►
Description
City of San José, California
Reimagining Public Safety Community Advisory Committee of January 19, 2022
Agenda https://sanjose.legistar.com/View.ashx?M=A&ID=924055&GUID=1102D27E-4F63-4CAE-A8F2-47D7AE4FC16D
A
A
A
To
serve
on
this
committee
by
an
organization
you
should
have
received
an
invitation
to
be
a
panelist..
If
you
sign
in
with
that
email
that
was
sent
to
you,,
it
should
set
automatically.
If,
for
some
reason,
you
were
not
automatically
set
up
as
a
panelist
and
were
nominated,,
you
will
be
promoted..
Please
pay
attention
to
your
screen
to
accept
the
promotion
to
panelist's,
as
it
requires
you
to
accept
the
promotion.
If.
A
A
Acknowledge
that
this
meeting
on
the
lands
of
the
more
alone
people
who
have
stewarded
this
land
through
the
generations,
we
commit
ourselves
to
partner
with
indigenous
sisters
and
brothers
to
celebrate
and
honor
their
legacy
in
our
collective
work
for
justice
and
our
care
for
these
lands,
we
benefit
from
today..
We
will
now
get
started.
A
B
B
That's
right
there,
but
I'm
going
to
read
to
you
so
so
so.
The
recent
indictment
of
former
deputy
district
attorney
floyd
marshall,
for
the
homicide
of
a
15
year
old
high
school
student
illustrates
again
the
disparity
of
justice
for
the
wykeham
unity
and
the
chicano
community.
In
september
of
nineteen,
sixty
nine
young
chicano
manual
veha
was
shot
in.
B
B
Case
investigation
was
conducted
by
the
office
of
the
district
attorney
and
the
chicano
community
called
for
the
intervention
of
the
office
of
the
state
attorney
general
to
assure
fairness..
It
was
further
requested
that
the
attorney
general
present
the
case
to
the
grand
jury.
The
same
request
occurred
in
the
simmons'
case.
in
the
village
case.
The
attorney
general
was
even
called
by
the
local
authorities
in
the
simmons'
case,
the
attorney
general
present
the
case
with
very
little
public
pressure..
The
reason
is
obvious:
the
death
of
cement
involved,
a
white
person.
B
This
obvious
double
standards
of
justice
is
apparent
and
other
examples,
nationwide
and
locally
the
poor
are
treated
differently
or
more
discrete
and
different..
The
disparity
between
justice
for
the
poor
or
the
chicano
in
this
case
and
the
white
community
is
clearly
evident..
It
is
no
wonder
that
the
chicano
residents
of
this
county
have
no
faith
in
the
system
of
justice
as
administered..
Whether
this
bias
is
intentional
or
unintentional
is
of
no
consequence..
B
B
B
B
B
They
removed
body
parts
from
him.,
so
the
pathologist
was
unable
to,
you
know,
say
what
was
the
real
cause
of
death..
In
one
case
I
want
to
bring
up
is
the
death
of
fernando
alvarez
in
two
thousand
nineteen..
This
is
a
nineteen
year
old
young
man
who
was
on
a
skateboard
and
when
it
first
happened,
they
said
it
was
a
hit.
B
B
B
B
He
broke
his
arm
in
several
places
where
they
had
to
cut
his
arm,
open
and
stitch
it
up,
and
he
was
also
involved
in
the
in
the
case
of
gregory
johnsen
junior,
who
was
so
suspiciously
said.
He
committed
suicide
at
san
jose
state
in
a
fraternity
which
they
said
that
none
of
the
lapd
officers
were
involved,
but
luchadores
credle
prove
that
that
wasn't
true.
they
were
there
and
ryan
was
one
of
them..
That
was
the
first
ones
on
the
scene.,
my
penya,
who
killed
jacob
domingues
in
twenty
seventeen.
B
B
B
B
Cover
it
up.,
I
don't
know
why,
but
this
is
the
kind
of
stuff
that
doesn't
need
to
be
happening..
We
shouldn't
be
having
these
kind
of
cover
ups
and
police
investigating
itself..
This
is
why
it
doesn't
work.
police
cannot
investigate
themselves.,
it
doesn't
work
and
they'll
never
be
held
accountable.
and
here's
ryan.
B
Dougherty.,
here's
phillip
watkins,
the
person,
the
young
man
that
he
killed
and
here's
one
of
his
victims.
That
is
a
surviving
victim.,
but
this
is
what
he
did
to
his
arm
and
he
still
continues
to
harass
this
young
man
and
to
this
day
causing
him.
They
put
restraining
orders
on
him
and
they
did
they've
done
so
much
it's
not
even
funny..
I
don't
think
that
should
be
appropriate
procedure.
Then
how
cops
will
harass
people
because
they
file
complaints
against
them
and
continue
to
get
away
with
it.
the
next
slide.
so.
B
B
Better.
it
really,
I
don't
know
how
to
impress
this.
it's
not
that
the
police
are
not
trained
to
protect
our
community.
they're,
trying
to
kill
us.
we're
it's
it's
disgusting,
their
way
of
thinking,
and
that
needs
to
be
changed,
because
so
many
lives
are
being
taken
and
some
of
them
they're
not..
If
you
notice
this
names
are
being
withheld
by
the
police,
which
we
don't
know
why
they
would
even
have
to
withhold
names,
but
they
do
that
a
lot
when
they
don't
want
somebody
to
be
revealed
because
there's
a
pattern
with
that
person
or
whatever..
B
Violence
and
there's
twenty
twenty
of
these
victims
seen
here..
They
had
children
so
they're,
all
their
children
are
growing
up
in
our
community
fatherless
and
living
with
trauma,
and
they
don't
get
acknowledged,
and
this
is
a
problem
because
we're
hurting
our
most
vulnerable
children
in
our
community
who
are
growing
up
with
this
trauma
and
they
don't
see
police
as
heroes..
They
don't
see
them
as
protectors..
They
see
them
as
bad
people
who
kill
their
parents..
So
this
is
a
breakdown.
B
B
B
What
day
is
the
bell
ringer
special?
I
talk
about
like
what
the
is
that
like?,
you
know,,
it's
like.
How
do
we
get
past
that
racism
that
they
think
it's
ok,
that
they
can
do
tests
like
this
and
be
indifferent
with
other
officers?
And
but
yet,
if
you
want
to
know
how
would
you
get
a
latino
officer,,
a
chicano
officer,
to
want
to
even
become
an
officer
in
a
place.
B
Target
certain
neighborhoods.,
so
these
are
our
special
teams
that
we
need
to
get
rid
of,
because
basically
they
just
target
certain
neighborhoods
and
all
they
do.
It's
like
a
racist.
they're,
just
targeting
certain
neighborhoods.
They
don't
go
in
neighborhoods
like
will
aglen.
they
specifically
target.
So
there's
the
bct.
B
Doesn't
matter
what
they,
what
they
say?
That's
what
it
is..
So
we
don't
need
those
kind
of
special
teams..
What
we
need
is
we
need
officers
who
are
properly
trained,,
who
are
called,,
who
know
the
culture,,
know
the
community
and
come
from
the
community,
who
understand
the
difference
in
the
communication
and
who
can.
B
B
B
Hundred
thousand.,
but
there's
I
have
a
handful
like
ten
fifteen
people
that
the
highest
one
is
eleven
million.,
the
lowest
one
was
four
hundred
thousand,
and
this
is
something
that
that
money
can
be
better
used
to
put
back
into
our
community
into
our
education
for
our
children,
to
housing,
to
so
much
other
stuff.
When
the
police
are
paying
for
stuff
they're,
their
wrongdoings
out
of
their
paychecks.
B
they're,
going
to
think
twice
when
they
decide
to
take
a
life
because
they
know
they're
not
going
to
get
they're
not
going
to
get
paid
like
they
were
you
know,.
It's
just.
There
has
to
be
a
way
to
make
them
accountable,
and
we
need
to
stop
believing
the
narrative
that
they
feed
everybody.
They
were
afraid
for
the
life..
They
are
not
afraid.
B
For
their
life.,
that's
what
they're
trained
to
say,
so
they
can
justify
killing
everybody
and
it
needs
it
needs
to
stop
it..
It's
it's
disgusting
and
it's
hurtful
because
I
can
relate
to
the
families
back
in
nineteen
sixty
nine,
some
of
the
stuff.
They
were
simple
things:
they
were
just
asking
for
accountability
for
them
to
be
held
responsible
for
their
actions..
They
were
asking
back
then
we're
asking
now
we're
still
not
getting
it
and
it's
sometimes,
you
feel
like.
B
Are
they
ever
going
to
change?
Are
they
ever
going
to
admit
that
they've
been
wrong??
Are
they
ever
going
to
see
that
they're
pattern
of
behavior
has
been
violent
towards
the
community??
How
do
they
expect
to
be?
How
do
they
expect
our
community
to
trust,
believe
and
respect
them
when
they
don't
see
us
as
people
worthy
of.
B
Being
respected?
they
just
rather
than
us
down
like
animals
in
the
street
and
just
say:
oh
well,
I
was
afraid
for
my
life
and
you're
gone,
and
you
know
it.
It's
it's
something
that
people
you
need
to
understand
when
your
family
member,
you
never
think
you're
going
to
be
in
that
position,
but
it's
like
human
they're.
B
B
B
B
Moses
pardo
was
killed
by
san
jose
pd
at
save
mart
on
story,
road
and
arthur
ghias
was
run
over
by
sheriffs
and
jimmy
zuniga
was
brutally
beat
by
the
san
jose
in
his
own
home..
So
this
is
a
pattern.
This
is
the
pattern
that
they've
had
way
back
when
and
they're,
not
going
to
say
that
it's
changed
and
they're
trying
to
make
things
better
commune
because
it's
still
happening
present
day.
B
B
B
B
B
Them
if
they
can
and
to
require
them
to
carry
their
own
excessive
force
insurance
that
they
pay
out
of
their
own
pocket
and
if
they
cannot
continue
to
keep
it,,
they
are
too
much
of
a
high
risk
for
so
many
complaints
and
stuff,
and
they
are
no
longer
able
to
keep
insurance..
They
are
terminated,
no
ifs
or
buts
about
it,
and
they
cannot
go
to
arbitration
and
try
to
get
their
job
back..
B
We
want
them
to
defund
and
demilitarize..
We
want
them
to
dismantle
the
vct
demerge,
the
kovács
response
and
the
street
crimes
unit.
Those
are
all
racist
units
that
target
latino
communities
that
they
say
they're
trying
to
stop
crime..
They
always
arrive
after
the
fact..
They
are
never
there
to
prevent
crime..
They
come
after
the
fact,
and
they
just
create
more
chaos
in
our
community
and
just
expose.
B
B
B
Are
maybe
out
there
doing
things
because
they're
hungry
or
because
their
families
struggling
to
do
something
and
they're
doing
committing
crime.?
They
like
steal?
They
do
some
because
it's
a
means
of
survival
not
because
they
want
to.,
but
there's
no
support
system
to
help
families
in
certain
neighborhoods
and
youths
are
being
targeted.
Next.
B
Try
to
bring
up
the
person's
past,
which
had
nothing
to
do
with
that
incident,.
That
moment
like
they
bring
up
that
to
dissuade
to
persuade
and
the
media.
They
use
the
media
to
do
this..
They
try
to
dehumanize
their
loved
ones,
and
that
needs
to
stop,
because
what
they
need
to
do
is
they
need
to
start
not
calling
their
cops
heroes
or
they
did
things
right..
They
need
to
keep
their
mouths
quiet
and
be
respectful
of
the
grieving
families,
and
they
to
give
information
that
they
can
give,
which
is
ok.
These.
B
Officers
that
were
involved
in
this
shooting
and
and
so
officer
so-and-so
has
been
had
fifteen
complaints
filed
against
him,
since
this
is
what
we
need
to
know.,
that's
what
they
should
be
giving
us
not
trying
to
bring
up
somebody's
past.
If
somebody
has
a
past
criminal
record
and
they've
done
their
time,,
why
do
they
have
to
bring
it
up??
They
had
nothing
to
do
with
it,
and
that's
this
is
the
common
practice
of
officer
involved,
shootings
and
that
needs
to
stop..
They
need
to
be
very.
B
Empathetic.,
they
need
to
understand
that
you
just
took
somebody's
family
loved
one
and
you
need
to
not
try
to
dehumanize
them
because
put
yourself
in
our
shoes,.
Would
you
like
somebody
to
do
that
to
your
family?
The
way
you
want
your
mom,,
your
sister,,
your
brother,,
your
wife,
to
be
treated?.
That's
the
way
you
should
be
treating
the
community.
You
chose
to
protect
and
serve,
and
and-
and
so
just.
B
B
Their
reaction.
there's
for
every
action,
there's
a
reaction
and
their
actions
are
causing
the
community
to
react
in
a
way
that
they
think
everybody
is
against
them..
But
it's
about.
We
want
accountability.,
we
want
transparency.,
we
want
somebody
to
be
held
accountable
and
we
want
it
to
stop
already.,
it's
been
going
on
for
decades
in
our
community
and
it's
still
going
and
we
keep
talking
about
the
same
things
and
nothing's
been
done..
So
hopefully
everybody.
This
advisory
committee
understands
how
important
you've
been
a
part
of
this
advisory
committee..
B
B
A
Laura.-
and
I
just
want
to
say
you
did
a
great
of
presenting
all
of
that
information..
I
know
you
were
planning
on
having
another
speaker
with
you.
So
thank
you
so
much
for
giving
us
the
presentation
by
yourself
which
which
could
be
hard..
So
thank
you
so
much
for
that,
and
let's
remind
everyone
really
quickly
before
we
go
into
public
comment
to
please
turn
on
your
language.
Preferences,.
A
D
D
Centering,
the
research
that
I
have
about
the
chicano
experience
and
american
experience
within
the
context
of
some
say
is
able
to
be
changed,
no.
one
to
a
historical
context
document
that
is
produced
about
the
city's
history..
My
research
is
in
there
and
my
research
was
was
was
to
remove
the
balance
that
the
research
and
taking
it
through
the
bureaucratic
process.,
and
so
that's
why
censoring
the
chicano
experience
within
the
context
of
these
types
of
meetings
is
so
critically.
Important..
D
D
Russell
the
jacksboro
that
breteau
consuelo
rodriguez,
all
of
these
women
and
men,
these
these
are
my
heroes,
because
I
understood
what
it
is
that
they
have
done
for
my
community
when
my
father
was
going
to
here
and
the
way
that
we
were
treated-
and
I
agree
with
gloria-
said
we're
not
as
far
as
my
position
is.
I
am
not
against
the
police
department.,
I'm
glad
that
we
have
one
to
protect
the
citizens
that
are
most
vulnerable
in
our
communities
and
they're
being
victimized.
D
however,
when
the
when
the
ones
that
we
go
to
for
protection
are
the
ones
that
we
need
protection
from
you
no
longer
whether
aware
that
you
need
to
take
it
off
and
demand
that
the
police
department
do
something
about
that.
Might
clean
up
clean
house
house..
That's
all
we're
asking.
I'd
like
to
take
a
cheap
marker
for
allowing
this..
This
would
never
happen
if
tindale
agreed
to
do
it
become
chief..
This
would
never
happen.
this
kind
of
meeting..
D
So
I
would
like
to
thank
you
for
allowing
this
to
happen
and
for
for
us
to
coordinate
and
really
actually
policy
number
one,.
I
would
like
for
us
to
create
a
presentation
with
this,,
really
refine
it,
really
refine.
The
presentation,
put
this
chicano
experience
in
the
academy,
the
first.
It's
a
part
of
the
curriculum
in
the
academy
for
them
to
know
that
there
is
a
history
in
the
city
that
you
have
to
understand
that
they're
still
experiencing,
and
I
got
much
more,
but
thank
you.
thank
you.
thank
you,
laurie,.
Do
we
have
any.
A
A
That
really
has
to
be
representative
of
what
the
community
is
here
in
san
jose,
and
we
also
must
think
about
our
most
marginalized
members
of
our
community..
So
when
we
talk
about
community
safety,,
it's
important
to
for
example,
acknowledge
that,
while
the
black
population
of
san
josé
is
less
than
three
percent
of
our
general
population,,
it's
more
than
17
percent
of
our
own
house
population.,
and
I
think
when
we
talk
about
community
safety,
we
really
need
to
talk
about
safety
for
right,
because.
A
Who
have
money
for
people
who
are
moving
here,
protect
jobs
and
not
that
those
people
shouldn't
be
safe,
but
our
priority
should
be
upon
the
safety
of
the
most
vulnerable
members
of
our
community..
So
thank
you
so
much,
laurie.
and
I
hope
that
we
can
consider
the
most
vulnerable
members
of
our
community
ok?.
Oh
thank
you.
E
E
F
F
F
F
These
single
guys
and
they've
spent
the
night
in
jail,
and
they
tell
me
how
they
were
treated
when
they
were
in
jail
and
I'm
sure
that
these
guys
were
not
saints.
The
night
before.
you
know,.
They
were
out
on
a
drunk
or
something.,
but
nonetheless
the
way
that
they
were
treated
in
jail,
that
their
cell
phone
and
their
money
was
taken
from
them,.
Their
shoestrings
were
taken
from
the
city
I
guess.,
and
so
they
don't
hang
themselves.,
I'm
not
really
quite
sure
what
that's
about
it.
F
F
F
Wonder
about
the
accountability.:
maybe
these
guys
were
exaggerating..
Maybe
they
were
flat
out
lying,
but
by
all
appearances
they
were
not
treated
well
and
they
were
they
were.
They
were
stolen.
Their
things
were
stolen
by
the
police
and
at
disheartens
me
to
think
that
the
police,
who
are
supposed
to
be
protecting
the
as
a
citizen,
is
not.,
and
so
I
wanted
to
express
that
concern
that
I
have.
thank
you
,
flora.
did
you
want
to.
I
want.
B
B
B
Using
pcp
right.
and
he
actually
turned
my
little
sister
on
to
using
pcp,
and
I
used
to
tell
him
you
better,
stop
that.,
but
later
as
time
went
on,
I
would
tell
them
like
how
come
every
time
you
get
arrested
and
you
have
pcp
you're
out
within
a
week?
right..
So
then,
one
day
he
got
drunk
and
he
shared
with
me
that
his
probation,
a
parole.
B
B
B
B
Cops
do.,
they
take
people's
property.,
they
keep
it
as
their
own..
They
take
stuff
from
the
evidence,
room
and
and
sell
it,
and
this
is
a
pattern
of
practice
that
they
do
that
some
of
them
get
away
with
and
it
has
to
stop
and
but
they'll
never
admit
it..
But
I
know
that
it
happens
because
my
friend
who
is
as
a
living
testimony,
I
used
to
see
him
taking
off
and
doing
he
would
get
arrested
and
it
was
the
same
thing
every
two
weeks.
B
B
A
Right.
thank
you,,
laurie.
and
everyone
for
speaking
up
for
public
comment..
I
would
like
to
make
a
very
quick
comment..
I
think
it's
really
important
to
look
at
historical
policing
practices
and
how
that
they've
targeted
traditionally
latino
communities,
mostly
on
the
east
side
and
downtown.,
there's
a
there's,
a
lot
of
them
just
down
connections
here
stage,
multiple
others
are
really
important
to
look
at,
and
I
urge
my
fellow.
A
G
One
to
be
sure
I
apologize.
I'm
doing
this
actually
on
my
car,
so
I
want
to
make
sure
that
you
all
hear
me
just
so
folks
have
understand
who
I
am.
I'm
in.
I
am
the
principal
and
consultant
who's
working
on
this
very
important
project..
My
focus
and
my
experience
has
been
with
the
asian
pacific
american
leadership
community
for
a
very
long
time..
I
have
worked
with
us
in
the
past.
My
expertize
is
leadership,
development
and
particular
facilitation..
G
G
G
Start
talking
about
reimagine
public
safety,,
there
was
a
desire
to
really
empower
the
youth
to
give
them
more
space
and
voice
to
speak
and
provide
their
own
insight
and
their
wisdom
into
this..
After
some
couple
hiccups,
we
were
able
to
get
the
started..
We
got
the
started
in
this
past
november
and
we
reached
out
to
twelve
different
organizations.
G
As
you
can
see
here
by
the
slides,
we
were
able
to
reach
up
to
nine
organizations
and
they
were
able
to
nominate
youth
leaders
who
their
own
leaders
of
these
organizations
feel
like
they
can
contribute
very
valuable
insights
to
really
impact
what
we
imagine.
Public
safety
can
look
like..
We
also
reach
out
to
the
three
dogs
and
due
to
logistics,
people,
power.
G
G
Also
have
to
decide
because
the
time
was
really
short.
We
have
to
really
think
about.
How
do
we
maximize
our
time,
together.
and
so
part
of
it
is?
There
is
an
experience
or
projection
onto
youth
that
we
don't
have
much
voice,
and
sometimes
our
youth
leaders
kind
of
take
that
on
a
projection..
So
a
lot
of
the
work
we're
doing
right
now
is
focused
on
leadership,
development,,
empowerment.
Then
the
proposals,
a
lot
of
it,
is
like
we're
trying
to
rearrange
their
belief
system
what
the
leadership
looks
like,.
G
G
When
I'm
seeing
the
first
piece
of
work,
it's
like
the
dignity
work
initiative
to
recognize
the
intersections
of
their
own
intersections,
what
each
other's
intersection!
After
that,
then
they
actually
do
the
work.
In
terms
of
how
do
we
show
ourselves
foley
as
leaders
empowered
to
create
proposals
that
encompasses
the
desire
in
need
of
the
community
itself,.
G
G
A
F
G
G
Would
love
for
the
black
community
to
be
represented
and
that's
been
brought
up?
Multiple
times.
one
of
the
challenges
that
sometimes
our
network
are
not
as
comprehensive
or
sometimes
there's
like
barriers,
and
this
is
wonderful
if
we
can
recommend
somebody
by
saturday
so
that
we
can
have
them
join
us
for
the
rest
of
the
session
,.
I
do
have
someone
in
mind.
I'm.
G
C
H
H
With
a
set
of
organizations
that
nominate
people
to
it.,
we've
been
trying
to
stay
with
the
stay,
with
a
focus
on
making
sure
that
these
are
the
initial
things..
But
I
would
love
to
make
sure
as
long
as
as
long
as
the
committee
itself
doesn't
feel
like
we're
imposing
someone
on
them
to
try
to
give
as
much
autonomy
to
the
youth
council
as
possible..
So,
like
my
only
addendum.
Perhaps
to
that
to
that
motion
is
to
say.
H
We
would
like
to
recommend
this
and
affirm
these
organizations
nominating,
but
the
youth
would
also
have
to
summarily
endorse
and
embrace
accepting
someone
else,
another
nominee..
I
don't
perceive
that
to
be
a
problem
with
that.,
but
I
don't
want.
I
really
don't
want
the
youth
that
are
part
of
this
process
to
feel
like
we're,
dictating
who
is
sitting
there
and
what's
happening
with
them..
You
know,
anticipate
a
problem.,
but
but
I
just
want
to
make
sure
that
we
were
affirming
their
their
autonomy
in
this
process,
and
I.
B
D
D
The
word
leader,
because
anybody
that
does
something
they
serve
the
community
you
research
or
we
do
not
need
a
leader-
is
something
that
is
assigned
to
somebody
look
to
you
as
a
leader,
but
you
don't
call
yourself
a
leader
is
what
I'm
saying.
there's
a
little,
because
I
serve
my
community.
I
don't
lead
it
in
so
that
I
have
a
problem
with
that.
secondly,.
D
D
D
This
is
intersectionality
issue
and
that's
it
and
that's
all.
and
what
it
does.
Is
it
dilutes
the
effectiveness
and
the
efficacy
of
what
it
is
that
somebody
is
trying
to
propose,
but
they
come
in
the
side
first
because
are
certain
intersectionality
so
that
I
want
that
out
because
it
doesn't
work
not
in
these
situations..
This
is
the
issues.
D
Are
the
stakes
are
high
and
it's
very
serious
what
it
is
that
we're
doing.
so
being
able
to
get
the
youth
or
training
wheels.
In
this
context,
I
don't
think
is
proper..
I
don't
think
it's
proper
for
them
to
have
their
training
wheels
and
for
them
to
learn
to
participate
in
government
and
in
a
situation
like
this.
That
is
this
serious.
D
I
think
they're
suitable
for
any
other
kind
of
committee,
but
something
like
this-
it's
just
it's
too
critical..
You
just
saw
the
history
that
is
long,
storied
history.,
so
I
mean
when
you
look
at
it
from
that
perspective,
I
think
chicanos
should
be
the
ones
that
are
running
the
show..
I
think
chicanos
should
be
the
ones
that
have
do
that
or
because
we
in
our
generations,
our
history,
is
right
there
to
be
seen
document..
We
have
the
women
that
were
protecting
us,.
D
D
C
This
is
this,
is
our
speaker
during
during
this
op,
you
were
able
to
join
us.
We
passed
your
part
of
the
presentation
and
so
we're
going
to
go
off
for
now.
C
F
C
C
I
Give
an
update.
our
committee
has
been
coming
up
with
our
policy
ideas,
so
we
have
a
spreadsheet
of
it.
This
way,
I
think
it's
about
twelve
policy
ideas
that
we're
continuing
to
for
the
most
part
they're
done..
I
think
we're
continuing
to
tinker
with
some
of
them
and
should
have
them
will
be
completed
by
the
time.
Chris
is
ready
to
put
them
in
a
spreadsheet
and
just
to.
I
A
C
F
A
I
I
I
D
D
D
I
want
to
be
able
to
go
somewhere
on
a
site
to
look
at
what
we're
talking
about,
because,
if
you're
going
to
just
like
keep
everything
a
secret
and
then
like
compile
this
long
report
and
then
submit
that
to
the
council,,
I'm
telling
you
no
one
here,
absolutely
no
one
spends
more
time
in
the
council
than
I
do..
I
know
how
they
think
I've
done,
it.,
I'm
going
on
for
years,
man.
Don't
pay
a
penny.
D
D
D
D
This
is
all
a
bunch
of
nonprofits
that
will
get
paid
and
they
go
to
this
meeting
for
political
gain
or
to
make
sure
that
they
can
get
the
grant
money
come
you
know,
or
we
can
really
talk
about
hard
policy
issues
like
having
a
psychological
test
on
a
on
the
officer
after
he
comes
back
from
from
troubleshooting.
you
know,.
When
we
talk
about
that,,
that
is
the
skunk
policy
issue
that
could
be
changed.
D
Is
this
person
needs
to
have
a
psycho
psychological
evaluation
and
a
site
needs
to
clear
him
before
he
can
go
back
to
work.
That
is
nonexistent
right
now..
What
lori
had
come
up?
That
was
good..
That
was
good.,
but
also
I
want
lori
and
one
other
person
in
that
academy.
In
the
first
week
in
the
last
week
in
all
three
academies.,
nobody
wants
to
talk
to
me
about
that.
But
I'll
bet
you
like
that.,
I
that
happens,
because
that
is
centering.
This
community
in
the.
D
Academies
right
at
the
beginning.,
you
can't
get
any
more
censoring
the
community
within
the
context
of
policing
than
to
place
citizens
in
the
community
in
that
context,
right
from
the
beginning
to
sensitize
them
to
the
ultimate
responsibility
that
we
lay
upon
them
and
that
is
to
make
a
decision
to
take
a
human
life,
whether
it's
justified
or
not,
justified
doesn't
meet..
Does
it
matter?
What
matters
is
that
you
were
going
to
take
a
human
life..
You
have
to
understand
the
gravity
of
that
first
right
when
you
come
in.