►
Description
Pre-meeting citizen input on Agenda via eComment at https://sanjose.granicusideas.com/meetings.
Agenda at https://sanjose.legistar.com/View.ashx?M=A&ID=712219&GUID=1BAA2CB7-2C7F-4E35-92C6-9531D564B3AA
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
To
the
rules
committee
and
leader
of
the
whole
for
may
6th.
Well,
we
have
a
quorum.
All
of
the
members
are
present
virtually.
That
is
we'll
begin
with
a
review
of
the
may
12th
final
agenda.
A
And
I
think
we're
requesting
I
see
clerk
and
cmo
requesting
11
a.m,
start
due
to
the
many
substantive
items
that
are
on
this
agenda,
so
ask
the
maker
the
motion
to
consider
that
there
are
several
ads
as
well
item
relating
to
temporary
financial
relief
for
concessionaires
at
moneta
airport,
the
amendment
to
allow
temporary
reduction
in
rent
the
amendment
to
an
eviction,
moratorium,
ordinance
and
actions
related
to
cares,
act,
supplemental
grants,
so
those
are
all
on
the
edgy
we'll
begin
with
pages.
A
A
A
A
I
understand
it
relates
in
some
ways
to
the
location
and
assessing
the
various
locations
of
emergency,
housing
and
and
temp
and
transitional
housing.
I
understood
staff
is
already
working
on
direction
dave
to
review.
I
think
lee
indicated
they
were
going
to
review
the
criteria
and
the
list
and
all
that
kind
of
stuff
that's
going
to
be
going
on
now
is
that
right.
A
C
Mayor
this,
this
is
also
to
try
to
bring
the
city's
density
bonus
development
incentives
in
line
with
state
law
and
our
general
plan.
A
A
Yeah,
I
understand
that's
the
point
of
it
being
on
the
agenda
as
precisely
as
you
described
as
that
was
the
staff's
intent.
Clearly
there's
a
another
direction
proposed
on
this
item
by
councilman
jimenez
and
I'd
like
to
believe
the
staff
could
consider
that
as
part
of
instead
of
the
work
stream.
I'm
just
not
sure
we
want
to
go
through
a
lengthy
debate
again
on
that
issue.
Given
the
fact
that
staff
already
has
direction
to
go
to
go.
Look
at
this
stuff.
A
I
think
it
relates
to
the
consideration
of
other
zoning
expansion,
potentially
of
of
potential
locations
for
emergency
and
transitional
housing,
looking
at
other
zoning
designations,
etc.
B
A
A
Okay,
so,
as
I
see
it,
direct
staff
to
investigate
whether
additional
amendments
of
zoning
code
are
necessary
to
clarify
intent
behind
ab101
and
ab2162.
A
So
it's
a
substantial
amount
of
work.
Clearly,
that's
not
that's
not
what's
contemplated
in
steph's
memo
here,
and
so
I'm
just
trying
to
understand
you
know.
Obviously,
we've
got
a
process
for
trying
to
ensure
you
guys
are
able
to
focus
on
the
emergency
work.
You
critically
need
to
dave,
and
this
is
obviously
very
important
work
that
is
being
suggested
by
councilor
jimenez.
I
just
want
to
make
sure
that
what
we're
not
doing
is
having
end
around
around
the
basic
rules
committee
function,
which
is
to
provide
some
gatekeeping.
A
That
is
where
the
staff
can
clearly
indicate
hey
here's
our
workload,
here's
what
we
can
do,
here's
what
needs
time
or
prioritization
and
then
align
it
accordingly,
rather
than
having
council
consider
something
that
is
really
an
ancillary
issue
to
the
central
one,
that's
being
proposed
by
staff
on
that
item.
B
C
A
Well,
I
mean
I'm
open
to
whatever
staff
wants
to
do
on
this,
but
one
idea
might
be
that
we
come
back
in
a
week
and
you
guys
give
a
red,
green,
yellow
on
these
specific
items.
I
know
leigh's
got
a
work
stream
going.
I
know
it's
not
to
be
done
next
week,
it's
longer
term
about
looking
at
all
the
the
sites
and
where
the
criteria
are
the
right
criteria
and
all
that
kind
of
stuff,
and
I
think
this
is
probably
something
that
would
be
reasonably
married
with
that.
B
Yeah,
I
think
that's
that's
accurate.
I
I
we
certainly
don't
have
the
capacity
to
do
anything
with
the
the
council
members
memo.
In
relation
to
the
item
that
we
have
agendized
on
consent,
right,
there's
no
way
for
us
to
marry
that
up
so.
B
Yeah,
I
would,
I
guess
my
preference
would
be
to
let
the
the
the
item
go
forward
and
we'd
have
to.
B
A
B
Yeah,
I
think,
if
that,
if
that
can
work,
I
certainly
would
accept
that
you
know
that
I
guess
playing
that
out,
though
next
tuesday
at
council.
You
know
we'd
have
to
indicate
that
we'll
we'll
bring
that
analysis
back
through
rules.
The
the
following
day,
yeah.
C
It
doesn't
prevent
the
council
member
from
having
this
discussion
and
wanting
to
talk
about
it,
but
if,
if
the
idea
is
that
you
want
to
deal
with
the
the
direction
and
the
substance
of
it
at
rules
to
determine
if
it's
a
red,
green
or
yellow,
I
mean
that's,
that's
that's
fine,
but
you
know
the
topic.
Is
there
it's
true,
it's
germaine
to
the
topic
and
he
can
certainly
have
that
conversation.
A
Why
don't
we
just
defer
this
whole
thing
then
a
a
week,
so
we
can
have
that
conversation
first.
Is
this
item
this
consent
item
that
time
sensitive?
We
could
just
defer
it
a
couple
hours.
B
I
think
it
probably
could
I
I'm
sure
it
could
be
kicked
yeah.
You
know
just
understanding
what
it
is
so
yeah
we
can.
We
can
certainly
defer
item
d
to
a
later
date.
A
A
Okay,
because
I
think
we're
going
to
have
a
pretty
jam
calendar
next
week
as
it
is
all
right,
great
sorry,
all
right.
Any
suggestions
on
the
other
items
on
the
agenda
or
a
motion.
A
B
E
F
Thank
you,
councilman
campbell,
yeah,
all
right!
Thank
you.
Can
you
hear
me?
Yes,
sir.
Thank
you
sorry
for
my
awkwardness
yesterday.
Any
awkwardness
I
offered,
but
but
thank
you
for
letting
me
speak
on
the
subjects
that
I
did.
F
It
was
important
to
me
to
try
to
get
it
out
of
my
sister,
get
it
out
of
me
basically
and
just
try
to
make
it
I'll
try
to
make
it
just
regular
everyday
conversation,
and
thank
you
for
your
patience
with
that
to
speak
to
my
my,
I
wanted
to
speak
on
your
add-on
items
today
to
again
sum
up
my
own
words
from
yesterday.
F
It
is
okay
to
go
slow
with
5g
and
other
projects
at
this
time,
and
I
think
we
are
all
understanding
how
both
renters
and
owners
should
not
have
to
owe
10
to
12
months
of
possible
back
rent
this
next
year,
I
recommend
to
review
the
friendly
ways
the
city
of
berkeley
is
going
about
their
own
12
month,
men's
forgiveness
program
plans
at
this
time,
as
we
are
all
waiting
for,
possibly
very
large
state
and
federal
economic
forgiveness
packages
in
the
next
year.
F
I
hope
I
can
remind
both
everyday
people
and
owners
shouldn't
have
to
be
hurt
in
working
through,
possibly
unnecessarily
or
overly
experimental
hoops
here
in
san
jose.
I
think
it
could
be
interesting
how
it
can
all
work
together
to
facilitate
open
decent
conversation
in
the
next
few
months
in
the
summer
here
in
san
jose.
Thank
you.
E
Yes,
so
I
I
do
concur
with
you
mayor
on
on
that
I
I
would
like
to
see
councilmember
jimenez's
memo
treated
separately
as
its
own
standalone
item,
but
if
staff
wants
to
bring
it
back
next
week,
I'm
okay
with
that
too,
although
I
think
it's
it
has
its
own.
E
You
know
it's
it's
its
own
path,
it's
clear
to
me
that
it
should
have
its
own
path
and
not
you
know,
be
lumped
up
in
some
other
path,
but
in
any
case
I
also
know
that
the
ad
item
8.3,
where
we're
where
we're
with
the,
where
we're
doing
the
eviction
moratorium.
Some
of
the
caveats
that
were
brought
in
is
going
to
be
discussed
on
the
12th.
But
I
imagine
I
don't
know
if
staff's
going
to
bring
back
a
extension
to
the
rent
moratorium.
E
So
since
I
don't
see
a
memo
for
item
8.3,
I'm
wondering
if
we
can
postpone
that
until
the
19th,
where
I
imagine
or
I'm
predicting
staff
will
come
back
with
an
extension
to
the
rent
moratorium
itself,
and
maybe
we
can
lump
those
two
items
together
so
that
we
don't
have
a
whole
lot
of.
E
C
Contemplate
here,
rick
the
extension's
in
place,
so
the
extension
already
is
in
effect,
this
was
a
a
memo
that
council
member
carrasco
authored
that
asked
for
additional
items.
C
This
is
coming
back
later
than
the
other
items
did
I
expect
the
memos
coming
from
staff.
I
expect
america.
E
D
C
C
C
I
expect
the
memo
to
come
from
staff
by
friday,
which
is
consistent
with
the
waiver.
You
know
the
what
the
council
on
the
cover
related
items
has
directed
that
you
know,
but
it's
up
to
council
whether
you
want
to
hear
it
because
you
wanna,
you
want
more
time
to
study
a
memo.
So
I
just
wanna
clarify
the
record
that
the
eviction
moratorium
moratorium
is
in
place
already
to
12
31.
A
E
Okay,
well,
I
I
wouldn't
mind
having
a
week
to
to
understand
what
the
word
prohibit
means.
There's
a
lot
of
the
use
of
the
word
prohibit
and
I'm
not
a
lawyer,
but
I
think
that
it
creates
some
very
one-sided
language
and.
E
Interpretations
of
what
the
word
prohibit
could
be
very,
very
open.
I
I
don't
know
that
just
reading
it
item
number
two
and
three
in
the
in
the
the
ad
sheet
gives
me
a
little.
E
B
B
It's
yeah
we're
just
yep.
C
E
Right,
that's
what
I
mean
it
that
is
going
to
come
up
on
the
19th
and
there's
going
to
be
a
whole
mess
of
people
to
speak
on
the
19th.
I
would
prefer
to
kick
this
item
to
the
19th
as
well,
so
that
we
can.
It
will
give
your
staff
some
time
dave.
B
E
Well,
so
so
my
original
thing,
which
which,
which
rick
just
confirmed
that
we
that
the
moratorium
does
expire
on
the
31st
first
like
I
thought
it
did
and
it
has
to
be
extended
and
I'm
sure
that
a
lot
of
people
are
gonna,
be
in
line
to
speak
about
that
too.
So
I'm
gonna
make
a
motion
to
accept
the
agenda
with
the
ad,
with
the
exception
of
8.3,
which
I'm
hoping
to
move
to
the
19th
instead
of
the
12th.
G
A
Kessler
canvas
the
item,
10.1
d.
I
would
just
ask
if
that
could
also
be
deferred
for
two
weeks,
so
that
way
would
be
time
for
that
memorandum
to
come
back
to
us
absolutely
so
moved
yes
for
a
workload
assessment.
Okay,
you.
E
Am
making
we'll
add
that
to
the
motion
to
11
a.m?
Start
time
assuming
rule
and
assuming
we
get
done
with
closed
session.
H
So
council,
member
campus,
is
that.
B
I
do
support
the
idea
of
having
memos
come
in
a
bit
earlier,
so
that
way
we
can
understand
them
as
well
as
we
can
previous
to
a
meeting.
So
I
I
support
that.
I
just
want
to
be
able
to
also
give
our
public
an
opportunity,
not
everybody
comes
in
at
the
same
day
at
same
night
in
terms
of
of
comments,
and
so
public
comment,
sometimes
it's
easier
when
the
line
is
shorter
and
it
could
be
discouraged
when
the
line
is
a
lot
longer.
B
A
Okay
on
the
motion,
then
I
guess
tony:
could
you
please.
B
A
A
B
A
All
right,
wonderful,
thank
you,
then
we'll
move
on
then
to
the
19th.
We'll
start
with
pages
five
and
six:
are
there
any
changes
to
those
pages.
A
Okay:
let's
go
to
the
public,
I
believe
mr
buchanan.
I
Hi,
I'm
eric
councillor
trying
to
chime
in
for
the
last
item,
so
this
is,
I
guess,
related
to
8.3.
That's
now
on
this
agenda.
It's
my
understanding
that
the
reason
why
this
item
was
brought
on
this,
for
preferably
for
the
earlier
item,
was
trying
to
get
direction
from
council
and
then
an
ordinance,
implicit
amendments.
The
ordinance
in
place
by
the
time
folks
are
paying
june
rent.
I
I
may
be
mistaken
in
in
the
in
the
timing
here,
but
because
of
the
I
believe
there
there's
no
council
meeting,
I
want
to
say
the
week
of
the
was
it
the
the
25th
and
so
that
that
potentially
creates
some
complications.
There
realize
you
already
voted
on
moving
the
item,
but
it
would
be
helpful
to
hear
from
the
the
city
manager's
office
their
perspective
on
whether
this
delay
in
fact
creates
a
challenge
and
how
this
is
implemented
and
just
to
kind
of
bring
folks
back.
I
You
know
the
whole
point
of
that
set
of
recommendations
were
around
particular
issues
that
vulnerable
tenants,
particularly
immigrant
tenants,
are
facing
in
trying
to
access
the
moratorium,
which
we've
appreciated
the
council's
broad-based
support
for
for
the
eviction
moratoria,
and
so
there
there
is
it'd,
be
helpful
to
hear
from
the
city
manager's
office,
but
there
could
be
a
potential
cost
to
that
delay.
So
I
appreciate
the
concerns
about
meeting
links.
I
think
we
want
to
make
sure
that
we're
not
leaving
any
tenants.
I
You
know,
particularly
our
vulnerable
immigrant
households
in
a
a
difficult
situation
by
thinking
about
these
delays,
so
appreciate
it.
Thank
you.
A
Thank
you.
I
appreciate
the
concern
raised
by
I'm
sure
you
can
I'm
just
looking
again
at
the
recommendation.
I
think
the
only
thing
that
would
be
rent
specific,
I
think,
might
be
the
prohibition
on
late
fees.
Everything
else
really
has
to
do
with
retaliation
and
eviction,
which
probably
would
not
be
date
sensitive
just
on
the
late
fee
issue.
Is
that
something
rick
that
we
could
make
retro
active
in
some
way
that
any
fees
or
interests
or
penalties
that
would
be
assessed.
C
B
You
know,
I
don't
think
I'm
really
in
position
to
you
know
I
think
yeah.
I
guess
I
just
want
to.
I
very
much
appreciate
you
know
kind
of
that
everyone's
kind
of
challenged,
with
just
keeping
up
with
how
we're
doing
things
right
now
and
I'm
not
sure
it's
really
working
to
be
honest,
you
know
having
all
these
ads
on.
B
I
certainly
think
it's
you
know
it's
because
of
the
urgency
of
the
matter
of
what
we're
working
on,
but
on
the
other
hand,
you
know
we're
not
really
giving
people
a
chance
to
understand
what
it
is,
including
myself.
So
it's
it's
it's
hard
for
all
of
us,
so
I
think
we
need
to
kind
of
regroup
a
bit
on
this,
so
that
you
know
the
ads
are
coming
forward
in
a
in
a
way
that
we
can
better
manage
them.
I
think
just
to
kind
of
share
with
you.
B
You
know
when
we
have
these
ads
like
this,
I'm
not
seeing
them
before
you're
seeing
them,
and
so
you
know
we're
adding
them
on
to
the
agenda
here
in
our
morning
discussion
this
morning,
I'm
not
privy
to
the
details
of
it.
So
I
understand.
A
We're
all
acting
here,
yep
yep,
you
know
I
pulled
away
from
public
comment
and
I
realized
mr
beekman
actually
raised
his
hand.
So
mr
beekman.
F
Hi,
thank
you.
Can
you
hear
me?
Yes,
great
thanks
for
yeah
taking
my
public
comment
for
items,
there's
item
2.16
on
the
consent,
which
is
it
will
be
about
pedestrian
bicycle
improvements
projects?
I
guess
you
know
to
to
just
continue
our
good
practices.
You
know
I
I
just
hope
I
can
do
my
job
to
just
dull
practices.
I
guess
you
know
continuously
routine
asks
and
stuff
of
you
know.
F
Can
you
can
you
just
we
keep
up
the
efforts
to
be
open
and
accountable,
basically
to
continue
our
good
practices.
F
I
hope
I
hope
we
can
keep
up
the
efforts
to
be
open
and
accountable
and
and
what
can
be
open
and
accountable
in
in
this
new
era
we're
entering
into,
and
you
know
maybe
this
is
a
chance
that
things
can
be
easier
to
explain
to
to
a
person
if
they
write
a
letter
to
you
and
I'm
hopeful
that
can
that
can
take
place.
F
Good
luck
in
this
work.
You
know,
there's
many
people
in
the
community
with
many
different
needs
and
there
can
be
ways
to
fulfill
all
of
those
needs.
I
think
hopefully,
or
you
know,
work
towards
those
efforts.
Good
luck
with
that
there's
issues
of
digital
inclusion
on
the
may
19
agenda.
Thank
you
for
that.
Thank
you
that
you're
keeping
this
subject
open
and
you're
talking
about
it,
and
you
know
good
luck
with
with
your
rent
issues
that
you
were
just
talking
about.
F
You
know
I
I'm
not
as
in-depth
in
knowledge
of
these
things,
but
you
know
I
just
I'm
with
my
my
own
words
that
I
speak
about
it,
I'm
really
hoping
that
the
whole
community
can
come
together
and
and
want
to
work
together
to
support
each
other
and
and
everyone's
good
efforts.
So
good
luck!
Thank
you.
F
A
You,
okay,
council
member
davis,.
G
Thank
you.
I
just
have
one
comment
about
the
the
late
fees
item
for
for
8.3.
Since
it
came
up.
I
actually
had
talked
with
jackie
a
little
bit
about
that
in
reference
to
a
business
that
was
being
charged
a
late
fee
for
for
non-payment
of
rent
and
the
they
looked
into
it
and
said
that,
even
though
we
didn't
have
it
in
our
eviction
moratorium,
the
county
had
passed
it
so
and
it
actually
applied
in
our
jurisdiction
rick
you
can.
G
A
Thanks
for
the
clarification,
councilman
chemist.
E
Yes,
well
I
I
sympathize
with
dave
and
and
the
staff
that
that's
being
kind
of
given
things
all
the
time.
This
is
one
of
the
reasons
why
I'm
I
was
hoping
to
push
it
so
that
we
can
have
one
discussion
and
and
more
thoughtfully,
discussed
and
and
thought
about
and
vetted,
and
so
I
will
actually
make
a
motion.
I
don't
nobody
made
a
motion
to
for
this
calendar
right
or
no
yep.
E
B
A
Motion
and
second
tony,
let's
vote.
B
A
A
All
right
so
on
that
we
are
now
on
to.
F
A
For
a
second,
there
is
mr
beekman.
F
Hello,
can
you
hear
me
yes
great?
Thank
you
I
wanted
to
mention.
I
tried
a
different
way
to
write
my
public
record
letters.
This
week
I
wrote
a
few
shorter
letters
for
the
speeches
that
I'd
given
in
the
previous
week
and
see
how
that
could
work
out
to
me
to
mention
some
of
the
words
from
from
my
public
record
letters.
I
just
wanted
to
talk
a
bit
about
the
sunshine
ordinance
and
you
know
I
think
what
may
have
been
embarrassing
a
few
weeks
ago.
F
Hopefully
is
now
turning
out
to
be
kind
of
interesting
and
showing
you
know
exactly.
You
know
how
good
the
sunshine
ordnance
can
be,
and
you
know
it
can
pretty
much
answer
all
of
our
emergency
questions
you
initially
had.
I
think-
and
I
I
hope,
we're
all
secure
in
that
there
are
a
few
issues
of
orders
of
the
day
that
I
hope
during
the
summer
we
can
better
discuss.
You
know
when
we're
not
in
such
an
emergency
state
and,
finally,
that
you
know
at
this
time.
F
You
know
if,
if
as
a
community,
if
we
need
to
take
comfort
and
a
way
to
kind
of
share
like
same
values,
I
guess
you
know
and
have
this
kind
of
a
shared
system.
I
really
invite
everyone
to
look
at
the
sunshine
ordnance
and
its
rough
drafts
and
its
you
know
all
of
its
early
beginning
ideas
that
are
in
your
on
your
city,
public
website.
F
I
think
it
can
be
a
way
to
bring
the
community
together
and
it's
just
really
nice
fun
interesting
stuff
to
look
at
and
read
about,
and
I
think
it
could
be
bring
an
interesting
togetherness
for
for
our
whole
community
this
summer
about
how
to
talk
about
issues.
You
know
especially
rental
issues
and
it
can
bring
all
sides
together
and
I
think
fairly
well.
F
Thank
you
for
your
time
and
good
luck
with
your
issues
thanks
a
lot.
Thank
you.
A
Okay
on
the
motion:
is
there
any
objection
to
the
motion
all
right,
we'll
move
on
then
I
hear
no
objection.
We'll
start
the
reviews,
recommendations
and
approvals
portion
of
the
calendar
with
item
two,
the
fee
cap
on
food
delivery
services,
councilmember
diet:
do
you
want
me
to
speak
on
this.
J
Hello,
council
members,
so
thank
you
rules
committee.
I
I
just
want
to
present
on
my
proposed
item
before
you.
Essentially,
you
know
we,
as
the
council
are
doing
what
we
can
across
the
board
to
help
our
residents
and
everyone
within
the
boundaries
of
san
jose
cope
during
this
difficult
time.
With
a
cobit
night
team,
we've
done
everything
from
you
know:
deferring
tax
collection,
not
collecting
meters
fees
and
rents,
freezes
and
so
on
and
so
forth.
J
A
lot
of
the
things
that
we
wish
we
could
do
are
at
the
state
and
county
level.
So
I've
been
trying
to
think
of
other
ways
that
the
city
council
can
help,
and
one
of
the
such
ways
is
to
continue
supporting
our
small
businesses
by
helping
them
stay
afloat
right
now.
I've
talked
to
a
few.
J
And
so,
as
I
looked
into
it,
they
told
me
that
a
lot
of
the
fees,
the
commissions
that
these
services
charge
really
cut
into
their
bottom
line
and
as
I
looked
into
it,
I
realized
that
there's
a
federal
lawsuit
happening
right
now
in
in
new
york,
where
the
charges,
basically,
these
companies
collectively
take
from
13
to
40
percent
of
the
the
profit
of
these
these
restaurants.
And
so
I
looking
into
it,
I
see
that
san
francisco
has
imposed
a
similar
fee.
J
Seattle
has
adopted
one
at
15,
new
york
city
is
looking
at
10
percent
and
chicago
is
looking
at
5,
and
I
think
you
know
san
jose
can,
at
least
in
the
in
the
interim,
when
we're
in
the
shelter
at
home
era
do
something
along
the
same
lines,
to
help
businesses
maintain
more
of
their
profit,
because
I
think
the
the
service
provided
by
the
food
delivery
companies
is
very
important.
They
offer
an
opportunity
for
people
to
be
employed.
J
That's
certainly
true,
but
in
the
whole
production
scheme
of
things
running
the
restaurant-
and
you
know,
preparing
the
food
and
having
things
ready,
I
think
is,
is
the
real
value
to
our
community
and
bringing
the
food
from
the
restaurant
to
your
door
should
not
be
something
where
a
company,
I
think,
can
rightfully
take
40
percent
of
your
profit?
So
so,
at
least
during
this
time
when
when
businesses
are
already
suffering,
I
would
like
the
council
to
consider
implementing
some
cap
to
help
the
the
businesses
get
by
right.
Now.
A
Thank
you,
councilmember
nate,
I'm
we're
going
to
the
public
next
nate
leblanc.
H
Thank
you,
mayor,
hello,
council
members.
We
just
want
to
weigh
in
as
the
san
jose
downtown
association
and
say
that
we
support
council
member
dieppe's
memo
on
this
item
that
we're
looking
for
creative
ways
in
which
to
help
the
restaurant
community,
which
has
been
you
know,
I
think,
as
we
phrased
it
in
our
member
in
our
letter
yesterday
disproportionately
affected
by
the
coven
19
pandemic,
and
we
thank
you
for
considering
this
cap.
I
think
every
little
bit
helps
every
dollar
counts
and
we
need
to
do
something
to
support
our
small
business
members.
H
A
Thank
you,
eddie
trong,.
D
Thank
you,
mayor
eddie,
chong,
director
of
government
relations
at
the
silicon
valley
organization,
we're
the
region's
chamber
of
commerce
representing
the
interests
of
over
1
200
members
in
the
region.
I'm
here
today
to
speak
in
support
of
councilmember
deep's
memorandum
to
propose
a
feed
cap
on
food
delivery
service
charges
on
certain
apps
operating
within
san
jose
in
normal
times.
D
I
would
make
a
caveat
to
say
that
my
organization
would
not
necessarily
support
such
a
memo,
but
I
think
we
can
all
agree
that
we
live
in
extraordinary
times
and
that
one
unintended
consequence
of
the
shelter
in
place
in
covet
19
is
that
the
market
has
shifted
completely
from
what
the
restaurant
industry
used
to
enjoy
and
has
shifted
over
to
food
delivery
commissions,
and
now
restaurants
are
struggling
to
survive.
Restaurants
now
have
to
give
up
a
portion
of
their
operating
costs
and
their
margins
in
order
to
survive
in
this
new
normal
in
this
new
economy.
D
A
Thank
you.
I
appreciate
very
much
the
intention
of
counseling
dip's
memorandum.
I
rick,
I
think
you
had
indicated
your
team
needed
some
time.
C
Yeah
I'd
like
to
ask
for
a
week
to
and
come
back
to
rules
next
week
with
the
outline
of
when
we
can
come
back
yeah
one.
I
I
it
is
fairly
new
and
I
understand
san
francisco
and
seattle
have
looked
at
this.
We're
gonna
need
some
time.
We've
got
a
ton
of
contracts
going
out
on
food
delivery,
services
and
other
things
and
just
the
workload,
and
but
I
want
a
little
bit
of
time
to
sort
of
look
into
this
so
asked
to
come
back
next
week
and
we'll
report
back
to
committee.
A
G
A
Okay,
yeah-
and
I
know
many
of
us
are
in
conversation
with
food
delivery
services.
I've
I've
talked
to
various
folks
at
doordash,
including
the
ceo,
and
you
know.
I
think
that
there's
ways
to
do
this
and
that
will
still
ensure
that
we
keep
the
delivery
going
and-
and
I
think
that's
certainly-
I
know
a
relevant
consideration
with
councilwoman
yep
and
my
conversations
with
him
that
we're
doing
this
in
a
balanced
way.
A
We
don't
want
to
discourage
any
delivery
services
from
being
here,
but
those
operators
who
are
maybe
taking
advantage
of
the
situation
and
taking
advantage
of
the
small
restaurants
are
ones
that
I
think
we
ought
to
be
regulating
any
other
comments
before
we
vote
on
the
motion
defer.
A
Okay,
let's
vote.
B
H
A
Hi,
okay,
thank
you,
councilman
jeff
and
then
item
three
is
universal
extension
and
development,
construction
deadlines
due
to
covid.
I
think
we
heard
yesterday
that
there's
some
discretionary
granting
of
extensions
for
some
of
these
items.
Some
of
these
deadlines
within
staff's
discretion.
A
This
require
application
in
several
cases,
which
requires
fees
and
delay
and
requires
a
lot
of
individual
consideration
by
staff,
which
means
all
of
us
get
lots
of
phone
calls
and
so
does
staff
to
go.
Do
this
and
what
we
are
proposing
is
just
uniformly
saying:
how
can
we
enable
everyone
uniformly
to
have
some
breathing
room,
given
the
fact
that
everything
has
been
shut
down
for
a
considerable
period
of
time?
A
K
Here
and
council
members,
pat
sacedo
bia
bay
area
good
afternoon,
it's
good
to
see
all
of
you.
You
look.
You
look
well
so
it's
nice
to
see
that
I
did
submit
on
behalf
of
bia
bay
area
a
letter
supporting
the
mayor's
memo
to
generate
a
universal
extension
of
development
and
construction
deadlines
due
to
the
impacts
of
kobad.
I
strongly
encourage
the
rules
members
to
support
the
mayor's
memo,
send
it
to
the
city
manager
and
attorney
for
their
review
and
to
come
back.
K
Bia
stands
ready
to
work
with
the
city
on
the.
I
think
it's
important.
It's
the
right
steps
to
take
under
the
impacts
of
covid
for
all
of
the
development
and
the
construction
industry
and
to
keep
things
moving
forward
as
long
as
our
health
orders
allow
construction
development
to
proceed
and
to
keep
investment
going
forward
in
the
city
of
san
jose.
K
So
I
appreciate
your
time
and
your
attention
and
just
ask
for
consideration
of
the
mayor's
memo
at
this
time.
Thank
you.
A
Thank
you,
pat
nate
leblanc.
H
Thank
you,
mayor,
hello,
council
members.
I
just
want
to
voice
support
of
the
san
jose
downtown
association
and
our
2000
member
businesses
for
the
mayor's
memo
as
well.
I
think
every
industry
wishes
it
had
a
magic
wand
that
it
could
wave
and
make
the
last
few
months
kind
of
go
away
or
not
matter
as
much,
and
so
I
think
granting
these
extensions
is
a
way
to,
if
not
do,
that,
than
to
give
some
time
to
figure
out
what
the
new
landscape
is
going
to
be.
H
We've
fallen
into
such
a
sharp
recession
so
quickly
that
everyone
is
scrambling
to
figure
out
what's
going
on,
and
we
should.
We
should
allow
the
best
decision
to
be
made,
not
the
fastest
decision
to
necessarily
be
made.
So
we
appreciate
this
common
sense
approach
to
these
extensions
and
I'd
like
to
also
voice
support
for
what
you
just
said
a
little
bit
earlier
mayor.
H
I'm
sure
this
will
need
to
be
refined
and
worked
out,
but
let's
do
it
with
an
eye
toward
kind
of
a
blanket
exemption
and
not
having
to
pay
more
fees,
submit
more
forms,
take
up
more
staff
time
that
could
be
more
appropriately
appropriately
used
elsewhere
and
that's
all
I
have
to
say
thank
you.
A
Thank
you
all
right.
Returning
to
council-
oh
I'm,
sorry,
eddie
truong,.
D
Eddie
trung
here
from
the
studio
again
again
here
to
support
the
mayor's
memo
to
universally
extend
all
construction-related
deadlines.
I
will
say
that
the
impacts
of
coved
and
the
impacts
of
the
shelter
employ
stopping
construction
activity
will
have
ripple
effects
in
the
construction
projects,
delivery
schedules,
and
so
it
is
smart
to
extend
all
entitlement
approvals,
building
permits
not
on
a
case-by-case
basis
but
universally
to
make
sure
that
everybody
can
have
their
best
shot
at
the
economic
recovery
efforts
that
the
city
will
need
to
facilitate.
D
I
will
say
that
I
hope
that
this
council
will
strongly
consider
extending
fee
reductions
and
fee
incentives,
particularly
the
the
downtown
high
rise
fee
reduction
program
and
the
reduced
inclusionary
housing
industry
structure
that
was
approved
not
too
long
ago
back
in
september
november
of
last
year.
We
know
that
in
good
economic
times,
many
high-rises
and
project
types
didn't
pencil
out.
D
E
Well,
mayor,
thank
you,
as
always,
I've
always
been
advocating
for
reducing
red
tape
and
lowering
fees,
and
I
say
hallelujah
and
I
make
the
motion
to
accept.
F
G
Yep,
I
was
basically
going
to
say
the
exact
same
thing
there.
I
think
this
is
going
to
actually
be
less
work
for
the
staff
as
well,
because
having
to
evaluate
so
many
requests
on
a
case-by-case
basis.
Just
doing
a
blanket
extension
makes
makes
sense
for
everybody,
not
just
not
just
the
private
sector.
It
makes
sense
for
our
staff
too.
A
Thank
you.
I
want
to
thank
joe,
joel,
dellavecourt
and
and
kelly
klein.
Our
team
we've
been
working
on
this
with
cd
staff,
appreciate
that,
okay
on
the
motion,
let's
vote.
A
Hi.
Thank
you,
okay,
that
moves
on
then,
and
we
are
on
to
open
forum.
F
Hello
blair
beekman,
can
you
hear
me?
Thank
you.
I
do
that
to
check
and
make
sure
so.
Thank
you
for
answering
for
open
forum
today.
I
wanted
to
be
able
to
quickly
offer
you
had
an
item
that
will
be
on
next
week's
council
agenda
about
bay,
uasi
funding.
F
You
know
it's
I've,
I'm
I
wrote
a
speech.
I've
been
writing.
I
go
to
beiwasi
meetings
as
part
of
the
technology
work,
oversight
that
I
do
and
accountability
and
you
know
they've
started
a
new
program
with
with
a
a
a
santa
clara
county
program
called
cater
and
in
the
san
francisco
area.
There's
a
program
called
sf
card
and
it's
a
place
where
the
public
can
really
become
more
involved
with
the
entire
emergency
operations
process
and
they
they
started.
F
This
programs
they've
expanded
them
in
in
with
the
in
an
ending
urban
shield,
and
what
they've
done
is
they've
they've
put
their
their
resources
and
their
energy
and
thought
into
these
they're.
Basically,
you
know
public
entities
in
a
way
where
our
public
go-betweens,
I
guess
where
the
public
can
really
have
much
more
of
a
say
in
in
emergency
operations.
F
Work
and-
and
I
just
wanted
to
offer
that
here
as
as
just
ways
that
you
know
the
everyday
public
can
communicate
with
with
people
they
need
to,
and
it's
actually
an
interesting
service
that
it
offers,
and
I
guess
that's
about
it,
and
just
I
guess
that's
my
theme
for
the
day
is,
is
how
to
again
begin
to
start
to
talk
about
unity
for
the
community
and
and
what
can
be
those
those
sorts
of
efforts
that
we
can
better
communicate
with
each
other,
because
that's
what
we
all
need
in
in
these
times
of
emergency.
F
So
thanks
for
your
time
and
thanks
for
the
meeting
today,
thank
you.
A
All
right
without
the
means,
adjourned
thanks,
everybody
stay.