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One thing that jeff has always imprinted on my life is that we can always find better, we can always love each other and respect. This is still a city full of hope for peace, justice, and art. Thank you very much, supervisors. Next speaker, please. Thank you. Im a spokeswoman for the Public Defenders Office. On behalf of the Department Today and with respect to our neighborhoods, we support the renaming of gilbert street to jeff adachi way and we thank you for proposing this. Jeff adachi left a mark on this city and having his name outside would be a reminder of his fight for civil and human rights. He recreated what a Public Defenders Office could be, a frontline Legal Organization that built practices at a high level. Were the understood dogfight for the rights of the over 20,000 indigent clients who become part of the San Francisco incarceral system every year. Were also a watchdog making sure that Law Enforcement is being held accountable. Under the leadership of the new leader, we will fight against the new challenges. We will not shy away from the National Conversations around racial justice, immigrant justice, youth justice and police accountability. Jeff adachi changed the definition of what a public defender can be. He said we all have to be public defenders now to make sure that we defend our own humanity. Thank you very much. Good afternoon, supervisors. My name is kevin epps. Im a lifelong resident of San Francisco, a community activist, father of three, currently from bayview hunters point. I want to echo my unwavering support on behalf of myself and my community for changing the jeff adachi changing the street to jeff adachi name to honor his legacy and his commitment to serving communities of color and Minorities Community in a fair and just way. He was such an inspiration to so many and something of this magnitude would honor his legacy and go forward and wide in ensuring that people remember his contributions to the city of San Francisco as well as his fight for fairness in the criminal justice system. Thank you. Next speaker, please. Good afternoon, supervisors. Ive had the honor of serving alongside jeff adachi as a fellow public defender and under his leadership when he was chief attorney and then our head. Ive been there for 22 years. I wanted to give a little bit of a background of our presence there on gilbert location. Before we moved to the location where we are currently on 557 street, we were in the hall of justice. In the mid1980s we moved our location to where we are now, partly because we wanted to have a place that was safe. Gilbert street is our back yard. Each day our attorneys back to and from the hall of scwlus on gilbert alley. We chat there with other community folks. Over the years, weve seen many other businesses and buildings come and go, but we have been a steady presence there on gilbert alley. When we first moved into the building we shared a space with the sheriffs department. We are now the sole proprietors of that building. The persons most responsible for the presence and growth of our office is jeff adachi. I urge the board to adopt this measure. Its not the only fitting that the right thing to do to remember and pay tribute to a man who was a leader and protecting the rights of san francisc franciscans and fighting for the rights of those in our community. I am Rebecca Young from the Public Defenders Office. I want to read a statement from a former manager of the misdemeanor unit. By the time jeff died he mentored two generations of public defenders and transformed them into proud fighters for social and racial justice. Though ungulfed by the demands of his work, he made time for those below him. He was trained in the struggle for social justice. His detractors said that he was a force. He was at times deeply unpopular for his beliefs. Some want to sully his legacy, but no one can diminish or eradicate his accomplishments. Before he died he created a nationwide movement for passion and advocacy that changed not only the publics perception of public defenders but changed how they were perceived themselves. So committed was he to the fight for justice that in his spare time he produced documentaries. It is only fitting that a portion of the street be named after him because the way to justice will always be both literally and figuratively jeff has way. And strong and farreaching from gilbert alley all the way over to Juvenile Hall and into our Magic Program. Right before jeff died, he reached out to supervisor safai or vice versa to create another Magic Program in supervisor safais office. So i urge you to rename it. Jeff saved so many lives over cost. Thank you. Hi. Supervisors, i am a native of San Francisco chinatown and now im in upper mission. I want to say this weekend i celebrated day of the dead, and whats so sad is jeffs picture is among many of my friends and family who has passed away. And jeff has been a person i went to undergrad with at u. C. Berkeley. Back in those days he had the makeup of what he was today even then. He was working for affirmative action and we were all part of that. It was great to see 40 years later, we all continued to do that kind of work. So important for us to carry that legacy. With your commissions, your land use committee, he does embrace some of these commissions including Affordable Housing when we discussed about how to get back. Included also in his nontraditional way as a public defender he deals with immigrant rights, something that your other public defenders did not include, all the ancillary rights that are not included usually, but how to sustain what comes about. With that i support the changing of the name. Just please, understand he would love to have the public defender named after him, but i think equally in the alley where a lot of issues are hidden, he would be proud of that as well. I am retired from San Francisco city and county public health. I am a homeowner and resident of San Francisco, and i am here to support the changing of the name. Jeff was a friend but, more importantly, he was a colleague. I worked in the Health Department and worked in the neighborhoods with the highest disparity and outcome and jeff was always there. As a Public Servant for 30 years, its hard work. To have that symbol to show as a Public Servant we have to maintain our humanity and also give back humanity to people that is given away. For us seeing that and all the Public Servants seeing that will have an impact. I do appreciate people who brought up these other issues and i hope other issues are addressed with the changing. Good to see you. Next speaker, please. I pretty much grew up here and im in support of changing the name of gilbert to jeff adachi way. Like the Opening Statement about jeffs work, i dont want to go further with that and with the previous speaker here as we are now, jeff is really doing great work when he is here. Im here in support of changing the street to jeff adachi. Thank you. Next speaker, please. Thank you so much. Im a member of the board of directors of the San Francisco japaneseamerican citizens league, the Civil Rights Organization which was founded in 1929. Jeff was also a president of the San Francisco chapter. Im here to support the renaming of gilbert street to jeff adachi way. I understand that some have expressed the inconvenience of such a change, however, all over the city such changes have been made and i know it takes a bit of time to adjust. Jeff adachi did not think, not for a moment, of his time and work as an inconvenience. He worked tirelessly for civil rights and for the underserved. His voice was a voice for justice in this city. He mentored and inspired and shared his position with so many that his name will remind future generations that a good fight is worth having. Through his tireless efforts, he lifted burdens. Please consider jeff adachi way. Jeff dedicated his life and career to public service. It is an honor and a welldeserved honor. Thank you so much. Thank you. Next speaker, please. Hi, im a lawyer in San Francisco, a private lawyer. My office is on Boardman Place which is right next to gilbert. I wish my street was up for this renaming, but i want to support the renaming of gilbert as jeff adachi way. I think it will show that this city values public defenders, values the office, as an important institution. I think it will not of course memorialize jeff himself, but it will be a very loud statement against mass incarceration which is a very significant problem in this country. Over 2 Million People in america are in prison and i think that will be a statement against mass incarceration. So i urge the board to adopt the resolution. Thank you. Thank you, sir. Next speaker, please. My name is bill groziano. We have a property on brandon and our side is gilbert. Im disappointed in the District Attorney lawyers not wanting the public defenders building named. We just changed the name of the t line station in china town rose pak and we put harvey milks name at the airport. I wonder why we dont do something more relevant of renaming the public defenders building. Every public defender who works in that building. Every client who needs the service of the public defender, when they go in that building with a plaque explaining what he accomplish accomplished, that would be the way to honor him. Next speaker, please. I am a former president of the Japanese Citizens League San Francisco chapter. I support the name change. The years that i served, i had the privilege of working with jeff when he first came on the board. There wasnt anything that came up about civil rights that he did not introduce or carry through to see what would happen and carried it and made it a cause that the entire board supported. Looking at where he started in the community in San Francisco to this particular point in time, i think it appropriate and the sort of thing that i think the city can and should do. Thank you. Thank you. Next speaker, please. Good afternoon. Im resident minister at the buddi Buddist Church of San Francisco. Im here to represent everyone who agrees with me. And i thank supervisor haney for his initiative to present this opportunity for us to recognize mr. Jeff adachis full career serving the people of San Francisco as the conscience of the city. He demonstrated that as something not based on political pressure or popularity. For that reason, im supporting this resolution to support the name change to not necessarily jeff adachi way, but the way of jeff adachi. Good afternoon. I am a deputy public defender. Jeff swore me in as a member of the bar on my 30th birthday and every day i walk up jeff adachi way i hope it will be called i think of him and the inspiration he has given me. It is true that jeff had his critics. What courageous leader doesnt. He had flaws, what human being doesnt . Even his detractors cant deny his practice. His office was the place to be if you wanted to be a great attorney. Jeff adachi made our office the standard across the country the standard for young public defenders. He taught us to be proud and he spread that message from sea to shining sea. This is why gilbert street must be renamed jeff adachi way. It is a humble honor San Francisco can bestow on one of its legends. Thank you. Next speaker, please. Jeff adachi is my hero. Please rename the street. Next speaker, please. Good afternoon, supervisors. I voted for the Public Defenders Office and signed a petition to have it there in the 1980s and it was the mayor who developed the idea of getting it out of the hall of justice and putting it in its private location at 5557 street. Everything you heard or most of the people who have spoken are from the Public Defenders Office. The problem with this proposal is that its changing when jeff adachi could ied, there was a huge photo of him and several flower arrangements around the front door. The proposal was to change the tribute from the front door to the back door. Why are you doing that, supervisor haney . Why dont you leave his legacy at the front door where it started out . Its very, very visible to all the traffic that goes up 7th street, especially in the morning because of bryant street. Everybody would see his name there. Why are you sticking him at the back entrance. He deserves more than that, doesnt he, supervisor haney . I think thats the wrong thing. Its near the hall of justice. Whats important is he was a service to the criminal justice system, not that he walked across gilbert street to get to the hall of justice which is going to be demolished in a few years. The Police Department already moved because of mesothelioma and lung cancer. Seeing no other members of the public who want to speak on number 4, Public Comment is closed. When we first heard this in committ committee, we heard a lot of folks on the block of gilbert to the south of bryant. I want to acknowledge that supervisor haney listened to those folks. Those are mostly newer condo buildings. The proposal before us today is to have the block between gilbert and bryant and the hall of justice and branon be jeff adachi way. If you go down that block there are some empty parking lots. Yes, there are some residences, but very few. I think that supervisor haney has come up with a solemnonic compromise and has listened to the preponderance of the constituents in his area. I am more than happy to support the name change and appropriately honor mr. Adachi. With regard to the notion of naming a building after him, i have to say that this came from the community, from his family, and from his staff and colleagues. Far be it from me to secondguess his friends and family and beloved colleagues. So i am most inclined to listen to them, and with that, i will hand it over to supervisor haney. Supervisor safai. I know supervisor haney has some remarks to close out. I understand, having gone through a changing of property. We too have a will and trust and theres a number of different documents and it can be an inconvenience. I think a fiveyear transition period provides for a very fair balance. I think one thing we could do is monitor the situation and have people come back and present their costs to us. For the purposes of honoring someone that dedicated his life and actually gave his life to this city, i think its a really honorable way. I really appreciate all the public defenders who came out and all the members of the public who have kochl out and have come out in the past and have sent letters and have contacted the office individually even if they couldnt be here today, there is a significant ground swell of support for this action. So i look to supervisor haney and his leadership and appreciate the neighbors that came out. I think theres still work that can be done with the district supervisor. I know that hes open to that. Ultimately, i think this is a nice honor for an individual that, as i said, gave so much to this city. This is something that his friends and families think will be an appropriate honor. There is something powerful about having a public street name after jeff, something that really belongs to all of us, his legacy was, yes, and a huge part of that was the Public Defenders Office, but its even beyond that. To have one of the streets that we have in our city a public space designated for him for people who are walking by and seeing it and going to and from court i think is especially powerful, especially in light of the fact that jeffs friends and families and colleagues are in support of it. I want to thank everyone who came out today and spoke on this and was contacted. I love always to hear stories of jeff and new stories. I want to appreciate meno and the story that he shared. There are so many ways that jeff set an example and inspired and mentored people. Supervisor safai, i definitely am i do understand that theres some inconvenience with changing addresses. So i would to the residents or the Property Owners who are here and concerned about that, we definitely would work with you to figure out the best way to do that, whether thats Legal Assistance or ways that it can be done in the most expeditious way possible. There is a fiveyear time period. Thre might be able to provide some other support. Thank you to all colleagues about this support of the resolution. I would ask that we move it to the board with a positive recommendation. Motion made with supervisor haney. We will take that without objection and send it to the full board without objection. Clerk item 3 is a hearing on wildfire prevention and Management Practices for land owned by each internet and requesting the Fire Department and other agencies to report. Thank you, ms. Major. We are joined by our board president yee who is the primary sponsor of this timely item. The floor is yours. Okay. Thanks, colleagues, for putting this on the agenda. I called this hearing today because its clear that we need to be prepared for the impacts of Climate Change in our city. There has been a stark difference in this years wildfires versus in the past. This year no one died. All the News Coverage have noted that what made the difference was learning from the past and using the best and most promising practices. Climate change is real. Again, i get the sense that the climate is dryer for longer periods of time and, more recently, when that wind was blown around, it felt like you couldnt walk around with that went. So the wind feels more powerful. We need to make sure that we are prepared for the changes that will increase the risk of wildfires. We should have a comprehensive understanding about what the city is doing to prevent wildfires in our undeveloped or underdeveloped areas because the objective should be to prevent as much as possible wildfires in our city. We had areas around San Francisco where i should define these maces as small, urban forests. And were we need to be proactive not just reactive. Im looking forward to hearing from the departments. We should also be aware of promising practices that exist but that our city is not yet using. We want to know why. I want to thank the representatives that we have from city departments that own and control underdeveloped land that is with the department of public works. Public utilities commission, rec and park and the Fire Department and our fire martial. I want to welcome our neighbors ucsf and Presidio Trust for sharing your expertise with us. I want to thank my colleagues once again for cosponsoring and for our support. I see that there might be some opening remarks from supervisor mandelman. One of the great things about San Francisco is that we have so many beautiful parks and open spaces, but in light of the citys history and in light of recent events in california with these horrific wildfires, i hear regularly from my constituents about their concerns. I want to thank you were preside president yee, for calling this hearing and what the city is it going to do to address these issues and what were to do to ensure our residents theyre going to be safe. So i want to start with our guests, and i really want to thank all of you for our patience, waiting close to two hours to give you an opportunity to really let us know whats happening with your departments. So first i would like to have up from ucsf Mark Freeberg the executive director of the office of the environment, health, and safety for ucsf. Come on up. For the clerk we have hard copies. Thank you. Its a pleasure to be here. I am Mark Freeberg. I am at ucsf where i am the executive director of the office of the environment, health, and safety. I am here today with several colleagues from other departments of ucsf that are involved in overseeing the open space reserve which is really the focus of our attention here today. So this slide shows a couple maps. First on the left just a general location of the mount sitro open reserve. Mount sitro is located under the sitro tower tv antenna and right about in the middle of the city where you see the green hexagon. The right map is a closeup of the mount sitro open reserve just to the left of the ucsf campus there. The open space reserve is over 60 acres and on those 60 acres we have about 5. 5 miles of Public Access trails. Some other statistics ill mention real quickly, theres about 900 feet of elevation gain across this property. Those are beautiful trails in those trees and giving great views. We also have over 10,000 living trees in the reserve. We also have between 200 and 300 residents that live in the housing facility up at the top top of the mountain. The history is the mayor in 1885 he donated 13 acres to create the ucsf campus there. In 1953, decades later, ucsf purchased 90 additional acres, including the area that is now the open space reserve on mountain sutro. And in 1976, the uc regions designated that as permanent open space, designating this the mount sutro open space reserve. That reserve is maintained and the trees on it and our priorities are multiple. First off, we want to ensure of course the safety of people and structures in and around the open space reserve, which includes our own students, faculty, patients, whatnot, the neighbors also. We want to maintain the reserve as permanent open space, as designated by the regions back in 1976, and that means including Public Access to the 5. 5 miles of trails in it, improving the ecosystem, the biodiversity within the open space reserve. So, for example, since 2008 by ucsf policy, we have allowed no use of any herbicides in the open space reserve and we do no tree work during mating season. We also want to submit to the transparency and the Community Planning principles that were used in developing and finalizing in 2018 the open space reserves official Management Plan. That open process and review involved a technically Advisory Committee of experts that met several times, community meetings, tours of the trails, and whatnot. One of the groups that we worked closely with that we heard earlier today are sutro stewards. They are a Nonprofit Community organization that helps maintain trails and restore habitat. In 2016 they provided 5,000 person hours and that has been maintained at the same level. They are a native planting garden at the top. There is many events that they hold as well as the ongoing maintenance work. So ucsf does do quite a bit of fire hazard mitigation. We have ongoing projects all the time, removing ongoing projects and duff. We trim leaves and remove these ladder fuels, trip and control the canopy itself. And clearing the avenue a minimum of three times a year because of the presence of power lines. We have special projects where we created a buffer zone between the preserve and buffer areas. We were focused on reducing the tree canopy to prevent canopy fire emission. They like the blackberry bush as much as i like the blackberries which is great, because it helps with maintaining that vegetative matter under the trees. In 2019, the goats have come back to do more 4 acres. Were doing fire abatement and nearby structures and planned for this year, in fact, coming up in the next few weeks, a picture of what the trees look like under nike road, named after the missile site and not the shoes. Thats planned for this year. I want to point out many resources that we have that go into a lot of detail around the open space reserve and the registration Management Plan for it. Theyre all located on our website. You can find the vegetation Management Plan itself there. You can find an f. A. Q. Document about it to summarize it. We have posted there the Environmental Impact report that was done through that open community process. Information about the public process thats been used, linked to the sutro stewards and other organizations that are helping us with this whole effort, calendar of events, trail maps and whatnot. I hope that provides an overview of what the space is and how ucsf is managing it. Im happy to take any questions. Just a quick question. Did you work with the San Francisco Fire Department in terms of having them go in there to look at things that you might have overlooked . I will say my office coordinates with the San Francisco Fire Department. We also have station 20 up on clarendon and olympia. We have oriented them to the campus and the science going on. There is more work that we can do around wildfire. So youre saying you would be open to having the fire martial go in there into the area yes, and we have our own campus fire martial two and the two of them know each other very well. Happy to collaborated in that way. Not to jump into a fraught topic, but i have sort of lost track how the city and others are dealing with the balancing of native versus nonnative plants and what to do with the eucalyptus. Now i think the plantings that were doing are a blend of 75 eucalyptus and 25 native species. If you want to correct me, you can. I am the Ground Program manager for ucsf and i am the manager for basically the project manager for mount sutro. So, yes, were removing dead and dying trees. We have a lot of dead trees. Part of the plan is to plant more trees. We mix it up with nonnative trees, with different types of trees, because of the plan thats built by the community. Thats what 50 of the community wanted this. Parts of all those trees are native trees that we incorporated in the plan. At the same time you saw the picture of the blackberry and things like that. We were trying to remove all the blackberry. There is a lot of fuel load in it, but the goal is to actually remove that normative blackberry permanently and reintroduce mobile diversity to our program and our plan. Hi, i was the coordinator for the Management Plan. I want to say a couple things about our approach when we developed the plan. One was we said at the time we had 90 eucalyptus and we needed more biodiversity to improve the whole ecosystem. But at the same time we had a lot of people in the community who loved eucalyptus. What we said is we would preserve the historic eucalyptus stance. Sop at the time it was 50 eucalyptus and then 50 native trees to increase the biodiversity. Thank you. Okay. So just really quickly we feel good. Is there another question you had . Im just wondering i guess i had this stereo type of view not being native. In a dry climate, they really do dry out. When be they catch on fire that they actually explode . The eucalyptus trees in particular, yeah, i think theyre generally recognized as a greater hazard than the nonnatives. Yeah, i think maybe the fire martial will really talk about th th this, they dont explode, but they have they can release their seeds in a foul way during fire and they produce a lot of debris. Were reintroducing some eucalyptus species that dont have that amount of debris that the bluegum has right now. I think the glu bluegum is full of debrises. In my mind, it seems something to think about. I guess i asked the question why are we even planning 50 eucalyptus. Why dont we just plant all the new tries to be more native. You may not have the answer. Yes, i am the campus fire martial. Understanding how Vegetation Management works in a wildland urban interface, theres a lot that goes into it, but from the basis we really do try to protect the wildland interface from sfrures and people and roads and things like that. Nowhere will they tell you remove all the vegetation. Its Vegetation Management. Part of that is respecting the biodiversity aspect of it and part of it is saying where the fire starts and where it expands. Taking care of the items that mr. Freeberg brought up about removing the dead materials on the bottom, clearing the duff, controlling the latter fuels and fitting out those canopcanopies thats what we can do. I believe ucsf is following those same practices and trying to respect that. I think its hard to see when folkses like yourself and myself have been through Oakland Berkeley hills fire with that same interface where we saw 50 eucalyptus trees blowing up. Really what that is is where the fire storm starts taking on its own environment and velocity and had spreading, thats what were trying to do is thin that out, where you cant build up that power and force, especially around houses and streets. Its not specific to native versus nonnative. Its about the overall forest or Vegetation Management. Thank you for the explanation. Thank you very much for your presentation. Im going to try to move this along. Thank you for coming here. Next up i would like to ask the trust. I dont have a presentation, but i have a short statement. I am the forest manager of the trust. The presidio in San Francisco is unique. Its a pork and a former military post which now combines opportunity for the public to explore history, culture, and nature in a densely populated area. The interior of the park is managed by the trust. This is primarily the inferior of the park. There is also the National Park service and the ggnra which manages the remainder of the presidio. The open space of the presidio is a mixture of a natural and Historic Landscapes bordered by homes. Minimizing the threat of wildfires to the presidio, its visitors to the park and the adjacent community is of great concern to the trust. The highvalue trusts increase the value. There was recently a Risk Assessment and a wildfire Management Plan. It was found that the overall level of wildfire risk throughout the park is low. Thats the good news. Both as a result of concentrated Vegetation Program which has been implemented over the past 10 to 20 years since the park was created and because of the cool, moist climate found in the presidio throughout much of the year. Standard trees have been thereined, lower branches have been pruned. Grasses have been mowed and or grazed as we heard in the last presentation. There are specific locations throughout the park where forests have been restored resulting in vegetation which are not as vulnerable to ignition. We have reforested 40 acres throughout the park and many more acres of Natural Lands throughout the park. I dont believe there is a historical record to my knowledge of fires here and to the knowledge of people who have worked in the past. During our recent Risk Assessment we modelled the fire activitied and the fire throughout the park based on many weather scenarios. This took into account all the different vegetation types mapped. Our model wildfires are expected to luren with low intensity even under the weather conditions in the park over the past years including the most recent drought years. The fires are not likely to travel far beyond roads, parking lots, grasses, or lawns. Any embers that would be produced would fall into locations unburnable or in locations that could be extinguished easily with tools. This is a result of our consultant putting all the information into our fire models and this is information gleaned from the fire assessment. The some of the following actions will help to reduce the hazard and risks to the park and our surrounding areas. We continue an Ongoing Program to create and maintain defensive space around structures in the park. We heard some of that from the previous presentation as well about Defensible Space and the recommendations. We will conduct continue to conduct training on wildfire intervention and protection concepts and weve had some meetings in the past year about wildfire bringing in some of their neighborhoods. Weve conducted prevention programs. We have incorporated messages about the past dry spell. We do conduct annual fire extinguisher training and we conduct annual fire inspections throughout the presidio. We inspect all fire detection system and inspection all fire systems. We dont have a fire martial, but we do have an Emergency Services director and interfaces with the San Francisco Fire Department. Some additional examples, we recently conducted Defensible Spaces, and were continuing to manage that according to the recommendations. The public should see some of those reactions. There is a tree crew that performs all of our tree crew and maintenance in the park which i manage. We are currently thinning out some of our eucalyptus stands and thinning out the tree health and vigour to help with the fires. Many of these are in addition to ucsf and we have looked at their Management Plan and taken their best practices and are applying them to our park as well. In the past year we have trimmed and pruned along the utility lines and corridors. We own all of our own infrastructure. Were responsible for maintaining our infrastructure. We have had contractors come out this past year and prune all of our line miles throughout the park. Weve seen positive results just in this year alone. There was a question about how we officer face with the San Francisco park. The Presidio Trust has a construction for Fire Response Services with the Fire Department. This includes Fire Response Services with the department itself. The Response Time is fir from five to seven minutes, ten minutes maximum in the park. On an annual basis the trust provides information to the park on fire response. So they are familiarized with the layout of the parks and the infrastructure in the Presidio Park itself. That is a brief overview in the trust and if there are any questions, i would be happy to answer some of those. How did you do this assessment, did you hire a consultant and how did the assessment go down . I was hired into this position roughly two years ago. Im relatively new to the trust. Some of you may know the previous forester, peter erlich, he was there for many years. There was a change in my position and my superiors position at the same time. There was work on the aftermath on the fire in the Berkeley Hills that was mentioned earlier. She put together some of the plans after that fire for uc berkeley. So we brought her on board and gave recommendations what to do and what were not doing well enough and where to go from here. We initially had a vegetation Management Plan that was designed and approved back in the 2000s when the park was initiated. That has some language about Fire Management how to manage for fires in the park, but our new plan goes into much more detail. Looking at our current weather conditions and including in implementing those spatial measures as well. We are developing and starting that program already, but its going to take time for us to move throughout the entire park before we can say the entire park has met those requirements by cal fire. How much has that cost . This Management Plan is roughly 25,000 to get an assessment and a Management Plan in hand. Do you guys have a relationship with the San Francisco fire martial or are you on your own . No, we do. Our Emergency Services director couldnt get it today, but he is routinely in contact with the personnel over at the Fire Department. Thanks. Thank you for your presentation and keep up the good work. It sounds like youre really managing the area the way it should be managed. Thank you. Were trying our best. The first city park is rec and park operations. Good afternoon, supervisors. I am the director of operations and eric is pulling up our presentation here. Weve got a couple of things i want to run through you once up on the screen. We want to describe how our procedures are largely focused on our over 1,000 acres for open space. How theyre operationalized in the field and how they are consistent with our park values on Natural Resource preservation that makes it an alignment with the previous alignment on biodiversity. I will cover a couple of our resources and challenges in doing these things

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