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A
A
Can
we
get
a
roll
call?
Please.
A
C
B
Mary
Louise,
Romero
here
and
I
believe
Annie
and
Monica
are
excuse
and
Chris
will
be
joining
us
shortly.
Correct.
A
B
A
Thank
you,
Valeria
I'll,
move
on
to
the
approval
of
the
minutes.
We
have
two
to
approve
versus
March
7th
2023.
A
Got
a
second
any
other
discussion.
Seeing
none
can
we
get
a
roll
call
Valeria
absolutely.
B
Councilwoman
yes,
Emily
cottenbach,
yes,
Marcella
Diaz,
yes,
Bruce
finger!
Yes
and
Mary
Louise
Romero!
Yes,
you've
got
to
prove
minutes.
A
D
A
Second
right,
we
have
a
motion,
a
second
any
other
discussion.
Seeing
none
can
we
get
a
roll
call.
B
Absolutely
councilwoman,
yes,
Marcella
Diaz,
yes,
Bruce
finger.
A
Appointment
excellent.
Thank
you.
Moving
on
to
Communications
from
staff,
oh
I
skip
One
Communications
from
Metro
chairs.
A
I,
don't
have
anything
I'm,
just
feeling
really
sick,
still
trying
to
sell
I'll,
probably
just
not
say
much
today,
as
least
as
possible,
so
I'm
gonna
pass
it
over
to
staff
and
and
Valeria.
If
there's
anything
they
want
to
share
with
us.
B
For
me,
none
at
this
time,
just
as
you
know,
sending
gentle
reminders,
as
we
are
working
on
identifying
recommendations,
then
making
sure
we're
streamlining
them
into
the
work
plan.
I
I
do
have
that
framework
for
the
one
that
was
discussed
the
last
the
last
meeting,
so
I
will
be
updating
that
in
the
days
to
come,
for
for
all
of
you
to
make
revisions
as
you
deem
necessary.
A
I
think
Julie
was
on.
She
had
a
family,
a
death
in
the
family,
so
she
had
to
to
leave
us
so
sending
her
prayers.
C
A
I'm
gonna
move
on
then
to
presentations.
We
have
our
long-awaited
guest
Dr
Sanchez
that
we'll
be
presenting
on
the
community
engagement
survey,
update
and
he's
from
the
center
for
social
policy.
They
get
that
right,
sometimes
I
think
people
mix
you
all
up
with
the
center
for
civic
policy,
which
is
two
very
different
things,
but
Maybe
I'm
Wrong.
Maybe
that's
just
me.
F
Absolutely
it's
great
to
see
everyone
I
hope
everyone's
well.
I
hope
you
start
to
feel
better.
Counselor
I
apologize
I
was
not
able
to
be
with
you
at
your
last
meeting.
I
was
sick
with
strep
throat
and
although
I
was
feeling
good
enough
to
to
come
on
and
present,
my
voice
was
completely
shot,
so
I
would
have
had
to
try
to
type
out
my
responses
and
show
you
some
slides,
but
the
upside
of
not
making
that
meeting
making
this
one
is.
F
We've
made
some
progress
on
the
Open
Access
survey,
so
there's
actually
a
little
bit
of
preliminary
summary
evidence
to
provide
to
you
as
well
as
kind
of
what
the
next
steps
are
in
the
research
process,
which
I
think
will
help
you
all
start
to
map
out.
You
know
when
those
exciting
recommendations
in
our
timeline
might
might
be
ready
for
all
the
data
to
be
summarized
to
help
with
that
process.
Of
really
writing
up
with
the
policy
recommendations
are
in
light
of
the
findings,
so
just
to
give
you
some
some
context.
F
If
folks
don't
recall
what
the
overall
idea
was
with
the
rest
of
data
collection.
Remember.
F
Time
I
presented
to
you,
it
was
the
random
sample
that
my
team
at
bsp
research
conducted
of
300
Santa
Fe
residents,
randomly
drawn
to
be
representative
of
the
overall
cities,
population
Etc,
and
you
might
recall
that
we
were
intending
to
augment
that
survey
with
results
from
an
Open
Access
survey
of
harder
reach
populations
right
the
goal
being
people
we
know
who
would
be
less
likely
to
participate
in
a
survey
that
was
randomly
selected.
C
C
C
C
F
Raffle
a
50
gift
card
and
we're
doing
one
every
10
complete,
so
I
just
issued
out
three
more
randomly
selected.
Respondents
from
that
survey
we'll
be
getting
a
50
gift
card
in
in
the
mail
within
the
next
few
days,
or
so
so,
just
to
remind
folks
of
what
the
process
looks
like
probably
most
important
for
us
to
think
about
is:
are
we
reaching
our
goal
of
reaching
the
harder
to
reach
segments
of
the
population
through
the
Open
Access
survey?
F
F
Of
making
sure
that
we
augment
the
random
survey
with
some
harder
to
re-segments
of
the
population,
just
some
data
points
to
back
that
up
of
those
48
completed
interviews,
26
of
those
have
been
done
in
Spanish.
That's
53
of
that
40
38,
we're
Spanish-speaking.
Respondents
who
took
the
survey
completely
in
Spanish
27
was
at
58
of
that
48
were
were
self-identified
immigrants,
so
I
think
through
this
process,
and
thank
you
folks,
on
on
this
meeting
for
for
helping
to
distribute
the
survey
to
the
right
segments
of
the
population.
F
We've
definitely
I
think
already
reached
what
the
Immigrant
segment
of
the
population
looked
like
from
that
300
randomly
drawn.
So
that's
definitely
going
to
augment
and
and
really
bolster
that
segment
of
the
Santa
Fe
Community.
We
had
10
of
those
48
respondents
with
residents
under
the
age
of
30..
Folks
might
recall
that
was
a
weak
spot
and
and
the
randomly
drawn
sample,
which
makes
sense
just
given
the
city
of
Santa
fe's.
F
Overall
demographics,
18
of
the
48
make
less
than
twenty
thousand
dollars
annually
in
overall
household
income,
so
we're
definitely
reaching
our
goal
of
augmenting
what
we
got
with
the
random
sample,
with
a
lower
income
segment
of
the
population
and
this
Open
Access
venue
and
probably
most
importantly,
the
seven
of
the
four
48
respondents
indicated
that
they've
had
prior
experiences
with
the
criminal
justice
system.
Four,
who
have
spent
time
in
jail
or
prison
themselves
and
three
who
have
been
on
court,
ordered
probation.
F
As
long
as
you
all
tell
me
to
collecting
more
data
from
from
the
Open
Access
survey,
we'll
merge
that
with
responses
from
the
random
sample
and
produce
a
set
of
results
for
you,
have
you
seen
what
the
overall
Top
Line
results?
Look
like
right.
The
percentage
of
the
overall
population
across
every
single
question
in
the
survey
will
give
you
essentially
three
columns
the
total
percentage
that
has
both
the
merged,
Open,
Access
and
randomly
drawn
sample,
as
well
as
columns
and
percentages
for
every
single
question.
For.
F
Survey
as
well
as
the
random,
so
you
can
directly
compare
what
those
results
look
like,
as
well
as
just
having
the
overall
percentage.
So
I
think
this
has
been
successful,
I'm
very
happy
with
where
we
are
at
this
point,
and
hopefully,
as
we
collect
more
data
through
this
component,
if
we
reach
100
right,
then
we
could
say
at
the
end
of
the
day
we
reached
400
City
residents
through
the
survey
alone
right
so
I
think
that
might
be
a
nice
Target.
F
If
we
want
to
think
about
keeping
this
open
until
we
hopefully
reach
100
completes
I'll.
Give
you
a
little
bit
of
an
idea
of
what
the
preliminary
findings
look
like
again
as
we
we
think
about.
48
completes
in
the
Open
Access
format,
so
just
to
give
you
an
idea
of
how
they
compare
I
think
is
the
best
way
to
think
about
those
48
completes
with
the
randomly
drawn
sample.
So.
F
Of
the
performance
of
the
random
sample,
there's
a
lot
of
commonality
across
these
two
groups
of
Santa
Fe
residents
on
a
number
of
different
issues
within
the
survey.
For
example,
almost
identifical
satisfaction
levels
with
living
in
Santa,
Fe
I
think
they
were
within
two
percentage
points
across
both
groups
of
residents
and
addressing
affordable
housing
is
the
number
one
issue
for
both
groups.
When
we
ask
them,
what
do
you
want?
F
F
Area
we
asked
folks
right,
you
know
we
read
them
different
approaches
to
kind
of
Rehabilitation
Focus
programs.
We
also
ask
people:
do
you
think
that
folks,
who
have
committed
a
crime
are
able
to
be
rehabilitated
across
all
those
items,
only
slightly
higher
support
among
hunger-reach
communities,
but
again
almost
identical
and
overwhelming
support?
If
you
remember
the
presentation
that
I
get
off
the
random
sample,
however,.
F
An
important
distinction
there
are
some
differences
in
attitudes
and
experiences
across
both
groups.
That
again
I
think
speak
to
the
value
of
adding
the
Open
Access
survey
to
our
overall
research
design.
I'll
just
give
you
a
few
examples
of
some
of
those
important
areas
where
we
do
see
some
distinction.
For
example,
the
harder
to
reach
segments
of
the
population
are.
C
F
More
concerned
with
protecting
immigrants,
rights
43
among
this
population,
which
was
actually
the
highest
concern
when
we
ask
folks
just
to
identify
what
they
think
are
the
most
important
issues
for
the
City
of
Santa
Fe
to
address.
Protecting
immigrants
was
the
number
one
issue
for
the
100
Reef
segment
of
the
population,
where
I
don't
believe
it
was
even
in
the
top
ten
for
the
random
sample,
and
that
makes
sense.
Given
the
demographics
remember,
over
half
of
the
hard
to
reach
segment
of
the
survey
so
far
have
been
immigrants
themselves.
F
So
it
makes
sense
intuitively
that
they're
going
to
be
more
concerned
with
protecting
immigrants,
rights
given
their
underlying
demographic
and
their
identities,
and
the
hard
to
read
segment
of
the
population
is
much
less
concerned
about
homelessness.
On
that
item,
I
think
12
percent
among
the
harder
reach
population
said
that
was
one
of
their
top
issues.
They
wanted
the
city
of
Santa
Fe
to
address
compared
to
31
among
the
random
sample,
so
we
do
see
some
distinction
across
both
groups
when
we
ask
them
what's
their
highest
priority.
F
If
you
want
to
think
about
it
that
way
in
terms
of
public
policy
response.
Furthermore,
over
half
of
53
percent
of
the
harder
to
reach
segment
of
the
sample
that
48
complete
so
far
indicate
that
people
who
live
in
Santa
Fe
do
not
have
enough
influence
on
decisions
regarding
Public
Safety,
which
is
significantly
higher
than
the
random
sample.
So.
F
This
auditory
segment
of
the
community
more
likely
to
be
Spanish-speaking
more
likely
to
be
immigrant,
more
likely
to
be
people
who
have
had
Direct
interactions
with
the
criminal
justice
system
themselves
do
not
feel
like
they
have
enough
agency
or
input
into
the
policy
making
process.
Specifically
when
we
think
about
public.
C
F
We
welcome
input
on
anything
you
really
want
us
to
track
and
the
qualitative
data
that's
going
to
be
a
mixture
of
focus
groups
and
in-depth
personal
interviews.
We
recognize
that
some
individuals
might
not
feel
comfortable.
Speaking
with
our
team
in
a
focus
group
setting
may
want
to
do
that
more
one-on-one,
so
anybody
that
we
come
across
who
says
you
know
what
I'm
willing
to
talk
with
you
folks,
but
I
want
to
do
it
individually.
Our
team
will
meet
them
where
they
are
if
they
want
to
do
that
over
Zoom.
F
Awesome
we
can
do
that
if
they
want
to
meet
in
person.
We're
definitely
willing
to
do
that.
Thank
you,
Marcelo
from
somos
for
volunteering.
Your
office
space
in
Santa
pay
for
our
team
to
be
able
to
access
to
complete
that
aspect
of
data
collection.
Our
goal
is
to
touch
at
least
40
Santa
Fe
residents
before
the
end
of
May,
through
either
focus
groups
or
interviews
among
that
Target
of
40.
F
We
want
to
do
at
least
one
focus
group
exclusively
in
Spanish
and
no
less
than
two
focus
groups
with
teenagers
or
young
adults
under
the
age
of
18..
Remember
that
was
an
overall
Target
of
our
research
design
is
to
make
sure
we
reach
young
people,
and
so
we
think
we
can
do
that
with
at
least
two
focus
groups,
specifically
targeting
that
age
group
we're
working
closely
with
members
of
the
community,
some
of
you
on
this
Zoom
today.
F
So
thank
you
in
advance
for
your
help
in
connecting
us
with
potential
participants,
and
our
goal
is
obviously
to
make
sure
our
Recruitment
and
the
qualitative
data
focuses
on
segments
of
the
community
who
are
not
likely
to
see
participate
in
the
survey.
So
again,
it's
similar
to
The
Open
Access
survey
of
filling
any
gaps
that
we
feel
we
had
with
the
random
sample
survey.
With
this
deeper
dive
into
some
of
the
same
themes
that
we've
covered.
F
Where
we're
at
in
this
segment
of
the
process,
thanks
to
all
of
you
who
have
been
helpful
along
the
way,
obviously,
we've
got
some
work
to
do
ahead
of
us,
but
I
feel
very,
very
well
where
we
are
in
our
timeline
at
this
point,
so
I
will
pause
there
see
if
there's
any
questions,
any
follow-up
comments,
anything
you
need
our
team
to
to
to
Chase
and
provide
to
you.
If
you
have
additional
questions.
A
C
B
F
Of
a
difference
with
how
we
think
about
dealing
with
focus
groups
or
interviews
is
I'll
write
up
the
script
for
our
moderators.
That
will
be
conducting
the
interviews
that
touch
on
those
broad
themes,
but
give
them
a
lot
of
leeway
to
chase
different
directions
that
come
up
in
a
focus
group.
Conversation
right.
So
if,
if
that
gives
you
an
idea,
we'll
have
like
here's
our
set
of
of
questions,
we
want
to
make
sure
get
asked.
F
But
these
things,
if
you've
ever
participated
in
the
focus
group
or
watch
them
where
I
can
quickly
turn
into
Direction,
and
we
might
spend
30
minutes
on
a
topic
that
was
only
very
lightly
touched
in
the
survey
that
that
might
be
the
one
thing
that
deviates
a
little
bit
from
the
survey.
That's
I
guess
fully
scripted
from
the
onset.
A
Great
and
I
think
in
terms
of
those
like
details,
I'm
trying
to
recall
exactly
what
director
Ochoa
was
wanting
to
understand.
A
nuanced
question
and
I
need
to
refer
back
to
my
notes
about
it.
But
things
like
trying
to
get
to
the
kind
of
more
core
details
with
groups
is
that
kind
of
what
you're
planning
on
doing
with
the
qualitative.
F
F
F
In
other
cities
or
other
states,
so
that
you
have,
you
know,
plans
to
potentially
Implement
in
Santa
Fe.
Those
are
things
that
we
can
put
in
front
of
focus
group
responders
to
get
much
more
specific
reactions
to
those
particular
programs,
and
we
really
try
to
dig
deeper
into
why.
Why
do
people
feel
the
way
that
they
do
about
a
particular
issue?
For
example,
I'll
give
you
one
case
point
right.
F
We
saw
in
the
open
source
survey
that
a
larger
segment
of
that
population,
which
is
going
to
be
very
similar
to
who
we
target
for
the
qualitative
data,
don't
feel
comfortable,
contacting
police
or
Public
Safety
when
they
actually
need
them
right.
We
know
that,
from
on
the
survey
right,
a
segment
of
the
population
doesn't
feel
comfortable.
What
we
want
to
drill
drill,
much
deeper
into
with
the
qualitative
data.
F
A
Counselor
that
that
makes
sense
or
answers
your
questions.
Yes,
yes,
thank
you
so
much
I'm
opening
it
up
to
the
rest
of
the
task
force
members.
If
you
had
any
other
questions
for
Dr
santis
about
process,
I,
don't
know
if
you're
saying
any
of
the
groups,
yet
that
you'd
be
doing
that
or
we
waiting
on
that.
F
Just
just
starting
that
conversation
as
we
speak
in
the
last
couple
of
days
is
starting
to
line
up.
You
know
what
what
potential
respondents
do
we
have
in
essence,
I
think
if
folks
have
suggestions
or
have
contacts
with
folks
that
they
really
think
we
should
reach
out
to
send
those
my
way
and
my
team
will
run
with
scheduling
those
run
with
all
the
logistics
of
that,
mostly
just
making
sure
that
we
cover
the
right
groups
that
you
all
want
cover.
Okay,.
A
That's
great,
let's
see,
Marcella
has
her
hand
up.
G
This
is
a
question
I'm
about
to
send
you
again
in
one
chart:
Gabriel
Gabriel,
Dr
Sanchez
and
the
contact
information
for
the.
G
Somos
for
chain
breaker
for
the
for
Mary,
Louise's,
restorative
justice
program
and
I-
wanted
to
ask
about
that
because
she
can
she
can
you
can
your
people
can
meet
with
talk
to
her
directly
on
setting
that
up,
but
her
folks
are
under
18.
you're,
good
I.
Just
don't
remember
you
had
some
issues
with
setting
up
for
youth,
but
you're
all
good
now
and
that
shouldn't
be
a
problem
to
do
the
under
18
focus
groups.
F
I
got
one
more
form:
I've
got
to
get
approved
from
UNM
IRB
to
to
do
the
data
collection
with
under
18
population
I
tagged
them
today.
They
said,
there's
no
reason
why
I
can't
move
forward
with
data
collection.
I
just
got
to
get
this
one
form
signed
off
on
before
we
we
close
out
everything
but
I've
got
I've,
got
a
clearance
to
be
able
to
move
forward
with
that.
G
For
some
reason-
and
you
can
certainly
share
this
Mary
Louise
Mary
Louise-
even
with
the
open
link,
because
she
was
going
to
run
work
with
students
just
for
the
open
link
part
and
it
didn't
work
because
of
some
firewall
I.
Don't
know
if
that's
the
right
word,
but
some
barrier
that
the
Santa
Fe
Public
School
internet
system
has
and
so
I'm
wondering
if
your
team
can
work
with
her
to
figure
that
out.
F
Yeah
absolutely
missile
metal.
If
you
want
to
drop
me
an
email
and-
and
let
me
know
what
the
challenge
or
the
the
issue
is-
I'll
get
with
I'm
I'm,
not
an
expert
in
the
it
mechanics
at
the
line.
The
scene
stuff.
So
I'll
have
to
talk
to
my
team
to
figure
out
how
we
might
be
able
to
figure
out
a
path
to
do
that.
But.
F
Marcela
might
remember
this
from
another
project
that
we've
done
together,
where
we
ran
into
some
of
those
issues.
We
literally
went
old
school
and
printed
out.
A
series
of
surveys
had
folks
complete
those,
and
then
my
team
entered
them
into
the
data.
So
that's
our
last
case
scenario.
That's
something
that
we
could
definitely
entertain
doing.
G
G
F
F
Focus
group
any
of
the
qualitative
data
right,
because
that
obviously
takes
more
time
from
people's
lives
than
to
fill
out
a
quick
15-minute
survey.
So
we
do
incentivize
that
at
a
higher
rate.
H
Thank
you,
Dr
Sanchez
we
have,
we
did
have
a
problem
logging
in,
but
that's
because
the
Santa
Fe
Public
Schools
has
their
own
stuff
going
on.
But
honestly
I
need
to
tell
the
team
here
that
I
probably
can't
get
the
same
students
to
attempt
to
do
it,
but
I
can
get
two
focus
groups
for
sure,
I'm
thinking
that
I
can
get
one
at
Capital
and
another
one
at
Santa,
Fe,
High
and
so
I
can
connect
with
you
directly
Dr
Sanchez.
So
we
can
talk
about
that.
F
Awesome
excellent
yeah
and
we
actually
have
two
members
of
our
research
team
that
are
from
Santa
Fe
that'll,
be
Fielding.
These
groups
I'll
make
sure
if
I
could
get
one.
That's
in
a
level
one
of
those
high
schools
at
each
setting
I
know
some
of
those
nuances
held
so
I'll
after
I
speak
with
you,
Mr
rometto
I'll
figure
out
the
logistics
online
to
see
who's.
The
best
person
to
fill
those
two
groups
appreciate
your
help.
B
Beautiful,
thank
you.
Mary
Louise,
for
all
that
effort
and
Chris
did
I
see
you
wave
your
hand.
Did
you
have
a
question
just
wanted
to
confirm
yeah.
I
Well,
my
question
was:
you
know:
I
I
had
presented
youth
works
as
a
group
of
kids
that
you
might
be
able
to
talk
to,
and
these
are
probably
teenagers
between
17
and
19,
so
I'm
getting
up
there
to
20,
and
you
know
they've
had
issues
not
some
with
the
law,
some
with
just
trying
to
get
through
life
and
when
I've
spoken
to
them
they
have
a
harder
time,
I
think
with
older
people
than
they
do
with
maybe
people
their
own
age,
and
you
might
have
already
touched
on
this.
I
But
do
you
have?
Are
you
taking
that
into
consideration?
Do
you
have
younger
younger
facilitators
that
can
talk
to
some
of
these
kids.
F
F
Right,
like
I'm,
not
as
young
as
I
once
was
so
it'll,
be
PhD
students
of
mine,
two
of
which
are
from
Santa
Fe.
That
are,
you,
know,
one's
probably
23,
the
other
one,
maybe
22.
F
I
can
put
folks
in
front
of
focus
groups
that
share
some
of
the
same
lived
experiences,
whether
that's
being
from
Santa
Fe,
graduating
from
similar
high
schools,
whatever
it
might
be.
That
obviously
opens
up
a
better
conversation,
because
people
have
that
immediate
connection
and
feel
a
little
bit
more
comfortable.
Having
conversations
so
we've
definitely
thought
about
that
counselor
and
and
every
time
we
can.
F
G
Yeah
I'm
putting
everything
I
don't
have
to
but
I'm
putting
the
rest
of
our
contact
information
for
focus
groups
in
one
dock
for
for
Gabe,
but
if
he
already
has
youth
works
that
way,
you
can
just
go
down
the
list.
I
won't
add
youth
works.
That's
why
I
was
asking
like
who
specifically
should
he
be
contacting,
but
it
sounds
like
he
already
has
it.
A
Whoever
has
that
list
is
there
groups,
you
think,
were
still
missing.
Maybe.
G
If
anyone
here
has
another
group
of
hard
to
reach,
it
sounds
like
we
need
some
more
like
formally
incarcerated
folks
who
are
going
through
the
system.
E
Actually,
just
a
comment,
so
under
drug
policy
lines,
we're
reaching
out,
we've
been
having
conversations
with
the
Mountain
Center,
so
those
folks
I
think
will
be
really.
You
know
across
a
lot
of
different
issue
areas.
E
Obviously
it's
a
harm
reduction
program,
so
these
are
people
who
either
currently
are
formerly
used.
Drugs
and
the
other
group
I
was
going
to
reach
out
to
Andreas
Mercado
about
the
aru
and
then
mijo,
because
they
were
interested
and
I
think
some
of
them
might
have
done
this
survey,
but
I
think
having
some
either
one-on-one
focus
groups
or
I
mean
one-on-one
interviews
or
a
focus
group
might
be
really
great
and
that's
another
group.
That's
definitely
hard
to
read
so
I
just
wanted
to
share
those.
F
That
she's
connected
to
that
might
be
helpful
and
once
she
highlighted
that
she's
worked
with
in
the
past
as
youth
works,
so
I
think
that
would
be
a
relatively
easy.
You
know
focus
group
or
set
of
interviews
for
us
to
be
able
to
complete.
E
Oh
and
Gabe
wasn't
there
communities
and
schools
communities.
F
I
Not
a
question
but
I
just
wanted
to
know
what
the
group
said
about
like
I
sent
him
Boys
and
Girls
Club,
but
I'm
not
sure
those
are
necessarily
at
risk,
kids
and
then
same
with
the
mayor's
youth
advisory.
It.
You
know
they're
an
important
group,
but
I
don't
see
them
as
as
kids
that
are
really
at
risk
or
in
Jeopardy.
So
I
don't
know
if
you
know
how
the
the
group
feels
about
including
those
two.
B
I
would
just
want
to
say,
I
mean
different
communities,
but
I
mean
boys
and
girls
club.
For
me,
as
a
kid
where
I
was
growing
up
in
the
violence
I
was
experiencing
was
a
lifeline,
so
there
might
be
some
children,
some
youth
there,
that
you
know
is
experiencing
some
challenges
or
at
risk
that
they
might
not
know
about
I,
don't
know
just
putting
it
out
there.
A
The
mayor's
youth
advisory
board
members
I,
don't
know
whose
Aunt
serves
on
that
right
now,
but
it
tends
to
be
I
achieving
students
that
have
time
to
serve
on
a
board.
So
I
don't
know
if
that's
I'm,
not
sure
you
all
tell
me,
because
I
feel
like
there's
some
other
populations
and
groups
that
we
might
be
thinking
about
and
also
other
ethnic
groups
that
we
haven't.
A
H
I,
just
wanna
I
just
want
to
say
that
the
last
time
that
I
talked
about
this
I
kind
of
got
shot
down
for
it.
But
I
just
want
to
say
this
out
loud
that
when
you
choose
the
people
that
are
on
those
committees,
when
you
choose
the
people
that
go
to
the
youth,
Summits
they're,
always
picking
the
kids
that
are
high,
Achievers
and
I
feel
as
though
we're
talking
about
the
people's
voices
that
don't
really
get
heard,
and
so
I
just
want
to
say
out
loud.
H
H
F
That
reports
to
me
at
UNM
is
a
Native
American
budget
and
policy
Institute
their
their
director
Dr
carmilla
roybals
from
okay,
Wingate
and
told
me.
She
has
two
teenage
two
teenage
sons
that
live
in
Santa
Fe
that
are
both
in
her
words:
juvenile
delinquents.
That's
her
words,
not
mine.
So
she
told
me
if
if
it
was
value,
they
could
definitely
convene
a
small
focus
group
of
their
network
of
Native
American
Youth.
That's
one
group
I'd
say
that
I
just
checked
the
open
source
data,
even
the
open
source
data.
F
F
H
Nancy
Davis
is
in
charge
for
the
Santa
Fe
Public
Schools
of
that
community
and
I
know
that
she
would
completely
be
on
board
to
get
a
group
of
students,
but
she's
very
engaged
with
serving
those
students
and
I
know
that
she
could
help
us.
A
Excellent
I
think
that's
a
yeah
she's
a
good
resource
than
she
is
also
a
graduate
of
Santa
Fe
hi
Emily
did
you
have
another
Edition
Emily
and
just
know
that
when
you're
adding
messages
here
on
the
chat,
nobody
can
see
him
in
the
public.
So
someone
should
read
them
if
you
want
to
read
them
out
loud.
Oh.
B
Yeah
Renee
I've
been
taking
notes
of
these
Emily's
and
or
youth
members
with
connection
to
at-risk
communities
yeah.
B
D
I
just
have
a
quick
question:
the
the
doctor's
looking
for
focus
groups
to
to
survey.
So
why
would
you
exclude
kids
from
the
boys
and
girls
club,
even
though
they
may,
you
know
be
a
little
smarter,
whatever
they
still
may
have
had
parental
issues
or
issues
with
law
enforcement
or.
C
D
A
C
A
Which
is
made
up
of
not
very
many
members
so
to
to
me
I
think
we
need
to
look
at
like
boys
and
girls
club
there's
a
lot
of
Youth
right
there,
a
good,
focused
area
to
so
yeah
that
that's
what
Mary
Louise
was
saying
and
I.
Think
Marcelo
was
saying
too
so.
I.
B
Oh
I
love
it
Chris
through
the
I.
Don't
know
much
about
these
programs
but
I
on
a
separate
project.
There's
also
true,
kids,
twirl,
towels
and
well.
Towels
is
not
relevant
in
youth
heart
line,
so
I'll
I'll
look
up
and
see
if
youth
heart
line
is
out
of
Santa
Fe,
because
these
organizations
also
work
with
affected
children.
So
youth
I
should
say.
Let
me
see
and
I'll
I'll
share
that
with
you
Dr
Sanchez,
if
it's
relevant.
A
The
one
thing
I'm
thinking
of
is
but
I
need
to
think
about
this
more
about.
Maybe
a
group
being
organized
around
the
black
community
in
Santa,
Fe
and
sunshine
did
say
she
would
want
to
be
part
of
that
once
we
get
to
that
point
as
well
as
potentially
rashan,
so
I
don't
know.
If
you
you
all
think
that
that
would
be
an
Avenue
to
explore.
A
I,
don't
know
about
an
organization
because
there's
a
lot
of
different
groups,
including
like
young
folks,
that
they
work
with
there's
youth
programming.
That
I
mean
I,
guess
for
lack
of
a
better
group.
You
could
put
Earthsea
Black
Arts
Alliance
for
now:
seed
Earth
seed,
Black,
Arts,
Alliance.
F
And
if
I
know,
Sunshine
pretty
well,
I
can
reach
out
to
her
for
ideas
as
well.
A
Actually,
that
would
be
great
I
can
reach
out
to
Rashaan
about
it,
but
Sunshine
was
part
of
our
group
as
a
facilitator
when
we
first
started
and
she
said
that
she
would
be
willing
to
once
we
get
to
those
that
point
in
this
Community
engagement
piece
that
you'd
be
interested
to.
Potentially,
you
know
bring
folks
together
that
live
in
Santa
Fe.
A
G
C
G
A
B
B
A
Well,
I'm
excited
about
this
piece
of
the
work
and
you
know
we
have
a
lot
of
good
information
and
I.
Think
there'll
be
some
overlap
of
things
that
we've
talked
about
in
our
learning
sessions,
and
you
know
what
community
members
are
saying
so.
F
Excellent
I
appreciate
everybody's
help,
thanks
in
advance
for
any
contacts
or
leads.
If
we
run
into
any
important
substantive
questions,
I'll
definitely
reach
out
before
we
start
engaging
in
data
collection,
excellent.
A
A
We
had
planned
to
do
working
group
breakouts,
so
I,
don't
know
if
you
have
that
capacity
by
Lydia,
but
I'm
just
curious.
If
folks
I
just
need
to
send
an
email
to
my
group,
so
we
won't
be
meeting
except
Bruce
I.
All
I
think
I
need
from
you
is
to
send
remind
me
the
dates
that
you
said
you
were
going
to
have
you're
at
a
commission,
and
maybe
you
could
just
text
me
those
or
email
me
if
you
want
well.
D
Friday
I'm
having
my
left
shoulder
replaced.
That's.
D
But
you
know
I
could
I,
could
you
know
I
could
meet
on
Zoom?
You
know
if
you're
in
a
group
in
person
I
can
still
be
there
in
Zoom
but
guesstimate
about
a
month.
It'll.
Take
me
to
where
I
can
drive
drive
on
my
own.
D
D
A
So
are
you
all,
did
the
other
working
group
want
to
meet
in
breakouts
you
all
meeting
and
breakouts?
Are
you
already
met
yeah.
B
I've
got
the
breakout
room
set
up,
so
if
y'all,
if
the
Community
engagement
and
alternative
approaches
wants
to
meet,
it's
ready
to
go
in
whenever
you're
ready.
A
Yeah,
let's
talk
about
that,
do
we
want
to
be
in
person
or
just
do
what
we
need
to
do
with
you
know
all
the
other
kind
of
other
exterior
stuff
that's
happening
around
us
and.
G
Thank
you,
I'm
trying
to
follow
the
protocol.
I,
it's
very
hard.
G
G
If
we
don't
have
other
presentations,
we
would
like
to
do
two
of
our
next
meetings
with
presentations
around
including
starting
May
1st
presentations
on
alternative
or
diversion
programs,
basically,
alternative
diversion
programs
that
may
or
may
not
include
restorative
justice
components
and
so
Anna
who's
actually
on
our
as
she
was
on
the
call,
but
I
guess
she
left
she's
putting
together
she's
helping
us
put
together
that
presentation
from
somos
with
different
folks
from
different
parts
of
the
country
that
do
community
courts
Etc.
So
we
wanted
to
start
that
on
May,
2nd.
G
If
there's
nothing
else,
we
may
want
to
do
a
second
one.
The
meeting
after
so
we
want
to
use
May
to
help
educate
Us
in
the
community,
and
we
want
to
bring
in
an
interpreter
so
that
we
can
bring
in
people
from
somos
who
or
anybody
from
the
community.
We
actually
want
more
people
than
us
just
to
hear
that
information.
G
And
if
that's
the
case,
it's
going
to
be
people
from
around
the
country.
So
if
we're
doing
it
in
person,
it
would
have
to
be
over
Zoom,
but
we
would
have
to
have
the
zoom
component
and
then
we
would
have
to
have
an
interpreter
which
we
can.
We
can
get
from
somos
to
participate
and
we
would
need
the
interpretation
feature
turned
on
on
the
zoom
and
all
of
that
good
stuff.
C
A
What
do
you
call
it?
The
actual
recommendations
and
the
document
and
working
on
that?
We
can
definitely
refine
that
together,
and
that
would
be
the
like
ultimate
goal
to
get
that
to
the
council,
but
having
regular
meetings
like
this,
they
end
at
the
end
of
May.
Unless
we
extend
our
time.
A
I
Yeah
I
think
we
can
I
think
I.
Think
Gabe
also
said
that
he
felt
like
he
had
until
July
1st
to
finish
his
work
so
either
we
need
to
try
to
extend
another
month
at
least
or
we
all
decide
to
do.
Continue
our
work,
kinda
just
compiling
everything
and
then
give
a
final
report
sometime
at
the
end
of
July
I,
don't
know
Renee
what
you
feel
about
that.
A
A
A
That
would
come
out
of
those,
because
that's
what
most
of
our
listening
sessions
are
about
like
learning
and
then
it
relates
obviously
back
to
the
community
engagement.
So
we
can
have
presentations.
I
just
want
to
make
sure
that
whatever
we're
needing
to
do
in
the
meantime
is
Valeria
reaches
out
to
us
consistently
about
putting
things
in
documents
as
we
move
along
that
we're
just
we're
not
putting
everything
in
at
the
last
minute.
A
B
I
How
about
we
just
continued
on
our
regular
schedule
and
if
we
have
to
kind
of
do
more
meetings
in
June
that
we
all
kind
of
informally
agree
that
you
know
it
might
take
more
more
work
than
just
what's
what's
part
of
the
regular
meeting
list.
B
E
I'm,
okay
meeting
it
I
mean
I
mean
a
part
of
you
know,
just
culminating
all
of
a
couple
of
years,
so
they
think
it
needs
to
be
intentional
and
we
need
to
set
enough
time
aside,
but
at
the
same
time
we
also
need
to
make
sure
we
have
all
the
feedback
from
the
community
and
I
know
that
started
later
than
we
had
hoped
it
would,
and
so
it's
really
hard
to
put
stuff
in
that
document
until
we've
seen
it
in
its
entirety.
E
So
that's
really
hard
I
mean
we
can
say
we're
just
gonna
take
what
we
have
and
hopefully
in
the
focus
groups
and
then,
if
any,
you
know
I,
don't
know,
Marcelli
I
think
it
just
feels
like
it
needs
to
be
packaged
in
a
way
that
we
can
compare
it
to
our
learning
sessions
in
order
to
make
those
recommendations.
I
G
Would
be
interesting
if
we
have
four
more
meetings.
We
have
five
more
meetings
before
the
end
of
June
and
we
agreed
at
the
last
meeting
that
we
were
going
to
present
at
some
point
in
July,
so
I.
The
reason
why
I
don't
feel
so
time
crunched
is
because
I
feel
like
we
have
at
least
one
meeting
in
June
to
refine
our
recommendations,
but
maybe
I'm,
just
not
understanding.
G
I
Yeah
I
think,
but
by
the
resolution,
our
our
meetings
go
till
the
end
of
June,
so
I
think
we
can
do
that
and
then
formulate.
You
know
our
recommendations
to
present
sometime.
It
could
be
the
last
meeting
in
July,
but
we
would
have
to
meet
kind
of
outside
outside
of
this
committee
kind
of
boundaries,
I
guess
or
per
the
resolution,
just
on
our
own,
whether
it's
in
person
or
Zoom
or
whatever,
but
to
kind
of
finalize
those
that
last
presentation.
G
B
B
That's
actually
what
I
was
just
looking
for
was
my
contract.
So
but
you
know
what
I
love
you
guys
I'll
do
whatever
it
needs
to.
Did
that.
So
don't
worry
about
that.
I
Hey
Emily,
it
would
be
interesting
to
see
what
recommendations
were
made
by
the
drug
Alliance
versus
and
compared
to
it.
What
is
made
now
and
it
I
think
one
can
support
the
other
and
you
know
say
hey.
We
we've
told
you
about
this.
You
know
three
years
ago,
four
years
ago,
five
years
ago
and
nothing's
been
done
so
yeah.
E
I
totally
agree
and
I
think
you
know
when
Marcela
and
I
presented
those
I
think
right
at
the
beginning
of
the
our
meetings
with
this
group
that
that
was
one
of
our
recommendations
is
that
a
lot
of
those
you
know
still
are
very
pertinent
and
stand
on
their
own.
So
you
know
Valeria,
we
could
put
those
in
you
know.
I
can
I
can
go
through.
Let's
do
that
highlight
the
ones
that,
because
there's
been
actually
some
great
move,
you
know
movement,
especially
like
aru.
E
That
was
one
of
the
recommendations
and
you
know
that's
happening
and
so
and
like
legalization,
you
know
happened
like
there's,
I
guess
one
thing
I
just
wanna
highlight
because
we'll
see
that
how
we
categorize
things
in
those
recommendations
were
things
that
the
city
can
do
like
through
policy.
What
the
city
can
do
through
budget,
what
is
sort
of
a
collaborative
partnership
recommendation
and
then
ways
the
city
can
advocate
for
changes
at
a
state
level.
E
B
A
And
Emily
remember
the
last
time
we
talked
about
it.
There
was
actually
ones
that
you've
flagged
that
were
very
pertinent,
pertinent
Terror
and
we
had
talked
about
that
they
would.
We
would
move
those
into
our
recommendations
because
they
were
still
relevant
to
both
works
because
there's
you
know
intersectional
approaches
to
this
work
so.
C
A
I
think
just
put
a
bug
for
in
or
and
let
Julie
know
about
that
too,
because
it'll
just
be
this
transition
from
different
fiscal
years.
Yeah.
I
And
I
think
you
can
do
it
I
think
you
can
do
an
extension
like
if
it's
for
one
or
two
months
and
have
it
you
know,
go
through
the
long
drawn
out
process
but
we'll
have
to
make
sure
with
Julie
yeah.