►
Description
City of San José, California
Joint meeting of Rules and Open Government / Committee of the Whole of September 1, 2021
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=890594&GUID=C457446E-62AD-4DD7-8A34-46ED65FB3827
A
A
A
A
A
A
A
B
I
really
do
appreciate
that.
Let's
see,
I
know
tony,
you
had
an
updated
agenda,
so
I
just
want
to
make
sure
I.
A
B
B
B
B
B
B
C
A
B
B
D
Hi
everybody
happy
wednesday,
happy
september
to
speak
to
three
items
on
this
agenda,
for
I
guess
the
14th
of
september,
one
is
sv,
rhea,
try
a
new
name
there,
that's
the
emergency
radio
service
for
first
responders.
D
You
know
I've
been
talking
about
this
for
a
few
weeks
now
and
with
the
hot
spot
issues
recently,
you
know.
Is
there
that
you've
created
a
really
good
bay
rick's
channel?
Is
there
a
first
responder
channel
for
everyday
public
in
the
times
of
emergency?
Just
to
mention
that
again
I
know
council
person
jones
was
working
on
this
a
few
years
ago.
I
hope
you
can
offer
the
public
some
updates
on
this
subject
about
what
else
is
there?
D
Oh,
there's
an
item
about
complete
streets
on
king
road,
so
I
I
just
thought
it
would
be
important
to
mention,
as
always,
the
the
importance
of
a
open
public
policy
with
technology
that
will
be
a
part
of
this
project.
As
always,
you
know
it.
It
can
be
so
easy
for
a
person
to
be
able
to
just
call
yourselves
up
and
ask
you
know
what
kind
of
technology
is
this
complete
streets
project?
Having
can
you
give
me
a
rundown,
can
you
give
me
what
will
be
its
data
collection,
its
purposes?
D
Can
I
what?
How
can
I
retrieve
that
data?
You
know
these.
There
is
a
way
to
do
this
now,
so
it
can
be
very
clear
and
easy.
You
don't
have
to
make
this
difficult
anymore.
I
hope
we
don't
and
it
just
takes
effort
to
learn
how
to
do
that.
We
can
one
day
I
hope
we
do
20
seconds
left,
there's
a
item
about
extremely
low
income
issues,
you're
working
on
and
helping
with
one
of
your
items.
D
A
E
Yes,
good
afternoon,
council,
my
concern
is
about
there's
a
lot
of
items
that
I
think
the
city
as
a
whole,
and
people
like
blair
and
myself
would
benefit
from
some
of
the
discussions
on
items
that
appear
on
the
consent,
calendar,
there's
transportation
issues
with
respect
to
that,
and
let
me
tell
you
something
about
the
transportation
issues,
what
what
they're
doing
with
the
grant?
Writing
it's
like,
say
for
instance,
or
there's
like
five
people
that
get
killed
by
cars
on
the
east
side:
okay,
they're!
E
Extracting
that
information
they're,
inserting
it
in
their
grants,
they're
getting
grants
approved,
but
nothing
ever
goes
to
the
to
really
improve
the
conditions
that
cause
those
deaths
in
the
first
place.
So
there's
a
there's,
a
there's,
an
abuse
of
the
of
the
grant
allocations,
and
so
and
and
what
what
I
find
very
offensive
is
the
fact
that
they're
using
the
poor,
you
see
the
poor
there's
a
lot
of
money
in
poverty.
E
There
is
a
lot
of
money
in
poverty
and
and
also
like,
for
example,
the
destination
home.
I
think
we
would
benefit
from
knowing
what
is
the
process
as
a
public
they're
going
to
be
receiving
500
and
something
a
thousand
dollars.
I
I
think
I
I
I
would
like
to
know
from
this
organization.
That's
getting
a
lot
of
this
money.
This
is
city,
money,
okay,
what
is
what
is
the
problem?
What
is
the
impediment
specifically?
E
You
know
what
are
you
going
to
do
that
is
going
to
expedite
these
processes?
I
think
that
as
a
city
that
we
would
benefit
from
those
conversations,
so
there
would
be
a
a
a
more
clear
understanding
of
what's
happening,
but
when
these
items
get
placed
on
the
consent
calendar,
it's
it's
impossible
to
do
that
because
it
gets
stacked
with
like
10
different
items.
So
that's
just
something
that
I
wanted
to
point
out
that
that
is
a
concern
of
mine.
B
Thank
you.
The
person
with
the
number
ending
in
4963.
F
F
F
B
Martha
sorry
for
interrupting
for
a
second
which
item
are
you
referencing
on
the
agenda.
F
F
Zero
of
the
council
members
have
responded
to
the
city
clerk
zero.
Then
I
get
another
email
from
a
district
office
that
says
we
just
got
the
paperwork
a
few
days
ago.
It's
not
our
fault,
so
I'm
really
not
concerned
with
whose
fault
it
is.
I
would
just
like
somebody
to
take
action
so
that
the
housing
commission
doesn't
have
to
cancel
another
retreat.
Please
put
it
on
the
ad
sheet
on
the
14th.
Thank
you.
A
Hi
this
is
charlotte
city
clerk,
since
we
don't
have
an
agenda
for
september
7th
any
commission
appointments
that
come
in.
I
did
get
one
just
before
this
meeting
for
hcdc.
It
can
be
added
to
the
ad
sheet
on
rules
of
the
8th
to
add
to
the
14th.
B
B
B
D
All
right,
thank
you.
Just
a
clarification
is
that
was
there
a
meeting
planned
for
this
date,
or
was
it
just
a
meeting
date
schedule?
That's
now
being
cancelled?
Was
there
was
there
a
specific
meeting
that
was
planned?
That
was
cancelled.
D
B
All
right
next
is
paul.
Go
ahead,
paul.
E
Yes,
I
was
what
I
was
looking
for
was
like
the
title:
if,
if
there
was,
if
there
was
any
kind
of
like
something,
because
the
the
the
more
detailed
that
the
documents
are,
that
facilitates
my
ability
to
to
research
and
do
background
information
so
that
when
I'm
centering
my
position
with
respect
to
the
the
study
session,
or
even
just
the
topic
itself,
that
I'm
I'm
more
informed
and
there's
there's
time,
because
I
I
mean
between
all
of
these
memos
in
between
all
of
the
all
of
the
memos
and
then
and
then
reading.
E
You
know
additional
information
when
you're
doing
research,
it
branches
off
into
all
these
different
areas,
and
so
that
that's
a
lot
of
time
and
it's
a
lot
of
energy
and
so
the
the
more
detailed
the
the
information
can
be
prior
to
the
meetings.
Then
I
could
do
my
information
and
compare
that
to
what
it
is.
E
That's
being
said
at
the
at
the
meeting
and
and
then
it
then
as
a
as
a
citizen,
I
can
bring
that
information
and
maybe
possibly
okay
well
either
challenge
some
other
some
of
the
information
or
affirm
it
or
or
or
just
completely
discredit
it,
because
it's
just
not
it's
just
not
true,
it's
false,
and
so
that
that
that's
my
role,
that's
what
I
do
as
a
citizen.
That's
that's!
E
What
we're
supposed
to
do
is
we're
supposed
to
constantly
check
government
and
to
ensure
that
government
is
working
and
it
is
a
government
for
the
people
and
by
the
people
you
know
for
their
benefit
and
that
they
are
doing
their
due
diligence
to
protect
the
citizens
from
things
that
they
can
forecast
if
they're,
if
they're
looking
properly
and
so
us
working
together,
we
bring
that
alignment
and
then
from
that
alignment
we
go
forward.
Thank
you.
B
A
D
Hi
blair
beekman
here,
hopefully
my
my
zoom-
isn't
going
to
cut
out
on
me
here:
you're,
offering
a
flag
raising
for
mexican
independence
coming
up
around
the
15th.
Thank
you.
Thank
you
very
much.
I
felt
this
would
be
an
appropriate
time
to
mention
in
the
name
of
mexican
independence.
D
We
are
in
this
country
we're
dealing
with
issues
of
gun,
violence
that
have
been
pretty
shocking
over
the
past
several
years.
If
this
can
really
be
traced
back
to
about
2007,
you
know
the
u.s
started
something
of
what
became
the
fast
and
furious
program,
and
you
know
ever
since
that
time.
D
You
know
we
have
had
serious
gun,
violence
and
gun
issues
within
this
country
and
within
mexico.
You
remember
how
bad
that
violence
was
in
mexico
back
in
2007.
It
just
simply
blossomed.
Then,
in
this
country,
because
america
wanted
to
kind
of
control
the
the
north
american
market
on
gun
sales
and
youth,
they
did
not
want
russians
involved.
They
didn't
want
venezuelans
involved,
so
we
are
just
locked
into
this
situation
of
just
massive
amount
of
guns
in
this
country.
D
You
know
we're
dealing
since
the
events
of
the
vta
to
really
re-examine
what
is
our
local
bureaucracy
and
how
it
works
and
how
we
can
kind
of
look
into
the
future
and
foresee
events
and
and
try
to
work
from
person
to
person
to
give
a
heart
feel
feelings.
You
know
how
to
address
those
events.
It's
this
work
together
at
the
local
level.
We
can
really
begin
to
address
state
violence
and
extremism
at
the
state
and
international
level
and
we're
doing
that.
That's
what
reimagine
and
equity
are
about.
E
Paul
yes,
this
is
I'm
hoping
that
we
could
possibly
use
that
date,
the
raising
of
the
flag
to
possibly
start
centering,
some
factual
truth
about
california,
history
and
and
mexican
history.
You
know
as
a
as
a
as
a
whole.
That's
why
it
was
so
critically
important
that
I
did
what
I
had
to
do
in
order
to
bring
up
the
conversations.
Do
all
the
lobbying
that
I
could
do
and
then
successfully
rally
the
community
to
have
that
fallon
statute
removed.
E
That
was
that
was
critically
critically
important
is
because
you,
if
you
ask
any
if
you
ask
any
immigrant
here
in
san
jose,
they
do
not
know
that
that
statue
is
a
representation
of
what
put
the
idea
in
his
head.
E
That
he's
an
immigrant
you
see
because
that's
where
the
line
came
from
the
scar
in
san
diego
you
see,
and
and
if
the,
if
the
mexican
community,
we
had
a
very
very
short-lived
independence
for
300
years,
we
had
experienced
the
oppression
of
both
church
and
state
catholics,
the
catholicism
and
through
via
the
mission
system
and
the
spanish
government.
So
in
1821
they
were
excised,
get
the
church
out
and
get
the
government
out,
and
so
we
only
had
an
independence
for
20
something
odd
years.
E
We
were
an
infant
country
where
we
were
just
trying
to
get
our
bearings
back
from
that
300
years
of
oppression
and
the
united
states
saw
that
weakness.
They
saw
that
vulnerability
and
they
came
in
for
the
kill,
literally
literally
the
kill,
and
so
that
is
what
installed
reinstalled
the
the
catholic
church
and
that's
how
come
they
had
so
much
power
here
in
san
jose,
because
peter
burnett
was
not
a
catholic
peter
burnett
converted
and
in
exchange
for
that
conversion.
E
He
granted
the
catholics
santa
clara
university
in
1851
and
that's
why
he's
buried
in
mission
cemetery,
so
I'm
hoping
that
we
can
at
least
center
some
of
these.
Thank
you
paul.
A
B
B
D
All
right,
thank
you,
laura
beekman!
Here
you
be
this.
This
item
is
about
doing
some
work
with
hud,
who
is
doing
some
work
with
yourselves
and
they've,
been
doing
some
interesting
work
with
yourselves
for
the
past
few
years.
D
Now
about
the
future
of
funding
issues
and
such
and
what's
kind
of
connected
to
the
last
item
in
in
you
know,
the
valley
waters
doing
some
really
important
work
with
the
federal
government
at
this
time
that
I
know
it's
irking
yourselves
a
little
but
like
with
this
item,
you
know
we
just
have
to
realize.
D
You
know
that
we're
dealing
with
a
subsidy
process
from
the
state
and
federal
level
that
it's
massive
at
this
time
and
they
they've
started
a
whole
new
economy
out
of
it
basically
and
they're
just
waiting
to
get
really
get
this
stuff
going.
You
know
with
a
whole
bunch
of
different
funding
plans
and
cycles
and
patterns
to
bring
to
local
communities,
and
you
just
have
to
learn
how
to
speak,
that
language,
to
the
public
more.
D
D
Good
question:
I
know
that
this
may
be
a
part
of
funding
issues
that
hud
has
been
doing
for
the
past
few
years
in
san
jose,
and
I
tried
to
tie
it
to
the
subsidy
purpose,
but
I
think
it'll
be
best
to
stop
here.
So
thanks.
E
Yes,
I
believe
we're
at
a
time
in
our
history,
where
we've
never
been
able
to
talk
about
racism
and
the
impacts
that
not
only
redlining
had
on
the
deprivation
of
generational
wealth,
but
you
have
neighborhoods
right
now
that
are
called
quote
unquote:
resource
rich
and
the
only
way
they
got
that
way
isn't
because
these
people
are
of
superior
intellect
or
they're,
more
studious
or
they're,
more
they're,
more
hard
working
or
they're,
more
intelligent
over
generations,
and
over
time
there
was
an
impact
when
you
did
this
to
a
people,
okay,
and
what
I
believe
that
the
housing
departments
are
doing.
E
B
Paul
sorry
for
interrupting,
can
you
tell
me
how
it's
tied
to
the
agenda
item
well.
E
Because
it's
redlining
these
are
houses.
These
are.
This
is
a
housing
issue.
Okay,
because
it
says
the
neighborhood
services
education
committee,
work
plan
for
september
9,
2021
meeting
below
and
what
they're
doing
is
it
says
that
a
consolidated
annual
performance
evaluation
report,
housing
so
they're
going
to
remove
that
they?
What
what
the
question
is
in
this
document
is
to
not
include
that.
E
E
What
it
is
that
has
really
actually
happened
from
the
government's
perspective
with
respect
to
housing
and
hud,
because
that
was
one
of
the
major
ways
in
which
the
cities
try
to
rectify,
but
without
going,
they
tried
to.
They
tried
to
rectify
the
issue
without
talking
about
the
problem,
and
we
can't
we
can't
do
that
any
longer.
As
a
society,
we
must
be
able
to
sit
down
and
talk
about
race.
E
We
must
sit
down
and
say:
hey,
you
know
what,
because
of
that,
what
equity
means
is
not
giving
certain
neighborhoods
that
have
been
the
beneficiaries
of
redlining
and
equity
housing
equity
I
mean,
and
and
so
what
that
means
is
you're
not
necessarily
going
to
get
what
you
think
you
have
coming,
because
it
needs
to
go
to
these
generations
of
people
which
are
the
offspring
of
the
braceros.
G
Thank
you
vice
mayor.
I
would.
I
would
like
to
see
the
work
plans
more
accessible
to
people
who
might
have
such
disabilities
as
aphasia
or
maybe
dealing
with
a
stroke,
recovery,
stroke
survivor
where
the
I
don't
know
it
might
be
a
lot
of
work.
Maybe
it's
outside
the
school,
the
school,
sorry
outside
the
city's
parameters,
but
if
there's
a
link
or
some
way,
there's
some
technology
that
takes
the
text
and
makes
it
audible
without
having
somebody
to
read
it.
G
It's
you
know
text-to-speech
and
it
highlights
either
the
each
phrase
or
each
sentence
or
each
word,
and
I
think
that
might
make
it
easier
for
people
who
are
most
affected
by
these
work
plans
and
it
also
can
read
in
different
languages.
I
do
believe,
there's
a
chance
to
read
between
like
to
take
the
english
converted
into.
I
was
trying
to
do
with
vietnamese
last
night
and
it's
it's
not
a
direct
translation,
but
mr
vice
mayor,
if
I
do
come
up
with
something,
do
you
mind
if
I
email
you
that
information.
H
Thank
you
well,
thank
you,
or
vice
mayor
for
really
handling
the
issue
as
a
really
great
teacher
to
say
how
does
it
address
and
then
letting
people
you
know
address
that
issue?
That's
a
beautiful
versus
you
know
the
way
mayor,
licardo's
just
been
cutting
us
off,
and
I
really
appreciate
that
vice
mayor.
H
Thank
you,
and
so
I
guess
you
know
in
terms
of
our
work
plan
and-
and
it
seems
like
we're
dealing
with
housing,
and
that
has
been
an
issue
and
my
neighbor
is
writing
to
us
as
we're
having
to
fight
this
hotel
and
and
how
you
know.
Even
when
I
ask
the
city-
and
I
say,
can
we
get
back
to
the
original
general
plan,
because
when
I
bought
my
home,
we
bought
our
home
the
general
plan
for
this.
H
The
west
side
of
stockton
was
to
go
residential
up
until
2020
when
we
changed
our
2040
plan
and
everything
was
no
jobs
for
housing
conversion
and
we
hear
it
all
the
time
and
even
the
planners
said
we
would
not
support
it
going
back
to
residential.
We
would
not
support
it
going
back
to
residential,
and
the
irony
of
that
is
when
we're
dealing
you
know
we're
in
a
district
one
we're
at
district
one
like
last
night's
sighting
we're.
You
know.
B
What,
yes,
I
get
to
practice,
how
how
smooth
I
am
on
this?
Okay,
can
you
tie
your
comments
to
the
the
fact
that
we're
dropping
the
fy
2020
2021
consolidate
annual
performance
evaluation
report,
which
is,
is
actually
the
topic.
H
Well
well,
well,
we're
talking
about
housing
and
and
how
housing
is
part
of
this
plan,
and
so
what
I'm
saying
is
that
the
housing,
the
real
the
real
bottleneck
in
terms
of
our
housing
and
and
is
to
you
know,
is
to
go
for
the
residential.
It's
to
not
to
be
everything
about
commercial,
and
that
is
the
work.
The
work
plan
has
to
change
away
from
commercial
development
to
housing
and-
and
we
see
even
in
our
own
neighborhood
right
now,
there's
all
this
retail
you're
requiring
the
developers
to
build
they're
empty.
B
Thank
you,
tessa
bring
it
back
to
the
committee
move
approval.
E
B
All
right,
it's
been
modern.
Second,
it
tony
marinus.
B
I'm
sorry,
council
member
go
ahead.
C
That's
okay.
I
I
just
wanted
to
give
a
little
bit
of
an
explanation
on
that
item
that
mr
soto
was
referring
to
in
the
neighborhood
services
committee
work
plan,
and
this
is
the
consolidated
annual
performance
evaluation
report
commonly
referred
to
as
capper
and
our
department
staff
has
asked
for
a
delay.
C
The
the
teams
has
had
some
challenges
with
completing
the
report,
because
the
united
states,
department
of
housing
and
urban
development
has
has
delayed
the
process,
and
so
we,
the
the
the
committee,
will
not
hear
the
the
item.
It'll
go
directly
to
council,
but
the
residents,
our
public,
will
still
have
an
opportunity
to
comment
on
this
report,
and
so
we
look
forward
to
having
that
comment
directly
at
the
city
council,
and
that
was
it
really.
Thank
you.
A
B
All
right,
so
it's
moved
and
seconded
tony.
B
D
All
right,
thank
you
for
everything
to
quickly
practice
good
response
skills.
Thank
you
for
your
your
question
before
in
the
previous
item.
As
council
person
arenas
just
offered
2020,
it
was
a
unique
year
for
for
hud
reporting
and
what
they
were
trying
to
work
towards
and-
and
I
guess
this
budget
report,
so
I
felt
it.
D
I
was
in
the
space
that
I
could
speak
about
the
unique
subsidy
issue
that
we're
in
at
this
time
and
how
to
address
that
as
well,
because
the
hud
plans
of
2020
were
pretty
unique.
I
I
understand
so
sorry
for
the
trouble
to
go
on
to
this
item.
This
is
talking
here
an
add-on
about
procurement
issues
for
the
smart
cities
committee,
and
I
just
wanted
to
offer.
D
You
know
it
was
an
incredible
smart
cities
meeting
I
felt
a
few
weeks
ago,
and
you
talked
about
the
issues
of
procurement
and
what
wasn't
mentioned
was
just
kind
of
a
friendly,
familiar
sense
of
how
open
public
policies
you
know
to
be
practicing
that
and
to
be
sharing
that
with
the
people
you're
talking
with
and
and
to
be
con,
you
know
offering
the
ideals
of
good
democratic
practices.
D
Civil
protections,
civil
rights,
you
know
within
the
procurement
process,
I
think
it
can
do
some
really
interesting
work,
and
it's
something
that
that
really,
you
know
you
know,
there's
a
a
lot
of
variations
that
the
technology
ordinance
stuff
can
offer,
and
I
just
want
to
remind
yourselves
of
that-
also
that
it
was
spoken
at
that
meeting,
that
you
know
it
seems
that
we'll
be
working
on
ai
stuff.
This
fall
new
ai
stuff
and
it
will
be
new
to
yourselves
and
it's
a
little
cold
and
how
to
work
with
it.
D
E
Yes,
and
and
from
this
meeting
months
ago,
it
was
from
this
particular
meeting
where
it
was
announced,
an
official
that
400
000
people
are
going
to
be
coming
to
this
city,
okay,
and
that
that
youngster,
that
kid
justin
yang,
I
believe
is,
was
his
name
when
he
gave
that
presentation
on
transportation
and
alma
aradando
gave
her
perspective
and
aruba's
perspective.
E
He
also
confirmed
it
it
it.
It
came
from,
he
said:
40
of
san
jose's
population
will
be
coming
here,
and
so
there's
there's
confirmations
there,
and
so
what
I'm
seeing
is
at
that
meeting,
that
blair
was
referencing
this
ai
technology,
it's
actually
being
used
for
behavior
modification.
It's
it's!
It's
you're
having
a
system
that
has
the
computing
power
to
very,
very,
very
quickly,
take
in
data
that
it's
collecting
from
its
citizens,
us
and
then
it's
it's.
E
It's
filtering
it
in
through
this
ai
technology
and
the
eye
technology
doesn't
have
a
soul,
it's
it's
not
a
human
being,
so
it
can't
detect
racism.
It
can't
detect.
You
can
get
all
of
the
all
of
the
data
that
you
want,
but
you
can't
put
it
inside
of
a
machine
that
doesn't
have
a
soul
to
talk
about
something
that
injured
a
soul
and
think
you're
going
to
get
an
outcome.
E
That's
going
to
be
conducive
to
that
person
that
has
the
soul
from
data
that
was
extracted
from
something
that
doesn't
okay,
and
so
we
really
have
to
get
really
clear
on
that.
You
know
because
that
that
that
conversation
was
actually
it
was
scary,
because
I
understood
what
it
what
was
being
said
to
me:
okay
and
so
you're,
going
to
start
using
more
and
more
technologies
in
order
to
get
like
these
avatars
you,
it's
a
it's
a
program
that
projects
onto
the
person.
Okay.
E
B
H
Yes,
thank
you,
smart
cities.
Well
I
mean
there's
a
smart
city
that
is
becoming
resilient.
That's
one
part
of
it,
you
know,
but
we
could
talk
about
the
data
because
I
guess
you're
talking
when
you're
talking
about
smart
cities,
it's
you're
talking
about
like
smart
homes
and
how
things
work
electronically,
or
you
know
you
know
something
to
do
with
that,
and
so
what
I
you
know
the
issue.
The
data
that
has
been
collected
in
my
neighborhood
is
about
the
pollution
that
my
neighborhood
is
highly
impacted
with
pollution
and
the
the
bay
area.
H
Air
quality
management
district
has
documented
it
that
and
then
there's
also
breathe.
California,
which
is
the
you
know,
an
alternative
to
the
lung
association
and
don't
forget.
The
lung
association
has
given
us
an
f
in
our
air
quality,
but
in
our
particular
neighborhood,
based
on
the
the
geographics
of
having
the
mountain.
That's
why
the
east
side
is
so
bad
because
all
the
pollution
just
goes
up
against
those
mountains,
but
our
area
is
where
it
starts
in
san
jose
and
we
are
one
of
five
neighborhoods
in
the
bay
area.
A
H
Well,
no,
don't
you
don't
wait?
What
I'm
saying
is
that
you
know
we
have
the
data
and
yet
we're
not
responding.
That's
what
I'm
talking
about!
That's
what
what
paul
was
saying.
You
know
we
can
have
data,
but
what
are
we
doing
with
the
data?
And
that's
where
I'm
asking
for
a
with
reparations
to
our
neighborhood?
We
need
mitigations.
That's
why
even
housing
with
the
you
know,
35
80!
You
know
cars
would
not.
You
know,
because
we
haven't
upgraded
our
car,
our
car
relationship.
H
We
need
to
ban
cars
completely
to
really
deal
with
our
pollution
issues,
and
so
that's
why
we're
going
for
and
eat
grow
learn
to
grow
food
so
that
we
can
have
fossil
fuel
free
jobs.
That
is
our
smart
city
that
is
responding
to
the
data
of
our
pollution.
You
know
we
need
to
start
looking
at
the
data
and
responding
to
it
and
it's
the
same
thing
with
climate
crisis.
You
know
the
data
is
in
and
we're
not
responding.
A
G
Thank
you
again
vice
mayor
I'd
like
to
bring
up
about-
and
I
hope
this
is
included
in
the
work
plan.
The
3-1-1
app
has
a
lot
of
issues
as
far
as
like
usability
and
I've
brought
it
up
with
several
staff
members.
At
a
couple
of
the
you
know,
a
couple
sections
that
I've
lived
in
one
one
and
six
and
they're
very
kind.
Always
those
staff
are
out,
they
all
deserve
a
hand.
They
deserve
a
lot
of
credit,
and
I
want
them
to
know
that.
G
I
know
I
can
be
a
pain
in
the
caboosta
sometimes,
but
to
have
320
the
3-1-1.
For
instance,
I
tried
to
take
care
of
an
issue
and
it
wasn't
the
issue
that
was
really
important.
It
was
as
much
trying
to
say
the
communication
to
express
the
issue
was
trying
to
get
a
phone
number
reattached
on
a
on
a
sign
that
was
for
a
development
and
it
took
18
months
of
calling
and
calling
and
calling-
and
I
kept
saying
this
is
not
about
the
work
about
the
it's
about
the
lack
of
communication
and
there's
somewhere.
G
It's
broken,
I'm
just
using
this.
As
a
specific
example,
same
thing
with
potholes
the
same
thing
with
the
usability
and
the
one
part,
that's
really
a
problem
with
the
311
app
is
it
asks
you
to
click
on
a
particular
pin,
because
not
every
pothole
has
an
exact
address,
and
you
know
when
you're
out
there
seeing
a
pothole
you're
not
going
to
stop,
take
a
picture.
Look
at
the
new.
G
You
know
after
that,
you'll
get
hit
by
a
car
and
you
won't
be
worried
about
the
potholes
anymore,
but
I
really
think
it's
a
chance,
but
a
3-1-1
app
and
the
whole
concept
behind
it
is
your
backbone
for
your
smart
city.
I
think
you
really
want
to
take
a
look
at
it
and
I
would
no
offense,
but
some
people
need
to
be
held
accountable
as
to
the
quality
of
that
app
and
having
someone
who's
developed
several
apps.
I
can
tell
you
that
I
know
I've
always
been
held
accountable
for
it.
Thank
you.
B
Second,
all
right:
it's
been
moved
and
seconded
tony
marinus.
B
E
E
E
E
In
that
way
and
I'll
give
you
the
example
when
I
try
to
go
down
there
to
city
hall
yesterday,
I
was
told
that
I
couldn't
enter,
because
I
had
my
bike
the
last
time
that
I
was
there
when
the
city
hall
opened
up
for
the
first
time,
and
I
was
there,
I
was
there
with
my
bike
too,
and
so
this
is
this,
isn't
some
kind
of
like
new
policy
and
there's
times
before
that
I
did,
and
I
told
him
the
reason
why
I
said
dude
I've
had
my
rim
stolen
man,
I'm
poor,
I
don't
have
money
to
replace
it,
so
I
was
refused
entry
yesterday,
you
know
into
the
building,
and
so
there's
there's
this
I'm
not
really
like.
E
B
C
Hi
good
afternoon
nice
to
see
you
vice
mayor,
okay,
guys
I'm
here,
let's
talk
about
columbus
park.
I
think
you
probably
already
received
the
email
of
the
phrased
map.
What
they're
going
to
be
doing
at
heading
in
spring
council
member
corrales
has
heard
me
talk
with
him
many
many
times
and
the
thing
that's
not
happening,
and
I
know
it's
not
going
to
happen.
Is
you
all
aren't
going
to
be
doing
anything?
There's
nothing,
that's
being
done
now
for
housing
or
motels
for
the
unhoused
at
columbus.
C
What
apple
has
done
at
component
and
the
apple
site?
Wonderful
everybody
got
into
the
motels.
I've
been
there
every
day.
It's
a
great
movement.
You
guys
you
have
to
do
something.
This
is
going
to
be
a
tragedy
like
nothing's
happened
in
san
jose
they
screwed
it
up
on
south
hall.
People
ended
up
back
out
on
the
street
because
they
didn't
do
it
right.
This
is
the
truth
and
if
you
don't
start
finding
land
or
buying
empty
buildings
or
empty
motels,
it's
really
going
to
be
tragedy.
C
Waiting
to
happen
and
if
you
haven't
received
the
email
from
housing.
Please
ask
them
because
it's
very
important
that
you
all
know
what
goes
up
is
going
on
with
this
movement,
but
I
am
very
scared.
It
keeps
me
up
at
night
because
I
know
it's
not
going
to
work
out,
because
this
is
what
happens.
You
offer
them
to
go
into
a
shelter.
They
don't
want
to
go
in
those
horrible
places.
The
shelters
we
all
know
they're
bad.
C
B
Thank
you,
gail
brian.
G
Well,
I
hate
to
bring
everybody
down,
so
I'm
not
going
to.
I
want
to
thank
all
of
you
for
your
service.
It
has
not
been
easy.
This
pandemic
has
ripped
people
to
shreds.
G
You
have
tried
with
everything
you
have
to
try
to
keep
it
going
and
if
you
didn't
do
the
there
would
have
been
a
lot
more
people
in
the
streets.
If
you
didn't
do
what
you
did
and
even
if
you
look
at
the
pandemics
during
the
the
1918
1970,
you
know
go
back
in
history.
G
This
is
the
first
time
governments,
local
state
and
federal,
even
under
president
trump,
actually
cared
for
people,
usually
in
every
other
pandemic.
I
will
give
you
some
books
to
read.
If
you
want
to
understand,
you
know:
justinian's
flee
the
black
death
good,
and
these
are
not
that
long
ago
about
two
thousand
years
ago,
was
merely
a
blink
of
an
eye.
For
you
know
a
year,
a
planet
that's
been
around
for
4.5
billion
years
and
the
planet
and
viruses
and
the
satellites
and
that's
out,
but
you
know
the
moons,
are
they
don't
care
about
us?
G
G
G
H
Thank
you
yes.
Well,
I
guess
the
issue
in
our
neighborhood
has
been
the
re,
the
the
change
of
the
general
plan
without
notification,
and
even
I
have
a
neighbor
who
is
john
wolfram,
whose
mother
grandmother
vera
potter
fought
for
saving
the
historic
hoover
middle
school,
and
you
know,
she's
a
historic
woman
in
our
neighborhood
and
john
wolfram,
who
worked
for
the
city
of
san
jose.
He
was
like
the
head
planner
and
anyway,
he's
very
upset
about
what's
happening
in
our
community,
doesn't
want
a
five-story
hotel
doesn't
want
24
hours.
H
You
know
you
know
thing
going
on
in
our
neighborhood
and
in
our
historic
residential
neighborhood,
where
we've
already
had
so
much
input
from
the
so
much
negative
impacts
to
be
across
the
street
from
commercial
as,
as
everybody
knows,
royal
coach
tours
destroyed
our
community
with
not
only
their
diesel
emissions
but
harassing
our
neighborhood
with
noise,
because
we
tried
to
deal
with
the
pollution
okay.
So
this
is
the
history
of
how
corporations
destroy
you
know.
H
You
know
that
fight
back
for
any
environmental
controls,
they
they
say
no
and
they
destroy
your
neighborhood
and
we
have
no
noise
controls
so
anyway.
Getting
to
the
point
is
that
we
we
were
not
notified.
Our
neighborhood
was
not
notified
of
the
change
to
the
general
plan
when
they
came
over
with
a
drone
and
they
noticed
that
there
was
a
commercial
building
and
they
said
this
has
got
to
be
residential.
I
mean
this
has
got
to
stay
commercial,
no
housing,
absolutely
no
housing,
and
it's
going
to
be
you
know.
H
The
ideal
thing
is
the
hotel
and
that's
what
happened
to
our
neighbor
without
notification,
and
so
what
we're
demanding
for
our
city
is
to
put
put
it
back
to
residential.
That's
what
we're
saying-
and
there
were
many
plans
in
in
the
community
for
it
to
become
townhouses,
and
the
thing
is
is
that
it
could
be
that
and
then,
of
course,
we
would
like
what
we
need
now
is
a
companion
garden
in
any
housing
that
we
build.
We.
D
Hi,
thank
you
glad
we've
been
here,
you
know
this
is
really
a
time
that
we
have
to
kind
of
be
reviewing
our
bureaucracy
and
how
it
works
in
santa
clara
county.
I
think
that's
what
we'll
be
we'll
be
trying
to
do
with
the
events
of
the
vta.
D
Thank
you
for
the
efforts
of
supervisor,
submitting
and
and
mayor
licardo
who
really
tried
to
address
the
sheriff
issue.
I
think
that
can
help
a
lot
and
it's
really
needed,
but
it
is
more
than
that
it
is.
I
mean
what
I
was
trying
to
say
earlier.
You
know
we're
really
at
a
time
of
you
know:
person-to-person
heart-to-heart
communication
with
each
other.
It's
not
just
technology
and
law
enforcement
that
can
handle
these
issues.
I
think
you're
understanding
that
which
is
nice.
D
It's
great,
it's
awesome
and
I
just
I
just
hope
we
learn
how
to
really
do
that.
Well,
so,
good
luck,
and-
and
that's
why
I
keep
talking
about-
let's
bring
on
open
democracy,
this
fall
and-
and
you
know,
with
good
ideas
and
you're,
offering
honest
ideas
with
you
know:
affordable
housing,
siding
issues
explaining
it.
You
know,
I
hope
my
ideas
about
you
know.
Learning
to
talk
more
about
mixed
income
can
be
safe
and
helpful.
D
These
are
all
things
I
hope
we
can
talk
about.
This
fall
and
really
work
toward
our
good,
open,
democratic
practices.
The
reimagined
task
force
will
be
doing
well
and
it's
a
unique
process
in
the
bay
area,
we'll
be
helping
everybody
a
lot.
Thank
you
for
this.
I
hope
it
can
run
a
year
and
not
just
six
months.
It
can
help.
You
know
upcoming
covid
economic
task
force
and
the
like
very
much.
I
think
we're
building
a
feature
of
idealism
and
and
hope
based
on
reimagine
inequity.