►
Description
City of San José, California
Joint meeting of Rules and Open Government / Committee of the Whole of February 2, 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=927551&GUID=DC7DDA97-0FD8-4A05-A455-455068D84470
A
C
D
D
E
C
E
E
E
E
F
Yeah,
well,
you
know.
Basically,
the
link
is
broken.
It
was
broken
going
on
to
the
agenda.
We
are
saying
we
want
tony
tabor
to
be
fired
because
she's
not
doing
a
good
job
and
then,
on
top
of
it
yeah.
Why
couldn't
I
get
the
council
agenda?
I
couldn't
get
it
right
now.
I
got
the
15th,
but
the
eighth
was
gone
and
then
we
don't
get
it
until
an
hour
before
or
something
that's
bad
and
we
need
to
fix
that
and
so
the
issues
that
I
know
were.
F
I
was
trying
to
look
at
the
agenda
quickly
and
I
really
don't
like
page
eight
page
nine.
You
think
that
helps
the
public.
No,
you
should
read
the
agenda.
You
can
read
it
in
two
minutes.
Blair.
Reads
it
to
me:
okay,
you
read
it
out
loud,
so
we
can
hear
it.
What
do
we
mean
know
about
paige?
What
about
a
person?
That's
blind!
You
know
what
that's
called
equity
for
the
all
for
the
you
know
if
you're
supposed
to
be
for
the
hole
anyway.
F
So,
basically,
let
me
get
back
to
my
clock,
because
I
know
I
only
have
two
minutes
and
and
so
basically
thank
you.
What
I'm
really
mad
about
is
the
fact
that
we're
getting
a
hotel
on
our
property
at
615,
and
we
don't
want
that
and
what
it
is.
So
this
is
about
housing.
It's
about
climate
change,
it's
about
diesel,
it's
about
a
lot
of
issues
that
were
on
our
agenda
and
what
it
is
is
that
we
are
living
in
a
polluted
area.
F
Two
more
people
died
in
my
community
today,
this
this
this
holiday
season,
okay,
two
more
people
got
a
cancer.
What
what
you're
saying
it's
not
related-
and
I
don't
want
to
hear
about
that
chappie
it
is
related.
I
couldn't
even
get
to
the
agenda
and
you're
not
doing
a
good
job.
So
I
want
to
say
is
that
we
have
to
start
imagining
a
new
world
and
what
that
means
is
that
we
need
to
have
on
that
property
housing.
F
We
need
housing,
we
do
not
need
hotels
and
we
need
to
grow
food
and
we
need
to
build
without
without
car
infrastructure,
because
that
has
to
go
away
and
we
need
to
change
our
general
plan.
If
that's
on
the
agenda,
we'll
throw
that
in
and
the
unit
did
a
terrible
job
of
letting
our
neighborhood
know
about
the
general
plan.
Change
and
you
know
chappie
what
I'm
talking
about,
because
your
neighborhood
fought
at
a
hotel
too,
and
you
said
just
because
you
can
doesn't
mean
you
should
the
thing
is
we
need
to
change
it.
G
A
grafton
council.
I
want
to
agree
with
what
tessa
just
stated
with
respect
to
the
agendas.
G
However,
today
today
thank
you
to
staff,
because
that
that
agenda
was
posted
like
yesterday
and
probably
even
a
day
before
that,
and
I
appreciate
that
because
I
need
time
to
study,
to
to
to
have
conversations
to
formulate
my
position
and
come
here,
because
there's
only
two
minutes
that
I
have
that's
all
I
have,
and
anybody
knows
that
when
you
are
practicing
rhetoric
within
this
context,
you
need
to
be
able
to
set
your
premise
and
then
build
upon
it
and
and
that
you
it's
it's
very
hard,
and
it's
already
known
that
it's
very
difficult
to
do
that
within
the
context
of
one
minute,
because
we've
been
abbreviated
a
lot
with
respect
to
these
gender.
G
Now
to
respect
what
vice
mayor
jones
is
saying
about
the
agenda
and
staying
on
topic.
A
lot
of
these
things.
There
is
a
political,
sociological,
spiritual,
philosophical,
ethical,
moral
all
of
those
issues
contained
in
one
topic
and
to
say
that
we
just
make
it
exclusive
about
that
and
impugn
the
tentacle
effects
that
can
stem
from
those
decisions.
I
think
we
need
to
challenge
that
and
I
think
it's
a
healthy
thing
to
do
that.
You
know
that's
what
a
democracy
does.
G
A
democracy
is
predicated
upon
the
consent
of
the
people
and
I'm
not
an
informed
citizen
right
now,
nor
is
tessa.
Nor
is
anyone
else's
distance
to
these
calls.
So
I
submit
respectfully
to
stop
that
and
start
respecting
us
as
who
we
are.
We
are
the
we
are
those
that
give
you
consent
to
govern
me.
So
you
answer
to
me:
that's
just
the
state
of
fact:
that's
a
basic
principle:
democracy.
G
Now,
with
respect
to
this
agenda,
I'm
asking
the
developers
please
take
that
item
off
or
you're
going
to
get
embarrassed
next
week,
because
that
it's
worth
5
million
and
the
people
are
not
going
to
tolerate
it.
I
just
don't
want
to
embarrass
you
in
the
context
of
these
these
meetings,
because
that's
what
will
happen.
E
B
I'm
interested
well
first
item
2.7
is
about
issues
of
continuing
the
hybrid
public
meeting
process
and
this
time
of
cobit,
I'm
really
sorry
last
week
to
council
vice
mayor
jones
and
to
various
local
governments.
If
I,
my
passion,
got
a
bit
out
of
hand
last
time,
you
know
I
want
to
be
able
to
build
bridges
at
this
time,
and
san
jose
is
always
really
nice
to.
Let
me
allow
me
a
few
extra
words
at
hybrid
meeting
items.
B
So
thank
you
for
that,
and
I
just
hope
we
we
can
talk
about
community
public
health
and
safety
at
the
time
of
hybrid
meeting
approvals
in
the
future
for
the
equity
items
on
the
council
agenda,
I'm
interested
how
the
san
jose
city
officials,
city
government
community
can
work
more
together
in
the
next
few
months
to
openly
talk
about
how
ideas
of
equity
can
be
connected
to
ideas
of
baseline
community
services.
B
It
could
possibly
help
relieve
some
community
tensions
and
continual
misunderstandings
as
eastside
residents
and
all
of
san
jose
can
then
help
better,
define
and
be
more
clear
of.
What
can
we
can
then?
All
call
baseline
services
and
from
this
we
can
then
continue
the
efforts
and
what
can
be
better
services
and
choices
to
east
side
residents,
as
they
simply
still
do
not
have
the
same
access
and
choices
as
west
side
residents.
B
To
conclude,
with
35
seconds,
thank
you
for
the
items
about
community
forest
management.
Coming
up,
I'm
interested
I've
been
mentioning
that
you'll
be
working
with
cal
oes
on
these
issues,
which
means
you'll
be
talking
about
the
future
of
emergency
planning
and
development.
Also,
I
feel
that
it
allows
that
conversation
to
take
place,
and
I
hope
it
does
how
we
can
be
emergency
planning
for
the
next
few
years
and
and
how
trees
will
be
a
part
of
that
process.
B
So,
good
luck
and
all
that
good
work
and
thank
you.
E
Thank
you,
blair
for
being
on
point
and
on
topic.
Next
speaker
is
person
ending
in
4963.
D
Yeah
hi
martha
o'connell,
I
week
after
week
after
week,
month
after
month,
we
get
the
same
complaints
about
the
agendas,
the
postings
and
all
of
this,
and
I'm
saying
this
in
a
spirit
of
solidarity
with
folks
who
want
to
be
involved
in
their
government.
I
highly
recommend
that
you
perhaps
take
a
more
productive
method
than
continuing
to
bash
the
city
clerk.
D
If
you
want
the
process
changed,
then
I
highly
recommend
you
go
to
a
particular
council
person
that
you
think
will
be
amenable
to
changing
how
the
agendas
are
handled,
including
this
agenda
today,
and
you
get
them
to
put
an
item
before
the
city
council
and
there
is
a
vote.
I
sincerely
believe
that
is
the
most
productive
way
to
deal
with
the
agendas
because
it
happens
week
after
week
after
week.
Thank
you.
H
Thank
you
about
the
consent,
items
and
final
agenda,
the
the
clerk
city
clerk.
I
think
it
wasn't
somebody
changed
so
we
can
add
an
e-comment
to
each
of
those
items,
so
that
was
really
helpful
and
that's
about
it.
I
just
want
to
thank
every
hard
work.
They're
doing.
Thank
you,
mr
vice
mayor.
E
Thank
you
leah.
Before
we
bring
it
back
to
the
committee.
I
always
have
to
ask
my
standard
question.
This
pretty
robust
agenda.
A
So
for
the
eighth
staff
has
gone
through,
we've
moved
various
items
that
can
be
moved
to
future
meetings,
but
the
items
on
the
eighth
should
be
heard
on
the
eighth.
Otherwise
other
projects
will
back
up
vice
mayor.
C
E
G
G
For
I'm,
the
sixth
generation
of
my
people
in
this
city
and
my
relatives
and
my
ancestors
that
are
buried
in
the
cemeteries
right
here
suffer
those
injustices
that
I
in
my
generation
are
doing
whatever
it
is
that
I
can
in
order
to
set
that
correct
okay.
So
let
there
be
no
comparison
between
the
chicano
experience
in
this
city
and
that
of
a
caucasian
period
or
that
of
a
vietnamese.
G
In
fact,
I
expect
more
of
it.
Oh
yes,.
G
G
Okay,
you
want
look
I'll,
go
to
the
financial
and
the
economic
look
at
how
many
millions
of
dollars
have
been
going
through
that
consent
calendar,
and
there
is
absolutely
no
discussion
and
the
only
discussion
is
at
the
discretion
of
people
that
concentrate
power.
That
is
the
representatives
on
the
council.
G
They
concentrate
the
power
okay
amongst
themselves
and
they
form
deals
with
the
nonprofits.
So
the
nonprofits
now
is
exercising
political
power
in
access
that
the
regular
general
public
does
not
that's
a
problem,
and
what
happens?
Is
it
all
goes
through
the
consent
calendar
so
that
there's
no
questioning
of
that
process?
What
it
does
is
it
hides
it
in
plain
sight
and
under
the
law?
That's
why
I
don't
have
any
respect
for
the
law,
because
the
law
it
lies,
it's
manipulated
and
people
use
it
and
they
play
around
with
words.
That's
why.
H
Sorry
vice
mayor,
I
think
the
agenda
items
are
well
placed
and
I
agree
with
trying
to
it
gets
really
packed
and
I
would
like
to
keep
the
hybrid.
I
hope
I
don't
want
to
get
too
far
afield.
I
want
to
keep
the
hybrid
because
it
really
allows
me
to
interject
some
ideas
because
of
the
fact
I
work
three
jobs
about
18
hours
a
day
and
it's
hard
to
get
over
there
at
that.
H
The
other
thing
is,
I
know
it
sometimes
come
off,
but
a
lot
of
the
stuff
that
mr
soda
says
is
actually
fairly
accurate
and
we
probably
wouldn't
say
it
the
same
way,
but
I
think
he's
trying
to
make
a
point,
I'm
starting
to
begin
to
see
that,
because
coming
from
a
caucasian
male
standpoint,
I
don't
have
a
clue,
and
I
told
him
the
first
one
to
admit
that
what
other
people
of
other
ethnic
and
diverse
backgrounds
go
through.
H
I
I
don't
I'm
just
now,
beginning
to
barely
recognize
my
favorite
status,
and
I
really
actually
I
don't
like
it-
I'm
sort
of
ashamed
in
a
way
that
I
didn't
recognize
it
before,
but
sometimes
an
old
dog
can
learn
new
trips.
Thank
you,
mr
vice
mayor.
Sorry,
I
got
off
topic.
E
Thank
you,
blair.
B
All
right,
thank
you
for
this
item
today.
You
know
to
speak
to
the
words
of
paul.
You
know,
I'm
I'm
trying
to
learn
my
place
as
a
caucasian
as
well
in
this
process
of
san
jose.
B
I
hope
for
all
his
drum
beating
that
paul
is
offering
right
now.
He
realizes
also
that
people
do
try
to
offer
some
really
good
intentions
sometimes
and
that,
even
though
we
may
not
have
had
the
same
experiences,
a
person
like
myself
is
really
trying
to.
I
mean
I
lack
knowledge.
I
lack
better
understandings,
but
I'm
trying
my
darndest
here
towards
a
really
good
purpose
and
cause
that
needs
all
the
good
energy
and
positive
help
as
possible
and
for
paul
to
be
continuously
drum.
B
He
needs
to
learn
to
incorporate
that
encompass
the
sharing
of
a
community
towards
the
future
of
a
good
cause
in
working
together
and
what
that
means
in
working
together
as
a
community
process
towards
our
whole.
I
think
that's
incredibly
important
on
a
number
of
issues
this
time,
we're
trying
to
address
that
for
everything
that
paul's
saying.
How
does
he
see?
How
does
he,
how
does
he
then
bring
it
back
to
a
whole
community
process?
That's
what
I
would
like
to
be
working
on
to
continue
to
bring
up
whole
community
process
issues.
B
This
this
item
has
a
bunch
of
stuff
about
digital
equity
issues,
and
it's
it's
as
important
and
as
meaningful
to
our
future
as
it
is.
It
can't
be
whole
without
the
ideas
of
open
public
policies
and
accountability
practices
with
the
technology
involved.
So
we
can
have
this
digital
inclusion
future
our
children
if
they
understand
open
policy,
open
public
policy,
ideas
and
good
practices,
that's
the
digital
inclusion
future.
We
need
to
be
building
and
that's
the
good
stuff
and
just
a
reminder
of
those
important
lessons
until
the
new
it
manages.
F
To
communicate
digitally
it's
very
important,
it
should
not
be
hot,
I
guess
there's
it
should
not
be
hybrid
and
it
needs
to
be
all
of
us
on
the
same
page,
and
that
means
all
of
us
working
at
home
and
that's
how
we
all
should
be
doing
it,
and
you
know
I
was
looking
at
you
know.
The
matt,
mahan
and
dev
davis
are
running
for
mayor
and
I'm
looking
at
the
comments
from
daniel
mart.
Daniel
mart
is
our
leader,
because
he
is
asking
of
the
these
politicians
that
we
we
approve.
F
The
agenda
yeah,
I
know
we're
talking
about
homelessness
and
housing
and
really
okay,
what
I
was
gonna
start.
If
you
want
me
to
start
I'll
start
over
because
it
was
about
diesel
and
the
diesel
was
on
the
agenda.
There
was
something
about
diesel.
You
could
buy
something
for
your
plumbing
and
blah
blah
blah.
F
Well,
I
live
across
from
a
diesel
bus
depot,
okay,
and
we
have
so
much
disease
in
this
neighborhood
that
we
are
on
the
agenda
of
the
bay
area,
air
quality
management
district,
which
you
have
never
gotten
together
with,
and
I
blame
you,
okay
and
I
blame
my
politicians
that
have
supported
like
that.
F
D
Yeah
I'll
make
this
quick.
You
allowed
other
people
to
speak
to
the
issue.
This
is
martha.
O'connell
chappie,
I
think
we're
on
a
dangerous
slippery
slope
when
we
are
allowing
these
kind
of
comments
which
attack
a
person's
color
and
not
the
content
of
their
comment,
we
are
in
a
very
dangerous
slippery
slope.
D
I
wish
you
would
stop
these
kind
of
comments
and
people
should
be
judged
by
their
their
comment
that
they
make
and
not
whatever
race
they
are
their
sexual
orientation
or
whatever.
So
it
needs
to
stop
because
it's
getting
very
intimidating
and
I
make
no
apology
for
my
race
or
my
sexual
orientation.
Thank
you.
E
Thank
you
bringing
it
back
to
the
well.
Actually,
we
have
one
more
public
speaker
just
has
a
letter.
I
think
it's
a
s.
I
I
E
Thank
you
all
right,
bringing
it
back
to
the
committee
lee
before
we
have
entertaining
emotions,
I'm
going
to
ask
the
same
question
on
this
agenda
because
it
is
pretty
packed.
A
So
we
usually
do
that
analysis
for
the
the
first
week
there
are
items
that
absolutely
need
to
be
heard,
such
as
the
measure
e
property
transfer
tax
allocation
in
time
for
budget,
but
there
are
other
items
on
here
just
in
my
initial
glance
that
don't
legally
need
to
be
heard
that
you
could
take
consideration
and
move
and
defer
if
you'd
like.
E
Okay,
so
what
item
8.1
and
8.2
are
those
two
items
that
could
potentially
be
pushed
out.
C
Just
gonna
make
a
comment
about
that,
because
without
knowing
what's
on
the
coming
agendas,
after
that,
it
feels
hard
for
me
to
do
that.
We
we
pushed
a
bunch
of
things
out
and
ended
up
with
a
really
long
meeting
on
the
28th
of
january
and
then
an
extra
short
meeting
on
the
first
and
because
we
pushed
things
off
the
first.
You
know
it
ended
up
with
we
had
extra
time.
C
I
wouldn't
want
to
move
anything
off
of
the
meeting.
That's
two
weeks
from
now
until
we
know
what's
coming
in
the
meeting
after
that,
and
of
course,
the
week
after
that
is
a
week
off.
So
we
kind
of
have
to
get
an
idea
of
what's
on
the
agenda
on
march
1st
before
we
know-
and
I
think
once
as
budget
comes
we're
just
going
to
get
busier
in
my
opinion,
so
I
just
want
to.
C
A
A
C
C
It
ends
up
being
short
and
we
wish
we
hadn't
moved
things
and
then
other
meetings
end
up
being
way
too
long,
and
so
part
of
me
prefers
to
the
idea
of
keeping
things
on
an
agenda
until
almost
until
we
see
whether
even
that
day,
we
need
to
move
something,
because
that
meeting
is
going
long
as
opposed
to
always
moving
things
off.
But
I
don't
have
an
objection
to
any
single
item
getting
moved,
it's
just
unknown
about.
What's
coming
in
the
next
few
agendas.
That's
awesome!
J
J
I
do
agree
with
trying
to
move
any
items
at
at
this
meeting
at
our
rules
meeting
rather
than
potentially
waiting
until
after
rules
or
the
day
of
or
even
worse,
you
know,
bumping
up
to
a
midnight
deadline
and
then
deferring
something
at
the
last
minute,
and
only
because
that
puts
the
community
at
a
disadvantage
if
they
think
that
we're
going
to
have.
You
know
here
an
item
on
that
day
and
we
don't
so
I'm
kind
of
in
the
middle
there.
J
E
C
Meeting
I
I
don't,
I
don't
disagree,
but
on
the
other
hand,
given
the
the
imbalance
between
the
really
long
meeting
and
the
short
meeting
it
would,
the
goal
should
be
to
balance
them.
I
I
I
agree,
and
I
maybe
maybe
it
requires
a
little
bit
more
looking
ahead
by
the
rules
committee
than
at
other
at
the
horizon
report.
As
we
start
having
these
conversations
about
moving
things,
that's
all
I
was
thinking.
E
C
E
Hi.
Thank
you.
Okay.
Next
item
is
meeting
schedules
set
general
plan
hearing
cycle,
one
for
2022,
I'm
going
to
go
to
the
public
first
and
paul
you're,
going
to
speak
to
this
item.
G
Yes,
sir,
I
always
do
it's
just
that
if
you
don't
have
the
capacity
to
see
how
connected
it
is.
That's
not
my
issue,
I'm
I'm
a
I'm
a
part
of
a
democracy,
and
that
is
my
right
now.
If
you
need
an
education
about
it,
I'll
do
that
too,
but
let's
not
get
it
twisted.
First
of
all,
I'd
like
to
thank
councilman
perez
because
it
shows
that
you
have
an
accurate
assessment
of
what
it
is
that
I'm
talking
about
and
what
it
is
that
I'm
looking
at,
and
so
I
want
to
thank
you
for
that.
G
Councilman
cohen
does,
but
just
from
a
different
perspective.
Now
with
this
item,
I
would
respectfully
ask
that
a
representative
of
the
racial
equity
office,
because
we
passed
the
resolution
right.
So
this
is
one
of
the
primary
ways
in
which
racial
equity
is
practiced
right
here.
G
These
budgetary
decisions
that
are
made
absolutely
require
the
attendance
of
a
representative
of
the
office
of
racial
equity,
so
their
budget
needs
to
be
increased
number
one,
that's
number
one,
because
in
order
for
that
office
to
have
the
efficacy
that
we
that
I
expected
from
it,
because
I
argued
it
when
it
didn't
even
have
a
stapler,
I
argued
for
that
office.
I
was
in
every
single
budgetary
and
every
single
meeting
that
that
brought
that
particular
office
into
fruition.
There
is
not
one
other
citizen
that
can
make
that
claim.
G
I
can
so
with
that
in
mind,
because
I
was
against
that
definition,
because
that
definition
is
powerless.
There's
no
power
in
it.
Okay,
so
this
is
what
it
looks
like
though
you
guys
passed
it.
This
is
what
it
looks
like
and
if
there's
an
objection
to
it,
I
would
like
councilman
perales
to
to
check
me
on
that,
because
it
is
consistent
with
what
it
is
that
he
stated
yesterday.
That
was
excellent.
G
That
was
an
accurate
assessment
and
a
coherent
explanation
of
what
equity
looks
like
and
the
reasons
why
look
at
how
long
he
had
to
speak
in
order
to
give
you
the
actual
picture
of
what
it
is
that
he
met
by
what
he
said.
You
see
how
complex
that
one
word
is.
It
took
that
kind
of
explanation
in
order
to
really
grasp
it
and
understand
it
in
its
in
its
fullness
blair,.
B
Hi
claire
beekman
here
sorry
for
my
strong
words
in
the
last
item
I
mean
no
ill
will
towards
paul
at
all
paul
and
I
are
having
a
philosophical
discussion
outside
of
this
framework
outside
of
the
city
meeting
process.
So
I
you
know,
I
I'm
really
trying
to
defend
the
ideas
of
what
can
be
good
community
development
for
all
parts
of
our
community
at
this
time
and
and
how
we
can
do
that.
So
sorry,
I'm
a
little
strong
and
adamant
about
that
for
this
item.
You
know
for
general
plan
issues.
B
Good
luck
in
really!
It
was
a
really
nice
public
record
report.
You
have
that
you're
offering
statistics
and
numbers
of
eli
and
vli
housing
for
this
coming
year
and
forever
was
it
last
year
last
few
years
and
it's
a
hopeful
sign.
You
know
that,
and
so
I
thank
you
in
the
eli
numbers.
B
We
have
to
continue.
The
efforts
continue
to
consider
how
mixed
income
ideas
can
offer
an
amazing
flexibility
to
local
neighborhoods.
It
seems
how
to
talk
about
the
future
of
housing
for
all
levels
of
income,
and
you
can
engage
that
and
and
bring
it
in
at
different
levels,
and
I
think
it's
interesting
work
that
can
take
place
with
it
and
that
way
people
won't
get
so
upset.
I
mean,
but
it's
a
bit
naive
on
my
part,
but
I'm
hopeful
with
my
remaining
time.
B
This
general
plan
is
also
going
to
be
talking
about
urban
village
ideas
for
the
north
first
street
project,
and
I
think
it
can
speak
to
overall
urban
village
ideas
that
are
going
to
be
on
the
upcoming
ballot
list
of
things
to
do
for
san
jose
in
the
next
few
years.
I
hope
you
take
a
strong
approach
of
urban
village
things
and
don't
go
lazy.
We
have
to
be
really
mindful
of
how
subsidies
need
to
be
for
low
income
and
extremely
low
income
people.
H
H
Some
of
us
want
to
actually
leave
san
jose,
not
well
kiss
the
cost
of
living.
Actually
it's
just
and
I
don't
want
to
pay
when
I
retire.
I
don't
want
to
pay
three
quarters
or
my
whole
check
just
for
rent
and
that's
not
going
to
change
we're
going
to
pretend
like
it
is,
but
no
it
won't.
If
part
of
this
could
be,
some
of
us
want
to
transfer
out
transfer.
H
You
know
I
mean
a
a
city
play
of
even
just
city
resources
that
could
be
on
the
websites
as
to
really
who
to
trust.
I
mean
you
know,
get
a
bunch
of
different
ideas,
but
you
know
there's
so
many
other
places
to
live
where
you
can
actually
buy
a
house,
for
you
know
a
hundred
thousand
dollars,
and
you
can't
do
that
here.
You
need
a
million
dollars
or
more
just
to
buy
a
house
a
box,
actually
not
even
a
house,
and
I
don't
want
to
live
in
a
box.
H
You
know
I
I've
lived
in
a.
I
had
a
nice
house
that
went
away
and
that's
you
know,
nobody's
fault,
but
my
own,
but
a
part
of
this
general
plan,
maybe
discussing
you
know,
maybe
some
people
want
to
leave
and
that
it's
moving
out
just
leaving
is
not
easy
for
some
of
us
with
medical
issues
and
stuff,
but
the
cost
of
living
around
here
is
just
you
just
and
then
with
the
taxes
and
everything
no
offense,
but
it's
just
extremely
costly,
costly.
Thank
you.
E
Did
you
say
there
was
a?
Oh
I'm
sorry
thank
you
for
catching
that
tessa
go
ahead.
F
Oh
save
me,
I
love
you.
Thank
you
because,
actually
my
hand
was
up
and
then
tony
tabor
takes
it
down.
Okay,
that's
wrong!
Okay!
I
put
it
up.
I
guess
it
wasn't
at
the
right
moment,
even
though
it
was
after
the
last
meeting,
I
put
it
up,
she
takes
it
down.
I
don't
like
that.
Okay,
because
it
makes
it's
hard
enough
trying
to
be
engaged
in
this
process
that
we
shouldn't
have.
Oh,
I
have
a
check
to
see,
if
my
hand
is
still
up
all
right.
F
So
that's
the
problem
and
the
other
issue
is
in
regards
to.
I
guess
we're
dealing.
You
know
with
the.
I
don't
know,
oh
here
it
is
right.
It's
a
general
plan.
I
love
that.
I
love
that
tony,
that
I
love
that
you
put
the
issue
that
we're
discussing
up
on
the
screen.
Council
doesn't
even
do
that.
We
need
to
have
that
at
all
meetings.
So
it's
a
general
plan.
Okay,
the
general
plan
it
sucks.
F
Okay,
the
thing
is
is
that
we
had
a
general
plan
change
in
our
neighborhood
at
615
stockton
avenue
it
originally
was
to
go
residential.
That's
how
we
got
into
our
neighborhood.
As
you
know,
one
income,
my
husband
only
I'm
a
stay-at-home
mother-
and
I
you
know
we
we
bought
a
bar
that
was
turned
into
a
residence,
because
that
was
the
general
plan
for
the
west
side
of
stockton
was
to
go
all
residential.
All
the
properties
on
the
west
side
were
to
go
residential.
F
Then
you
came
in
with
your
helicopter
and
your
drone,
and
you
said:
oh,
that's,
commercial,
we're
going
to
make
money
at
that
one.
We
want
that
one.
We
don't
care
what
you
want
in
your
neighborhood
and
neighbors,
which
all
of
our
neighbors
came
and
we
fought
against
a
hotel.
We
fought
all
my
neighbors.
We
were
there
at
the
city
council
meeting
at
the
planning
meeting.
We
were
all
there
and
you
still
didn't.
Listen.
You
still
didn't
listen
and,
like
mayor
le
carter,
said
out
of
the
side
of
his
mouth.
F
Oh,
you
know
you
can
still
do
a
hotel
on
that
corner
lot
and,
of
course
he
was
right.
We
don't
want
a
hotel
in
our
neighborhood.
We
want
housing,
we
want.
This
is
the
the
road
to
the
google
village.
It
needs
to
be
the
best
of
mankind,
it
needs
to
be
fossil
fuel
free,
it
needs
to
be
learning
how
to
live
fossil
fuel
free
and
it
needs
to
be
growing
food
locally.
That's
what
we
need.
E
Thank
you
so
bringing
it
back
to
the
committee.
I
know
we
had
a
motion
and
I
heard
a
second,
so
we
can
go
ahead
and
tony.
E
G
Yes,
I'm
sorry
when
was
this
posted
this
agenda
item,
because
I
don't
remember
seeing
it:
what
is
the
topic,
because
I'm
looking
at
the
page
and
it
says,
release
date
for
study
session?
What
is
the
topic.
E
A
study
session
that
was
scheduled
that
we're
now
making
a
decision
to
release
that
date.
Okay,
but.
D
This
is
tony,
I
want
it.
This
is
tony
tabor
city
clerk
we've
had
this
question
before
the
council.
Members
are
given
tentative
hold
dates
for
potential
study
sessions.
So
that
way,
if
we
need
to
schedule
a
study
session,
they
already
have
a
date
blocked
on
their
calendar.
There's
not
necessarily
a
topic
scheduled
for
that.
So
so
they're
just
saying
we
don't
have
a
topic
so.
G
G
It
would
have
been
february
february,
4,
okay,
well,
that
doesn't
give
like
the
public
time
see.
That's
why
I
appreciate
what
council,
when
perales
had
stated.
He
said
because
I
read
everything
you
produce.
I
study.
I
do
research,
I
can't
just
you
know
some
stuff.
I
can't
come
just
off
the
top
of
my
head.
I
mean
really
the
large
body
of
the
work
that
I
do
is
just
from
my
head.
G
Okay,
but
there
are
certain
things
that
I
have
to
take
time
for
you
see,
and
so
this
this
is
how
why
robert's
rules
it's
based
on
a
racist
system,
maintaining
the
racist
policy
this
the
slave
holder's
power
to
concentrate.
So
we
all
know
that
that's
what
robert's
rules
of
order
are
predicated
on
was
to
was
to
be
able
to
consolidate
that
power.
But
that's
another
topic,
but
it
does
affect
this
because
I
can't
when
I'm
preparing,
so
I
could
submit
my
work.
I
I
don't
have
that,
because.
E
F
Okay,
great,
thank
you
paul.
That
was
so
right
on.
That's
what
it
takes.
You
know
it
takes
a
community
to
put
all
of
our
three
and
a
half
pounds
of
brains
together.
That's
why
we
need
democracy
because
we
are
failing
as
a
species.
I
mean
that's
that's
what
we're
facing
is
extinction
and
you
know,
along
with
the
sixth
mass
extinction
of
other
species.
This
is,
and
it's
called
the
anthropocene,
that's
the
epoch.
We
are
in
or
the
period
it's
it's
the
anthropocene,
because
we
are
changing
the
way
the
world
is
working.
F
We
are
creating
mass
extinction
from
the
way
we're
building
and
the
way
what
we're
doing
is
even
building
we
shouldn't
be
building.
We
need
to
stop
it.
We
need
to
stop
everything
and
start
dealing
with
our
climate
crisis
and
we're
not
we're
going
on
like
as
if
everything's
normal,
when
you
have
a
crisis
which
we
have
and-
and
I
don't
I
you
know,
look,
what
is
the
movie?
Don't
look
up.
I
hope
you
all
have
watched
it
and
the
song
of
look
up.
F
We
need
to
look
up
and
if
we
see
what's
in
the
news
right
now
with
the
weather,
that's
happening
across
the
nation,
the
amazing
amount
of
snow
okay.
So
what
I'm
saying
to
say
thank
you
is
in
regards
to
our
general
plan.
We
need
to
change
the
general
plan
so
in
specific
in
regards
to
alan
wynn
and
changing
the
general
plan
to
go
back
to
residential,
so.
F
You're
so
sweet,
I
love
you.
You
are
amazing:
okay,
yeah
the
study
plan
that
is
so
important
and
and
when
we
set
up
these
study
plans
like
the
last
this
has
to
do
with
our
climate
emergency.
That
is
one
of
the
study
plans
that
we've
been
thinking
and
you
just
left
it
open.
You
never
told
us
when
it
was,
and
that
was
exactly
you
know
in
terms
of
our
our
charter
review
commission.
Yes,
that
needs
to
be
on
your
agenda,
that's
what
this
should
have
been.
F
It
should
have
been
noted
and
it
should
have
more
time
because,
yes,
we
need
to
go
to
that
charter,
review,
commission
or
the
the
one
about
the
voting.
You
know
those
were
issues
and
you
never
gave
us
a
time.
Those
who
were
listening.
So
it
is
important
that
you
you
you
plan
these
things
with
openness
and.
H
Thank
you,
brian,
just
real,
quick
I'd
like
to.
H
I
know
this
may
not
be
the
exact
place
to
suggest
a
study
session,
but
on
the
new
I
sent
a
couple
of
emails
to
the
council
as
far
as
like
the
3d
printing
of
houses,
you
know
for
four
thousand
dollars
it's
being
done
in
mexico
and
in
texas
believe
it
or
not,
entire
communities
are
being
printed
up
in
weeks
instead
of
you
know,
decades
and
times,
and
a
study
session
on
alternative
methods
of
building
like
council
person
may
have
been
saying:
let's
build
it.
H
E
Thank
you
bringing
it
back
to
the
committee
councilmember
cohen,.
C
Yeah,
just
briefly
I
want
to
I
want
to
thank
you
tony
for
this
process,
because
it's
great
that
we
have
these
time
set
aside
ahead
of
time,
it's
much
better
than
the
alternative,
which
happens
in
a
lot
of
places,
which
is
that
we
have
to
call
a
special
study
session,
and
then
we
end
up
having
to
clear
our
calendar
from
the
meetings
that
are
there.
So
I
appreciate
that
we
have
these
times
set
aside
during
year
and
that
when
we
decide
we
don't
need
them.
C
C
F
Thank
you,
you're
doing
a
good
job.
Thank
you.
I
really
appreciate
your
help.
You're
doing
a
good
job
of
leading
these
meetings.
Thank
you
vice
mayor
jones,
and
helping
us
to
stay
on
topic,
but
you
you
give
us
a
chance
to
go
back
and
look
at
the
little
note
and
remember
what
we're
doing
you
know
it's
hard
to
do
everything
and
everybody's
doing
the
best
we
can.
So
we
appreciate
your
you
really
incorporating
the
public
voice
by
you
know,
helping
us
stay
on
topic
and
giving
us
a
chance
to
get
back
on
it.
F
So
thank
you
anyway,
public
record
yeah.
I
was
just
thinking
about
blair
beakman,
because
blair
always
talks
about
sustainability
and
so-
and
he
says,
he's
done
that
for
seven
years,
he's
participated
in
our
democracy
for
seven
years
as
a
focus
on
sustainability
and
that's
what
we
need
to
be
focusing
on
is
sustainability,
something
that
could
go
on
forever
and
we
know
the
fossil
fuel
has
to
stop.
F
It
has
to
stop
and
we
we're
not
doing
it,
we're
not
stopping
it,
and
you
know
I
was
thinking
about
the
letter
that
that
you
know
this.
Daniel
mart
writes-
and
he
says
you
know
you
went
ahead
and
had
the
google
village
and
the
google
village
has
hotels
it
has.
It
has
office
buildings,
it's
got
cars,
everything
we
don't
need,
we
need
it
to
be.
An
eco
village
everywhere
needs
to
be
an
eco
village.
That's
the
way
we
need
to
be
san
jose
has
no
trees.
I
mean
we
are.
F
You
know
I
was
downtown
in
over
there
on
san,
fernando
with
the
big
stupid
building
going
up
the
office
building,
whatever
that's
called
anyway,
and
so
you
know,
and
we
have
all
these
office
buildings,
you
can't
see
anybody,
there's
no
balconies,
there's.
No.
There
was
two
trees
like
they
were
left
over.
You
know
it's
it's
terrible.
You
know
how
we
have
no
nature
and
what
catherine
matthewson
says
is
nature
heals,
and
this
is
what
we
need
and
we're
getting
a
homeless
shelter
down
at
the
bottom.
On
the
alameda,
the
arena.
F
G
Yes,
yes,
paul
soto
from
the
horseshoe,
I
went
ahead
and
I
reviewed
those.
That
is
some
excellent
writing
if
I
do
say
so
myself.
That
is
an
excellent
in
terms
of
what
it
is.
My
life
experience
is
what
it
has
been,
how
that
life
experience,
because
all
you're
looking
at
right
there,
that's
the
reason
for
racial
equity
right
there.
G
From
the
female
perspective
within
the
context
of
a
community,
she
gave
an
excellent
articulation
of
that
within
the
context
of
city
government
right
what
you
see
there,
that
is
what
institutionalized
racism
looks
like.
That
is
what
is
what
systemic
racism
looks
like?
I
was
surprised
at
the
doctor.
That's
why
doctors
they
can
work
with
the
community,
but
coming
into
these
videos
and
throwing
your
greek
letters
behind
you
and
thinking
that
you're
going
to
get
my
respect
in
this
city.
It's
not
going
to
happen
on
me.
It's
not
going
to
happen.
G
G
What,
in
that
document,
you
have
my
permission
to
go
ahead
and
use
it,
because
that
right
there,
that
is
a
complete
articulation
and
accurate
one,
a
very
coherent
one
that
centers,
the
the
political,
the
social,
the
economic
and
the
spiritual
consequences
and
impacts
of
what
redlining
has
done
in
this
city
and
redlining
is
just
an
extension
of
another
process
and
what
that
process
is
called
is
manifest
destiny
that
right
there
is
at
its
core.
What
you
see
there
in
that
document
is
the
modern,
contextual,
contemporary
reverberation
of
what
happened
then.
E
B
All
right,
thank
you
for
tessa's
words
about
myself,
I'm
really
into
the
ideas
of
how
open
public
policies
and
openness
and
accountability
can
really
build
the
ideas
of
peace
and
sustainability
and
good
open
democracy
for
our
future,
and
I
think
it
really
can
address
you
know
war
and
harm
as
ways
to
work.
I
think
we
can
develop
important
new
ways
to
work
based
on
openness
and
accountability.
B
The
aclu
ideas
have
been
really
amazing
to
me
the
past
seven
years,
and
I
guess
it's
time
to
thank
them.
I
wish
I
could
talk
more
about
where
these
ideas
initially
come
from,
that
I
feel
had
some
basis
in
san
jose
sunshine,
ordinance,
ideas
of
2007
that
I
should
be
talking
more
about,
and
so
thank
you
for
all
this
work
and
effort.
We
are
trying
to
build
a
more
sustainable
future.
I
think-
and
I
wanted
to
thank
at
this
time
tony
and
her
work
as
a
city
clerk.
B
You
know,
since
covid
the
meeting
minutes
have
been
going
way
way,
downhill
and
paul
really
called
it
out
last
november,
and
I
think
since
then
they
are
really
making
an
effort
to
bring
back
the
meeting
minutes
process
and
good
luck
in
this
continued
good
work
and
we
can
harp
on
them
occasionally
to
make
sure
that
they
can
get
all
those
meeting
minutes
back
on
the
public
website
and
and
and
a
regular
part
of
a
process
again,
and
they
can
be
good
again
and
they
can
do
that
and
it
seems
like
they're
wanting
to
and
willing
to
do
that.
B
So
thank
you
and
thank
you,
amazingly,
that
you
you're
you're
placing
agendas
on
the
rules
and
open
government
meetings
before
12
p.m.
If
you
can
continue
to
do
that,
that's
a
great
next
step
and
then
you
can
bring
in
paul
and
tesla
who
want
to
bring
in
these
agendas
to
be
brought
in
maybe
on
tuesdays
and
mondays,
but
I'm
satisfied
that
we're
doing
it
before
12
a.m,
right
now
or
12
p.m.
Right
now,
thank
you
incredibly,
for
that.
H
Brian
hi
vice
mayor
is
the
public
records
searchable
as
a
single
database,
or
you
have
to
search
the
entire
the
entire
database
on
this
on
the
city
side,
I'm
not
sure
if
there's
a
an
advanced
feature
for
searching
the
public
records
or
a
certain
part
of
the
city
site,
I
tried
doing
it
through
a
google
compounded
search
and
I
didn't
get
much
work
for
it,
I'm
not
sure
when
they
digitize
the
stuff,
the
elect
when
it's
electronic,
I'm
sure
it's
searchable.
H
D
C
E
B
Hi
to
speak
to
african-american
month,
I
had
an
interesting
time
in
the
weekend
of
the
mlk
birthday
celebrations
a
few
weeks
ago.
His
words
were
often
about
how
we
can
how
we
can't
work
towards
peace
and
justice
and
a
poor
people's
campaign
without
a
healthy
environment.
B
E
Yeah
but
let's
keep
it
specifically
to
the
item.
B
You
know
a
more
defensive,
reactionary
position
that
we're
taking
across
the
country
of
voting
rights,
issues
that
we
shouldn't
have
to
take,
and
it's
african-american
incentives
and
ideas
that
can
really
bring
us
through
this
next
decade
of
important
voting
rights
measures
for
all
of
us,
and
it
is
the
ideas
of
unity,
and
it
is
from
that
chappie
jones
that
I
hope
your
flag
raising
ceremony
goes
incredibly
well
and,
and
these
ideas
can
be
considered
as
you're
raising
the
flags
of
of
african
awareness
and
and
celebration
for
the
month
of
february.
Thank
you.
E
Thank
you
person.
Just
with
the
initial
s.
I
I
want
to
address
the
lighthouse
item
too.
I
think
the
only
correct
thing
to
do
is
waive
the
permit
fees.
E
No
worries
tessa.
F
Okay,
good,
so
I
guess
I'm
just
trying
to
get
away,
I'm
outside
and
six
feet
away
from
everybody,
and
so
let's
see
so.
Basically
what
I
wanted
to
say
is
hello
is
in
regards
to
the
extent
calendar.
It
was
the
african-american
thing
and
I
saw
that
on
the
calendar
and
I
called
my
girlfriend
demetrius
hedeman,
but
she's,
half
black
and
half
mexican.
She
sounds
like
she's
german,
but
she
she
married
in
german
and
she
lives
on
at
cinebar
commons,
and
I
told
her
oh
demetrius.
F
You
need
to
come
to
this
meeting
so
that
you
can
talk
about
the
african-american
experience
and
and
raising
the
flag,
and
she
said
I
have
not.
You
know
she
had
nothing
good
to
say
about
it.
She
says
that
she's
been
mistreated
since
her
slavery
phase,
and
so
there's
nothing
to
celebrate
anyway.
That
that
is
very
important
to
me
and
I
wanted
her
to
do
it,
but
she
couldn't
even
figure
out
how
to
get
it
onto
the
thing.
So
it
needs
to
be
simpler.
How
we
really
get
to
the
city.
You
know
to
these
meetings.
F
It
should
be
just
one
button
on
the
top
of
it.
You
know
on
you
know
something
that
makes
it
really
easy
to
get
to
city
council
meetings
and
and
be
able
to
talk,
and
we
have
to
work
on
that
and
then
the
other
thing
is
in
regards
to.
I
guess:
well
there's
that
one,
but
you
know
so
the
african-american
and
that's
why
you
know
when
I
tell
her
about
she
doesn't
want
that
hotel
she's
in
our
neighborhood
at
cinema
commons.
She.
E
F
Okay,
so
you're
saying
it
has
to
do
the
consent
calendar
the
flag,
raising
okay.
So
the
issue
was
that
you
know
what
are
we
celebrating
and
she's
not
happy
that
we're
celebrating
black
black
month,
because
we're
not
taking
care
of
the
planet?
We're
not
taking
care
of
each
other?
And-
and
this
is
this-
is
the
truth.
We
don't
take
care
of
each
other
we
pollute
polluting
is
because
we
don't
love
each
other.
We
don't
care
about
each
other,
and-
and
this
is
this
has
to
change-
and
everything
has
to
be
about.
E
E
G
Go
ahead:
hello,
hello,
hello,
hello,
yes,.
G
You
can
yes
go
ahead,
hello.
I
don't
see
my
timer,
I
don't
I'm
confused
hold
up
hold
on
hold
on
I
I
I
need
to
see
the
time
timer
and
then
I
need
to
be
able
to
now
do.
Can
you
you
hear
me
now?
Yes,
go
ahead,
hello,
okay,
cool
now,
all
right
cool!
Thank
you
because
that
was
confusing,
but
thank
you
I'd
like
to
draw
the
council
anybody!
That's
on
this
call
to
the
symbol
that
I've
used
for
a
long
time.
G
It
says
power
to
the
people
and
what
it
has
is
a
welgabr
and
that
welga
bird
is
a
symbol
of
chicanos
and
it
was
derived
from
the
klesha
from
all
the
education
that
cesar
chavez
received
here
in
the
cso
right
there
on
the
ground,
father.
My
father,
I
have
a
picture,
has
a
tent
right
there
right
there,
where
mcdonald
hall
is
that's
how
connected
I
am
to
sanjo,
to
chicanismo,
to
the
lowrider
movement,
to
the
farmworkers
movement
and
to
the
chicano
movement.
G
That's
how
connected
I
am
to
it
and
I'm
proud
of
that
fact,
and
so
look
at
the
symbol
that
I
wear.
It
has
a
panther
coming
out
and
I
saw
that
solidarity
no
more
beautifully
articulated
in
san
jose
art,
then
at
san
jose
state
university,
where
you
have
two
men,
tommy
smith
and
juan
carlos,
both
in
the
1968
1968
olympics
in
mexico
city
and
prior
to
that,
the
week
prior
to
that
there
was
a
mass
student
where
over
50
students
were
murdered
in
that
city.
G
Prior
to
that,
because
they
were
using
the
olympics
to
protest
and
what
tommy
smith
and
juan
carlos
did
in
the
city.
They
honored
me
as
a
mexican.
They
honored
me
by
it
was
that
city
at
that
time
that
they
rightfully
earned.
They
raised
their
black
fist
in
solidarity
with
the
panthers,
but
they
also
form
the
solidarity
with
the
poor.
Their
shoes
are
a
brand
name
puma,
I
don't
buy
any
other
shoes
other
than
puma
and
when
you
they
had
their
shoes
taken
off
and
what
that
meant
was.
E
All
right,
yes,.
E
Thank
you.
Okay.
Now
we
are
on
to
the
lighthouse
ministries,
food
pantry
item
and
I'm
gonna
go
to
the
public.
We're
gonna
start
out
with
tessa.
F
Okay,
good,
yes,
that
was
so
important
that
we
look
at
this
issue
and
the
hypocrisy
of
charging
them
fifteenth
that
almost
sixteen
thousand
dollars
to
do
that
to
have
to
to
be
able
to
provide
food
for
free
and
that
just
caused
so
much
turmoil
in
our
society.
I
mean
our
community
to
see
that
and
I'm
glad
it's
changing,
and
you
know-
and
it's
the
same
thing
the
same
issue
in
terms
of
when
we
have
to
do
a
general
plan
change,
it's
thirty
thousand
dollars
to
do
a
general
plan
change.
F
You
know
in
2005.-
and
you
know,
the
thing
is-
is
that
that
is
a
chilling
effect,
the
same
with
the
food
that
that
was
a
chilling
effect
to
to
make
it
more
unavailable,
the
food,
the
basic
needs,
and
just
like
changing
back
to
residential
to
housing,
to
make
it
difficult,
because
you
want
to
keep
your
general
plan
that
we
know
that,
and
we
know
you
want
that
money
and
that
you
know
it's
the
same
issue
that
it's
going
to
cost
us
30
000,
to
go
back
to
housing.
That
has
to
be
stocked.
F
We
need
to
stop
that
because
we
need
housing
just
like
we
need
food,
and
so
this
is
the
corollary.
It
is
the
food
it
should
not
have
been.
There
should
be
no
fees
for
permitting,
and
you
know
I
think
that
there
are
issues
you
know
they
have
to
mostly
have
a
conditional
use,
that
they
do
a
good
job
and
keep
it
clean,
keep
it
fossil
fuel
free.
That
would
be
great,
and
you
know
those
type
of
issues
you
know,
but
that
doesn't
take
15
000
and
you
can.
F
You
know
that
that
just
has
to
be
built
into
the
permit
and
just
like
the
30
000
to
turn
it
back
to
residential
when
that
was.
The
original
plan
was
for
the
west
side
of
stockton
to
all
be
residential
and
and
then,
if
we
build
it,
fossil
fuel
free,
you
know
it
could
be
under
conditional
uses.
That's
why
we
need
noise
ordinances
and
we
need
pollution
ordinances,
but
we
don't
need
you
know:
big
bureaucracy
to
charge
thirty
thousand
dollars
or
fifteen
thousand
dollars
to
provide
food
or
thirty
thousand,
to
provide
housing.
H
Thank
you
this.
This
is
the
main
reason
I
logged
on
today
and
I
do
appreciate
being
able
to
log
on.
It
really
means
a
lot.
Thank
you.
I
understand
why
they,
I
haven't,
had
a
chance
to
actually
go
buy
that
particular
area.
I
understand
there
was
a
lot
of
frustration
about
a
lot
of
people
showing
up
and
having
I
get
all
that
you
know,
but
people
lining
up
for
food
that
permit.
H
H
H
It's
mind-boggling
that
we
can
land
on
the
moon,
you
know
and
even
come
up
with
a
way
to
stop
what
killed
the
dinosaurs,
a
potential
ability
to
deflect
or
stop
an
asteroid
which
could
wipe
out
our
entire
species
we're
the
first
species
on
this
planet.
That's
got
to
that
apex
and
we're
flushing
it
all
down
the
toilet,
which
is
really
frustrating
and-
and
ireland
doesn't
have
to
happen
that
way.
But
I
think
what
this
person's
doing
with
the
food
is
really
important.
Anyway,
they
got
a
little
far
off
there.
E
Thank
you,
blair.
B
Hi
blair
beekman
here
you
know
for
this
item.
Just
I
guess
it's
a
lot
of
difficult
work.
We
have
to
do
around
covert
issues
and
decisions
we
have
to
make.
I
think,
there's
a
certain
logic
to
what
the
the
city
is
offering
that
can
be
respected.
B
I
think
you
know
this
was
first
made
when
omicron
was
coming
on
and
I
think
we've
all
made
some
really
interesting
decisions,
not
based
so
much
on
vaccine
use,
but
just
people
to
the
people
contact
and
how
do
we
address
that
and
you've
tried
to
do
that
and
which
is
nice
and
and
those
terms,
but
you
know
the
overall
thing
is
not
so
great
and
good
luck
how
we
can
continue
to
work
on
this.
B
I
think
if
people
are
determined
to
bring
food
to
people
at
st
james,
they
can
make
the
efforts
to
contact
city
hall
and
city
government
and
good
luck
in
those
efforts
to
do
that.
I
also
I
qui.
I
guess
I
quickly
wanted
to
ask
and
to
offer
that
vice
mayor
jones,
you
and
I
have
been
going
back
and
forth
about
what
is
acceptable
public
comment
for
myself.
B
On
the
last
item,
I
spoke
about
how
african-american
issues
can
have
an
important
factor
in
the
next
decade
of
our
voting
rights,
an
important
good
factor,
and
you
denied
me
that
public
comment.
I
think
you
have
to
learn
to
better
trust
my
judgment
and
character
in
the
future,
and
it's
it's
as
simple
as
that,
you
don't
and
you
need
to
learn
to
and
that's
the
argument,
we're
going
back
and
forth
about
all
this
time.
Good
luck!
B
How
we
can
work
on
that
issue
between
ourselves,
and
I
think
I
delivered
a
very
nice
public
comment
previously
and
you
denied
that-
and
you
tried
to
take
that
away
when
I
was
doing
something
incredibly
decent
fairly
decent.
B
My
best
attempts
nice
guy
attempts,
so
I'm
done
now,
I'm
just
about
done
and
just
you're
doing
it
again.
I
think
you
should
allow
me
the
space
to
conclude
as
I'm
trying
to
include
and
to
apologize.
Also
and
good
luck.
E
I
Again,
shout
out
to
blair,
not
every
issue
goes
back
to
the
same
hotel
issue.
It's
disrespectful
and
alienates
you
from
potential
allies.
I
hope
you
hear
me
as
far
as
lighthouse
goes.
I
The
only
reason
that
this
food
pantry
exists
is
because
there's
such
a
dire
need-
and
the
community
really
really
appreciates
this-
it's
not
that
they
just
feed
like
a
thousand
people
a
day.
It's
that
those
people
take
that
food
and
take
it
back
home.
So
one
person
picks
up
a
bag
of
food,
takes
that
home
and
feeds
four
more
people,
and
I
think
that's
amazing,
and
I
know
we
work
with
them
a
lot.
You
know
we're
getting
tons
of
supplies
from
them
and
we
appreciate
that
because
then
we
take
it
out
to
other
camps.
I
We
need
more
lighthouses,
we
need
more
beacons
of
light
in
the
community
and
they've
done
an
amazing
job,
and
I
am
so
grateful
to
them.
I
am
so
happy
to
work
with
them.
There
should
be
no
special
use
permits.
There
should
be
no
fees,
we
should
just
be
thanking
them
for
existing
and
for
partnering
and
working
with
groups
like
mine
and
with
other
groups,
because
the
work
that
they
do
is
just
amazing
and
again
they
couldn't
exist
and
serve
so
many
people.
E
All
right,
paul.
G
Okay,
thank
you,
paul
soto
from
the
horseshoe.
I'm
not
sure
if
that
threat
was
to
me,
but
I'll
go
ahead
and
accept
it
as
such.
I
just
heard
somebody
did
on
this
call
and
say
I
hope
you
hear
me
when
she's
talking
about
somehow
another,
maybe
stopping
a
certain
process.
G
All
I
do
is
come
here
and
participate
in
the
democratic
process.
That's
all
I
do
I
set.
I
set
intellectual,
philosophical
and
arguments
that
are
rooted
in
life
experience
in
the
city
and
I
bring
them
to
the
these
meetings
and
I
center
it
within
the
context
of
public
meetings,
and
so
it's
speaking
cryptically
in
and
you
know,
insinuating
and
putting
this
into
the
record.
That's
what
I
I
just.
G
It
needs
to
be
a
part
of
the
record
and
if
she
did
mean
me,
then
just
be
woman
enough
to
stand
up
and
say
yeah.
That
was
intended
for
you
I'll,
accept
that
I
don't
have
a
problem
with
that.
But
when
comments
are
made
like
that,
you
know
exactly
what
kind
of
political
lining
what
political
alliances,
what
political
position
the
person
is
taking.
G
The
issue
is
this:
that
is
part
of
the
problem,
not
the
solution.
You
got
lighthouse
to
where
I
live
in
a
city
where
you
were
gonna,
ask
for
tax
breaks
for
to
to
install
market
rate
housing
and
you're
gonna
create
an
issue
where
you're
gonna
deny
what
someone
like
lighthouse
is
doing
within
a
community
and
you're
going
to
embarrass
the
city
you're
going
to
embarrass
a
lighthouse
and
you're
going
to
embarrass
the
people
that
receive
that
service
within
the
community.
G
We
need
to
ask
ourselves
the
question:
not
whether
or
not
there's
a
a
free
waiver,
but
why
do
we
have
that
kind
of
need
in
our
city
in
the
first
place?
Why
that's
the
question?
That
is
the
original
question?
Why
is
there
such
a
need?
Why
is
there
such
hunger?
Why
is
this
such
just
a
complete,
complete
dilapidation
of
areas
and
human
beings,
and
it's
due
to
neglect-
and
these
are
generations
of
neglect-
that's
the
topic
and
your
silence
in.
L
Well,
thank
you
for
this
opportunity
to
speak
on
behalf
of
the
lighthouse.
All
right,
my
name
is
pastor
ralph
almost
I
am
the
ceo
and
a
pastor
of
the
lighthouse
ministries.
I
want
to
thank
councilmember,
paralyze
and
mayor
ricardo
for
bringing
this
issue
forward.
I
think
that
I
I
this
is
my
first
time
on
this
type
of
panel
and
I'm
hearing
everything
that
people
are
saying
and
a
lot
of
it's
true
s.
L
L
I
would
like
to
help
here
first
and
I
did
not
realize
how
great
the
need
was
for
help
and
when
I
stepped
into
this
position
my
wife
says
you
know
you
can't
turn
back
now,
you're
helping
many
people
and
now
that
I've
been
doing
this-
and
I
realize
there's
so
many
people
involved
in
this
and
the
partners.
L
This
little
issue
during
the
pandemic
really
shocked
me
because
I
would
have
figured
that
you
know
something
would
have
been
in
place
to
protect
people
that
want
to
help
people
and
we've
done
everything
in
our
power
to
try
to
you
know,
follow
every
rule.
I
I
knew
that
issues
such
as
parking
and
double
parking
would
be
an
issue
during
this
pandemic,
but
there
are
people
that
don't
have
places
to
quarantine
that
are
homeless,
bigger
issues
that
involve
children
and
families
and
disabled
and
senior
citizens
in
our
neighborhoods.
L
You
know
every
neighborhood,
even
from
the
I
think
it
was
paul
from
the
horseshoe.
Those
are
old
neighborhoods.
These
are
all
those
neighborhoods
and
they
have
family
members
that
go
back
to
that
old
code
and
we're
kind
of
looking
to
that
right
now,
just
for
compassion
and
and
good
a
good
heart
to
help
us
move
forward.
So
thank
you
for
this
opportunity
and
I
I
pray
that
it
does
pass.
You
know
we
want
to
continue
helping.
Thank
you.
D
Thank
you,
chappie.
Thank
you
pastor.
Thank
you
so
much.
I
just
want
to
put
my
two
minutes
in
and
everybody
the
unhoused
and
the
families
in
that
area
appreciate
and
love
the
lighthouse
food
pantry
just
tremendously,
and
thank
you
for
all
your
hard
work
and
I
truly
believe
that
this
rules,
committee
and
our
city
council
will
step
up.
It
should
have
never
come
to
this
to
begin
with,
but
you
know
I
do
appreciate
ricardo
and
raul.
I
mean
it
is
a
election
year.
D
I'm
sorry
rahul,
but
you
haven't
stepped
up
with
some
of
the
in-house
before,
but
you
are
stepping
up
and
I
think
it's
a
great
thing
and
thank
you
so
much
for
that
and
let's
make
sure
everybody
that
has
a
food
pantry.
They
don't
have
to
even
go
through
this
because
I
know
it's
been
very
stressful
for
everybody
and
I
have
faith
in
this
committee
and
the
council,
which,
usually
I
don't
have
too
much
faith
in
them,
but
I
know
you
will
step
up
because
this
is
a
wonderful
program.
Thank
you.
So
much.
E
A
Just
that
it's
a
green
light
based
off
of
staff's
analysis
and
our
director
of
planning
building
code
enforcement.
Chris
burton
is
here
to
answer
any
questions
the
committee
might
have.
E
Great,
thank
you.
Councilmember
perales.
J
Yeah,
thank
you
very
much
vice
mayor
and
I
want
to
say
thank
you
to
to
staff
for
the
quick
response
and
really
for
pastor,
almost
and
lighthouse
ministries
for
the
service
they've
been
providing
to
the
community.
J
J
It
was
important
for
me
and
the
mayor
to
be
able
to
try
and
propose
a
solution
that
would
benefit
everybody
here,
and
so
that's
what
we've
come
up
with
with
the
direction
we
proposed,
and
we
had
a
couple
suggestions
that
I
see
in
the
early
consideration
form
that
staff
has
a
a
path
that
they
feel
would
be
beneficial
moving
forward
and
I'll.
Ask
a
question
on
that
momentarily,
but
just
to
speak
to
the
importance
of
this,
and
I
think
this
goes
without
saying
to
my
colleagues.
J
But
we
know
that
throughout
the
past
couple
years
that
we
we've
had
a
tremendous
increase
in
food
insecurity
in
our
community
and
we've
seen
food
pantries
get
stretched
to
the
limit
and
having
lighthouse
ministries
open
up
as
a
new
opportunity
and
service,
a
new
distribution
site
in
an
area
that
hadn't
had
this
type
of
service
before
and
one
that
pastor
almost
has
a
direct
connection
to,
I
think,
is
something
to
to
truly
be
proud
of,
and
appreciative
of-
and
I
know
our
other
food
pantries
have
expressed
their
appreciation
and
interest
to
to
help
make
lighthouse
ministries
successful
as
well.
J
The
additional
challenge
that
came
forward
was
was
not
necessarily
just
coming
into
in
compliance
of
operations,
which
I
will
say,
I
met
with
pastor,
olmos
and
his
team,
and
they
are
committed
to
a
partnership
with
the
city
and
committed
to
trying
to
alleviate
the
concerns
that
we
heard
from
the
neighbors
that
generated
that
initial
complaint
in
the
surrounding
neighborhood.
J
And
so
I'm
grateful
to
the
pastor
and
his
team
for
stepping
up
not
only
with
working
with
us
but,
more
importantly,
what
you've
been
doing
already
filling
the
gap
for
residents
who
are
are
struggling
and
food
insecure
and
so
the
the
secondary
challenge
that
remains
is
now
the
cost
of
of
this
fee.
And
so
that's
what
we're
trying
to
to
see
if
we
can
alleviate
here
or
reduce
in
some
way
and
again,
we
suggested
a
couple
different
paths
forward.
J
I
just
wanted
to
see
if
I
see
in
the
early
consideration
form
staff's
response
there,
but
I
wanted
to
see
if,
if
staff
could
explain,
especially
so
pastor
almost
can
understand
what
what
does
it
look
like
for
moving
forward
right
for
for
the
short
term
and
then
and
in
the
long
term,.
K
Thanks
councilmember
chris
burton
director
of
planning
building
code
enforcement.
So
I
appreciate
the
question
and
certainly
council's
attention
to
the
issue.
You
know
we're
looking
for
a
number
of
different
opportunities
to
work
with
the
the
pastor
and
the
lighthouse
organization
to
ensure
that
we
don't
impact
their
operations.
We
know
that
this
is
an
important
service
that
they're
providing
to
the
community.
K
So
I
think,
as
we've
noted
previously
in
some
of
our
conversations,
there's
a
timeline
that's
laid
out
as
far
as
the
special
use
permit
requirements
in
the
notice
that
was
provided
to
lighthouse.
So
we
have
some
flexibility
to
work
around
that.
So,
as
we
move
forward
exploring
a
program
that
supports
the
offset
of
the
cost
for
the
staff
time
that
goes
into
that
special
use,
permit
process
and
we'll
ensure
that
we
don't
trip
up
on
those
timelines.
K
We'll
continue
to
move
that
back
so
that
we
can
get
that
application
in
as
we
approach
code
enforcement,
we're
always
working
at
it
from
a
stance
of
how
do
we
get
people
into
compliance
and
we're
not
there
just
simply
to
to
sort
of
shut
people
down
and
and
create
these
impacts
to
their
operations.
K
So
so
we'll
work
with
them
on
that
and
we'll
work
with
them
around
the
timeline
to
make
sure
that
that
there's
no
issue
there,
and
so,
as
that
program
comes
online,
it
will
require
some
council
approval,
we'll
we'll
sync
up
that
special
usb
application
timeline.
For
that.
J
J
But
the
dollar
amount
is
the
issue
that
could
rise
right
at
any
point
once
that,
once
the
fee
is
has
to
be
charged
and
that's
that
that
secondary
direction
given
and
that's
what
you're
saying
that
that
that
work
is
going
to
take
a
little
bit
more
time
of
actually
stack
time,
and
my
understanding
is-
is
that
it's
it's
also
something
that
needs
to
be
done.
J
K
Correct
yeah
so
we'll
we'll
look
at
creating
a
program
that
provides
a
cost
offset
whether
it's
through
you
know
other
city
funds
or
through
a
straight
waiver
that
applies
to
food
distribution,
businesses
or
operations
and
and
sort
of
bring
that
forward
for
approval,
and
so
there's
that
additional
context
we
have
to
put
to
that.
K
So
so
that's
the
intent,
but
we
certainly
don't
want
to
impact
the
operations
of
lighthouse
in
the
meantime
and
so
currently,
there's
in
the
notice
we
provided,
there
was
a
timeline
to
submit
a
complete
application
for
a
special
use
permit
for
late
april.
K
We
generally
consider
a
complete
application,
obviously
to
include
payment
of
fees.
So
what
we're
saying
is
we
can
push
that
date
back
until
the
program's
in
place,
so
there's
not
a
direct
impact
where
they
have
to
pay
the
money
and
we'll
reimburse
them
later
or
figure.
That
out
is
that
those
those
timelines
will
align.
J
Okay,
great
thank
you
so
safe,
safe
to
say
or
suffice
to
say,
they're
not
having
to
pay
anything
right
now
and
then,
through
the
work
that
we're
going
to
be
undertaking
and
what
we
can
consider
during
the
budget
and,
obviously
the
work.
Your
teams
will
be
doing
we're
going
to
be
working
to
reduce
or
even
potentially
wave
eliminate
that
fee
in
in
the
future.
J
But
but
that's
the
work
that
we
have
ahead,
and
so
I
appreciate
staff's
work
on
this,
and
I
will
this
does
need
to
go
to
full
council.
Is
that
correct.
K
J
Okay,
so
we
don't
need
to
refer
anything
now,
so
I
can
just
make
a
motion
then
to
approve
based
on
the
staff's
early
reconsideration
form.
Thank
you.
Second.
C
I
think
my
question
was
just
answered
chris,
for
I
want
to.
I
want
to
thank
the
pastor
and
white
house
ministries.
C
K
That's
great
council
member,
so
so
we're
going
to
take
a
look
at
how
many
applications
have
come
in
sort
of
recently
how
many
operations
we're
aware
of
so
we
can
right-size
that
program
around
food
distribution
uses,
and
certainly
you
know,
as
this
comes
forward
to
council,
we
can
have
a
conversation
if
that
needs
to
be
expanded,
to
consider
any
other
sort
of
covid
related
uses
that
we
think
are
appropriate
that
might
otherwise
fall
into
this
social
service
category
so
that
the
munich
code
defines
social
services,
sort
of
quite
broadly
and
sort
of
tends
to
capture
a
number
of
these
types
of
uses
that
are
providing.
K
C
And
you
mentioned
food
services,
obviously
there's
other
kinds
of
distributions
to
clothing
and
other
supplies
that
are
done
regularly
by
certain
organizations
to
our
vulnerable
community
to
homeless
encampments.
So
the
policy
would
potentially
apply
more
broadly
than
just
food
distribution.
K
Yeah
exactly
so,
that's
what
we're
going
to
take
a
little
bit
of
time
just
to
look
at
a
bit
more
deeply,
and
I
think
you
know
the
the
reason
that
we
certainly
support.
Moving
forward.
The
the
waiver
or
fee
offset
program
versus
kind
of
working
directly
with
the
emergency
order
is
that
I
think,
as
a
number
of
the
speakers
mentioned,
that
the
need
is,
is
great
and
will
be
ongoing,
probably
well
beyond
the
end
of
the
emergency
order.
So
we
think
it's
appropriate
to
sort
of
address
this
in
a
more
comprehensive
manner.
C
You
you've
been
perfect
at
segwaying
into
my
next
question,
because
my
very
next
question
was
about
the
language
in
this
memo
that
says
a
termination
of
local
state
of
emergency.
Clearly,
our
unhoused
crisis
is
not
I
mean,
while
it
potentially
has
been.
It
has
been
exacerbated
by
the
current
emergency
this
that
emergency
is
going
to
last
much
for
a
long
time
beyond.
Well,
we
hope
that
the
end
of
the
coven
crisis
will
come
to
an
end
sometime
soon,
but
that
we
know
that
the
house
unhoused
problem
isn't
going
to
be
resolved
as
quickly.
C
K
Yeah
absolutely
councilman,
I
think,
from
from
our
perspective.
Obviously
the
situation
came
around
as
a
result
of
a
complaint
into
code
enforcement,
and
I
think
you
know
we
do
recognize
some
of
the
challenges
with
surrounding
users
and
with
the
neighborhood,
and
you
know,
the
special
use
permit
process
is
designed
to
help
us
sort
of
figure
that
stuff
out
right
is
to
to
think
through
the
operations
and
understand
the
impacts
that
the
use
has,
and
so
so
you
know,
our
intent
is
to
sort
of
move
forward.
K
How
do
we
deal
with
that
special
use?
Permit
requirement
the
sort
of
cost
aspect.
We
think
that
the
the
process
is
actually
going
to
benefit
sort
of
these
users
and
benefit
the
surrounding
community
on
an
ongoing
basis,
and
so
that's
why
we
believe
that
the
second
recommendation
is
the
better
path
forward,
because
tying
it
to
the
emergency
order.
K
Just
makes
it
as
a
sort
of
regulatory
waiver
just
makes
it
a
fairly
limited
program
and
doesn't
give
us
that
opportunity
to
then
work
with
both
the
operator
and
the
local
community
to
find
a
solution.
C
Yeah,
I
appreciate
that
and
I
do
appreciate
the
general
point
that
the
overall
point,
which
is
that
we
want
to
accommodate
these
services,
but
we
don't
necessarily
we
still
that
should
have
some
ability
to
work
with
them
to
better
to
find
better
locations
or
more
appropriate
ways
to
run
to
operate
without
having
that
imposition
on
the
on
the
community.
So
it
makes
sense
that
we
would
still
have
a
process
that
must
be
followed,
even
if
we
find
a
way
to
waive
fees
for
certain
organizations
that
are
doing
this
good
work.
C
So
I
appreciate
that.
Thank
you
very
much.
E
E
No
worries
all
right,
so
we
have
a
motion
in
a
second
to
no
more
comments.
So
tony
arenas.
G
Yes,
paul
soto
from
the
horseshoe
I'm
kind
of
disappointed
that
there
was
a
moral
if
pastor
ramos,
if
you're
still
listening,
please
speak
with
me
first
before
you
accept
anything
from
the
city,
please
I
I
implore
you
just
please.
If
you
just
give
me
an
audience,
just
give
me
an
hour
of
your
time,
so
I
can
educate
you
on
what
it
is.
That's
been
happening
in
my
city.
What
has
been
happening
to
me
and
what
it
is
that
I've
been
doing
that
has
been
successful.
G
Just
please
grant
me
that
that
time
pastor!
Secondly,
is
that
I'm
I'm
disappointed
that
my
city
did
not
at
least
say
something
to
the
moral
issues
involved.
I
want
that
that
whole
fee
counsel.
G
You
know
what
I
apologize.
I
went
against
I'm
not
supposed
to
speak
on
this
because
it's
an
agenda,
I
apologize,
but
okay.
I
would
like
to
to
to
speak
to
councilman
provost,
and
this
is
a
formal
plea
as
as
me,
I'm
a
kind
of
like
at
large
member
of
guana,
the
guadalupe
washington
neighborhood
association,
and
I
inform
them.
I
give
them
the
benefit
of
my
attendance
here
at
these
meetings,
and
I
was
I
I
offered
to
ask
on
their
behalf
and
they
accepted.
G
If
you
would
please
come
to
the
next
quantum
meeting,
there's
been
three
shootings.
Multiple
people
have
been
killed,
I
mean
no.
Multiple
people
have
been
injured
and
and
gun
fights
inside
my
bottle
right
across
the
street
from
rocket
ship
school
in
elementary
school,
and
we
would
just
like
the
same
services
and
courtesy
that
any
other
city
would
any
other
part.
You
know,
in
fact,
just
like
maybe
a
mile
down
half
mile
down,
they
would
get
a
very
different
response
than
what
is
happening
in
our
body.
G
So
we
would
ask
that
you
and
chief
mata,
if
you
would
please
give
us
your
time
and
your
attention,
because
this
is
your
district
and
because
there
are
children,
all
people
that
contribute
to
the
maintenance
of
that
community
they're
suffering
right
now,
and
we
would
like
the
power
of
our
office,
because
you
were
in
our
district
that
we
would
ask
please,
for
the
power
of
your
office
to
come
and
help
us
solve
these
problems
of
violence
of
gun
violence.
In
our.
F
Yeah,
thank
you.
Thank
you,
paul
yeah
gwana.
I
love
that
name
of
that
community
center
and
that
you
know
I
was
telling
paul
and
I
was
realizing.
I
asked
him
to
define
the
horseshoe
and
he
did
for
me
and
actually
I
am
I'm
tessa
woodman
see
formerly
of
the
horseshoe
myself
I
lived
in
the
horseshoe.
I
we
lived
on
anyways
anyways,
part
of
the
horseshoe
in
west
north
willow
glen.
F
F
You
know
that
that's
what
you
know
with
the
issues
of
everywhere
that
I've
lived
because
I've
been
a
stay-at-home
mom
and
we
lived
on
one
salary,
and
so
we,
you
know,
lived
on
the
the
you
know
the
areas
that
are
polluting
like
in
north
willow
glen,
with
the
the
with
the
rail
car,
the
cal
train
and
and
then
you
know,
buying
our
for
our
home,
our
first
home
as
a
first-time
home,
owned
buyers
buying
it
on
stockton
avenue.
You
know
it's
all
you
know
living
across
from
a
bus
depot.
F
That's
not
good!
That's
how
you
get
multiple
sclerosis.
If
you
want
to
get
it,
you
can
get
it
like
me.
That's
where
you
live,
but
nobody
cares
about
that
and
nobody's
cared
about.
Oh,
I
lived
in
san
francisco,
but
that's
another
story,
but
you
know
just
living
on
a
main
road
and
all
the
pollution
and
the
context
of
of
what
we're
talking
about
today.
I
guess
not
to
talk
about
specific
things,
but
you
know
when
we're
making
the
changes
to
our
general
plan,
which
we're
doing
in
regards
to
you
know
food
distribution.
F
You
know
it
needs
to
be
fossil
fuel
free.
We
need
to
have
that
as
a
criteria
that
it
shouldn't
be
double
parking
and
idling
and
all
this
stuff
in
our
neighborhood.
I
wouldn't
like
that
in
my
neighborhood,
and
so
there
are
issues,
and
then
there
was
actually
there
was
a
food
production
that
was
going
to
be
on
london
and
they
wouldn't
allow
them
to
have
that
on
lenses
they
had
to
go
to
the
city.
You
know
they
had
to
get
like
a
permit
for
a
county
permit
and
we
lost
that
food
preparation,
food.
F
No,
it
wasn't
food
just
raw
food,
they
were
selling
food,
but
they
weren't
allowed
to
so
you
know
there
is
issues,
but
it
needs
to
be
fossil
fuel
free
and
we
need
to
promote
that.
E
E
D
About
the
study
session,
so
I
wanted
to
know
if
a
study
session
for
the
charter
review
has
been
set
yet
and
if
not,
when
could
we
expect
that
date
to
be
released
to.
E
D
We
do,
I
don't
have
it
off
the
top
of
my
head.
I
think
it's
the
last
two
meetings
in
march.
D
A
Yeah
vice
mayor,
this
is
lee
wilcox
assistant
city
manager,
we'll
be
releasing
a
memo
tomorrow.
I'm
sorry
next
week,
that'll
be
heard
by
the
rules
committee,
the
following
week:
kind
of
outlining
the
study
sessions
the
times
and
the
agendas
great.
D
Members
of
boards
and
commissions
have
been
directed
to
disclose
their
vaccination
status
to
various
people
in
in
the
departments.
I
really
think
this
should
be
handled
by
the
ada
compliance
officer.
There
should
be
a
high
degree
of
scrutiny
about
who's,
collecting
this
information
and
where
it's
being
stored,
I
did
get
an
email
back
from
the
city
attorney
and
she
is
is
looking
into
it.
D
B
Blair
all
right,
thank
you
boy,
beekman,
thanks
for
the
meeting
today
from
people
like
stacey
abrams
and
the
african-american
community,
I
feel
the
subject
of
voting
rights
can
become
a
more
unified,
understandable
process
for
all
sides
in
this
next
decade.
I
hope
we
can
work
through
our
current
problems
of
voting
practices
across
the
country
has
become
overly
defensive
and
reactionary.
B
I'm
also
wondering
how
people
from
low-income
neighborhoods
of
san
jose
are
interested
in
the
connections
of
dr
king's
work
of
towards
peace,
justice,
the
poor
people's
campaign
and
green
sustainability.
Can
we
talk
more
about
this
work
more
regularly
this
upcoming
year?
A
few
other
issues
to
note.
I
hope
that
you
can
really
take
care
of
the
the
urban
village
situation.
I
don't
think
they
should
be
allowed
a
free
pass
in
the
upcoming
years.
B
The
subsidy
plans
that
we're
now
working
towards
low-income
housing
are
scheduled
to
start
to
be
working
for
them
in
the
next
six
months
and
few
years.
I
think
we
should
really
question
that
and
if
you
are
going
to
do
that,
really
really
focus
that
it
should
be
on
extremely
low
and
very
low
income
for
the
future
of
these
urban
village
projects
and
not
turn
it
into
just
a
rich
man's
bonanza
subsidies
are
meant
to
help
people
who
need
it,
not
rich
investors.
B
Thank
you.
I
I'm
I'm
on
a
big
kick
about
public
meeting
items
at
this
time
and
how
the
process
can
be
a
bit
more
open.
The
consent
calendar
language
can
be
a
touch
more
clear.
B
You
know
I'm
willing
to
compromise
on
the
mayor's
ideas.
I
think
we
can
do
it
in
a
way
that
that
invites
a
a
clearness
and
better
practices
for
all
of
us.
I
think
we
feel
a
bit
short-changed
at
this
time.
Although
he's
trying
to
do
things,
good
luck,
how
we
can
work
on
this
issue
in
the
next
few
months
and,
to
conclude
you
know,
we've
got
a
ton
of
reimagined
health
and
human
services.
You
know
racial
equity.
E
All
right,
that's
closes
public
comments
and
open
forums.
So
that's
it
for
this
meeting
have
a
good
rest
of
your
day.
Everyone.