►
Description
City of San José, California
Joint meeting of Rules and Open Government / Committee of the Whole of January 12, 2022
Pre-meeting citizen input on Agenda via eComment at https://sanjose.granicusideas.com/meetings.
This public meeting will be conducted 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=922700&GUID=C8F834AA-83E0-4833-B156-038754BF36CD
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
B
Government
committee
and
committee
of
the
whole
we
are
well
tony.
Can
you
do
roll
call,
please.
C
C
Okay,
so
arenas,
cohen
davis,
yes,
perales,.
C
And
jones,
okay,
so
I'm
going
to
mute,
close
session
for
a
second
arenas.
You
will
need
or
go
ahead
and
recess
to
close
session.
C
E
E
Well,
thank
you
for
putting
that
out
there
that
that's
what
you're
doing-
and
I
guess
you'll
have
it
on
your
side
that
you'll
be
gone
for
a
half
hour
or
something
whatever
your
closed
session
and
then
we'll
know
when
we
can
come
back
to
when
you
open
up
the
session
so
and
the
that's
helpful
that
you're
letting
us
know
about
it
and-
and
it
was,
it
was
a
similar
issue
that
we
were
talking
about
in
regards
to
the
consent
calendar
and
how
that
changed.
Without.
C
E
Well,
well,
I
was
just
appreciating
that
the
consent
you
know
that
you're
putting
it
out
in
the
open
and
letting
us
know
what
you're
doing
and
hopefully
you'll.
Let
us
know
when
you're
going
to
come
back.
The
screen
will
show
that
okay
good
and
then
I
I
was
just
saying
how
important
it
is
in
our
open
government
rules
in
open
government,
even
in
the
name
of
you
know
this.
This
commission
committee
is
that
we
we
we
put
those
things
out
in
the
open
as
much
as
we
can,
as
like
blair
has
been
saying.
E
We
need
open
democracy
and
I
think
that
needs
to
be
our
you
know
going
forward
in
terms
of
all
of
our
activities.
So
I
appreciate
that
you
allow
us
to
talk
even
on
your.
You
know
closed
session,
and
you
know
so
I
guess
that
that
was
it,
and
so
I
will
be
happy
to
know
when
you
guys
are
going
to
come
back
and
as
much
communication
you
can
give
to.
The
community
is
very
helpful.
So
thank
you.
F
Hi,
thank
you,
blair,
beekman.
Thank
you
that
you
saw
tessa's
hand
offered
a
public
comment
at
this
time.
Thank
you
the
same
as
what
tessa
said
and
what
I've
been
asking
at
the
bta
close
session
meetings.
I
hope
it
can
be
a
learn
to
be
a
regular
practice
to
not
only
ask
for
public
comment
at
this
time,
but
to
make
the
extra
effort
to
offer
the
public
how
long
we
can
expect
a
meeting
will
be
in
session.
Will
it
be
30
minutes
45
minutes.
F
I
know
this
isn't
always
clear
to
yourselves,
but
to
give
some
sort
of
indication
can
be
helpful
for
the
public,
so
we
can
gauge
things
as
well.
Good
luck
in
how
you
can
gauge
these
things
that
offer
this
sort
of
advice
to
the
public
for
better
accessibility
practices
and
a
just
a
good
luck
to
how
to
talk
to
to
speak
to
these
women's
issues.
F
Who's
she's
really
doing
a
lot
for
ourselves
as
a
community
in
san
jose
and
a
lot
is
it's
been
a
lot
of
stress
and
I
hope
we
can
learn
to
to
do
this
equitably,
honestly
and
fairly
that
that
she
has
some
some
good
rights
at
this
time
that
we
need
to
address
and
what
what
can
come
of
that
and
good
luck
and
how
you
can
talk
about
this
issue
at
this
time.
Thank
you.
C
C
There
is
an
item
above
that
that
says
closed
session.
G
C
G
C
Just
say
that
we're
recessing
the
closed
session.
B
Right,
but
are
we
locked.
B
B
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
B
B
We
are
now
on,
nor
would
this
be
the
point
where
I
would
entertain
a
motion
to
change
or
modify
the
agenda.
C
A
request
from
the
public
records
act
appellant
to
continue
the
hearing
on
her
item
for
two
weeks.
B
J
I'll
move
that
we
adopt
today's
agenda
and
prefer
item
I
a
to
the
leading
two
weeks
or
is
it
next
week
for
two
weeks?
I
guess
two
weeks.
B
B
B
G
B
And
in
taking
account
of
time-
and
I
know
that
we
have
the
gun
ordinance,
which
is
going
to
require
a
lot
of
time-
are
there
any
items
on
the
agenda
that
could
be
moved
or
need
to
be
moved.
C
C
C
B
E
Tessa,
okay,
thank
you,
yeah.
Thank
you.
Well,
in
terms
of
what's
on
the
agenda,
there
was
a
lot
about
land
use
issues
and
rezoning
and
whatever
they
call
those
urban
villages
and
things
like
that,
and
we
and
and
last
night,
as
we
were
talking
in
council,
there
was
a
lot
of
discussion
that
there
was
a
lot
of
community
outreach,
and
that
is
just
not
true,
and
I
know
you
have
these
groups
that
we
we
you
know,
go
to
meetings.
E
We
go
to
and
different
things,
but
the
outreach
is
actually
oftentimes
very,
very
weak
too,
like,
for
instance,
in
our
neighborhood,
where
there's
you
know,
you're
in
the
middle
of
commercial
and
residential.
So
when
the
commercial
gets
you
know
developed,
the
outreach
is,
let's
say
you
know
300
feet
well,
a
lot
of
times,
there's
no
residential
within
that
area,
even
though
it
affects
our
community.
What
happens
in.
E
I
was
just
looking
at.
There
was
just
things
on
land
use
and-
and
we
you
know-
I
don't
know
exactly,
but
I
I
just
wanted
to
say
that
as
we
go
forward
and
we're
trying
to
create
these
urban
villages
and
specifically
where
we're
we're
creating
no
residentiality,
which
is
what
you
know,
is
happening
in
a
lot
of
our
rezoning.
E
Is
that
we're
putting
it
as
neighborhood
commercial,
where
there's
no
allowance
for
a
residential
at
all?
And
that's
where
we
get
hotels,
because
that
is
the
thing
that
makes
the
city
a
lot
of
money.
And
I
call
it
I
I
refer
to
it
as
financializing
our
land
and
that
we
have
to
stop
looking
at
making
money,
but
dealing
with,
which
is
what
paul
soto
said.
F
Blair
right,
thank
you,
guer
beekman
here,
thanks
for
your
explanation
to
the
closed
session
report.
That
was
very
nice
of
you.
Thank
you
to
speak
to
the
final
adoption
of
ordinances,
you're
going
to
be
adopting
an
ordinance
about
the
rezoning
issues
for
the
26th
street
and
east
santa
clara
urban
village
project.
It
was
spoken
at
about
last
night.
F
F
F
F
F
B
Okay,
bring
it
back
to
the
committee.
Can
I
get
a
motion
please.
C
Second,
with
the
yeah,
with
the
inclusion
of
the
10.1
being.
K
B
All
right
and
item
four
point:
one
was
that
not
before
six
I.
J
E
Yeah
I
was
looking
at
paul
soto's
letter
as
he
discussed
his
peoples
and
and
the
miss.
You
know
the
how
we
mistreated
the
people
of
the
indigenous
people,
and
you
know
that
that's
where
capitalism
has
been
doing
this
is.
E
It
is
based
on
exploiting
people
and
and
in
nature
for
profit,
and
I
I
like
the
the
words
that
he
said
at
the
end,
which
was
the
institutions
exist,
so
which
I'm
at
our
government
exists
to
serve
the
needs
and
well-being
of
the
people
and
that's
where
we
have
got
to
start
making
a
systemic
change
and
we're
not.
You
know
doing
that,
and
our
fossil
fuel
use
is
going
up
and
and
what
was
it?
E
The
the
hottest
year
on
record
and
in
terms
of
our
oceans,
the
hottest
oceans
on
record,
and
these
are
what's
causing
the
the
the
extreme
weathers
that
we're
getting
and-
and
this
is
where
it's
uninhabitable
earth
and
we
are
not
going
to
be
prepared
for
that.
Where
the
you
know,
the
projection
is
there's
so
many
people
that
are
climate
refugees
and
just
recently
the
people
in
colorado
with
the
fires.
And
so
you
know,
the
thing
is
is
that
we
have
to
be
developing
more
housing
and
also
food
security.
E
That
is
really
what's
happening
in
our
on
our
shelves
of
our
our
stores
and
we're
not
preparing
for
that
either,
and
it
really
comes
from
having
local
you
know
to
living
without
fossil
fuels.
That's
that's
the
program
we
need
to
be
under
and
and
helping
our
community
to
survive,
just
like
my
husband
says,
to
save
the
people.
You
know
because
right
now
we're
very
threatened
and
we
need
to
be
growing
food
locally
and
we
need
to
start.
E
B
Thank
you:
try
to
try
to
speak
directly
to
the
letters
in
the
public
record
blair,
hi.
F
Blair
beekman
here
I
guess
first
to
speak
to
my
own
letters.
I
I
hope
we're
all
noticing
that
you
know
there's
been
a
real
big
big
push
for
new
law
enforcement
practices
in
san
jose
in
oakland
and
in
san
francisco.
At
this
time
it's
been
a
bit
surprising
and
and
and
we're
trying
our
best
to
understand.
F
F
How
can
we
develop
these
things
at
this
time?
I
think
these
are
the
ways
to
develop
the
law
enforcement
questions
that
are
going
around
all
of
the
bay
area
at
this
time.
Good
luck!
How
we
can
do
that
it
shouldn't
be
too
difficult
to
work
on
and
work
on
these
good
terms,
and
with
that
I
think
health
and
human
services
will
just
naturally
arrive
a
naturally
evolve
from
if
we
just
organize
cell
organize
ourselves
well
and
do
our
practice
as
well.
So
good
luck!
F
How
we
can
do
ask
questions
at
this
time
with
43
seconds
to
speak
a
bit
on
paul's
letters.
I
hope
he
doesn't
get
upset.
We've
talked
often
about
his
letters
and
what
he's
working
on
many
things.
You
know
the
consent
calendar
item.
The
words
have
been
changed
about
the
public
process.
F
I
think
we
have
to
work
on
more
on
that
issue.
The
meeting
minutes
process
meeting
minutes
how
they're
being
written
over
the
past
year,
they're
no
longer
available
and
they're
they're,
just
re
they're,
not
barely
written
at
all.
So
I
think
we're
going
to
have
to
go
through
go
over
a
few
procedural
things
and
I
hope
everyone's
up
to
doing
that
and
it
can
be
an
open
good
process,
a
good
democratic
practice
as
a
all.
G
Right
paul,
yes,
paul
soto
from
the
horseshoe.
I
specifically
put
the
my
letter
in
the
record
with
respect
to
councilwoman
I'm
not
as
because
she
does
a
lot
of
business
with
the
city.
She
does
a
lot
of
advocacy
a
lot
of
she's
involved
very,
very
heavily
in
san
jose
politics,
and
my
advocacy
is
what
what
compelled
a
group
here
in
san
jose
to
fire
those
four
bullets.
While
she
was
on
the
phone-
and
so
I
guess,
I'm
putting
this
out
there
to
my
council
people,
your
mandated
reporters.
G
So
that
means
that
when
I
told
perales
about
it,
he
was
a
mandated
reporter
at
that
point
and
he
failed.
He
didn't
fail
me.
He
failed
the
boy,
because
that
boy
is
dead.
Now
he's
dead
because
of
his
failure
and
cindy
chavez
failure
to
act,
I
was
incarcerated.
I
did
30
days
of
my
life,
my
freedom,
because
I
submitted
an
email
to
cindy
chavez
explicitly
stating
how
dangerous
she
was
and
what
my
experience
with
her
was
30
days
later
to
the
day
the
boy
was
dead
in
her
yard
in
her
yard
at
her
house.
G
B
All
right
jill.
I
I
Okay,
thank
you
I
getting
confused,
but
actually
I
wanted
to
speak
on
martha
o'connell's
letter.
I
was
so
grateful
that
she
chimed
in
here
about
the
redistricting
process
and
how
she
felt
sort
of
appalled
at
it.
I
also
was
appalled,
but
I
I'm
not
going
to
kind
of
place
blame
on
on
any
one
person
in
any
way.
I
followed
it
quite
closely
and
was
just
sort
of
astounded
at
the
level
of
variation
you
know
in
in
every
different.
I
I
felt
like
we
weren't
hearing
specific
instances
and
more
of
a
voice
that
I
couldn't
quite
relate
to,
but
what
was
really
upsetting
was,
in
the
end,
after
all
those
hours
of
those
redistricting
meetings
to
have
the
council
members
quickly
come
in
and
just
take
a
map
and
then
alter
and
then
move
and
shift,
it
felt
really
really
traumatic.
Almost
but
anyway,
good
luck
to
you
when
you,
when
you
revisit
it,
it
was
horrible.
B
Thank
you
person
with
the
number
ending
4963.
L
Yeah
hi
thanks
jill
for
the
for
the
kind
words
about
my
letter.
The
die
is
already
cast.
They
did
what
they
they
were
going
to
do.
I'm
now
moving
on
to
the
issue
of
notification,
and
I
understand
I've
gotten
emails
from
a
couple
of
council
people
and
I'm
grateful
for
those
emails.
They
are
going
to
make
outreach
to
the
folks
that
are
now
in
their
district,
so
I
encourage
all
the
rest
of
the
council
to
do
the
same
thing.
L
If
you
have
new
people,
please
acknowledge
that
you
are
now
their
council
member
and
I
understand
from
another
council
member
that
the
office
of
the
city
manager
has
indicated
that
it
is
in
within
the
power
of
each
council
district
to
send
out
those
postcards.
So
so
please
do
it.
As
I
said
in
my
letter,
we're
not
chattel
we're
human
beings,
and
some
of
us
had
good
relationships
with
our
previous
council
member,
and
I
look
forward
to
a
good
relationship
with
my
new
council
member.
Thank
you.
L
B
C
B
F
All
right,
blair
beekman
here
there
is
another
dumpster
day
on
this
agenda.
I
thought
I
would
just
mention
it
if
it's
past
or
if
it's
in
the
future
dumpster
days
are
a
great
way
for
a
neighborhood
on
a
saturday
morning
to
get
together
and
co-mingle
and
talk
and
see
what's
up
with
each
other
and
it's
a
great
it's
a
great
tool,
it's
a
great
way
to
work
on
things
together
and
just
have
good
communication.
F
So
thanks
as
always
to
have
this
item-
and
I
hopefully
I
can
always
speak
when
this
item
is
on,
because
it
allows
me
to
feel
more
comfortable,
and
I
hope
that
you
know
it's
a
healing
thing
that
it
can
offer
and
paul
is
going
through
a
lot
of
healing
issues
right
now.
Good
luck
in
how
we
can
work
with
his
healing
issues.
I
think
one
of
them
is
including
how
you
know
in
all
the
difficulties
he's
having
he's
trying
to
address.
F
You
know
decent
government
issues
that
I
hope
we
can
all
work
on
like
the
meeting
minutes
like
the
agenda
consent
calendar
item,
I
hope
it
can
be
a
process
we
can
work
on
together
and
it
can
be,
it
can
be
a
good
experience.
Hopefully
thank
you.
B
Thank
you
paul.
G
Yeah
paul
from
the
horseshoe,
that's
all
right.
Blair
I
deal
with.
I
got
strong
blood.
We
dealt
with
junipero
sarah,
we
dealt
with
manifest
destiny.
We
dealt
with
the
subsequent
I
dealt
with
38
years
inside
of
institutions
can
handle
this
believe
that
anyways
with
respect
to
the
consent,
calendar
the
consent
calendar,
the
wording
has
changed
tonight.
G
That's
a
criminal
act
with
respect
to
this
document
that
was
altered
like
that,
okay,
after
my
advocacy
with
regard
to
it.
All
I
wanted
was
the
law
to
be
enforced
and
what
you
did
is
you
went
and
you
changed
the
language
on
the
consent
calendar
the
wording.
Now
it
doesn't
have
that
the
staff
or
the
public
can
pull
it.
The
fact
that
you
change
the
wording
like
that
you
affirm
everything
that
I've
been
accusing
you
of
absolutely
everything.
G
These
are
criminal
acts.
All
of
those
all
of
those
minute
orders
they're
being
changed
the
language
because
I
caught
it.
That's
why
you
don't
have
no
more
minutes
for
the
last
year,
because
you're
going
to
read
you're
going
to
change
them
to
make
sure
that
they're
consistent,
because
the
inconsistencies
that
I
discovered
I've
been
bringing
to
your
attention
and
the
fact
that
you
changed
this
and
you
didn't
put
it
in
the
record
tony.
That
is
a
criminal
act.
That
means
this
is
a
poor
perjury
document.
G
This
is
a
purger
document
and
so
is
going
to
be
all
of
those
synopsises.
You
think
that
you're
going
to
publish
those
and
that
those
are
going
to
be
adequate
and
sufficient.
You
took
them
because
none
of
the
none
of
the
agenda
items
has
my
response
blair's
response
or
tessa's
response
or
anybody
else's
response.
But
we
are
the
consistent
members
of
the
community
that
continue
to
serve
our
community.
By
laying
at
the
doorstep
of
the
centers
of
power
that
extracted
that
power
from
mexicans,
from
blacks
and
from
japanese.
B
E
Right,
thank
you.
Thank
you,
paul
for
bringing
up
these
issues
and
of
of
our
our
future
records
is
where
paul
comes
from
it,
and
I
come
from
it
too,
because
it
is
very
frustrating
where
we're
going
as
we
have.
You
know,
destroyed
everything
on
planet
earth
and
who
were
the
ones
that
stood
up.
You
know.
I
E
Said
something's
wrong,
so,
okay,
I'm
going
to
get
back
to
the
point.
The
point
is
about
your
role,
as
our
government
like
paul
clearly
stated,
is
that
your
role
is
to
serve
the
needs
and
well-being
of
the
people,
and
so
when,
when
that
was
taken
out
of
the
agenda
of
the
you
know
our
you
know,
and
it
no
longer
says
that
the
people
can
pull
things
from
the
consent.
E
You
know
and
that
you
know
and
and
paul
is
saying
it's
a
legal
criminal
and
I'm
not
going
to
argue
he
might
be
right
about
that.
The
thing
that
bothers
me
is
that
there
was
no
public
discourse
about
it.
You
know
we
weren't,
you
know
I
wrote
our
our
attorney
and
asked
if
you
know
about
that,
why
aren't
we
allowed
to
do
that?
I
didn't
get
anything
back
from
her.
E
However,
you
know,
supposedly
in
some
december
meeting
of
rules,
this
was
discussed,
but
this
needs
to
be
discussed
in
the
public
domain
and
it
wasn't.
You
know
that
we're
taking
this
option
out
and
we're
taking
away
your
voice-
and
you
know-
and
we
have
so
little
voice-
you've
already
taken
away
our
our
public
forum,
putting
it
at
the
end
of
the
meeting,
which
makes
it
so
much
more
difficult
for
people
to
address
the
council
and-
and
we
only
get
two
minutes
as
it
is,
or
or
sometimes
one
minute
or
30
seconds.
You
know
it.
E
You
know
it's
up
to
your
discretion
and
so
we're
you
know,
and
what
the
issue
that
we're
saying
is
that
it
needs
to
come
out
into
the
public
domain
before
we
make
those
changes
and
it's
the
same
thing
with
the
with
our
general
plan
changes.
You
say
that
you,
you
notify
us,
but
we're
not
getting
the
notification.
It
needs
to
be
in
our
mailbox
and,
and
things
like
that,
to
to
really
address
the
people.
L
Yeah,
martha
o'connell
paul,
I'm
not
sure
when
that
language
was
polled,
I'm
I'm
I'm
getting
paranoid
about
government
and
I'm
wondering
if
it
was
after.
I
stated
during
a
rules
meeting
that
I
believe
you
were
correct
in
your
analysis
and
I
would
be
getting
back
to
you.
I
apologize.
I
haven't
I've
been
swamped.
I
haven't
been
able
to
do
that,
so
it
would
be
very
interesting
to
see
if
that
change
occurred,
because
what
it
represented
was
a
coalition
of
people
on
different
sides
of
the
political
spectrum
you
and
I
yet
agreeing
on
that
issue.
L
I
will
take
issue
with
you
on
one
thing:
with
with
great
affection
and
respect,
I
don't
think
it's
tony's
fault,
I
think
you're
putting
the
the
blame
on
the
wrong
person.
Tony
does
not
act
in
a
vacuum.
I
suspect
that
she
was
told
by
the
administration
to
do
it,
which
makes
it
even
worse.
So
that's
my
opinion.
That's
where
I
think
the
direction
was
coming
from.
B
All
right,
thank
you,
bring
it
back
to
the
committee.
Can
I
get
a
motion
please.
C
B
H
Assigned
as
a
panelist
but
tony
just
corrected
that,
and
I
sent
her
a
text
saying
yes,
so
just
for
the
record.
Thank
you.
B
Awesome,
thank
you.
Okay,
so
we
are
on
to
approve
the
auditor's
office
monthly
report
of
activities
for
the
month
of
december
2021.
D
Good
afternoon
council
members,
I'm
here
with
our
monthly
productivities
for
december
2021..
In
december,
we
issued
our
annual
report
on
city
services
for
fiscal
year,
2020
2021.
I
will
be
bringing
that
to
council
on
the
25th,
as
you
saw
earlier
as
you're
reviewing
that
agenda.
The
balance
of
our
work
plan
is
on
the
is
in
the
attachment.
We
have
many
projects
underway,
I'm
happy
to
answer
any
questions,
and
I
ask
you
to
ask
that
you
approve
the
report.
F
Hi
hi
rickman
here
to
speak
to
clean
energy
risk
management
practices,
just
a
hello
to
wanting
to
continue
good,
renewable
energy
ideas
and
its
local
procurement
process.
At
this
time.
I
hope
it's
an
idea
that
all
of
san
jose
and
city
government
will
want
to
get
involved
with
and
and
not
sell.
It
short
and
good
luck
in
practicing
making
it
the
community
energy
process
open
and
clear
to
the
public
how
they
can
be
involved
about
team
san
jose
issues.
F
It's
always
difficult
for
yourselves,
but
when
I
want
to
talk
about
how
open
data
collection
policies
of
its
alpr's
use,
I
think
that
is
a
hopeful
project
that
has
a
lot
of
potential
and
how
we
better
talk
about
ai
issues
as
a
community
in
san
jose,
and
I
hope
I
can
just
be
allowed
in
the
future
the
space
to
to
say
that
and
and
to
offer
our
better
selves,
because
that
is
what,
if
we
do
innovative
good
things
and
civil
rights
and
good
civil
protection
things
with
those
things.
F
F
You
have
equity,
pledge,
ideas
and
you're
going
to
have
on
the
january
25th
agenda
items
about
you
know
redefining
what
exactly
equity
can
mean
good
luck
to
ourselves
with
this
issue.
Hopefully
paul
can
be
included
in
this
conversation,
and
I
think
he
can
help
develop
something
really
interesting,
because
we
are
getting
closer
to
better
definitions.
Let's
hope
we
can
feel
comfortable
with
what
they
can
be
at
this
time
and
finally,
I
I
just
wanted
to
quickly
comment
that
you
know
it
was
a
pretty
surprising
meeting
yesterday
about
the
charter
commission
issues.
G
Paul
yes,
paul
soto
from
the
horseshoe
martial
if
you're
listening
it
was
afterwards.
It
was
after
that
they
knew
that
I
understood
what
they
were
doing.
Joe.
Like
I
said
again,
I
I
I
read
the
the
the
work
that
you
produce.
G
I
really
like
the
like
the
yearly
report,
because
I
mean
back
then
like
a
couple
years
ago,
used
to
get
this
one
like
thick
book
and
you
can
like
just
sit
there.
You
know
I'm
old
school,
I
like
going
to
do
books
highlighting
making
notes
in
the
margins.
So
I
respect
your
work.
However,
the
documents
that
have
been
signed
off
on
stating
that
there
is
equity
within
them
and
they
can't
be
defined.
G
It
changes,
that's
exactly
what
happened
with
these
documents,
the
minute
that
you
lay
eyes
on
it.
Just
like
you
do
with
the
in
with
metaphysics.
It's
the
same
thing,
okay,
and
they
think
that
they
can
do
it
with
their
silence.
They
think
that
their
silence
is.
Is
this
the
only
thing
that
the
silence
is
doing
with
respect
to
racial
equity
issues?
G
E
Okay,
thank
you
yeah.
I
was
talking
about
the
the
clean
energy
and,
like
blair,
was
saying
to
have
more
openness
about
it.
You
know
the
only
way
you
really
know
you
have
solar
energy
is
that
it's
on
your
rooftop
and
and
and
then
also
battery
backup.
You
know
as
much
as
you
know
that
that
is
how
we
know
for
sure,
and
so
I
I
I
question
the
cities.
E
You
know
saying
that
you
know
we're
doing
this
clean
energy
and
we're
getting
it
all
figured
out
and
and
even
when
we
were
talking
about
it
in
regards
to
in
you
know,
our
charter
review.
There
was
pushback
saying:
oh,
the
city
of
san
jose
is
doing
enough,
but
we
really
need
to
know
what's
going
on
and
have
it
much
more
clearly
articulated
and
and
seeing
how
we
can
improve
it,
because
we
really
need
to
go
to
you
know:
fossil
fuel,
free
and
nuclear
free.
E
Those
are
two
issues
so
really
understanding
what
we're
doing
needs
to
be
much
more
articulated
in
and
not
to
say,
like
I
hear
deb
davis
when
she
talks
about
the
clean
energy,
it's
like
it's
got
to
be
a
penny
less
than
the
pg
e
or
something
you
know.
E
That's
really
not
putting
the
emphasis
on
our
climate
crisis,
our
emergency,
that
we
we
need
to
get
off
of
fossil
fuels
and
and
also
the
resiliency
of
our
community,
because
you
know
we
see
that
if
we're
not
off
of
fossil
fuels,
when
it
starts
going
up,
you
know
when
they
start
turning
it
off.
It's
going
to
either
cost
us
a
lot
more
money,
and
things
like
that,
so
we
need
to
be
off
of
it.
E
So
we're
ready
for
the
big
changes
that
need
to
come
and
then,
and
also
in
terms
of
our
you
know,
battery
backup.
We
really
need
community
batteries
and
we
need
to
be
working
on
that.
So
we
don't
have
to
use
pg
e
as
our
backup,
because
pg
e
has
the
the
transmission
lines
and
that's
where
we're
creating
a
lot
of
problems.
The
long
distance
and
and
fires
are
started
because
of
that
we
even
saw
it
in
colorado.
B
I
Hi,
thank
you.
Can
you
please
tell
me
what
this
this
one
is.
I
for
some
reason
I'm
really
struggling
today
with
finding
out
when
I
can
say
what
I
want
to
say
other
than
open
forum,
where
what
are
we
on
now.
B
So
we're
on
the
sadie
otter's
monthly
report
for
okay,
so.
B
I
I
B
All
right,
second
great
and
then
I
see
two
hands
raised:
councilmember
davis.
C
You
I
just
wanted
to
ask
joe,
I
see
on
page
three,
the
number
of
audits
that
are
in
process
and
they
don't
have
dates
yet,
but
I
was
just
wondering
kind
of
I'm
guessing
everybody.
Are
they
working
all
in
parallel
or
are
they
staging?
Are
you
staging
them?
I
don't
know
if
you
have
different
staff.
D
They're
all
they're
all
working
first
they're,
all
underway
they
the
some
of
the
work,
slowed
during
the
because
we're
putting
into
the
annual
service
report.
I
can
give
you
a
heads
up,
but
what
we're
looking
at
so
the
likely
the
sql
project
is
march.
The
grants
and
fleets
are
probably
april
semi-annual,
auto
recommendation
status
report,
which
we
just
kicked
off,
which
is
in
the
not
yet
started
because
we
started
in
january
that's
also
in
march.
C
Okay
and
I'm
not
going
to
steal
council
member
ryan
is
just
thunder.
I
pretty,
I
think
I
know
what
she's
going
to
ask
about
her
thanks.
H
Thank
you,
councilmember
davis,
but,
and
I
think
you're
just
as
excited
as
I
am
because
I
do
see
that
we
have
the
bill
of
rights
for
children
and
youth
audit.
That
has,
although
I
think
it's
been
noted,
like
it's
a
bit
behind.
I
think
it's
right
on
time
as
we're
coming
once
again
head
on
to
a
new
budget
cycle,
even
though
mid-year
hasn't
passed.
It
feels
like
we're
almost
on
the
precipice
of
of
a
new
budget,
so
I
look
forward
to
it.
H
I
know
it's
a
tbd
in
terms
of
when
you
think
that
this
is
going
to
be
finished.
Is
there
any
sense
that
you
can
give
me?
Do
you
think
that
it
would
be
ready
before
budget
or
should
I.
D
H
D
H
D
Yeah
not
before
budget,
but
you
know
some
of
the
information
we
have
that
we're
working
on.
We.
J
D
D
D
Which
we
can
move
pretty
quickly
or
we
go
a
little
more
broadly,
in
which
case
we
might
take
a
little
more
time.
So
we're
still
just
in
that
early
phase
of
getting
our
brain
around
kind
of
the
scope
of
work
across
the
city
and
from
then
we'll
have
a
better
understanding
of
how
much
work
we're
going
to
be
needing
to
do
to
kind
of
have
a
have
a
project.
That
is
add
some
real
value.
D
H
You
know
how
to
raise
a
girl's
hopes
up
real
high.
Then
there
joe
cause-
I
was
hoping
you
were
going
to
tell
me
yes
by
june,
and
I
was
going
to
do
a
motion
just
around
that.
I
I
actually
value
that
you
take
your
time
and
you
do
and
you
do
our
children
and
youth.
H
You
do
this
well
for
them,
because
this
will
really
outline
for
us
a
direction
in
terms
of
where
we
should
go
where
we're
missing
some
items:
the
gaps
in
our
systems,
the
the
the
one
thing
I
did
want
to
just
share
with
you
is
that
angel
rios
in
our
city,
manager's
office
has
been
working
around
a
youth
and
child
master
plan
because,
through
our
nsc,
our
neighborhood
services
and
education
committee
that
I'm
a
chair
of,
we
have
been
asking
our
directors
to
develop
a
logic
model
that
helps
outline
some
of
the
strategies
that
work
within
at
a
very
large
scale
within
any
all
of
the
programs,
so
that
we
can
figure
out
what
works,
what
doesn't
work
and
how
to
do
things
scaffold.
H
How
does
build
the?
How
do
we
build
the
program
so
that
the
learning
scaffolds
with
the
youth
and
the
children-
so
I
think,
that's
another
area
that
you
might
want
to
explore.
H
Wonderful
and
so
there's
also
logic
models
that
that
have
been
developed
for
some
of
the
programs
that
I
think
you
might
find
useful
so
anyways.
Thank
you,
councilmember
davis,
for
allowing
me
to
make
the
motion
to
approve
this.
B
All
right,
so
we
have
a
motion
in
a
second
tony.
B
Thank
you.
Next
item
is
neighborhood
services
and
education
committee
work
plan.
I
will
go
to
the
public
first.
First
speaker
is
blair.
F
All
right,
blair,
beekman
here
sorry,
I
didn't
better
offer
in
the
previous
item.
I
really
like
the
monthly
report
audit
report
because
it
does
offer
so
many
items
that
a
person
can
speak
to
that,
I
think,
is
a
good
tool
for
community
for
community
involvement,
and
so
it's
always
good
to
hear
that.
Then,
when
that
report
comes
each
month
january
after
this
work
plan
in
january,
there
will
be
items
of
the
equity
roundtable.
That's
still
only
in
the
proposed
stage.
I
hope
it
really
comes
through.
F
I
think
it
can
really
help
organize
the
future.
The
commission
process,
which
is
really
important
and
good
luck-
how
to
do
that
and
just
it
can
develop
better
study
session
conversations.
I
liked
the
conversations
and
the
study
session
ideas
last
night
about
the
city
charter.
Stuff,
don't
get
me
wrong,
but
I
just
I
wish
we
could
all
more
talk
about
all
the
good
study
stuff
we
already
worked
on
at
the
charter
for
the
past
year
more.
I
hope
you
can
spend
time
and
and
make
a
special
time
for
that
in
the
future.
F
A
public
comment
time
february
is
fair
housing
like
what
I
stated
earlier.
I
hope
this
year
we
can
talk
about
affordable
housing
ideas
that
are
not
just
80
000,
but
how
about
like
sixty
thousand
dollars
and
less
and
and
the
ideas
of
vli
and
eli
and
mixed
income?
I
hope
we
are.
We
get
our
planning
act
together
and
and
that
sort
of
subject
matter
can
be
easier
for
us
to
talk
about,
and
it
has
to
be
have
what
we
talk
about
with
anything
with
urban
village
stuff
in
the
future.
F
Eighty
thousand
dollars
in
urban
village
future
is
not
affordable,
housing,
that's
regular,
everyday
stuff.
We
need
to
do
better
than
that.
There
are
a
few
other
items
that
are
of
interest:
coyote
trail
project
quarter
reports,
as
always
count
on
davis
for
good
wild
wildlife,
trail
studies.
G
Paul,
yes,
yeah!
Yes,
thank
you,
paul
soto
from
the
horseshoe.
First
of
all,
I
would
like
to
see
a
a
kind
of
a
confluence
of
topics:
racial
equity
topics
all
the
month
of
january,
those
met
with
the
housing
issues.
You
cannot
speak
of
one
without
the
other,
so
if
you're
listening
jill,
that's
how
you
do
it
girl!
You
connected
you
connected,
but
you
wouldn't
have
that
problem
right
because
you
know
you're
the
caucasian
persuasion.
G
You
know
just
leave
this
to
do
this
to
the
chicanos.
We
know
what
we're
doing
come
from
long
line
long
line.
So
what
I'd
like
to
see
is
those
merged?
Okay
and
I'd
also
like
to
appear
on
the
record
that
I'm
calling
out
urban
confluences
participation
in
in
any
kind
of
city
business,
because
that
is
the
non-profit
arm
social
arm.
Whatever
arm
you
want
to
call
it,
but
it's
the
non-profit
arm
of
gary
dillable,
okay
and
he
installs.
G
I
think
his
name
is
eric
raider
and
he
comes
into
these
meetings,
begging
the
voters
for
six
million
dollars,
so
that
billabo
can
protect
his
investment
because
he
spends
500
million
dollars
downtown
and
he
thinks
he
owns
the
place
and
then
they
start
urban
confluence
is
on
this
worksheet
twice.
It
is
the
only
organization,
the
only
outfit
that
is
on
here
twice
yeah.
G
They
really
want
to
make
sure
that
they're
cycling
on
all
this
grant
money
all
of
the
city
money
and
just
getting
it
using
it
to
fortify
their
infrastructure
what
they
have
planned
because
they're
going
to
create
san
jose
in
their
image.
It's
already
happened.
It's
already
happened,
but
the
the
the
vibrational
freak
it's
low.
It's
like
it's
bad
like
the
way
it
oscillates.
It
oscillates
very,
very
long,
but
there's
going
to
come
a
time
when
it's
going
to
get
tighter
and
tighter,
because
poverty
is
actually
violence
against
the
people.
B
E
Okay,
thank
you,
neighborhood
services
and
education
work
plan.
I'm
glad
you
have
that
as
a
as
a
program
and
a
commission
or
whatever
they
call
it.
So,
basically
what
I've
been
looking
at,
because
I'm
actually
involved
in
a
they're
they're
trying
to
reach
out
in
terms
of
climate
leadership.
That's
part
of
environmental
services
is
doing
that
and
in
in
regards
to
neighborhood
services
and
education
work.
E
What
I
was
going
to
present
to
them
in
terms
of
they're
trying
to
reach
out
to
our
community
about
climate
crisis
and
preparing
for
that
is
that
we
need
neighborhood
services
that
connect
our
neighborhood.
E
Small
neighborhoods,
like
you
know
we
need
to
you,
know
we
have
the
shasta
hancher
park,
neighborhood
association,
that's
part
of
our
neighborhood,
but
they
haven't
even
been
listening
and
have
been
have
been
actually
ignoring
the
issues
that
we're
having
in
our
part
of
the
neighborhood
because
they're
in
the
rich
part
of
the
rose
garden
and
I'm
on
the
thorn
side.
So
you
know
we
need
to
have
smaller,
more
hyper
local
groups
and
that
the
city
could
help
us
create
these
neighborhood
associations
that
are
smaller.
E
So
that's
something
I
I
wanted
to
talk
about
and
then
in
terms
of
education
that
we
could
use
our
children
in
our
homes.
We
need
to
start
growing
food
everywhere,
and
so
it
could
be
part
of
a
program
to
get
the
the
the
children
and
the
parents
to
work
on
growing
food
on
all
parts
of
their
property.
So
either
they
can
own
property,
so
they
can
work
on
it
there
locally
or
even
within
our
homes.
E
B
I
I
I
What
I
want
to
start
talking
about
is
how
we
have
in
this
city
and
now
throughout
the
united
states,
really
our
conversations
generally
begin
with
who
is
a
renter
and
who
is
a
homeowner,
and
I
find
this
particularly
disturbing
when
we
talk
about
all
of
our
affordable
housing,
because
what
we're
really
doing
is
saying
this
is
affordable,
so
some
people
are
going
to
get
it.
Some
people
are
going
to
benefit,
but
those
people
are
that
live
in
affordable
housing,
making
a
certain
payment
per
month.
I
They
will
not
be
owners,
we
do
not
see
them
as
owners,
and
I
want
to
start
changing
the
language
if
we
could
somehow,
in
all
of
these
discussions
about
equity,
about
affordable
housing,
we
are
not
a
community.
We
are
not
a
city
of
renters
versus
homeowners.
We
became
very
close
to
having
sort
of
this
cultural
war
break
out
in
redistricting
when
there
was
this
conversation
about
how
we
should
have
districts
that
are
mostly
made
up
of
renters
and
we
should
have
districts
that
are
mostly
made
up
of
homeowners.
I
really
reject
that.
I
I
J
J
I
mean
I
see
february
and
march,
for
example,
six
five
and
six
items
and
some
meetings
with
fewer-
and
I
know
some
of
these
have
timeliness
issues,
but
is
there
an
attempt
to
try
to
make
the
agendas
more
evenly
balanced
so
that
some
of
some
of
them
don't
go
as
long
as
they
have
them?.
H
Yes
and
we,
we
work
really
hard
to
make
sure
that
all
of
these
are
as
balanced
as
they
can
one
of
the
one
of
the
responsibilities
we
have
as
a
committee
is
that
our
council
sometimes
makes
recommendations
for
some
items.
Additional
items
on
top
of
what
we
normally
see
come
through
year
round
also
get
reviewed
by
the
nsc
committee,
and
so
it
just
adds
to
our
work
plan,
and
it
also
needs
to
be
aligned
either
with
the
budget
or
before
the
budget.
And
you
know
we.
We
were
very
thoughtful
of
that.
H
H
I
think,
it'll
make
it'll
bring
that
agenda
together
in
a
way
that
will
make
a
lot
of
sense,
maybe
to
pull
in
many
many
different
departments
and
programs
under
one
umbrella,
with
the
objective
of
making
sure
that
we're
serving
our
our
children
and
youth
well-
and
I
think
that
is
one
of
the
ways
that
we
are
creating
some
efficiency,
but
not
for
the
sake
of
overlooking
issues,
but
for
the
sake
of
making
sure
that
our
programs
serve
our
children.
H
In
the
most
effective
and
best
ways-
and
so
you
know
I
I
I
would
love
to
shorten
up
our
meetings
and
I
would
love
to
have
less
items,
you
know
in
concept,
but
the
reality
is
that
you
know
this
committee
is
is
beginning
to
really
have
a
lot
of
say
in
many
of
the
issues
that
are
impacting
our
communities
because
of
the
pandemic
and
because
of
the
social,
emotional
well-being
of
our
children
and
families.
And
so
I
will
work
hard
to
make
sure
that
we
reduce
it
leave
on
one.
H
Just
trying
to
make
all
of
the
presentations
as
concise
as
possible
so
that
when
we
are
in
nsc
that
we
get
all
of
the
information
and
we
are
starting
to
have
our
presentations
get
reduced
really
to
hopefully
five
minutes.
H
The
problem
is
that
sometimes
some
members
don't
read
all
of
our
packets
and
then
what
we
have
to
do
with
our
answer
and
question
is
basically
go
through
the
presentation
because
people
have
not
prepared,
and
so
that's
one
of
the
pitfalls
of
any
committee
or
any
body
of
that
is
meeting
on
an
ongoing
basis
that
might
have
you
know
a
high
workload,
as
you
can
probably
appreciate
from
having
council
meetings
and
rules
we're
kind
of
in
similar
committees,
council.
H
Member
going
so
I
I
get
you,
I
will
take
that
back
and
make
sure
that
we
have.
As
you
know,
we
have
a
well-balanced,
but
most
of
these
items
are
have
already
gone
through
some.
H
J
Know
it's
a
difficult
task
and
I
made
the
mistake
of
biting
off
so
much
that
I'm
I
serve
on
three
committees
in
addition
to
rules
and
councils,
so
I
think
I
have
I
hold
the
high
number
for
this
year.
So
I
understand
anyway,
the
the
the
only
reason
I'm
asking
is,
I
see
in
may
and
june
two
items
on
each
agenda.
J
It
looks
to
me
like
the
april
items
are-
maybe
I
maybe
I'm
not
great
at
judging
these,
but
the
april
items
in
some
sense
seem
a
little
shorter
in
terms
of
the
kind
of
discussion
we
may
have
and
then
march
you
know
six
items,
including
housing,
homelessness,
anti-displacement,
family
camp,
active,
activate,
sj,
all
in
the
same
meeting,
and
so
I
was
just
wondering,
but
anyway
I
mean
not
really
specifying
proposing
anything
specific,
except
just
maybe
to
think
about
whether
one
or
two
of
those
things
in
february
and
march
to
move
to
april
may
and
then
that
just
gives
us
a
little
more
balance.
B
All
right,
we
have
a
motion
in
a
second
tony.
C
K
Oh
man,
I'm
so
sorry
I
missed
the
meeting
today.
Oh
well,
I
guess
I
came
in
right
at
the
right
time.
Happy
new
year,
everybody
and
I've
got
a
new
year's
resolution
that
I
want
to
share
with
everybody.
I
have
a
slogan
you
know
to
heck
with
all
of
you
in
2022..
K
K
I
can't
say
it
enough:
we
got
high
crimes
going
on
and
you
what
you
people
worry
about
is
insane
it's
in
sync.
We
got
burned
out
buildings.
We
got
shootings
at
oak
ridge,
mall
smashing
grabs,
broken
windows,
assaults
on
the
aapi
community
happening
and
their
businesses,
not
far
from
where
I
live.
Where
are
you
guys
now?
You
guys
keep
a
lot
of
this
stuff
hush
hush.
I
swear,
but
hey
man
make
sure
that
you
do
those
road
diets
and
vision,
zero,
and
all
that
guar
that
garbage
fictitious
politics
that
you
do.
K
I
mean
I
can't
wait
for
hillsdale
to
be
a
one
lane,
so
pam
can
have
her
dream
of
a
road
diet
and
these
urban
villages
what
a
joke
they
are
they're
insane.
They
don't
work.
You're
gonna
be
making
coffin
apartments
with
surrounded
by
old
folks
homes.
I
mean.
Can
you
imagine
these
urban
villages
you're
trying
to
have
a
cup
of
coffee?
You
look
up
and
there's
an
old
person
getting
their
diaper
changed
at
the
senior
centers
that
you're
gonna
this
place
is
this
place
is
going
down
the
tubes?
K
B
Okay,
paul.
G
Yes,
paul
soto
from
horseshoe,
never
insult
me
like
that
joe.
I
got
thomas
payne
a
whole
freaking
anthology
of
his
books
right
here
by
my
bedside,
and
he
states,
and
I
quote-
has
most
promoted
or
most
injured.
The
general
happiness
of
man
is
a
question
that
may
be
strongly
contested
on
one
side.
The
spectator
is
dazzled
by
splendid
appearances
on
the
other.
He
is
shocked
by
extremes
of
wretchedness,
both
of
which
he
has
erected
the
most
affluent.
The
most
miserable
of
the
human
race
are
to
be
found
in
the
countries
that
are
called
civilized.
G
That
is
exactly
the
language
that
was
used
in
the
san
jose
historical
document
to
state
that
that
is
what
they
did
to
us
when
they
came
over
here,
the
overlands
1840
to
1846.
This
was
the
philosophy
and
it's
installed
in
these
documents.
G
I
got
those
documents
changed,
that's
go
to
the
san
jose
historical
context
record.
That's
me,
and
it's
going
to
continue
to
be
me,
and
I
forgive
the
council,
because
what
was
what
happened
here
today
is
the
same
exact
thing
that
happened
to
george
floyd,
as
hideous
as
what
happened
to
george
floyd
is.
G
It
was
the
law
that
protected
them
to
continue
to
do
what
he
did.
It
was
the
law
that
did
that,
and
so
am
I
to
interpret
that.
The
only
reason
why
you
didn't
say
anything
was
because
of
the
law:
did
the
law
protect
you
from
showing
humanity
and
concern
about
a
fellow
citizen
that
has
befallen,
because
of
my
advocacy
here
I
have
your
paralysis,
your
letter,
stating
that
you
were
a
beneficiary
of
the
advocacy
that
I
do
here.
G
E
Thank
you,
I'm
trying.
Let
me
see,
oh
there,
okay,
good!
Thank
you!
Well,
just
basically,
you
know
how
we're
going
to
create
the
issues
that
we
need
to
do
going
forward
and
to
really
do
like
paul
says:
the
institutions
exist.
E
The
government
exists
to
serve
the
needs
and
well-being
of
the
people,
and
you
know
I
think,
that's
such
a
profound
statement,
and
it's
really
true
and
the
other
statement
that
I've
used
is
that
our
government
is
there
to
protect
us
from
harms
of
the
businesses
and
things
like
that
which
we
haven't
done,
because
it
is
it's
the
strong,
the
strong
against
the
weak
and
and
it's
it's,
how
long
we've
put
up
with
pollution
in
our
community
noise
and
air
pollution.
E
You
know
we
don't
have
any
controls
of
that
and,
and
you
know,
and
even
the
cars
our
cars
are
so
killing
us.
40
000
of
us
die
every
year
just
from
the
car,
so
doesn't
matter
if
it's
electric
or
gas,
it's
that
it's
not
not
human
scale
too
much
power
too
much
anonymity
and
that's
40
000
every
year
in
the
us,
and
then
they
say
3
million
maimed
and
disabled
from
cars.
And
yet
you
know
we
we
we
support
the
car
and
even
in
our
you
know
the
vta.
E
With
our
measure
b,
you
know
13
highways
or
13
projects
being
expanded.
We
need
to
stop
that,
and
and
also
even
even
our
even
the
bart
going
forward.
You
know
going
to
santa
clara,
the
bar
to
santa
clara
is
a
waste
of
a
billion
dollars.
You
know
it
doesn't
get
us
out
of
our
cars,
it's
it's
redundant
and
even
building
a
new,
a
new,
a
maintenance
yard
when
we
have
spent
so
much
money
in
hayward
for
the
maintenance
yard.
B
F
All
right,
thank
you.
There
are
some
tree
planting
issues
coming
up,
that's
going
to
involve
california
office
of
emergency
services;
good
luck
in
those
efforts
that
can
be
an
open,
shared
process
for
all
of
us,
the
importance
of
possibly
developing
in
this
time
better
voting
rights
for
daca
children,
their
parents
and
immigrants
with
working
visas.
I
hope
it
was
noticed
yesterday
that
there
was
not
a
spanish
and
vietnamese
translation
available
for
the
first
part
of
the
zoom
city
council
public
meeting
yesterday,
and
to
also
mention
the
many
other
languages
spoken
in
san
jose.
F
It
is
a
safe
guess.
The
reason
why
translation
for
zoom
meetings
is
so
expensive
is
that
they're
trying
to
uphold
some
very
questionable,
1980s
english-only
policies
of
the
state
and
country
these
english-only
policies
can
have
the
same
logic
as
the
chinese
exclusion
act,
issues
of
the
late
1800s
that
was
recently
brought
to
this
council
in
abhorrence
and
condemnation,
the
ideas
and
logic
of
early
chinese,
exclusionary
acts
or
academic
arguments.
F
From
this,
I
think
zoom
can
learn
to
lower
their
current
prices
for
translation,
and
we
can
begin
to
move
forward
into
a
new
era
where
the
sharing
of
different
languages
with
local
communities
and
at
the
public
meeting
process
can
be
how
to
unify
and
create
a
better
functioning
community
for
everyone
in
all
our
interesting
regional,
good
study
efforts
and
voting
at
this
time,
and
I
hope
we
can
also
work
on
the
serious
drawbacks
of
1980s
english-only
laws.
F
B
I
Thank
you.
First,
I
apologize
to
paul
soto.
I
did
not
mean
to
insult
you.
That
would
certainly
be
the
last
thing
that
I
would
ever
intend
to
do,
but
I
do
want
to
expand
just
a
little
bit
on
the
renter
versus
homeowner
situation
here
in
san
jose.
What
I'd
really
like
to
do
is
find
out
how
we
can,
as
a
city
have
conversations
around
each
person
is
a
resident.
I
They
are
not
based
their
their
situation.
Here
is
not
based
on
being
a
renter
or
a
homeowner,
and
every
application
that
you
go
on
to
be
on
a
commission
or
anything
like
that.
You'll
have
to
mark
a
box
you're
either
a
renter
or
you're
a
homeowner,
and
the
reason
we
do
that,
of
course,
is
because
we're
you
know
concerned
with
that.
There'll
be
conflicts
of
interest
and
who
has
a
economic
interest
in
one
decision
versus
another,
but
we
really
need
to
look
at
that
and
find
out.
I
He
specifically
said
he
said
people
here,
do
not
we
aren't.
He
said
we,
we
are
not
homeowners,
he
said,
latinos
are
not
homeowners
and
I
thought
oh,
my
gosh.
What
does
that
mean?
I
mean
I
know
that
paul
soto
is
probably
sitting
there
and
pulling
his
hair
out,
but
I
just
want
you
to
know
that
that
makes
me
crazy.
I
Every
single
person
has
a
right
to
build
wealth
and
we
have
to
figure
that
out
whether
it's
in
the
conversations
about
affordable
housing,
whether
it's
conversations
about
whether
or
not
you
know
in
our
equity
conversation,
we
have
to
figure
this
out.