
used
differently
and,
of
course,
for
landowners
and
farmers
to
be
compensated,
and
I
heard
this
loud
and
clear
from
environmentalists
when
I
met
with
them.
My
team
mostly
met
with
some
folks,
but
I
met
with
one
and
they
loud
and
clear.
They
said
you
know
they
want
to
make
sure
that
landowners
are
compensated
fairly.
S
It
was
one
thing
that
I
really
walked
away
well,
aside
from
the
bobcat
crossings,
which
I
was
really
just
enamored
with,
but
one
of
the
things
I
heard
loud
and
clear,
and
so
in
response
to
that
to
that
speaker
who
said
you
know
you
like
it,
you
want
it,
you
buy
it
and
absolutely.
I
think
this
is
a
path
forward
for
that
to
explore
options
to
do
it.
I'm
really
interested
in
that
climate
credit,
and
I
know
it
hasn't
been
worked
out
just
yet,
but
it
sounds
fabulous.
S
It
sounds
like
this
is
an
opportunity
to
create
some
of
that
money
to
to
purchase
some
of
this
land
in
the
same
way
that
post
and
in
the
city
of
san
jose
has
done
together
to
purchase
the
lands
that
have
already
been
purchased
with
measured
tea
so
anyway
anyways.
I
I'm
obviously
gonna
support
the
motion
on
the
floor.
I
also
want
to
thank
my
fellow
council
members,
who've
been
advocating
for
coyote
valley
for
a
really
long
time.
S
A
Thank
you.
I'm
sorry.
I
missed
some
of
the
earlier
dialogue
from
my
colleagues,
but
I
appreciate
that
a
lot
of
good
points
have
already
been
made
from
what
I've
heard.
It
was
all
brilliant,
I'm
sorry,
it
was
all
brilliant.
It
was
all
brilliant
yeah,
it's
always
better
when
I'm
not
here.
A
I
want
to
just
thank
a
couple
folks
who
I
think
haven't
been
thanked
yet
because
I
think
just
about
everybody
else
has
been,
but
I
really
want
to
thank
a
couple
of
folks
who
have
been
really
spearheading
an
effort
for
many
years
now
to
try
to
bring
folks
together
and
yes
to
compensate
landowners,
but
to
be
able
to
preserve
a
different
kind
of
future
first
for
coyote
valley,
and
that
is
the
ceo
of
open
space
authority,
andrew
mckenzie
and
the
ceo
of
post
peninsula,
open
space,
trust,
walter,
moore
and
I've
appreciated
working
with
them
since
roughly
2016
and
very
long
meetings
we're
having
to
try
to
understand
best
how
to
move
forward.
A
I
also
want
to
thank
just
on
my
own
team,
joel
duval
court
and
mckenzie
mossy
and
kelly
klein
have
been
working
hard
on
this.
I
I
have
a
bit
of
a
personal
connection
to
land
down
coyote
valley.
I've
spent
many
many
hours
in
my
youth,
cycling
down
monterey
and
santa
teresa
and
up
to
uvas
and
clara
reservoirs,
and
it's
a
beautiful
area
and
I've
enjoyed
every
one
of
those
hours
riding
with
friends,
and
I
appreciate
many
of
the
concerns
that
have
been
raised
by
many
landowners
prior
to
this
meeting.
A
To
me
and
to
many
of
my
colleagues
and
now,
of
course,
and
certainly
I
can
appreciate
their
concerns
are-
are
valid,
but
I
think
it's
important
for
us
to
recognize
at
least
as
a
legal
matter,
and
I
think
much
has
been
asserted
in
the
past
about
whether
or
not
this
is
a
takings
and
my
understanding
correct
me
if
I'm
wrong
in
this
nora,
but
the
fact
that
there
is
a
rezoning
or
a
change
in
land
use
destination
that
merely
diminishes
the
value
of
a
land
is
not
a
taking
under
fifth.
A
Although
I'm
not
an
expert
in
agriculture-
and
I
don't
pretend
to
know
whether
or
not
agriculture
is
economically
viable,
it
wouldn't
surprise
me
if
either
it
were
or
not,
there
are
in
fact
other
uses,
and
if
I'm
not
mistaken,
michael
that
on,
there
is
an
opportunity,
for
example,
to
build
nothing
else.
A
ranch
house
on
an
ag
land
is
that
right.
P
Yeah
yeah,
the
code
does
allow
you
to
build
a
house
and
depending
I
mean
the
issue
is
going
to
be.
How
far
can
you
subdivide
how
small
could
you
subdivide
the
property
right
so
now
it's
20
acres,
minimum
we're
proposing
40..
There
are
properties
that
are
very
small
smaller
than
that
that
you
could
build
a
house
on.
A
Right
so
so
clearly,
there's
value
and
it's
not
the
value
that
landowners
hoped
for
or
wanted,
and
I
can
understand,
certainly
they're
disappointed
and
it's
not
unreasonable
that
they
want
some
compensation
for
the
diminution,
the
value
of
the
land.
A
I'm
going
to
try
not
to
bore
everybody
with
a
two-minute
version
of
history,
as
I
understand
it,
but
the
first
owners
of
this
land
were
the
oloni
and
they
did
not
get
compensated
when
the
land
was
taken
from
them.
Subsequent
to
that,
we
know
that
there
were
rentarius
that
were
owned
by
rancheros
owned
by
by
mexican
residents.
And
again
I
mentioned
my
my
personal
connectional
land,
one
of
those
families
that
owned
land
in
the
coyote
valley
and
south
of
there.
A
Many
cases,
many
generations
and
they
have
every
reasonable
expectation
to
be
treated
fairly,
and
that
is
true.
They
do
they
should
be,
but-
and
I'm
confident
we're
gonna
do
everything
we
can
to
be
as
fair
as
possible.
A
P
Egg
open
space
and
some
some
areas
that
had
limited
had
some
rural
residential
in
it,
but
it
was
not
intended
for
urbanization.
Yeah.
A
So
that
was
our
very
first
general
plan
and
certainly
it's
changed
since
then
in
the
80s
we
saw
clearly
there
were
different
plants
or
development
and
lots
of
dreams
of
an
apple
headquarters
and
tandem.
Who
knows
what
else?
A
But
you
know
I
can
remember
coming
on
the
council
in
2007.,
we
had
a
new
mayor,
then
chuck
reed
and
council
majority
and
mayor
reed,
and
I
was
part
of
that
majority-
said
we're
not
very
interested
in
having
housing
development
coyote,
and
that
was
a
major
major
watershed.
A
I
know
we
had
a
lot
of
upset
landowners
when
we
were
making
it
clear
we
weren't
going
there
and
then
in
2011
I
was
a
head
of
a
general
plan
task
force
and
we
reaffirmed
the
protection
that
mid-coyote
urban
reserve
with
triggers
that
pretty
much
nobody
believed
would
ever
get
met
to
protect
mid-coyote
against
development,
and
I
guess
I'm
reciting
all
this,
because
this
is
not
a
case
in
which
anybody
is
pulling
the
rug
out
from
anyone.
These
were
all
public
decisions
that
were
made
in
public
hearings.
A
That
was
in
my
first
year
in
my
mayor's
role
as
mayor
in
2017,
the
regional
agencies,
the
metropolitan
transportation
commission
abag
all
got
together
and
launched
planned
bay
area
2040,
which
they
created
priority
conservation
areas
throughout
coyote
valley,
priority
conservation
areas,
meaning
there
would
not
be
any
significant
development
in
those
pcas
and
those
are
regional
agencies
that
made
these
decisions.
After
many
public
hearings
among
the
nine
barrier
counties
in
2018.
Of
course,
we
passed
measure
t
the
voters
voted
overwhelmingly
for
bond
funding
to
purchase
land
for
the
preservation
of
the
open
space.
A
A
A
There
are
certainly
countervailing
concerns
that
we
have,
and
I
think
the
greatest
of
all
of
environmental
concerns
is
the
one
that
was
articulated
by
council
member
cohen,
which
is
about
our
drinking
water.
There's
one
critical
natural
resource
as
we
are
enduring
another
year
of
drought,
and
yes,
we'll
continue
to
endure
many
years
of
drought
in
the
future.
A
Water-
and
these
are
pretty
compelling
needs
in
addition
to
all
the
other
important
environmental
concerns.
So
I
I
am.
I
want
to
be
honest
with
folks,
because
I
think
there
may
be
some
who
walk
away
from
this,
believing
somehow
that
we're
going
to
pull
a
rabbit
out
of
a
hat
with
a
lot
of
money
for
landowners
to
compensate
them,
and
I
frankly,
don't
think
that's
going
to
happen.
A
I
think
osa
is
going
to
continue
to
do
their
best
and
negotiate
with
those
who
can't
use
the
land
for
anything
else
and
we'll
certainly
be
partners
in
doing
all.
We
can
to
try
to
secure
state
funding,
try
to
secure
credits
from
developers
elsewhere
in
the
city
to
try
to
supplement
those
dollars
and
we'll
try
to
do
so.
A
We'll
certainly
do
so
in
good
faith
and
we'll
do
all
we
can
to
treat
folks
fairly,
but
there's
simply
no
pot
of
money
that
the
city
has
to
go,
pay
everyone
what
they
think
their
land
is
worth
and
that's
not
the
way
it
works
in
land
use
in
this
city
or
any
other
city.
We
make
land
use
decisions
all
the
time
that
diminish
the
value
of
land,
and
we
do
so
within
the
law
and
within
the
constitution.
A
So
I
appreciate
the
very
difficult
challenging
decisions
that
we
have
all
faced
over
the
last
several
years.
I
think
we're
finally
on
the
right
path
and
we're
going
to
try
to
do
all
we
can
to
deal
fairly
with
those
landers
who
feel
they
deserve
something
better,
but
I
want
to
ensure
that
nobody
feels
misled
either
about
our
actions
today
or
about
the
history,
because
the
history
to
me
is
fairly
clear.
A
All
right.
We
have
emotions
or
any
other
comments.
H
A
A
To
the
I
think,
item
3.7,
the
city
roadmap;
first
quarter,
2021
update.
We
do
have
a
presentation
thanks
to
all
the
senior
staff
who
waited
patiently.
N
So
good
evening,
honorable
mayor
city,
council,
members
of
the
public
and
city
staff,
dolan
beckel
interim
deputy
city
manager
here
well,
my
colleagues
are
setting
up
we're
going
to
skip
the
introductions
each
individual
introduce
themselves
when
they
present
their
section
in
the
interest
of
time.
So
we'll
get
right
into
the
presentation.
N
Our
topics
we're
going
to
discover
this
excuse
me
discuss
briefly.
Today
are
first
of
all
just
a
quick
background
on
the
san
jose
city
roadmap.
It's
been
a
while,
since
we've
been
in
front
of
council,
the
second
is
we'll
give
a
status
update
on
quarter,
one
and
a
view
into
quarter,
two
planned
and
actual
objectives
and
key
results
for
two
key
enterprise
priorities:
we'll
talk
about
current
and
next
steps
and
be
happy
to
answer
any
questions
and
answers
and
feedback.
Since
this
is
the
first
time
this
is
actually
the
first
first
quarter.
N
N
Currently
the
city
finds
herself
delivering
on
the
covet
19
response,
the
coven
19
recovery,
major
change
initiatives
and
core
city
services,
all
in
parallel.
So
given
the
finite
delivery
capacity
across
the
city
and
our
partners,
the
prioritization
and
focus
brought
by
the
city
roadmap
is
critical
to
our
collective
success.
N
We
are
incrementally
rolling
out
the
full
city
roadmap
status
report
over
a
period
of
12
months.
Today's
report
will
be
on
two
critical
enterprise
priorities:
those
being
powered
by
people
there
at
the
bottom
and
we'll
also
then
be
talking
about
the
status
report
on
govind19
pandemic
community
and
economic
recovery.
M
Mayor
council,
members
of
the
public
kelly
parmley
assistant
director
for
human
resources
and
human
resources,
is
the
champion
for
the
power
by
people
change
initiative
or
excuse
me,
enterprise,
wide
priority.
Many
of
you
are
familiar
with
powered
by
people
from
several
reports.
During
the
emergency
operations
center
planning
and
efforts,
we
have
transitioned
it
from
what
were
four
objectives
to
three
objectives
that
you
see
here
will
be
the
first
time
that
you
have
seen
them.
M
M
The
third,
probably
my
favorite,
is
bust
down
silos
to
build
trust
and
transparency,
invest
in
inter-departmental
partnerships
by
removing
barriers,
building
capacity
and
engaging
with
departments
through
deeply
collaborative
relationships.
So
thank
you
for
indulging
a
little
bit
of
language
around
those
which
would
be
new
to
you.
I
will
offer
up
that.
What
you
see
here
in
terms
of
first
quarter
results
are
mostly
green,
which
means
we've
been
acting
and
working
very,
very
hard
for
this
first
quarter.
M
What
I
will
offer,
then,
is:
we've
established
key
results
for
quarter
two,
which
are
only
is
only
a
few
weeks
away
in
terms
of
ending
by
the
end
of
december,
all
of
which
are
related
to
not
just
human
resources
and
our
responsibilities,
but
also
public
works,
I.t
and
the
office
of
emergency
and
management
in
terms
of
making
sure
we're
supporting
our
workforce
as
we
move
forward,
not
only
for
recovery
and
supporting
recovery,
but
also
our
core
service
areas
and
you'll
see
a
variety
of
results
here
that
are
both
stretch,
goals
or
objectives
for
us,
but
also
ones
that
will
lay
a
great
foundation
for
q3
and
q4
of
the
remaining
part
of
the
fiscal
year.
E
Great,
thank
you
so
much
kelly
good
evening,
mayor
city,
council,
members
of
our
community,
rosalind
huey,
deputy
city
manager.
So
this
enterprise
priority
is
really
all
about
lifting
up
those
who
have
been
most
burdened
and
impacted
by
the
pandemic
and
in
particular
those
residents
who
live
in
zip
codes.
E
Empowering
our
community
with
the
resources
that
build
resiliency
and
stabilizing
and
improving
equitable
outcomes
for
all
the
team
is.
Oh,
I'm
sorry.
I
think
I
went
too
far
there
we
go
my
apologies,
so
these
are
our
okrs
for
quarter,
one
of
2021
and
the
team
is
really
pleased
that
we
were
able
to
achieve
nine
of
the
13
items
for
quarter
one
goals
and
I'm
just
going
to
highlight
a
few
of
these
results.
E
E
However,
since
that
time
in
september,
the
full
amount
of
57
million
dollars
has
been
committed
not
yet
paid
out
with
71
percent
of
funds
paid
to
3
540
households
and
there
are
1720
households
awaiting
payment,
and
we
are
anticipating
that
100
percent
of
these
emergency
rental
assistant
round
one
funds
will
be
paid
out
by
the
end
of
this
month.
E
These
positive
developments
require
the
city
to
be
more
intentional
about
asking
our
partners
to
better
access.
The
current
and
projected
need
develop
a
plan
to
transition
away
from
the
city's
temporary
obligation
of
overseeing
food
distribution
in
response
to
in
in
the
response
phase
of
the
pandemic
and
to
focus
additional
attention
on
the
recovery
phase
in
any
new
emerging
community
needs.
E
So
this
slide
shows
the
current
quarter.
Two
set
of
okrs
and
you'll
see
that
there
are
quite
a
few.
There
are
a
lot
of
items
that
we're
hoping
to
achieve
and
we
decided
to
do
this
because
we
understand
how
important
this
enterprise
priority
is
and
how
important
it
is
to
stretch
ourselves
when
setting
goals,
and
so
I
won't
go
through
all
of
these.
But
obviously
we
are
still
for
focus
on
housing,
stabilization,
small
business
recovery
and
reinforcement,
re-employment
and
workforce
development,
and
with
that
I
think,
I'm
turning
it
over
to
back
to
dolan.
N
Thanks
rosalind
in
terms
of
next
steps,
we
will
be
bringing
the
objectives
and
key
results
for
the
community
and
economic
recovery
enterprise
priority
to
the
task
force
in
a
little
over
two
weeks
for
them
to
provide
review
and
feedback
with
the
lens
on
the
community
needs
and
their
perspectives
on
the
objectives
and
key
results
for
both
q1
and
q2.
N
We'll
be
returning
early
2022
with
our
q2
update
on
how
we
scored
red,
yellow
or
green
for
the
the
q2
plans
that
we
just
reviewed
with
you.
We
admit
we're
a
little
bit
behind
we'll
be
making
adjustments
to
the
city
roadmap
as
appropriate
both
for
the
november
30th
american
rescue
plan.
Excuse
the
typo
there
reallocation,
as
well
as
priority
setting
and
then
we'll
be
developing
a
performance
measure,
framework
and
pilot
for
both
outcomes
and
performance
measures.
N
So
that
concludes
our
presentation
on
the
actual
results
of
q1
and
the
plan
results
q2
for
the
objectives
and
key
results
for
these
two
critical
enterprise
priorities,
we're
open
to
taking
any
questions,
comments
and
feedback,
especially
since
we
know
this
is
the
first
time
a
a
city-wide
road
map
has
ever
been
reported
on
status-wise
to
council
in
the
community.
A
Thank
you
thanks.
Everybody
great
presentation,
more
importantly,
great
great
work,
and
I
really
appreciate
the
the
format
and
the
presentation:
let's
go
to
the
public
first
and
we'll
come
back.
I
Yes,
thank
you
from
the
horseshoe.
Thank
you
for
the
presentation
there's
going
to
be.
I
I
appreciate
it
because
within
the
next
months,
there's
going
to
be
an
influx
of
funding,
and
so
what
my
question
is
to
you
is:
how
are
you
defining
equity?
What
what
are
you
using
as
as
a
base?
We
we
need
a
definition.
I
I
have
been
asking
the
nora
for
a
legal
definition
so
that
there's
an
objective
way
that
allocations
of
funding
are
met
because
without
it
you
the
word
is
there,
but
the
the
placement
of
the
fund
becomes
now
subjective
and
whoever
has
the
better
argument
you
know,
and
so
so,
if
we're
going
to
get
going
to
go
that
area
of
having
equity
for
all,
we
need
to
be
able
to
define
it.
C
All
right,
thank
you,
blue
beekman.
Here
thanks
a
lot
for
this
item,
it's
nice
to
think
that
I
think
kip
should
be
back
in
town,
okay,
parkness.
This
seemed
this
item
was
presented
with
like
a
lot
of
love.
It
seemed
like
and
that's
what
I've
been
trying
to
learn
and
ask
about,
and
you
know
we
got
a
whole
bunch
of
new
ai
issues
and
I
saw
like
real
human
ways
to
address
those
ai
issues
in
this
item
and
presentation.
C
Thank
you.
We
have
to
continue
those
good
efforts
of
what
is
you
know,
heart-to-heart,
dialogue
and
communication
with
each
other
and
not
just
data
collection
and
technology
data
collection.
I
hope
that's
what
kip
has
come
back
to
and
seen
happen
and
taking
place
and
is
a
little
hopeful
about
it.
You
have
digital
equity
ideas,
you're
going
to
be
working
on.
I
really
hope
those
ideas
can
be
around
open
public
policies
as
well.
A
All
right,
thank
you.
Let's
go
to
council
questions.
Customer
renis
is
that
from
before,
or
it
was
from
before.
Okay
counselor
mayhem.
K
K
I
really
really
appreciate
it.
I
I
think
it's
important
to
be
able
to
to
you
know
measure
where
we
want
to
go
and
assess
our
progress
along
the
way
and
learn
so
just
a
few
quick
questions
about
the
okr
system,
more
than
the
substance
of
the
specific
kind
of
boxes
within
it.
So
one
just
question
to
help
us
all
get
oriented
is:
are
the
objectives
in
priority
order
from
left
to
right
and
then
are
the
krs
in
priority
order
from
top
to
bottom,
or
should
we
not
interpret
it
that
way.
N
I
would
not
look
at
it
that
way.
The
the
objectives
are
are
not
necessarily
listed
in
left
to
right,
and
the
key
results
are
not
necessarily
listed
in
in
priority
order.
N
It
was
there's
a
lot
of
information
being
communicated
on
a
single
page.
I
think
the
good
thing
is
there's
a
lot
of
information.
You
can
communicate
on
a
single
page
right.
You
can
know
the
objectives
we're
trying
to
achieve.
You
can
know
those
key
results
by
which
we
measure,
if
we're
achieving
those
objective
or
not,
and
those
key
results
need
to
be
very
specific
and
definable
and
measurable.
K
N
Well,
I
think
I
think
it's
both.
First
of
all,
I
know
it's
actually
time
flies
during
a
pandemic
right,
so
we
actually
have
come
to
you
twice
with
both
the
enterprise
priority
road
map
in
2020
and
the
city
road
map.
N
In
2021
we
broke
all
those
road
map
items
into
work
streams,
the
47
work
streams
and
we
added
a
racial
equity
lens
to
prioritize
those
work
streams
and
we
kind
of
budgeted
accordingly
to
that,
when
we
come
back
on
november
30th,
I
think
you're
going
to
see
an
evolution
of
that
process
about
how
we're
budgeting
the
the
arp
funds
for
the
community
and
economic
recovery,
and
then
I
think,
when
it
comes
to
the
trade-offs,
that's
going
to
be,
that
will
be
something
we're
looking
at
moving
forward
right.
N
K
Great
yeah,
I'm
looking
forward
to
that
conversation.
I
think
my
fear
is
that
we
could
overlay
a
really
complicated
okr
model
over
everything
we're
doing
today
and
just
kind
of
map
it
all
and
say:
okay,
we've
got
dozens
and
dozens
of
objectives
because
we're
a
big,
complicated
system,
and
then
we've
got
all
of
these
okrs
and
rather
than
using
this
to
be
more
strategic
and
deliver
more
impact
by
focusing
and
deliver
on
the
results
that
are
most
important.
K
We
could
just
kind
of
create
this
as
an
existing,
just
sort
of
a
description
of
what
we're
already
doing.
I
think
it's
good
to
measure.
I
think
the
key
the
kr
piece
is
really
important,
but
I
also
hope
that
the
object
that
this
framework
gives
us
an
opportunity,
especially
as
council,
to
weigh
in
on
which
of
these
objectives
are
most
important
and
rather
than
just
kind
of
taking
everything
we
already
do
and
then
just
sort
of
describing
them
with
a
set
of
of
objectives
and
key
results
laid
on
top
of
the
existing
work.
N
It
it
does-
and
I
would
say
we're-
certainly
open
to
that
feedback
right.
We've
we've
this.
We
brought
the
objectives
and
key
results
to
you
the
first
time
now,
so
we're
open
to
that
feedback.
We're
also
going
to
be
engaging
with
the
appropriate
channels
for
the
community
and
our
such
as
our
community
and
economic
task,
recovery
task
force
to
get
their
perspectives
on
the
objectives
and
key
results.
N
At
this
point
in
time,
we
felt
a
bias
to
action,
especially
with
the
one-time,
time-boxed
funding
for
the
american
rescue
plan.
We
felt
it
would
be
better
to
work
with
the
teams
and
work
with
the
task
force
and
come
back
and
show
that
that
action
taking
place
and
then
adjust.
So
we
are
certainly
open
to
council
feedback
on
the
on
those
objectives,
but
those
were
based
on
all
the
years
worth
of
work.
We've
done
on
the
roadmap
and
the
community
economic
recovery
budgeting.
K
N
A
N
Change
initiatives
move
into
more
stable
business
as
usual.
Then
you,
you
kind
of
transition
over
to
what
are
those
key
objectives
and
performance
measurements.
I
think
the
good
thing
for
the
city
of
san
jose
is
the
the
federal
funding
requirements
required
us
to
define
objectives
and
performance
measures
for
each
of
the
recovery
items.
So
the
the
directors
and
initiative
owners
have
already
done
a
good
job
of
giving
us
something
to
work
with
and
be
begin
begin
to,
transition
from
objectives
and
key
results
to
outcomes
and
and
performance
measures.
But
we
wanted
to
get
moving
yeah.
K
S
K
I
think
that's
great
so
in
that
last
five
I
was
actually
going
to
ask
about
kpis.
Do
you
imagine
that,
as
these
change
in
this
initiatives,
I
think
you
just
said
this.
I
just
want
to
make
sure
I'm
clear
on
it
as
they
become
more
mature
and
stable.
Are
we
imagining
something
like
a
kpi
to
help
us
set
targets
against
benchmarks
and
understand
ongoing
performance
of
the
more
stable
programs.
N
On
an
ongoing
basis,
as
we
kind
of
mature-
and
that
is
what
we
envision-
we
have
a
slide.
I
won't
show
that
kind
of
show
the
the
anatomy
of
a
road
map
measurement
with
kpis,
and
it
would
it
begin
to
look
like
a
circuit
chip,
so
we
decided
it
was
a
little
too
detailed,
but
that
is
what
we
envision
is
having
a
minimum
set
of
kpis
both
at
the
enterprise
priority
level
and
at
the
initiative
level
that
kind
of
can
roll
up
into
into
a
dashboard.
N
That's
what
we
envision,
but
we've
been
kind
of
underwater
with
the
pandemic,
and
we
just
haven't
got
there
yet.
K
Yeah
makes
sense
to
me,
okay
and
then
finally,
last
question
from
me
on
this:
how
do
we,
what
is
in
terms
of
our
culture,
I
mean
we
create
these
systems
in
a
very
impersonal
way,
but
in
terms
of
our
best
practices,
our
culture
around
this?
K
N
Well,
I
think
the
first
step
in
that
is
with
community
and
economic
recovery,
which
is
all
about
recovering
to
a
better
normal,
with
with
equity
that
we
have
a
community
economic
recovery
task
force.
That's
helping
us
act
as
a
proxy
for
the
community,
so
I
think
that's
our
our
immediate
next
step
and
that's
why
we're
reviewing
those
with
the
task
force
in
less
than
two
weeks
in
less
than
three
weeks,
cool.
K
I
think
we
could
also
include
some
resident
satisfaction
measures
and
maybe
like
quality
quality
measures
into
the
krs
as
well.
I
didn't
see
a
lot
of
those,
but
I
feel
like
we
could
insert
those
in
there
as
well.
N
Yeah,
absolutely,
I
think
you
know
to
get
in
in
the
discussion
we
could
have.
We
will
have
equity
outcomes
and
measures,
we'll
have
execution
outcomes
and
measures,
we'll
have
kind
of
performance
outcomes
and
measures
will
have
community
impacts,
outcomes
and
measures,
which
is
why
we
didn't
rush
into
this,
because
with
41
initiatives
and
eight
enterprise
priorities,
pretty
soon
we're
going
to
have
200
to
300
measures
that
we
have
to
rationalize
and
bubble
up.
So
I
I
think
we're
agreeing
with
you.
We'd
have
all
of
those
in
communi,
including
some
community
engagement.
K
K
Great
yeah,
it
does
sound
like
a
lot.
Hopefully
we
can
also
prioritize
and
focus
a
little
more,
but
awesome
appreciate
all
the
great
work
on
this
and
the
good
answers
to
the
questions.
Thank
you,
oh
and
I
will
move
the
we
need.
A
motion
to
accept
the
staff
report.
Is
that
correct?
Yes,
I'll
make
that
motion
great.
A
Thank
you.
You
know
a
lot
of
great
work
being
done
here
and,
of
course,
when
you
present
a
picture
full
of
green
and
there's
one
red
box.
Of
course
we're
I'm
going
to
ask
a
question
about
the
red
box.
So
here
it
comes
that
I
understand
we're
having
a
hard
time
meeting
the
goal
of
getting
the
25
of
families
signed
up
for
cal
fresh,
I
think
that's
implied
by
the
chart
on
page
four
about
the
food
and
I'm
just
wondering
what
are
the
barriers
that
we're
experiencing
there.
N
N
N
N
So
john,
would
you
would
you
like
to
we
lost
you,
but
I
think
you're,
probably
beaming
back
in
john?
Do
you
want
to
take
the
answer
to
that
question
about
some
of
the
challenges
in
getting
residents
enrolled
in
cal,
fresh
and
wic.
H
Sure
so,
and
I'm
also
going
to
ask
tony
if
you
can
promote
cj
ryan
from
the
public
side,
cj
ryan.
C
Who
helps
head
up
the
food
branch
so
part
of
the
problem
with
that
number
mayor?
Oh
sorry,
john
cecilia,
director
parks,
recreation,
neighborhood
services,
part
of
the
problem
with
that
number
is
you
know
when
I
started
looking
into
it.
It's
not
easy
to
measure
we're.
You
know
we
don't
have
great
consistent
data
from
all
of
these
different
partners
that
we're
doing
food
distribution
with
and
in
some
cases
it's
not
simple
to
get
them
to
focus
on
transitioning
people
they're
just
focused
on
feeding
people,
and
they
maybe
put
less
energy
into
that.
D
Good
evening,
cj
ryan
interim
administrative
officer
with
prns
thanks
john
some
of
the
issues
that
we're
having
is
first
of
all
many
of
our
partners
are
stating
that
there
is
still
a
need
out
there.
They
have
asked
folks
if
they
still
need
to
get
the
food,
and
they
do
so.
People
are
still
in
line
for
the
food
distribution.
People
are
still
receiving
the
meals
at
home.
The
other
thing
that
we
found
is
that
our
programs
have
identified
a
gap
of
folks
that
may
not
necessarily
qualify
for
some
of
the
state
programs.
D
You
know
such
as
cal
fresh
and
wic,
but
they
still
have
a
need,
and,
and
so
they're
going
to
the
programs
that
we're
funding.
Those
are
two.
D
That
is
a
great
question:
we're
trying
to
do
some
focus
groups
with
one
of
our
one
of
our
partners.
We're
going
to
start
asking
that
question
of
why
folks
say
that
they
still
need
to
be
part
of
this
program
and
aren't
signing
up
for
the
others,
but
anecdotally
we're
finding
that
folks.
You
know,
for
example,
in
the
great
plates
delivered
program
that
we
had
folks
were
making
too
much
money
to
qualify
for
the
other
programs,
but
still
had
a
need
to
have
food.
A
Right,
okay,
and
is
there
a
way
for
us?
I
know
we've
got
contracts
that
are
already
signed
with
a
lot
of
these
providers,
but
the
ways
for
us
to
integrate.
This
is
a
requirement
in
the
implementation
of
food
contracts
that
they've
got
to
be
providing
us.
This
data
showing
that
they're
actually
working
with
families
to
try
to
get
them
signed
up.
A
Okay,
thanks
cj,
appreciate
that
and
then
on
page
10,
the
powered
by
people
portion
really
appreciate
the
endeavor
to
try
to
improve
processes.
Various
ways
particularly
seems
to
be
kind
of
a
peak
academy
model
where
we're
encouraging
employees
to
you
know
embrace
an
orphan
process
of
some
kind
and
come
up
with
some
redesigns.
A
The
report
doesn't
indicate
whether
the
process,
the
three
processes
that
were
selected
or
the
nine
processes
that
were
identified
for
automation-
and
I
know
this
is
pretty
wonky
and
I
expect
you
know
off
the
top
of
your
head.
But
could
we
include
that
in
the
reports?
Just
so
we
know
hey?
What
are
we
working
on
improving
because
I'm
sure
we
all
have
our
own
pet
processes
that
we'd
love
to
see
not
suggesting
any
in
particular,
but
maybe,
for
example,
procurement
or
hiring,
or
something
like
that.
M
Yeah,
absolutely
I
don't
have
that
right
in
front
of
me,
but
they
are
pretty
standard
ones
like
one,
for
example,
is
we
have
had
some
challenges
with
the
employee
directory?
What
is
the
employee
directory?
How
many
do
we
have
or
what's
the
one
source
of
truth
and
it
hr?
M
That's
important
for
employees
who
are
trying
to
find
other
employees
as
an
example,
but
there
are
several
other
that
oh
yeah.
Thank
you
for
that
this
one
here
yeah.
So
a
lot
of
them
have
to
do
with
key
forms
that
really
hang
up
the
employees
in
terms
of
time,
so
the
mileage
reimbursement
form
the
temp.
U
process
if
anybody's
had
to
endeavor
on.
That
is
a
good
example
of
complex
ones
that
have
been
some
time.
Savers,
I
will
say
in
the
next
quarter.
M
For
doing
some
of
these,
we
really
are
starting
to
kind
of
pull
back
a
bit
on
just
building
new
processes
and
endeavoring
to
understand
how
they're
being
adopted
so
I'll
come
back
to
you
with
a
a
clear
list
of
what
those
things
are
that
we're
working
on
and
have
been
prioritized
through
the
bpa
process
and
then
brought
to
this
group
in
terms
of
human-centered
design,
learning
lab
and
then
a
business
process
improvement
with
that's
actually
brian
elms
from
the
change
innovation
academy.
M
B
B
B
That's
why
I
said
favor
anyway:
can
we
do
the?
Can
we
discuss
the
nine
ones
we,
the
nine
business
process,
automation
we
did
for
first
quarter
and
then
what's
anticipated
and
then
also
what's
on
the
on
the
backlog
list
that
we're
going
to
get
to
eventually
that's
been
identified.
I
think
it'd
be
great
for
the
council
to
know.
I
would.
A
A
L
M
M
I
almost
don't
dare
to
adventure
one,
but
one
that
we
had
put
through
the
human
but
I'll
do
it.
Anyways
right,
we
put
one
through
the
human
center
design
learning
lab
to
understand
what
the
experience
was
of
employees
involved
in
the
council.
Memo
process,
for
example,
and-
and
so
we
learned
a
lot
about
how
we
could
help
ourselves
internally
with
the
process
but
didn't
necessarily
lend
itself
to
sending
it
through
a
business
process
improvement
because
there
were
so
many
factors
involved.
M
A
A
Fantastic
and
then
finally
on
housing
assistance
again,
I
guess
we
have
to
call
a
friend
on
this,
but
I
know
the
state's
taken
over
the
distribution
of
that
funding
and
we've
got.
I
think,
2
000
households
we're
hoping
that
they'll
reach.
Are
they
giving
us
any
deadline
of
when
they're
going
to
be
able
to
distribute
the
money
to
this
two
thousand
families.
E
Thank
you
mayor.
I
am
hoping
that
jackie
ferran
morales
says
morales.
Ferran
is
on
the
phone
or
perhaps
either
rachel
vanderveen.
To
answer
that
question.
A
G
G
Hi,
I'm
jackie
morales,
grant
I'm
the
director
of
housing.
We
don't
have
a
timeline
from
the
state
regarding
when
they're
going
to
be
distributing
all
of
the
funding.
G
But
what
it
looks
like
now
is
that
san
jose
is
very
close
to
having
as
many
people
in
the
queue
meaning
have
submitted
applications
and
are
waiting
to
get
paid
in
terms
of
the
amount
of
money
that's
available.
G
So
the
state
is
working.
You
know
very
carefully
to
try
to
see
if
we
can
redistribute
funding
to
those
cities
and
counties
that
have
met
their
allocated
money
and
thank
you
mayor.
I
know
you
have
released
a
letter
with
other
mayors
asking
for
the
feds
to
also
redistribute
money,
so
we're
still
encouraging
people
to
apply
and
the
state
is.
You
know
slowly
but
surely
working
through
getting
the
money
out.
S
Thank
you.
So
I
have
some
questions
around
sorry.
Where
am
I
first
of
all
just
thank
you
for
the
for
the
update.
This
was
really
helpful
to
understand
some
of
the
progress
that's
been
being
made
and
and
also
to
understand
how
you're
balancing
all
of
these
things
together.
So
thank
you.
S
You
have
as
part
of
empower
community
with
resources
that
build
resiliency.
The
30
outreach
events
and
then
you
have
a
conduct.
12
boost
is
sj
business
walks
and
webinars
the
most
heavily
impacted
carbon
19
commercial
corridors
to
outline
resources.
S
So
my
question
is:
how
can
we
align
this?
These
boost,
biz,
sj
business
walks
and
webinars
with
some
of
the
established
ethnic,
small
businesses,
associations
or
the
ones
that
are
emerging,
particularly
I'm
thinking
about
mine,
because
that
was
part
of
what
I
requested
is
in
my
budget
to
develop
a
a
tully
corridor,
business
association,
and
so
I'm
hoping
that
I
and
and
before,
and
I'm
hoping
that
we
can
get
this
one
established
before.
S
And
going
before,
we
have
any
of
the
infrastructure
construction
happening,
hopefully
with
lightroom
lemon
and
knock
on
wood
that
it
begins
next
year,
but
at
least
the
utility
relocation
of
it
will
be.
N
I
see
nancy
klein
is
here
and
leaning
heavily
into
the
microphone,
so
I'm
heard
better,
as
I
have
been
told
to
do,
I'm
going
to
ask
nancy
if
she
could
answer
that
question
for
us.
Thank
you.
D
S
S
Great
well,
I
I
would
like
to
see
where,
in
that
process
a
place
like
tully
could
fit
in
and
hopefully
around
aborn.
I
mean
there's
just
so
many
corridors
throughout
our
city,
I'm
sure
my
colleagues
can
think
of
their
own
in
their
respective
districts
and
many
that
are
ethnic
based
right.
So
there's
a
lot
of
small
ethnic-based
businesses,
so
we
can
talk
offline
on
how
that
would
work.
I
want
to
make
sure
that
we
get
some
of
the
support
going
for
our
small
businesses.
S
I
know
that
who
was
it
that
gave
us
that
statistic?
I
think
it
was
jesus
flores
who
said
that
there
is
primarily
a
lot
of
women,
owned
businesses,
ethnic
yeah
and
shaking
ahead.
So
yes,
so
that's
important
also,
so
that
we
can
continue
to
keep
women
in
the
workforce,
as
you
know,
as
they
desire
to
be
part
of
that
the
recovery
phase.
S
Thank
you.
Thank
you
very
much,
and
then
I
have
another
question
about
the
sustainability
plan
for
the
programs
under
this
is
for
all
of
the
the
green
lit
key
results
that
you
know
for
the
distribution
of
the
hot
spots,
the
launching
of
the
31
child
care
slots,
the
launching
of
the
18
recreation
preschool
classes
for
210
children,
the
community,
centers
and
and
parks
open
and
upgrade
to
rent
relief
and
eviction
centers.
S
And
so
since
these
are
marked
met
and
they're
marked
green.
What
is
that
sustainment
sustainability
plan
for
these
programs
and
efforts?
You
know,
will
they
keep
these
programs
continue
to
be
implemented
and
served
as
a
priority?
Come
quarter
two
and
subsequent
quarters,
or
is
this
one
and
done.
N
So
I
think
we'd
need
to
take
each
one
of
those
programs
individually,
because
I
think
that
as
you
list
them
off,
they
span
multiple,
multiple
departments.
So
if
one
of
the
things
I
could
offer,
if
it
makes
things
a
little
more
efficient
and
effective,
is
to
come
back
and
in
the
next
update,
which
will
be
early
next
year
and
give
you
an
update
on
the
sustainability.
C
S
Right,
I
appreciate
that
ultimately,
my
concern
is
that
some
of
these
that
some
of
this
work
group
will
be
removed
from
the
staff
workload
and
then
because
it's
perceived
as
completed
and
done
that
it
then
is
taken
off
somebody's
folder
here.
So
I
know
there's
different
expectations
very
different
for
the
the
the
list
that
I
named
off
and
we
can
go
offline
and
go
through
each
one
of
them,
but
there's
some
that
carry
on
the
work,
I'm
sure
beyond
order.
One.
N
I
think,
that's
a
very
good
point
that
that
we
need
to
make
sure
that
it
doesn't
just
become
a
result
is
accomplished,
but
then
it's
not
sustained
and
that's
certainly
not
the
case
with
most
of
these
programs
we're
not
going
to
just
distribute
hot
dogs
hot
spots
for
one
year
and
then
stop,
but
I
think
that
we
can,
I
think,
that's
a
good
feedback
into
how
we
come
back
with
the
reporting.
Is
it
not
is
to
also
look
backwards
and
make
sure
that
the
sustainability
of
what
we
achieved
is
included
in
the
status
report
and.
B
D
Suggestion
dolan,
I
think,
also
what
I
think
the
council
member
is
interested
in.
B
J
I
could
give
an
example
of
how
we're
doing
that
so,
for
example,
an
area
of
children,
child
care
and
youth
services.
So
here
you
know
the
the
the
activities
and
the
efforts
that
we're
making
here
on
this
roadmap
are
meeting
kind
of
the
immediate
pain
points
that
we've
identified
in.
In
these
you
know
very
vulnerable
communities
right
and
then
on
a
parallel
track,
as
you
know,
through
nsc,
for
example,
we're
doing
a
deeper
dive
in
terms
of
the
development
of
a
children
and
youth
master
plan.
J
Where
we're
taking
a
look
at
these
these
same
locations
and
also
doing
an
overlay
of
trying
to
identify
any
additional
need
that
may
exist,
and
then
I
think
that'll
give
us
the
data
and
the
information
to
make
well-informed
decisions
around
what
we
need
to
kind
of
sustain
long-term
and
what
it
would
cost.
And
so
that's
that's
how
we're
trying
to
kind
of
move
this
from
that's.
You
know,
step
one
is
meet
the
immediate
pain.
That's
in
the
community
step.
Two
is
really
work
out.
J
A
well
thought
out
strategy
to
make
sure
that
that
that
that
need
continues
to
get
met
as
well
as
identifying
any
emerging
emerging
needs
that
develop
from.
You
know
from
the
time
that
this
has
been
done.
So
that's
just
one
example
of
how
we're
trying
to
operationalize
it.
S
Thank
you.
I
appreciate
that
my
last
question
is
around
the
objectives
and
the
key
results
and
angel.
You
might
be
able
to
answer
this
now
that
you
mentioned
the
youth
and
children
master
plan.
S
J
Yeah
councilman,
that's
a
that's
a
great
question,
and
so
it
does
it
in
two
ways:
one
you
know
when
we
when
we
develop
these
okrs,
we
develop
you
know
kind
of
these
high-level
key
objectives
at
the
end
of
the
day.
What
do
we
want
to
accomplish
right
and
what
we're
doing,
for
example,
in
the
area
of
children
and
youth
services,
we've
been
developing
this
logic
model
which,
as
you
know,
is,
is
built
it's
premised
on
a
theory
of
change
right,
so
we
have
a
problem.
What
are
we
solving
for?
J
What
are
the
actions
that
we
need
to
take?
What
are
the
inputs?
What
are
the
investments?
What
are
the
ultimate
outcomes
and
then
what
are
the
metrics
that
determine
whether
or
not
we're
meeting
them
and
then
that
that
helps
inform
other
things?
There's
that
and
then
there's
a
third
element
right
that
we
haven't
really
talked
much
today,
but
is
actually
happening
literally
right.
Now,
as
we
speak,
we
have
a
pilot
going
on
around
results-based
accountability
and
it
kind
of
speaks
a
little
bit
to
what
councilmember
mayhem
was
asking
about.
J
You
know
we
we
start
with
the
okrs,
but
then
we
begin
to
take
a
look
at
the
work
that
we're
doing
and
we
start
taking
a
look
at
community
level
indicators,
performance
metrics.
You
know,
as
well
as
disaggregated
data
right.
S
J
Take
those
three
efforts-
and
we
really
you
know,
do
the
you
know
we
analyze
them
and
then
we
prove
them
with
kind
of
what
not
only
what
the
data
is
telling
us,
but
what
we're
seeing
in
the
community
and
what
we're
hearing
from
our
residents.
Hence
the
customer
satisfaction.
You
know
the
information
as
well.
E
J
We
and
we
consolidate
all
those
things
to
help
inform
decisions
going
forward,
and
so,
at
the
end
of
the
day,
we'll
get
to
the
point
where,
where
that
becomes
a
discipline
within
our
organization
right
and
right
now
we're
doing
a
pilot
with
eight
departments
where
we're
working
with
the
departments
to
really
build
that
skill
set,
because
it
is
an
art
right.
It
is
a
discipline.
J
It's
not
something
that
you
know
you
just
kind
of
start
on
the
job
and
know
so
so
I
think
that
pilot's
going
real
well
and
we're
bringing
in
some
subject
matter
experts
as
well
to
kind
of
help
with
that
facilitation
process
along
the
way.
So
I
think
what
you'll
see
down
the
road
is
kind
of
the
execution
of
a
a
much
more
strategic
and
kind
of
disciplined
approach
that
would
include
okr's,
result
based
accountability
and
a
logic
models.
Theory
of
change,
wherever
applicable,.
S
That's
wonderful,
I
I
I
believe
I
mentioned
this
to
you
before
angel
and
thank
you
for
reminding
me
of
that
conversation
that
we
had,
because
it
was
more
than
20
years
ago,
when
I
worked
for
the
city
of
san
jose
and
we
were
heading
towards
results-based
accountability
framework
where
we
weren't
no
longer
counting
the
number
of
times.
S
We
took
our
youth
to
blah
blah
blah,
but
we
were
really
looking
at
some
results,
and
so
I
know
that
some
of
that
work
that
that
prns
had
completed
back
then
was
lost
because
of
the
not
the
res
the
the
the
downturn
in
the
economy,
and
we
had
to
let
go
of
a
lot
of
folks
and
with
that
we
had
to
let
go
of.
S
I
guess
some
of
that,
some
of
what
we
followed
in
terms
of
of
being
accountable,
and
so
you
know
with
that
lesson
in
mind.
I
think
you
know
we're
going
through
a
recovery
phase
and
I
it's
interesting
to
see
how
work
some
of
the
really
good
work.
That's
done
in
the
past
gets
lost
over
time,
and
I
hope
that
this
doesn't
get
lost
and
how?
How
do
we
institutionalize?
S
A
results-based
framework
so
that
all
of
the
departments
move
through
this
and
and
it
sounds
like
the
these
okrs-
are
the
first
step
in
that
right
direction.
And
so
I
was
really
surprised
when
I,
when
I
learned
that
not
every
department
moves
in
in
to
the
tune
of
of
the
results-based
accountability
and-
and
I
was
surprised
because
I
thought
you
know
I
when
I
left
that's
the
work
that
we
were
all
doing,
and
I
thought
you
know
20
years
more
than
20
years
later.
I
would
see
the
progress
of
that.
S
S
And
is
this
the
best
when
you
talk
about
theory
of
change
like
what
is
that
strategy
that
is
most
effective
with
our
communities,
because
it
doesn't
matter
whether
we
we
do
it
100
times.
But
if
it's
not
effective,
if
it
is
not
in
the
language
that
our
community
wants
and
needs,
and
if
it's
not
in
in
the
modality
that
they
need,
sometimes
in
person
or
sometimes
in
a
written
form
or
whatever
it
is
that
we
continue
to
flow
and
adapt
and
respond
to
to
our
community.
S
So
I'm
looking
forward
to
seeing
how
this
this
getting
implemented,
I'm
sure
it'll
be
some
years
before
we.
We
really
see
this
functioning
seamlessly
across
all
departments,
but
thank
you.
A
Okay,
I
think
it's
time
to
vote.
B
A
C
A
B
No
hands,
let's
vote.
C
C
C
Hi,
thank
you.
Thank
you
for
the
meeting
today.
Thank
you
for
the
words
of
council
person.
Arenas.
Talking
about
you
know
the
future
road
map
issues.
I
wanted
to
mention
the
ideas
of
accountability
that
can
be
used
for
the
future
of
digital
equity
ideas
to
bring
those
kind
of
concepts
together.
I
think,
can
be
really
important
for
the
future
of
our
bridging
the
digital
divide
issues
and
speaking
of
that
issue,
a
nice
reminder
that
I
hope
we
can
be
considering.
You
know
our
good,
open
accountability
practices.
C
You
know
with
you
know
the
future
of
you
know:
technology,
advisory
boards
and
the
like
in
san
jose.
These
sort
of
subjects
need
to
work
better
hand
in
hand
in
the
future
and
not
they're,
not
mutually
exclusive
things
anymore.
I
don't
think
it's
to
learn
how
to
do
that.
That's
where
the
innovation
is
for
us
to
work
on,
I
feel
and
with
coyote
valley
issues,
the
same
thing:
there's
technology
and
surveillance
data
collection
issues
that
will
be
needed.
Good
luck
and
open
public
policies
with.
C
I'd
like
to
introduce
to
you
something
called
megan's
law
looks
like
you
are
not
familiar
with
such
a
thing.
This
seems
to
be
a
mechanism
to
one
a
neighborhood
of
sexual
predators
living
in
the
world
when
sexual
predators
move
into
a
neighborhood.
The
data
is
published
in
the
megan's
law
website.
The
purpose
is
to
let
all
neighbors
know
of
possible
danger
in
the
neighborhood
danger
in
terms
of
sexual
contact.
This
is
so
that
neighbors
can
be
careful
about,
for
example,
letting
children
walk
to
the
school
bus
a
lot
our
neighborhood
around
71.
E
C
Side
we
share
a
boundary
world
with
the
rv
park
created
here.
Doesn't
it
make
sense
to
you
all
that
we
are
asking
for
the
list
of
people
you
placed
at
this
site
that
have
to
be
reported
to
megan's
law?
We
have
asked
for
this
from
day
one
that's
two
and
a
half
months
ago.
Why
have
we
not
provided
this
list?
Can.
E
I
Yeah
for
the
horseshoe
there
was
a
there
was
an
equity
argument
with
respect
to
extracting
those
infrastructure
dollars
and
because
they
knew
that
the
redlining
maps
that
free
the
infrastructures
were
also
impacted.
That's
how
we
got
the
freeway
going
right
through.
I
mean
right
through
the
mexicans,
and
if
you
look
at
the
redlining
map,
it
went
right
along
that
line
from
the
horseshoe
to
sausage
weathers,
and
so
what
I'm?
What
I'm?
I
What
I'm
asking
for
is
that
that
objective
definition
that
they
use
to
extract
those
infrastructure
dollars
the
definition's
already
there,
because
that's
how
they
got
the
allocation
of
the
funding,
did
that
just
go
ahead
and
continue
that
way.
Nobody
has
to
decide
as
to
whether
or
not
where
it
should
go
or
what
should
be
done
with
it.
It's
already
set
in
place
and
the
people
that
had
whose
lives
have
been
impacted
generation.
D
It
says
that
you'll
adjourn
in
the
memory
of
kent
great
house,
and
I
know
it's
very
late,
but
I
couldn't
let
this
opportunity
go
by
to
let
you
know
and
let
all
those
who
were
touched
by
kent
great
house
know
how
much
he
personally
meant
to
me
and
the
example
that
he
set
for
me
and
my
family
as
we
struggled
to
make
sense
of
and
navigate
for
the
first
time
really
being
involved
in
in
you
know
at
city
hall
and
trying
to
advocate
for
yourself,
and
so
I
just
wanted
to
thank
kent,
greathouse
and
his
wife
and
just
really
say
thank
you
for
putting
his
name
on
the
bottom
of
the
agenda
that
way,
because
he
was
an
amazing
person,
amazing
man
that
taught
me
so
much
and
gave
me
hope
that
I
could
too,
you
know,
do
what
I
needed
to
do
to
protect
my
family.
D
Thank
you
mayor
and
council
members.
I
I'm
going
back
to
speaking
about
71
vista
montana,
parking
lot
notice
that
you
put
up
a
black
tar
black
type
of
mesh
along
the
fence,
and
it
helps
hide
some
of
the
hideous
things
that
are
in
there
and
we,
but
we
can
still
see
what's
going
on
and
the
security
that
was
promised
to
us
as
a
neighborhood
is
completely
lacking
just
today
or
yesterday,
one
of
the
tenants,
or
was
of
the
of
the
parking
lot
decided
to
dump
a
furniture
or
things
outside
of
the
fence.
D
The
security
in
that
in
that
parking
lot
is
only
concerned
about
what's
happening
within
that
lot
and
not
what's
outside
of
our
neighborhood.
You
keep
putting
our
neighborhood
in
peril
and
we
don't
get
any
results
and
you're
not
telling
us
what's
happening
and
again
with
the
megan's
law.
We
don't
know
who
is
in
there
and
if
you've,
if
they've
been
vetted
properly.
Thank
you.
C
C
And
you
guys
need
to
take
care
of
business.
You
guys
need
to
handle
infrastructure
projects.
Here
I
mean,
I
hope
you
don't
screw
up
all
the
money
that
pete
booty
gig
is
going
to
give
you
guys.
I
know
sam's
been
there
in
in
dc
and
everything
with
the
big
smiles
and
handshakes.
C
I
hope
you
don't.
I
hope
it
doesn't
get
screwed
up,
but
you
need
to
fix
this.
This
city,
you
need
to
pave
the
roads.
You
need
to
stay
away
from
these
village
projects.
I'm
glad
you
didn't
do
this
development
out
in
coyote
valley,
because
this
city
can't
handle
what's
in
its
limits,
let
alone
something.
That's
in
the
outer
limits
of
this
town.