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You may watch live at www. Sftv. Gov. To participate by phone you can callin and use the access code 148 9208779. Someone is making background noise. Members of the public will have an opportunity to participate during Public Comment. The public is asked to wait for an agenda item before making a comment on that item. Comments will be addressed in the order received. When taking public commit members can press star 3 and you will be queued. Callers will hear silence. They will have the standard 3 minutes to provide Public Comment. Make sure you are in a quiet location speak clearly, and turn off any tvs or read yos around you. Item one, roll call. [clerk reads names of senators in attendance] [clerk reads names of members in attendance] general comment. Members may address the members for three minutes. Speaker shall address the remarks to the commission as a whole and not to individual personnel. They cannot enter into debate with the speaker. The lack of response doesnt constitute agreement with or support of statements made during Public Comment. There are no callers on the public commit line. Thank you ill close Public Comment and go to the next item. Item three approval of the minutes. Approving the Meeting Minutes of october 14 2020. Thank you madam secretary. To my fellow commissioners i made a few comments to the secretary regarding the minutes. There is nothing that changes the meeting the meaning of the minutes. Ill entertain a motion to approve. So moved madam chair. Thank you commissioner cleveland. Is there a second please . I second. Thank you Vice President feinstein. President covington how do you vote . I vote yes. Commissioner nakajo. I vote yes. Commissioner rodriguez. I vote yes. There is no one on the Public Comment line. Next item. Chief of Department Report to nickelson on issues and activities within the department in the meeting including budget, Academy Special events communication with other agencies and report from Administration Deputy chief jose on Administration Status and update. Support, services and training within the department. Thank you. You said there is no Public Comment . There is no Public Comment. Okay, very good. Are you there . I am. This is my report for wednesday october 28th 28th. I would like to thank everyone commissioners for your support for checking in with us online and president covington for being present with us. It was an emotionally challenging time and id like to thank all of the folks on here that really steppedup to make it happen. Assistant deputy chief eric just came in and organized a whole lot of it for us. I know the assistant deputy chief had her handful with lodgistics as well. I know, our chief down at the airport picked the family up. Thank you to the chief. Thank you everyone for your help. I appreciate it. Holding services during covid19 involves more work. I couldnt be more proud of everyone for stepping up and getting the job done so, thank you. The cortez family felt the support. I just received another thank you letter from them today and they really felt the support and love. I know their go fund me account is still open as well. Thats been really good to see so many people stepping up for them. We are of course following up with all of our members there at the incident with our brother to make sure that they have the things they need. We are a strong group of people but sometimes we need support. At this time id like to introduce my new deputy chief our new deputy chief bryan. Hes been in the department for a long time. He was a division chief. Might you announce yourself and say a few words. Thank you chief. Hello, everyone. I think i know most of you. Im very excited about this opportunity. I look forward to working with all of you and im available 24 7. Its good to see you. Thank you. Yesterday we held a town hall. We held it virtually with the chief to provide a forum for our medics and emts and rescue captains. We spoke about policy changes and procedures, openings, your Critical Response teams. Its a wonderful thing and we support them. They are the ones that know how to follow the problems. We will be stepping up again for the next several visits. All of the command staff will be visiting a certain number of stations like we have been doing since the administration started. Its been real good to go out and talk with them. I know its been good for others on the command staff. Well continue that in december. Through december. We have a few different employees we met in october and the chief association as well. Its good to have ongoing dialog. I know the chief will be with us next month to speak on the new team that we are putting together with the department of Public Health and support person to respond to Behavioral Health crisis on the streets. He will be providing all sorts of detail on that in the priority of the Mayors Office and department. Really we are looking at 21,000 calls that the police went to last year and we went to many of them as well. Not all of them. We are looking to takeover the burden of the calls where there arent violence involved. That team of people, paramedics from the department and advanced healthcare practitioners and peer support person someone thats experienced addiction or Mental Health issues. They are working on the changes and well talk to you next time about that. We are almost squared away on getting an Level One Academy up and running. We are getting emts onboard. We are also bumping up some current emts and paramedics. We will take a bunch of the paramedics. We are hiring people now to get that squared away. They solidified and chosen and going through background and medical. And then last time we spoke about a grant. It was accepted from fema of 14 million and it will allow us to hire and cover 36 people for the next three years. It will be no cost to the department. The only caveat with the grant is that when we accepted it, a few weeks ago, whatever i staffing was at that time we need to basically keep similar pretty much the same over the course of that Grant Funding over the next three years. If we hire 36 to what we had three weeks ago. We will have to hire again. We are looking pretty good there and we are looking at having a class in february. More information will follow on that. We are selecting some people people. There are way too many good people to chose from and thats a wonderful problem to have. Also the training center. We had a meeting yesterday and we still cant tell you where it is. There is a possible aquisition. We put together the department of real estate. There is a private owner and we are doing everything we can and more to follow on that. Its trending in the right direction. So thats the good news. Then you might know we sent more folks out on leave. We did preposition because we knew the winds were coming. We went out and prepositioned and nothing lit off out there. They were sent down south to the blue ridge fire. So they have an act of saving peoples housing and doing all sorts of good work. They were on the news. I know the commissioner got a letter from someone thanking them for for their great work. So with that, i will conclude my report for tonight. Thank you so much. I wonder, chief, do you have anything to add to the report . Shes not on. Chief tong, is she on . Yes she is. Do you have anything to add. Good evening president. No not right now. Okay, thank you. Okay, then. Is there any Public Comment on the chief reports . There is no one on the president commitment line. Ill go to my commissioners. I cant see everyone at the same time. Let me start with commissioner nakajo. You are not on the camera at all president covington. Really, wonder why . Madam president i beg your pardon. Did you turn your camera off . Not intentionally. Okay, let me see. Is that yep you are back on. I didnt see myself but assumed everyone else could. I was wrong in that assumption. All right commissioner. Madam president i do not have any questions for the chief at this time. Okay, thank you commissioner nakajo. Commissioner cleveland. No questions at this time. Okay, thank you sir. Commissioner rodriguez. Thank you chief for your report. At this time i do not have any questions. Okay, madam Vice President. Thank you madam president. Chief, i have one question and i cant quiet tell if its based on the fact that we as commissioners get notification of some events and no notification of other events. I dont know why we get selected for certain things. That seems to be what beeps on our cell phones. Im going with what i get. It sure seems to me that shark rescues are way up. I dont know if im right about that conclusion or somehow, you guys have programmed me to only be notified of shark rescues. Boy, do i see a lot of them. Do you notice anything going on. Is there anything going on or just what they chose to send me. The powers that be, the computer powers out there. Vice president thank you for the question. Antidotally, yes we have seen a increase in shark rescues and water rescues as a whole. So yes. We would have to rundown the data but from what we are all seeing and im sure many folks on the screen here shaking their head yes, as well. Its not the only thing we get though but quiet a few. I realize that but is there im not asking for any particular reason other than is there that explains that all of a sudden. Yes. So, there are a number of factors. I would say that you know, we definitely seen an increase in covid19 people cant get out to many places and they are going to the beach. There have been a lot of people we lost one man earlier this summer that was from out of town. Folks coming from out of town dont understand that we have one of the most dangerous beaches in the country. So yeah, we have seen a lot more people from out of town and, you know you have random sort of whatever the weather and tide is doing. There are a number of things that play into it. Its the most dangerous beach in the country and we had the most deaths over the years. Yes, its been quiet busy of late. Thank you that makes sense. Thank you. I appreciate comments from all of the commissioners. I see that the captain is on. Ill let him Say Something as a member of the public. Well, as a surfer for the last 30 how long have i been surfing . Since 1983 there has been a huge influx of surfers. With covid19 and people not working and working remotely and also being able to learn a new hobby at ocean beach instead of going to pacifica thats a starter beach. They have tried to learn at ocean beach and its not a beach to learn at. So with the influx of new surfers, good weather and covid19 its most crowded then i have seen it in 15 years this weekend every peak 20 to 30 people. We are also experiencing, usually the waves are bigger but keeping the beginning outofthe waters but the waves have been historically small and gives more people trying to get into the sport. Well, thank you for the information, captain. Thats really interesting. Thats really interesting to me. It seems to make perfect sense. Growing up here i was taught about the undertow at ocean beach. My spouse grew up in Southern California and was a surfer. He always told me remember the ocean is not your friend. It will kill you. So please. Please be careful. We have enough risk in your daily job. Please be careful with your sporting activity. Wed like to keep you around. All right thank you madam Vice President. Are there any additional comments from commissioners as a follow up . No okay, thank you you all. Thank you all. Okay lets see we have the report from administration. Good evening, president Vice President commissioner chief nickelson and marine. This is my report for the month of september. Id like to share my presentation. Are you able to see anything . Not so far. Chief we depend upon you. You are our go to guy for this stuff. I apologize for that. Id like to give you an update we had as you recall. A busy season up north. Now we are switching operations down to south we had a team deployed on the assignment. This is a program the governor started two years ago. Funding a program where agencies and counties can ask for resources before the fire strikes. The deployment is much faster and proven to be effective in many instances. We were called to assist across the county for that. We also had an engine assist in that. Mobbed night they were both deployed to the blue ridge fire. As of 10 00 a. M. Its 14,000 acres and 16 containment. Yesterday it was zero percent contained as of this time yesterday. The chief said on channel 2 and right behind the reporter our fire truck with our crews out there. I have seen it report and crews out there and the fire was coming down the hill. We got a lot of good feedback on social media for our department being there. If you think this fire season has been busy let me give you the stats from cal fire. They put out a report every year. This is just by size. In 2020 five of the top fires in the history of the state have happened in the state of california. Since 2000 we are seeing something here. We know what it is. Climate change and disease of the trees. Its been a busy season. Its not over yet. This is the prime of the season. We went to a fire in med to late december a few years ago. We hope it doesnt get worse. Its a significant trend. Update on training we hosted three Leadership Series at the fire academy. We hosted for some of our investigates and chiefs. This was from our office. We hope this will help us do better investigations. We selected captain julia as it new captain. He returned after three years. We continue to do multiple drills. Chief johnson is here. We did a water rescue. We continue to do drills all of the time and even with covid19 we have to continue to do the drills. Our teams have been quiet busy. They have been reporting every month. This is National Preparedness month. Our teams provide personnel to food banks and testing sites we are proud of their efforts. The mayor selected an Emergency Response team. On the 17th it was the 30th anniversary of the founding of nerd. It came after the earthquake city hall was very proud. Our chief of health has been quiet busy. Like the chief said ill speak about the memorial we held. This required canceling the plans. We will continue to develop our curriculum. We are looking for a new member for the Behavioral Health unit. They have been promoted soon to prevention. So we need to fill that spot and we are testing for that. We have been busy with the flu clinics. We hope everyone on the call has taken a flu shot. The goal is to achieve 70 of the data. We will continue to provide feedback for the covid19 safety plans. We are working on our stations. Many locations will be polling stations. We will have a plan for that pretty soon. Our Regional Planning bureau we have a vacancy there. Every year members can bid for open spots this takes place every year. Also different shifts took effect on october 3. One of the busiest divisions under my command. The fleet, we have the bids due after thanksgiving. If you recall the last meetings they will have to bid again. We will get them back after thanksgiving. We were granted five new mini pumpers from oes. This is liken begin 361. If they need them we will staff them. We will pay for them to be deployed. They will go for support and the bigger begins we send arent as good. We are also lucky enough to get grants. So soon enough we will have nine new mini engines that will assist us in brush fires. The new engines coming out we will do an early inspection. We will take covid19 precautions we will get better there and its not what we want to be the completion date is the fifth. The middle panels continue to be installed. We have dry wall in both levels. Its not finished yet but its there. Also the anchoring of the station. Some of the first floor pictures in the progress. Also the exterior. This has been built at treasure island. This is the work thats been done on the peer make sure they have the anchors for that. Its been installed and rooms near completion. The warehouse for all of the equipment. We will see pictures on the exterior of the division. Thats basically all of the storage for the medical equipment so we can give it to them. Our Human Resources we had two retirements. All of those promotions and captains. This is for our family. Thank you for those that put this together. Do you recall we are able to have companies to help cover the city. This is the project that was the operations chief and a lot of work was put into the project. We have numerous calls and offers for help that wanted to come and pay respects and help us out. That came from across the county. Multiple engine trucks and they were able to come in and pay respects at the end of their shift. This was from 2 30, 3 00 p. M. Until 10 30. Everyone and could pay respects. Alameda county cameraman put this video together. [ music ] that ends my report thank you. Can you hear me . Yes. Thank you very much for your report and showing us the video. Its still quiet moving to see thank you for mentions people coming from the out lying areas to help. Thats very good. I think the go fund me page is still up any member that would like to donate feel free to do so. Are there questions for im sorry are there any Public Comment on the chiefs report . There is no one on the public callin line. Okay, thank you. Since there are no members Public Comment is closed and ill go to fellow commissioners. Ill begin with Vice President feinstein. Thank you madam president. Kind of knocked me off my feet there. That was really that was a lovely tribute. I know that everybody appreciates it and you know, well always be able to respond when other departments need us that was lovely. I have a few issues to bring up. I know the fire marshal is not here and i hope you can answer for me we spoke last meeting about what i have noticed Walking Around i dont mean to be trite about this but the rigged up lightning system. In areas that have plastic canapes in some cases i think aluminum canapes. They are extension cords coming out of windows and wrapped around trees they light up the Big Christmas lights there. It just i think from everything you taught me i see danger danger danger. I know the fire marshal has been really on top of it and im just wondering you know, where we are with that and how involved the department is getting. It cant be safe. They have heaters and all sorts of things. Im not sure how many are permanent or not. There is no permit posted but you can envision a tragedy occurring. I dont know if you can address that or not. Its unfair to spring it on you. I didnt know the fire marshal wouldnt be here. What i can address and this is under it too. He has inspected 700 of these out of those 30 came back with issues that had to be corrected. We have the most active supervision for the shared space we are on top of that. Thats when they applied for the permit. If we see it and our chiefs on the field if they see something we have expected 700. So we are very active. Our team is very active and make sure they comply with access and comply with anything we mention about flammable or heating devices that could be close to flammable devices. They are very active. If they have issues they come back and work with the owner of the restaurant to make sure they are addressed. We work with them and make sure it happens. They are very active from that. Okay, thank you. My second comment that came out of your written report. I wanted to say when i look at what our volunteers are doing. Its really the same thing for the fire preserve and the service they provide. Boy, ill tell you. If they are straightening up the basement of the tower due to recent flooding bless them. Its just i think we need to do a shout out to those who volunteer their time and services. I did take note of that in your report. Thank you for bringing that to our attention. Those are my comments. Thank you madam Vice President. Commissioner cleveland. I dont have any comments other than i do believe the memorial tribute you put together was very good and moving. I had one comment. You mentioned 70 of the firefighters received their flu shots. I believe thats wonderful compared to past years where we barely got to you know 30 to 40 40 percent of the membership. Id love to see it at 100 but thats really good. I wanted to congratulate you on that. Thank you. I didnt say we achieved that. Thats our goal. We are Getting Better than last year but thats our goal. We have another event coming up this week. Thats our goal. Okay, well, keep me posted. I will. Thank you for your report. Iran across something that said red cap exercise i dont know what that means. I also have a question about testing the Fire Department would like to test their own members. Im not sure if thats extended to the public. The report on injuries. Is there were 12 head injuries that were higher than any other type of injury. I wonder what are they involve and why so many . Thats all of the questions i have. Thank you commissioner. A few things the red cup drills i can have Chief Johnson explain more of that. This is a company drill by faa regulation. Widow it more than required. They do multiple scenarios. Its not the same thing. They do things with fire on an airplane. Its a major deal and id like to see Chief Johnson explain more about that. In regards to the testing the issue we are having. Its for our members. They authorized to us to make sure we can test. As soon as we have an exposure we want to test and this doesnt allow members to be offduty for a long time or protect them in a way if they are testing positive protect their families. We are looking into that and we are pretty close to have trained our rescue captains. A few months ago we had eight members on the strike team thats policy. When they come back they are also tested too. This will expedite the process we can test them right there we can do it for odd hours when they might be closed this will provide an opportunity to do it on a expedited bases. The last question was about head injuries. There weird situation 12 of them ill have to see what they are. Chief johnson if youd like to explain about the red cup rules. These are multiagency drills. We have partnerships from the coast guards we will have an elevated train derailmentment. We are doing our yearly disaster drill. We will have 100 victims we did a smaller scale one last week. Thats because the army for the support team wanted to recreate the drill last year. Its something we puton and identify any shortterms that we have. Okay, well, thank you for answering my question and your report. Thank you. President you are muted. Sorry. Thank you for your report. Excuse me, thank you for your questions commissioner rodriguez. I think it would be helpful if the new members were able to get mass casualty bus and fsfd. We can make that happen for sure president. That mass casualty bus and information about our cooperative. Chief nickelson if you could include that in your comments at our next meeting. I know commissioner nakajo hasnt spoken. Thank you madam president. First of all i wanted to welcome chief reubenstein to your position. I havent had the personal interaction many times in the field. It will be a great experience and the department will benefit greatly with your skills and expertise and support. I definitely wanted to welcome you. I also wanted to thank the former chief of operation victor for all of his contributions and for a career that contributed to our department. I also wanted to thank you for the retort. We havent experienced the visual. Its very meaningful to see that and perhaps id like to see that again at some point. Thank you for that as well we have been able to look at Takeaway Services for members activity and service. We respect the families wishes and understand it was very appreciative. It wasnt easy and im speaking for myself in terms of knowing full well we had a visual of the service and whats going on. I thought i would be able to see something but i didnt. I just wanted to comment on that as well. Chief, i noticed in your report that september i just wanted to find out as an inquiry what the status is in terms of of response teams. Commissioner, we had three applications go out. Can he can he we will make sure we select the right candidate. We have to apply for that job. Okay, thank you chief. Also do you have an estimated timeline for when the position will be filled . As soon as possible. The next few weeks. Thank you very much, chief. The only other that was all my comments and questions. The only other thing, Vice President feinstein in terms of your questions its important, chief. In the parks its a shared space. That will help us as well. Chief nickelson wanted to share this with you. So, what i would suggest is we have them come they are calling it open spaces. We can speak to everything Vice President feinstein asked about. I suggest we do that at one of our upcoming meetings. Okay, dually noted. We brought up that subject matter at the last few meetings part of that is desperation. Many of my friends and colleagues cant even get a shared space inside their restaurant. There is no outlet. Its been really hard. This is from Police Barriers and up to 10,000 for their shared space. They told me they wont make it in the future with the restrictions i think thats a matter that still will occur. I just wanted to comment on that as well. Thank you madam president for my allotted time. Thank you commissioner. Yes, chief. I know we spoke about it a little bit. We are very much working with Restaurant Owners bar owners because we understand the situation they are in. They will have to figure it out right away. We are giving a little space to and time to get everything in order. We know that we need the businesses to open up. We all do. So we are doing everything we can. The fire marshal can speak to that but this is a december pat situation. Thank you chief nickelson. Commissioner cleveland. Commissioner cleveland. Madam president we didnt hear you. No questions. Okay. All right thank you. I agree that the parklets are shared space or whatever they are called. If people see a dangerous situation what they think might be a dangerous situation. I think that are very safe. Everything is by the book to me. Food banks run on such shall you know, little funding and they really, really depend on the volunteers and now more than ever we need the food banks. People who have never utilized food banks previously now are making the part of their, you know their route to go out and so the Fire Department, in this way, weve never had this situation before. Its wonderful. I thank every nert volunteer for their Office Participation and also i would like to thank the chief for putting together a Robust Program for the department and for the community. Did you have to say anything chief. You want to add something please do. Thank you for coming and the department and thank you. I appreciate the opportunity every time. The work they do from their hearts. Its an incredible commitment to a testament and what we pictured for ourselves and. Very good. Are there any additional comments from any commissioners . Oh yes ok. I see a commissioner rodriguez. So, just to be clear this could be for chief nickolson. Basically, he will get a list what are has been issued because just like Vice President feinstine, i see him all the over the place but its not knowing if they have permits or not. I just act on those you receive a list and you would go out and check them, correct . Thats correct commissioner. Thank you. Thank you commissioner rodriguez. Still, the average citizen can make a phone call regarding a situation they considered to potentially be unfazed. Have we already called for Public Comment madam secretary. Clerk yes, we have there was no one on the Public Comment. Clerk presentation from a black Firefighters Association Sherman Tillman president of the black Firefighters Association will provide an overview of their employee organization. Thank you. Welcome, captain tillman. Madam president covington Fire Commissioners chief of the department, jeannie nickolson and command staff and id like congratulate the chief to their promotions. I can only speak from my own dealings with them. Theyre welcome members of the staff and im sure theyll do us very proud. So last time, i had a great video presentation when we were all together and it had great music that i took the time to do. Today, im just going to read. I dont know if i can upload a video presentation. I should have talked to chief vello ahead of time and he would have told me i could have done it and i would have figured it out. So my apologies. Usually the black Firefighters Association would do about two to three events a month in the community. Because of covid19, in all of the restrictions, that has been cut down. Weve still found time to do various, Different Community activities. So what ill do is ill just read off some of the things weve been doing and then ill go into a brief comment and then ill take any questions if there are any. Before covid19, weve planned in zoo day december 17th. And we cooked for the participants and different members were at different they had different activities and so we participated in that as we have done under my presidency for the last three years participating once again with the toys for kids program. We have the Creative Arts school in january and did a presentation. We do probably four to five presentations a year to different schools mostly junior highs, talking about Fire Prevention and getting them into bringing the rig out letting them touch it, let the parents take pictures with the rig of the just Customer Service and just spreading the court of the San Francisco Fire Department. We have our yearly Martin Luther king march with many of the command staff participate in and we open it up inform anybody from our government and we did another presentation and Mission High School is now one of the schools in San Francisco that has a fire program. It was the only only one. It was a Pilot Program and we helped them participate in that and in march we visited el doradao Elementary School and thats been a yearly visit because, i guess the teachers like us. We keep going back to el doradao and this is the third year that weve seen the school so thats great. Covid19 hit and there was quite a few unusual requests from our community to help with rent and for food and normally thats not something that the black firefighters do. Obviously we dont have the budget like 798 has. We did ask for donations from our memberships and we did pay for rent for two families from the western edition and we delivered bags of grocery to elderly and they had problems with the eed payments. Theres been a huge backlog and people getting their payments from the government that are on assistance. So some people have been backlogged six months into getting their payments and so, they have problems feeding their families and they got in touch with one of our members and we provided food and for those families. We september a sent a group to perform in las vegas. These young ladies have participated in dance contests through out the year and their parents didnt have the funds to send them to las vegas because they made it to the finals but the finals were in las vegas. They had no way to the teacher was going to drive them there herself but she couldnt pay for the Sponsorship Fund of getting into the contest and helping with lodging. So i mean, this is what were about. This is if we can help out so, we just paid for it for them. We felt this is what anybody who is trying to accomplish their goals in life and it just would be so sad that not to continue that pursuit because that could kill the dream. So we voted unanimously to support them and i just get choked up about this. You know, you just some people have no place to go and if we can do something to help children in need, i think we should do it. And we did that. We gave out 100 bags to the community and set up the table around the corner from our office and we had bags of grocery from the community and we set this up from shaman walton and we gave out gross reese to thegrossreese to the community. We participated in the rallies for the tragedy that happened with george floyd and were at city hall and participated in those rallies and you know social distancing and mask and we helped give out masks for the people that were coming to those rallies that didnt have masks and sanitizer so from the Chinese Community who helped provide those resources i used to the captain in the china town station and the collaboration between the black community and the Asian Community is so important nowadays with all the various violence that is happening from not sit sense in San Francisco from outside gangs and such and that i preying on our asian brother and sisters and i just its just wrong. And i dont want the perception that just because one bad apple is doing something dont put that on the whole group of people or that whole race so ive been working with diana bang and dixon lee over in the chinatown communities to help bring collaboration in a dialogue, you know. A positive dialogue. In july we donated masks to the mega fraternity and they passed those masks out at city hall and we have members participate with them and just passing on masks to people who needed it. In august we did a collaboration with the justice of Diversity Center to provide access to free legal help with living wheels and powers of attorneys for our members because its expensive and i have a living will myself and it wasnt cheap. And so, im blessed i can afford this but i can see younger members couldnt afford Something Like this and so, i was lucky to be talking about this at some meeting and one lawyer said we can help you guys out and we made a collaboration with them and we provided this the first black firefighters in San Francisco and when i ascended and to celebrate this man that was the first and without him there would be no me or and its a worldrenowned artist and he is going to make a threestorey mur alf earl age and when that piece is finished, well have a celebration for earl graves junior our first black firefighters and everyone will be welcome and well give out those invitations when that is completed and it looks like the complete date is some time in january unfortunately because of covid and all these other Different Things and different insurance that we have to acquire. Its quite a undertaking that i didnt know. [laughter] but, its all taken care of now and january is what were shooting for. Recently we collaborated with the Mayors Office and they had testing for covid19 in the filmore district and we handed out flyers informing there was free testing. In october beef been working on Voter Registration so weve had two participated and one just Old Fashioned put out and handed out and have people sign up to vote. Also just going back into last month we participated in the census. I wrote to the command staff of chief nickolson allowed me to make in collaboration with the government a video on getting out the getting the neighborhood and specifically people of color into filling out the census, its very important and i think the chief and her command staff for allowing me to do that and its very important to get people who are supposedly under represented represented. And so, we participated in that video and got it out to members of the community. So that is what weve been doing this past year. Taz my presentation on the black firefighters in collaboration with the community and collaboration with staff and the collaboration with members of the Chinese Community. Now, i can go on to one thing i want to talk about but all take on that. Thank you captain. Did you want to talk about the Youth Academy. Sure. Were slated to start now. We have to follow the rules of the sfus the School District and all of our kids are i remember school age and thats the collaboration and the commitment weve made to the parents and the School District. It looks like we can start in march and usually we start during the school year as soon as the School Year Starts and every saturday thats when we start. Its because of covid we couldnt because we changed our schedule so we can do more things outside which can honor being a compliance with the rules. And so obviously we had to change and go out and raise money for that because obviously going outside and entails the could you tellyouthacademy from spending more money. The chief is there earlier and weve been in touch with the chief and weve been in touch with chief on getting some equipment for the Youth Academy and updating the equipment that we currently have had and it was kind of old and outdated and we had a couple tay shouldnt visits and we visited state 4 in february and covid hit in march and in march we had to shut down and we are incollaboration currently with not only the ymca in the bayview but we expanded it to the fill moore center and we have interest with that collaboration that i made with dixon lee and diana fang to get more asian students in it. As you know from the last time weve done our presentation, the Academy Started out 20 years with mostly African Americans and asian latino, caucasian, we have people from all walks of life in the Youth Academy and im very proud of that as a pathway to the Fire Department and i can say that because of the work that mayor breed did that we have one of our graduates come to the San Francisco Fire Department. After all these years where they were going to other departments we have one and i think chief nickolson has made that commitment also, to continue to make that a pathway and were pretty proud of that and were really happy of the collaboration that it happening between command staff and the black firefighters and these last couple years and being more cohesive and being on the same page instead of the friction that was the past. Well hold questions until the entire presentation is done. Ok. Our biggest concern and something beef been beating the drum about for a real drum about is the numbers in the San Francisco black Firefighters Association. The black firefighters in the department in general. Ive been in the department 22 years and usually the average has been in the high 180s and the 180s for black firefighters this is going back to Consent Decree numbers and you know, for me, its anna living room bell while all the other eth necessities numbers are going up and our numbers are going down and some people will say, in San Francisco theres not that many black people anymore and you have to look at the numbers of the bay area and San Francisco and African Americans, black people are 14 to 15 of the population and right now currently, we have 7. 8 of firefighters that are black. And even the lowest number is black women, which is only 1 and i have all the data and im sure i hope everyone out there does theres classes where theres no black women at all and theres been two or three classes under chief joe anne haze white were there were no black people at all. When you hire 52 to 54 people like there are now instead of my time when it was only classes of 20 and 24, that is really unacceptable and we have talked about this ad nauseam and the great thing and im hoping the chief nickolson has talked to us about this and shes committed to turning this around and we cant say that San Francisco is this great place of adversity when the numbers like this are going down and other municipalities they have these numbers that can you see here on a board. You know. And so when they see like in the military when you see a certain segment of your population or your work force going down they thwarted that. Im sorry to interrupt. Yes it seems that the way fie haswifi thats gone down at headquarters. Is that what you were going to say . Yes madam president. I want everyone to know. Im still here. I was getting a call saying the way fie isthe waythethe wifi is down. Everybody who is now located at headquarters cant join the meeting. Including the secretary. Yes. Someone said they could join via phone. They should be able to join through their phones and from the network. The only problem is that we dont know who is going to be able to join. Rosanne a was right its always something. Its always something. [laughter] i tell you oh the chief is going to connect by telephone. So we will wait a few moments. How are my commissioners doing . I see. Madam Vice President and i see the commissioner and rodriguez. Madam president , i want to tell you that my screen is jumping and its almost making me motion sick. All the though i can hear captain tillmans presentation, his words and his gestures arent aligned and its been true for the last few speakers and what is going on and chief nickolson is gone. Im back ok, you are on the phone. And so i feel like im back on the computer. This ser i can a. Hello. Is this the the wifi went down and everybody is jumping back on now. Ok. Is the commission asked back with us . Lets see when they return and we can continue with captain tillman. Madam Vice President , do you think theres some power problems in your area . Not that i know of. I dont have the best luck because i keep breaking it up but im not aware of any problems particular to me. Ok. And i have lost chief were back on. Ok, there. Were going to wait for you madam secretary. Our wifi went out. I know but i meant we were waiting to say do not answer the phone during meetings and i saw oh headquarters. Weve lost commissioner cleveland. We have weve lost commissioner cleveland. Im here. Ok. All right. Well carry on. Im not offended, Vice President. [laughter] i think your camera is off. Commissioner cleveland. Its good you can hear, please. Yes. Do you have an idea of when we lost the power because ive been saying this one thing so many times, i dont have a problem saying it. Welcome. Why dont you give us a condensed version about what you are saying in terms of black representation within the department. And i can captain if this is a help, write before the the wifi went doubt there you are on the screen, you were talking about the very low numbers of black women in the department. Ok. Taking notes here so that was my last note. Well, just to be clear maybe going back to former figures, of the high 180s [please stand by] as. Weve been doing a National Test for eight years, meaning that people from idaho, people from michigan, people from oklahoma can get hired here. Nationally, the numbers are 14. 5 to 15 of the population so thats double what we have currently. So we all want to see our department thrive and see it the way we came in we want to see it improved not backwards and right now thats where our numbers are going. Women, black women in our department its 22 at this time. That is the lowest of all the other groups by far. As a matter of fact, its less than half of some of the other groups and its way we low most of them have twice below. Most of them have twice the number, and there have been classes with zero black people in it and i think thats unacceptable when you have classes with 64, 65 people. Youre telling me there arent any African American people with qualifying criteria . I know there is. I cant blame this current command staff because all of the black people in the rampgs are because of the current command staff. But its ready to push and blame the command before. Just like in the navy the army the marines to have this report not only on their desk but they have this on a board, so any time the numbers are dipping, theyre alerted to that, and then, they can target that group to make sure those numbers stay alive, and that those people are represented in a place that says they value diversity. Right now, we have six chiefs down from 15. Just to give you a comparison theres [inaudible] that are African American, but theres four or five times as many in other races. [inaudible] and weve been engaging and collaborating with this command staff. And i think chief nicholson is committed to making those numbers rise and now, we just have to wait and see. But all the collaboration with this command staff has been very positive and i thank them for being very engaging with us and taking on that challenge and making that commitment. But i do hope that every commissioner gets this report and should ask for this report. Its the race and gender report and it comes from h. R. You can get this report. Its easily accessible because you get the retirements, and you can see how the numbers are going to be and it affects how many members that age group has. So thats my presentation and my talk about that and i thank you. And if theres any questions that i can answer about the black Firefighters Association or black people in San Francisco today or black fighters in the San Francisco Fire Department. President covington okay. Thank you very much for your presentation and im sure that our commissioners do have questions for you, so i will begin with commissioner cleaveland. Youre muted ken. Commissioner cleaveland sorry. Can you hear me now madam president . President covington um h. Commissioner cleaveland thank you, commander tillman, for your report. You say you have 152 members of your department. How many of those are members of the black Firefighters Association . 110. Commissioner cleaveland 110. Do they have to pay dues . Yes, sir. Commissioner cleaveland how much are they . Well every group pays dues. Whether youre in asian firefighters hispanic, los bomberos you pay dues. But were the only one with a building, and we have to upkeep the facilities. Under my presidency, thats been kind of the big thing for me. New paint job new back stairs. We have rot new bathroom. Just making it more presentable to not only the youth that use that building but to the neighborhood. Now we have a big firefighter on the building and other firefighters from other departments come by to take a picture because its about two stories, so yeah its awesome. Our dues are a little bit less than the dues from 798. Commissioner cleaveland so what is that . So its about 50 a paycheck so about 100 a month. Commissioner cleaveland okay. A limbttle closer to that probably 98. 50, somewhere around there. Commissioner cleaveland how did the black Firefighters Association get a building . So this came i guess, around the Consent Decree when they were meeting at different venues trying to get a rat gee on you know the Consent Decree strategy on you know the Consent Decree and they got tired of going from here to there to the other. So a couple members actually got together bought the property, and you know if Chief Johnsons on here im not going to say he was around at that time but i think he would have a better insight into i know the members who bought that building but he would have a better insight about what exact year that was. Im pretty sure that was in the 80s. I believe it was in the early 80s when they decided they wanted to make that leap from being more of a social organization to an organization that wanted to effect change in the departments. I believe it was the early 80s when that happened. Commissioner cleaveland is the building still owned by those individuals or is it actually owned by the black Firefighters Association . So the building is owned by the black Firefighters Association . Commissioner cleaveland okay. So they deeded it over to the black Firefighters Association . Yes sir. Commissioner cleaveland well thats good. Thats a great asset to have. Its a great asset to have but it puts us right in the community. You can see the building every day. You can go by. You know our hours. We have it posted and they can come in and get advice for joining the Fire Department. A lot of times, they come in because they want somebody to talk to and firefighters, were more i always tell my guys or my people, were more than firefighters. When youre a firefighter in your community, people come to you once they know youre a firefighter for all different kinds of advice. When somebody knows that youre a firefighter, people are knocking on your door for all kinds of stuff. I wish i didnt know sometimes i think that but it comes with the territory, so to speak. But the great thing about having that building is that in that area unfortunately, theres been a lot of shootings. Unfortunately, right across the street, a couple people recently had been shot, and we can work with the supervisor in targeting those areas, question can work with the Police Captain at the third street station and helping mitigate some of the situations that people dont know them, and were there all the time. We can go through those waters so to speak and make the dialogue at least a little bit more civil than friction. Commissioner cleaveland thank you. Captain, how long have you been the president of the black Firefighters Association . Three years now. Commissioner cleaveland through years . Some of you mentioned that you were committed to bringing new members into the department. Would that be the top priority of the black Firefighters Association or is it blah blah and blah . What are the top three goals of the black Firefighters Association . Our goals are always equality diversity, and making sure that our people are trained and promoted, so those are our tenets, and we expect all of our people to abide by the rules. But more importantly, we want our people to be treated fairly and i can only speak from my career it hasnt if you took my whole 2 years career i would say theres 20 years of them when i see that African Americans havent been treated fairly and we have blips of time where things were quiet and handled even keeled, but its unfair that you say you know four people [inaudible] and for some reason theyre coming after one of your members, when somebody else or you know a [inaudible] whos done the same thing, and nothing was done. Its just fairness, its just opportunity, and its just being able to get the same thing, no more or no less than other people are getting. Like i always said we wouldnt need a black Firefighters Association if those things happened but time and time and time and time again, its been proven that thats not necessarily the case. And, i mean unfortunately theres not a week that goes by that i dont get something that happened in a fire house. Being the b. F. A. President is that other people who are not in our organization see that thats what we stand for, and they call up asking for advice. They dont call 798 they call up myself they call up chief johnston because they know that were just straight down the board. Whats good for you is good for everybody, and so thats how we deal with things, so theyll come to us, soandso this happened and can you help me . Theyre not dues paying members, so obviously, i cant represent them as president of the black Firefighters Association, but i was a steward for 14 years and always a member with a Union Background so i represent them in that way. When all is said and done, we should be treated equally and fairly and not only getting in the Fire Department but once were getting in the Fire Department and ive talked to chief nicholson about this, and ive obviously talked to Chief Johnson about this and ive had the opportunity to talk to chief velo about this, there was the chance with the command staff that people always got to get them prepared to get into certain positions, but African American members never got those calls. And im sure those calls happen now. Likes like calls to get people ready to get them in another position. Its always a friend. It shouldnt be that way. Opportunity should be for everyone and everyone should have the chance to promote, and everyone should have the chance of venues of education and everyone should have the chance to get out and make those connections thatll help their career and further it and add to the diversity of the San Francisco Fire Department. But in the past and i can only speak for my time as the president , and before that i was a station steward. And before that ive been pretty involved my whole career. Before that i was on the cancer board. Before that a lot of latino members havent gotten those calls that a lot of people get, and thats not fair. Thats what we stand for. We just want fairness, to get the same calls that everybody else is getting. We want to be promoted and get the calls that everyone else is receiving or that we see that everyone else is receiving, if that makes sense. I hope that answers your question. I know i went into a long dieadia diatribe of a worm hole, but i hope that answered your question. Commissioner cleaveland so the organization wants fairness in terms of training opportunities, advancement opportunities, promotions, that kind of thing and the ability to be part of the Fire Department. Yes, sir. Commissioner cleaveland and be a part of the Fire Department. Does the black Firefighters Association spend any time out as ambassadors really i know you cant with covid, but prior to that, did you do a lot of outreach to the community as far as schools, when they have job fairs and that kind of thing . Did you do that or does the black Firefighters Association wish to participate in job fares around the city when they start again i guess, probably in 2021 . So i can i can i cant speak to the past i can only speak to under my presidency. So we go to junior highs, we go to high schools, we participate in job fairs, we participate at the mayors hbcu getting kids going to college. I was at the end of chief joanne hayeswhites tenure, and ive talked to chief nicholson. Under my administration thats what we have done consistently and i can say that, unfortunately, there were times where we gave 15 names, and not one person because there was two classes in a row, that not one black person was in it and that was a slap in the face to me because that meant that you hired 110 people, two classes, 54 people. Some people dont make it so lets say 50. So you hired 100 people without one black person in it. Thats unacceptable. I mean thats just unacceptable. And matter how or what excuse you want to give, thats unacceptable. And so i wrote a letter to that was chief joanne i wrote a letter and said to her, thats unacceptable. I give you 15 names, and how can you not pick one person . And so i just im hoping and im praying, and i think with the collaboration and the engagement and the communication that we have with this command staff, that will never happen again, and it shouldnt happen again. Commissioner cleaveland we get your letters at the commission when you send letters out, and we take them seriously. Just know that we are listening to you. Yes, sir. Commissioner cleaveland in your letters. One thing you talk about, your Youth Academy and the success. Its probably one of the few Fire Departments in the country that have youth academies. I wonder how you recruit for that and how do you prepare for that . Normally its word of mouth because we can only safely have a maximum of 30 because in previous years, we didnt have the funding. Last year by the grace of god, i wrote a grant, and we got a grant from the collaboration that weve done with the Asian American community, we were awarded a grant and that allowed us to actually go above that 30. And, you know i really had an edict from the mayor, and she told me i want you to expand your program. I said give me the money which is the bottom line. If you want me to expand the program, youve got to give me more money. So i think theres been more doors opening to more funding, and with more funding, we can get more recruits. Its word of mouth. Were in the schools and like i said probably outside of covid, probably six schools a year. Inside covid, weve already done four, so were inside the schools. We have a couple people that chief ballesteros trained very well that are on the nert side. We train them to give presentations. Some of our members are trained in nert thanks to chief arnesteros. Since shes on here ill just take the chance to say that nert program is great, built from the ground up. Im sure shes gotten awards for it but its a fabulous program, and thank chief balleceros for all the work that shes done for taking the ball and run with it. Thats one of the things thats helped us because weve had members trained in that. So we can go out and help the schools, and it ultimately helps the mission of the San Francisco Fire Department. When we go out and talk to these schools, we are members of the Fire Department we are representing the Fire Department and thats how we look at it. We have different facets, and we can get into some things that maybe the other intraers cant get into if that makes any other trainers cant get into if that makes any sense. Commissioner cleaveland nert is a great program, and im glad to see it grow. Thank you for your presentation tonight. Thank you. President covington thank you commissioner cleaveland. Commissioner rodriguez . We had job fairs that we went to. I found that mainly the high school job fairs and the and the city college, high schools and city build but that was for construction, but i would think you would have a good avenue there, also. But any way besides being a person of color myself its always i was always impressed when id see people of my race succeed. So i think when young adults see that they say if you can do it i can do it so i would the job fairs to me, are really important. We did junior high schools, and they arent really on anybodys radar what they wanted to do for a living. It was mainly when they were in high School Getting ready to graduate or city college actually. My church does a program where we deliver food during the holidays. We have a program where they can call the rectory and get food. Its so satisfying when you can actually help people and see their faces when you give them something that they really need. As for the other thing about see, i really dont know about the how you you would have lists of people that were given over to the administration of the Fire Department, and they werent put in. I guess thats something that we need to look at and see why that happens or that doesnt happen in the future but you mentioned women, and ill tell you, i was out on the field for 25 years, and another 12 years as an aide. And i think in the whole time there were only four women that became sprinkler fitters. Its a mechanical trade and youve got to pass a test to get in, and theres a physical unt interview. And we were getting hammered by the state all the time about not hiring women even though we had them apply for the trades. But like i said ill go back to i think a good way to try to get people is the job fairs and city colleges. And i just want to where is your building at . Thats another question that i want to know. Its on third street. 1468 third street. Its right across the street from Wells Fargo Bank over there. I know where thats at. Its on third street, so its on the right, so that would be on the north the northside. So if you go that way, like youre going to candlestick park, in Fire Departmenttype colors. And i was going to touch on how the public, if they applied for the Fire Department. But really, i dont think thats the case if you had a list that you get from the administration so thats a different type of a problem there. It wasnt really acknowledged, so but i want to thank you again for your work. It seems youre doing so much for the community that i just want to commend you on that. And before i go id like to also give congratulations to chief rubenstein and chief arturo on your promotions and i look forward to working with you. President covington thank you, commissioner rodriguez. Okay. Madam vice not gotten around as much as i would have liked to in terms of visiting stations and visits programs. You guys run a really tight ship about where youre going to let me in and where youre not, and thats thats the whole department. Has nothing to do with any Employee Group or anything. The more command staff than anything else but i feel the protection. So let me ask you about your academy. Can you just tell me a little bit about it since i dont know about it . Sure. Its typically from ages 12 to 18 im going to take notes when youre doing this, so dont think im not paying attention. Typically, its from ages 12 to 18. We have had 11. 5 year olds that i would say are more mature, and were not going to turn if someones 11. 5 and they want to participate and theyre really willing, were not going to turn them down but senior in high school is it. We dont have any College Freshmen or anything like that. Once youre out of high school, its over. Basically, we teach a firestyle academy, right . They learn c. P. R. They get a first aid card. They do get a c. P. R. Card to get a first aid card sometime when they finish. We teach knots in ropes. Its just basically a fire abdomen academy structure, but what they learn from that is selfri lines and selfconfidence. Theyre able to go home and show their friends about c. P. R. And first aid and different types of fire scenarios. They get a plan in case your family is in some type of disaster. All of these things you not only learn in nert class, but you learn in firefighter one. In the begin,ning, its mostly atrisk youth, some kids that have trouble with learning i wouldnt say trouble with learning, but trouble with attention spans, and we have activities to keep them busy. And its structured so theres sergeants and commanders, and the kids are really the ones they come back its a fouryear program, eighth grade, ninth grade, tenth grade, its a fouryear program. They dont just do it one year they come back the second year and the third year. And we give them a stipend for participating. We just upped it. It used to be 25 per time they show up to and now i think its 30 because of the grant we received because we had enough of the stipend and the whole time we started the program we felt it was time to up the stipend. Unfortunately, and its kind of sad to say, but some kids need that 35 a week just for showing up because that helps whatever is going on at home in helping support the family. And they know theyre going to get a meal when they come, and they have a place thats safe that they can come to. And, you know unfortunately thats you know unfortunately, thats important in a lot of communities to have a safe space that they can go to and learn something. And the most the thing that i know that warms my heart the most everyone that goes to the academy, we know theyre not going to be fightrefighters, e. M. T. S doctors or nurses but theyre going to be valuable to society. They learn how to interact with people they learn how to speak to people they learn how to have selfworth and selfconfidence, and you cant put a dollar amount on Something Like that because i have seen young people come into that program who were shy who came from a disadvantaged home, probably had some home violence or Something Like that in their background and just fluorished and just blossomed because theres somebody that cared about them trying to give them some structure and discipline. And its the structure and discipline that we give under the fire scenario. They have to come in uniforms, they have to prep their uniform, they have to take care of their uniform. Theyre learning a lot of life skills and i think thats the most important thing that we give to those youth of tomorrow. Commissioner feinstein may i ask you a follow up question or two, please . Am. Commissioner feinstein what, in terms of the academy and who you serve is the ethnic breakdown of your students or participants . I dont know how you refer to them. Correct. So last year, we were at full capacity. We had 30 i think we had 32. We went over 30. We had this is just off of my recollection. I have all the numbers on this actual computer that im talking on but we had 11 African Americans, we had i think we had it was 11 African Americans, it was 12 or 13 Asian Americans, and the rest were caucasian with a split between caucasians and latino. Thats what the bayview is now a high concentration of asians and African Americans in that neighborhood now, so those are the numbers of majority. And then we do have caucasian and latino students that dont actually live in the area. Commissioner feinstein right. The latino students that came i think there was three of them altogether, they came from the mission, actually, because weve been reaching out into other communities that we feel that we need to embrace. Like i said with the collaboration with the Asian Community, were also doing that with the latino community, and thats where the numbers come from and just giving a word out that we have a safe space that you know you can get some discipline and some training, and then you know were going to pay you to boot. So that allows the youth to participate. And i wanted to add one thing to commissioner cleaveland that i didnt touch upon. We also collaborated i think it was last year, with chief sato whos on here somewhere. We had some underprivileged youth. They were Community College kids and it was a twoday or threeday class, and the black firefighters helped in going through different scenarios, and we spoke to them and that was arranged by chief sato and i dont know if we sent a letter in recollection to thank chief sato for that collaboration, but if i didnt im remiss in that and i want to take the opportunity to thank chief sato for that. Commissioner feinstein chief sato appreciates it i can tell. One last question. In the academy how many young women do you have . In our academy . Commissioner feinstein if you have a class that hes 32 students how many are woman . Off the top of my head we had six, and the commander was a woman actually, the last two commanders have been women like our department the last two. Commissioner feinstein there you go. All right. Thank you. Thank you for your presentation and for the good work you do. Its i look forward to learning more about it. Thank you so much for your question. Commissioner feinstein thats it for me president covington. Thank you. President covington thank you, madam Vice President. Lets see. Commissioner nakajo, did you have did you ask your questions . Commissioner nakajo i did not have an opportunity to ask my questions. President covington okay. Please do so now, sir. Commissioner nakajo thank you very much madam president. Thank you very much for your presentation. [inaudible] in accomplished on the update and report on the black firefighters and their activities and concerns. The concerns, as you articulated, in terms of the numbers of blacks, men and women, that you can provide in terms of information, updates. The thing that i want to speak to that is not to talk about the importance i dont want to focus on myself. Im talking about the presentation of black firefighters and the black men and women, members of the department because in one point or another, there have been referenced references made in terms of the current inequity conditions so im careful with my words to members of the department of African American descent because you made references to and again i need to be careful of incidents that you are aware of that it seems like not that these incidents dont occur, but this reflection of these incidents on current command staff as well as the structure of communication, whether it be 798, association of black firefighters. I want to put that piece there because that piece is an attorney piece and one of the things that come up in my mind that i need a comment and an answer on that is what are we going to be doing about those incidents in the contemporary format to deal with those now . These things reflect on the commission because we also are responsible in all things with everything that has to do with the department, and it takes quite a while for us to be able to understand the variations. Commissioner rodriguez you asked a very good question in terms of how theres a member out there. And were talking about an African American teenager in this presentation rightly so. For myself as well, weve had los bomberos come up and we had Asian American firefighters and a womens group is going to come in, and i believe were going to have lgbtq queer and other groups, as well. As you know we have a Department Member that is in charge of recruitment. Again, my interaction over those last few years with the Fire Department, particularly with Asian American firefighters and los bomberos youve got to be careful, but weve seen these groups participating in Community Outreach programs in one way or another. This is before we had community personnel. In my mind all entities whether its member groups or current members or current staffers [inaudible]. When i came in 25 years ago we were in [inaudible] and i think we have some sense of what that [inaudible] really was and thats been brought back including the city and county of San Francisco. Again e we need reminders or education in terms of that issue [inaudible] that were many plaintiffs in that [inaudible] for a long time as a young commissioner that came in not young in age, but young in experience. I had to find out that [inaudible] in the department and back in fact day that the department that used to have their h. R. Was well honored [inaudible] but also i was taken out to a test site at the embarcadero over a twoday period lined up with members at that time [inaudible] that were lined up to go in and take this test in a warehouse at the embarcadero and i kind of looked at that. Now, the equation is finding the other equation is how many classes has the department had over the years [inaudible] without funding, you cant have a recruitment class, and you cant have members of the department. As i looked over the two days of that observation [inaudible] i asked over that time i remember very clearly, i asked how many members were here today on a saturday and it should probably be noted there was probably about 2,000 folks out there, and the next day, there was about 5,000, 6,000 africans. And there was a process by h. R. These people had to fill out an application and hand deliver it to the department location. At one time i remember it was station nine. There was a table out there, and i was watching people driving up in their cars, drop off the application. Well this apparently was supposed to be a precursor or a requirement in order to get the test. I [inaudible] into the testing ground at the warehouse. There was a sound system with a [inaudible] and i sat in the back. To be honest, i couldnt see the video [inaudible]. And then, when the verbal went on, the speaking system went on that was showing us the video, i could hardly comprehend it. So basically after all of this my question again was how does the department choose a qualifier or not . And basically, the process that i learned in those days was what i used to call a process of elimination. Do you have a drivers license, no criminal record . And a commissioner said that will eliminate about 2,000 [inaudible] and well narrow it down another 1,000. And i would say how many positions are we talking about and they would say 36 positions. And i would say, you mean to tell me were going to have 4,000 applicants for 36 positions . And [inaudible] very complex, i at that time had the Office President of the commission assign himself and myself to be monitors to the commission as a special master and to work, at that time with president of the commission. I can see him right now. President covington haley roth. Commissioner nakajo im not talking about haley roth im talking about the African American master of the commission. So [inaudible] and i began to go through a crash course trying to understand the [inaudible] how this was going to be implemented. When it came to recruitment i had to be introduced to something called a sliding band [inaudible] off of something called the score test. 100 was a perfect score, and we had members that scored that. I cant remember the exact score, but it seemed that there were hundreds and hundreds of name. If you can see my screen [inaudible] so that when this presentation comes, that at the time the department had the ability to use this sliding band that qualified. And again correct me if i am wrong [inaudible] this is my recall of that. [inaudible] in those days, we didnt have a meet and greet we didnt have any mechanism that i was aware of so it was a challenge for the administration to do that. I do know that the testing system has changed from locally to now what we have is a National Test, i believe. [inaudible] that i have. So with that the competition, as in previous years in the past and i remember, then, there was a time period when one candidate from this department [inaudible] and the venue entering into the department was, at one time, only h2 suppression that went into the categoricals of our department. But then as we adopted the m. S. You could become an e. M. T. Or paramedic. We had these learning curves to be able to figure out [inaudible] which i know is pretty much on the Candidate Academy with h2 at this point. [inaudible] and im a little uncomfortable in terms of references to past administrations because again [inaudible] in terms of dollars and assistance but i just think we need to get more factual information in terms of numbers, and again, im focusing this on [inaudible] and as you represent the African American population who want to come into this department so i just wanted to comment on that and definitely think that im looking at my notes that a comprehensive presentation [inaudible] for improvement for considerations [inaudible] of what it takes for a candidate to qualify to get on the list if you will and how that applies with you, captain tillman. [inaudible] that the emphasis is on this equity. I think equity for many of us im not going to move it away from there [inaudible] i believe for the commission, its very important so i think it reflects back to the commission. Im going to stop talking pretty soon but i wanted to share some of the Knowledge Base that i have within the 25 years but also [inaudible] expert in terms of what has occurred. So again madam president i think at some point when its appropriate [inaudible] the criteria [inaudible] and again, we need some more factual representations of past administrations or in terms of the numbers that were talking about [inaudible] because for me particularly the categorical women itself [inaudible] i want to thank you, captain tillman for sharing [inaudible] john smith, etc. , that were part of this adtrition. Administration. So with that thank you for your presentation, captain tillman, and thank you madam president. Thats all i have. President covington thank you so much commissioner. Im mindful of the time; and so commissioner nakajo i do have a question for you in regards to the time frame that youre requesting. Do you want to give some more detail about that right now or do you want to give those details later that you would like to see in the particular report . Commissioner nakajo i think it would be appropriate to do it later, without violating brown or sunshine, youto have a questioning the board and the administration, how best we can present this. Theres no pressure though. I think we have a class thats coming in [inaudible] the commissioners are in terms of process [inaudible] but again, i want to be cautious and respectful to the chief of the department in terms of her input in terms of how best to approach this. So i would request that we [inaudible] for discussion and then additional addendum, if you will of captain tillmans presentation. Its a very important discussion focusing on the participation of the African American community [inaudible]. President covington okay. Thank you again commissioner nakajo. Im just in my mind, looking at the calendar as provided by the chief of the department. There will be a new incoming class so it seems to me that that information should come before the selection of the entire class so that if you have input or any of the commissioners have input, it would come before everyone in the class is selected. Does that make sense to you or how would you like to do it . Commissioner nakajo yes that does make some sense for the timing of the [inaudible], and i definitely think at this point, the chief of the department should be part of this discussion because [inaudible]. President covington okay. Thank you again. One quick comment, i want to say president covington excuse me. Just a moment, please. Chief of the department did you have something you wanted to say . Yes maam, if i can take a couple of minutes of your time and i can answer many of these questions that are being asked. So when i came in i think most of my command staff knows that i am not just about equality and opportunity, i am about equity diversity, and inclusion, and we have started several Different Things in this administration to ensure that no one is being left behind. We have begun a program for succession planning, weve begun a program for training for everyone, so that the single mom who has three kids and cant go to sacramento to take a class can take a class here in San Francisco at the Fire Department. So were coming up with programs like that and were looking at the National Testing network, which i think is not a great test to get into the Fire Department, and were looking at changing it to the n. T. C. Tcc. Its just a many of the women who came in years ago many of whom were single moms if they had to have a [inaudible] before they came into the Fire Department, they would not have been able to do it so were looking at that. Its not something we can change overnight. Were also looking at smaller academies because an academy, people can get lost in the shuffle, people can flunk out. Smaller academies will have a better studenttoinstructor ratio. Ive brought [inaudible] who is now the diversity and Equity Inclusion officer. [inaudible] for me and they he is going to come into the commission with a report for you, why are you not you. Why are you not getting that report from me . Because we are actually waiting for that report from bryce, from [inaudible] and his committee, so i think thats going to be telling in terms of how we move forward in this department. We are also we also involved in this last round of selections we involved the entire department all the different Employee Groups sad on panels and spoke to people and then recommended folks to us for the next class. And so now were going through that. Instead of just me and one other person picking and looking at people, i think its important that we have a section of race of gender, of equity telling us who they think is a good candidate. And then were looking at a program that will be in district ten in the bayview and it will the firstclass is going to be young men only, but its a Wraparound Program for at risk men, young folks and it gives them wraparound trauma counseling. It gives them a stipend and an e. M. T. License by the end of the class, and then, were looking at a way to get them into the department. So im really proud of what were doing, and i think there needs to be as captain tillman says there needs to be quite a few changes, and we are doing that. We are absolutely committed to doing that. So i want to let you all know, this is not news to me. This is not something that im hearing about for the first time. I knew this when i came in and took office and so we are looking to change things, so thank you for allowing me to speak. President covington thank you so much chief nicholson. Just a question for you, is there reason that the class is going to be all male, and do you have plans to have an allfemale class following the allmale class . Yes. Great question president covington. It is based on e. M. S. Corp. , which is a program thats been extremely successful in the east bay and in Southern California. The first time they tried a class, it was mixed men and women, and it was not successful at all because they do things like trauma counseling and they really needed separate spaces. And so and there were also some other distractions frankly. So they separated they make this men at e. M. S. Corp. Now, my intent is to have the firstclass be men because thats the triedandtrue one that they have done that were going to bring over here and then, the second class, i would like to be all women, so thats sort of the direct that were looking to go in. President covington okay. Thank you. I just wanted to be sure that there was going to be equity for young women who might be able to you know take advantage of this opportunity. After all women hold up more than half the sky so i wanted to make sure that women were in there because theyre the ones that usually wind up with the children after a dissolution of a children. Ive never had a marriage dissolve but ive seen this happen to people. And so being a firefighter would be a wonderful wonderful career for young women as a lot of the veteran women members of the department can attest to so im happy to know that there will be two classes. All right. Thank you for that. Anything else chief nicholson . No thank you, president. President covington okay. Thank you. All right. Captain tillman, you had some comments you wanted to make . I just i just wanted the commission to know that recruitment is not just a San Francisco problem. Last year, i chaired a National Committee on recruitment with over 20 different departments that were there. Most of the big five, new york, l. O. L. A. Obviously us chicago and from the south. Not everybody wants to be firefighters. Everybody will apply but not everybody once they start going through all the things that you need to do, are committed to being firefighters, so we have to understand that first of all its not just a San Francisco problem when we talk about recruitment. But what is unique upon San Francisco is that we are or have been and still are a Diverse Department where a lot of these other departments are not. They are still mostly male caucasian. And so we know the proverbial wheel has already been built. We know how to recruit, we just have to do it. And unfortunately in a lot of the other departments, especially departments of our size where we have one recruitment person, they have three or four. And so what we have done iswith chief barraca is taking some of this pressure off of him. But when you get down to it aurjob isnt getting paid to recruit, our job is to run fire stations. But we are spending time doing that because we dont have that recruitment department. So these groups los bomberos, asian firefighters, womens groups have been helping out and in collaboration with our chief and command staff to find those diamonds in the rough, so to speak that can come through and can make it through the testing. One of the things that wasnt mentioned, and chief velo instituted, because i was part of it he instituted saturdays, and you dont know how much that helped. And what chief nicholson says about making the classes smaller, when you have a class of 54, not everyone gets the touches that they need. Not everyone gets to live that 50 multiple times they might only do it once or twice. So just chief velo instituting a saturday, if you want to show up you can it was tremendous and we got a lot of feedback from that. There was a lot of us at the department of division and training that would love to help out if that was made available, but right now it was just for the cadre that was in the tower at that time but theres a lot of us that would love to help out. But with youe need to nurture these recruits and some of them need more help than others. When i went to Washington High School in 1985, i never saw the firefighters at one recruitment day. I saw the police but i never saw a firefighter, so i didnt know this was a career that i could go into. The only way i knew, i had a job, i was a Customer Service rep. I was a surfer and i had some friends that were getting ready to go into it. I never knew it was something that i could get into or else i would have come in in the 1980s or 1987, whenever i took the test. But i found out, a bunch of my surf buddies were taking the test. Commissioner nakajo is right [inaudible] and some big municipalities like new york theyre going through Something Like that right now. I was talking to my counterpart in new york who has a lot bigger membership. They have 13,000 members in new york and believe it or not, in that big city they have the same issues in that big jurisdiction when it comes to recruitment. Its not very easy. You really have to get out there and do it, and just to come up with those 12 or 13 names, it takes us months to come up with that. And, you know, its not easy. Ill have to say it but when we do all that work, and we put in the time and the effort its just nice to see some of those people that you work with those names go forward, and to finally come into the San Francisco Fire Department. Theres no greater feeling than seeing someone from the beginning to the end and before their beginning so thats what i would like to convey to this commission that this is not an easy task. Its a daunting task, but i can only speak for myself, and the interaction that ive had with this command staff, that theyve said that theyre committed to. It committed to it. Its not just they arere talking the talk, theyre walking the walk and we look forward to these collaborations in these upcoming classes. President covington well thats a good note for us to end on that the collaboration is happening, and that the current command staff understanding the challenges and have heard the wishes and hopes of people who feel they have been underrepresented in the department. So i feel that this evening we are beginning a new dialogue around these issues. Our new commissioners have received a lot of information tonight. The more seasoned commissioners the three of us are familiar with things that have not been forcefully implemented. There has been a lot of vigor that has been brought with the new command staff and we need many more conversations that are being held. I look forward to us having you know more dialogue about these issues. Before i go on i want to go back a little bit. I want to remember the last time that the black firefighters presented and the hearing room was full of young people who had their uniforms on and were very enthusiastic and well spoken. And the young women well theyre teenagers. The teenage girls were in charge of it all, and other people who had already graduated out of the program were coming back to you know the city program. There was such pride in the room. They were very proud of themselves for having gotten to that point, and by extension, we were proud of them. And so that was a wonderful presentation. Tonight thank you for your presentation on the challenges that black firefighters face and challenges that the department faces. And if any one of the commissioners would like to drive down third street, you cannot miss the black firefighters building. Just to put it mildly, it stands out. It is very identifiable, so i have made many many notes and ive heard the questions from my fellow commissioners, so i think were were pretty much on the same page. Were looking for information concrete suggestions, and this broadens the dialogue that needs to take place all right . So thank you very much. Thank you. President covington all right. Madam secretary, is there any Public Comment on captain tillmans presentation . Clerk there is nobody on the Public Comment line. President covington okay. Thank you. So i will close Public Comment, and can you please call the next item . Clerk item 6 commission report. Report on Commission Activities since last meeting on october 14, 2020. President covington thank you. Commissioners, do you have something to report . Let me see. I dont see anyone who wants to report out. As everyone knows, i did attend the funeral for our fallen firefighter, and it was just a wonderful, Wonderful Service with his children, two little boys wonderful, beautiful family and his two little boys released doves in honor of their dad. And they also took turns ringing the bell nine times. And to see the members of the Department Standing along the wall of excuse me. I keep wanting to call it pacto park but oracle park. It was just everyone of one mind, and that one mind was we will do everything we can for this family going forward. We wont miss a tee ball practice, anything. Anything that they need, the family knows that they can count on members of the department. It was very very emotional and very touching. My fellow commissioners, i have to say i was honored to represent you that day so all right. Madam secretary. Clerk there is nobody on the Public Comment line. President covington all right. Public comment is closed. Clerk item 7 agenda for next and future Fire Commission meetings. We do have a resolution. We have the e. M. S. 6 update and the Racial Equity plan update. President covington okay. And thats for our next meeting . Clerk that wasis on a meeting that is tuesday october 10. President covington tuesday, october 10 . Clerk i mean, wednesday, november 10. Its a wednesday because tuesday is a holiday. President covington okay and the women in the fire service are also presenting on that day . Clerk no, theyre presenting in the december meeting. President covington in the december meeting. All right. Is there any suggestions from the clerk well we have to finish by noon so i think these three may take up most of our 9 00 to 12 00 time slot. President covington okay. Well we dont have to truncate any suggestion. Clerk we only had one extra item tonight, and it went two hours. President covington well it was a robust discussion and i think it was very very necessary, so im glad that we did have it. All right. If there are any suggestions that come to mind for future agenda items, then please let us know commissioner rodriguez, did you have something to say . No no thank you. President covington okay. Then were prepared to delve into these items at our next Commission Meetings the ones that youve mentioned, madam secretary. Clerk very good. Item 8 adjournment. President covington okay. At this time i will entertain a motion to adjourn. Commissioner cleaveland moved, madam president. President covington thank you, commissioner cleaveland; and theres a second from commissioner rodriguez. [roll call] clerk the motion is unanimous. President covington well thank you and thank you, command staff and mr. Corso. Thank you, everyone, for your participation in the meeting tonight. Thank you, president , Vice President , commissioners. Good night. Commissioner nakajo good night, everyone. Welcome, City Attorney herrera. Good morning. Thank you to mayor breed chief scott supervisors peskin and haney for joining me this morning to highlight our collective commitment to combating an all too familiar problem. Open air drug dealing in the tenderloin. Were all created to solutions to make sure we combat this epidemic that is taking control of the tenderloin neighborhood. This morning my office sued 28 known drug dealers file. They do not live in the tenderloin, but sell deadly drugs there. The drugs that are fueling the drug crisis in our streets. This is to stop the brazen drugdealing that has plagued this neighborhood. Last year alone 441 people died from drug overdoses in the city and the tenderloin had the highest overdose mortality rate of any neighborhood in the city. Enough is enough. These injunctions are carefully crafted to simultaneously safeguard a defendants due process while targeting with precision, the problem of drug dealers coming from outside the area to prey on tenderloin residents housed and unhoused. This prevents the 28 named defendants from entering the tenderloin and part of the adjacent south of market neighborhood. Roughly from van ness to ellis and geary to mission. The tenderloin would become a protected zone and these defendants none of whom live in the tenderloin, would be allowed to go there unless they had a lawful legitimate reason to be there. Were focused on the predatory repeat dealers selling the most dangerous drugs, including those leading to the most deaths. We have rigorous criteria. He or she was arrested at least twice for drug sales or possession of drugs for the purpose of sales in the tenderloin in the past year and a half. One of those arrests must have been in the last nine months. Both of the arrests must have led to either criminal charges by the District Attorney or a motion to revoke probation. The drugs involved were fentanyl, heroin cocaine or methamphetamine. And the defendant is not a tenderloin resident. Has been given the opportunity to present their defense in court at a hearing and the court finds there is sufficient evidence to warrant the injunction. In other words, an injunction is issued if the need for it is proven in a court of law. Demographics or Group Affiliations were not considered when putting together these lawsuits. Violations of the injunctions will have civil and criminal consequences. Violations carry Civil Penalties of up to 6,000 per violation. Perhaps just as important, violations can also be pursued as misdemeanor crimes and subject to the defendants immediate arrest. An arrest leads to the search and confiscation of drugs or contraband a person has in his or her possession. These actions are aimed slowly at criminals coming to prey on the people of the tenderloin. We know who the predators are and we will not allow them to victimize tenderloin residents. Our message to these dealers is simple. If you come to the tenderloin youll be arrested and your drugs will be confiscated. This is not a silver bullet. More needs to be done including drug treatment options, expanded Mental Health and a focus on major narcotics suppliers, but this gives one more tool to the Law Enforcement to help keep the tenderloin residents safe. We need to stop this neighborhood from being used as the open air drug market. Our goal is to keep the dealers out of the tenderloin. The kids, the parents, the seniors the workers the Business Owners of this neighborhood have suffered enough and deserve nothing less. The tenderloin has the highest concentration of children in the city. It also has the highest number of Overdose Deaths and that is not acceptable. Once the pandemic improves the kids of the pandemic deserve to be able to go to the school, playground, go see a friend without being caught in the middle of a drug deal or a person overdosing on the sidewalk. This wont solve the problem but its a step work taking. I hadnt to thank the hardworking men and women in the San Francisco Police Department. Their diligence laid the ground work to put together this creative approach to public safety. I want to thank the team in my office that worked hard to come up with a way that will deal with a longstanding problem. I also want to thank our mayor for her tremendous support and leadership during this incredibly challenging time for our city, as well as supervisors peskin and haney, for their commitment to combating this problem. With that i would like to introduce our mayor london breed. Mayor breed good morning everyone. Thank you, all, so much for being here today. I want to begin by thanking dennis has rare kwaerrera and the citys Attorney Office to deal with one of the Biggest Challenges in the tenderloin community. Not so long ago we set down a path to address what we saw as a significant increase in homelessness and tent encampments in the t. L. And we made a lot of progress. Over 400 tents removed with over 600 people. Were now down to less than 30 tents. And we drive around the tenderloin, we walk around the tenderloin, and you would think that nothing has ever happened there. That no progress has been made. You see hundreds of people on blocks throughout the t. L. Who are dealing drugs openly in broad daylight. You see people pushing strollers mothers, who have to go out on the streets to go around the drug dealing and the drug using and the challenges that exist there. I grew up in this city. I grew up not too far from the tenderloin in the western edition. And the tenderloin has always had its challenges but it has never been worse. It has never been worse. And we cant do this work alone. We need to make sure that, yes, we address the challenges that exist with people who struggle with addiction. This is why im fighting so hard to get Safe Injection Sites open. Why im fighting to get expanded Mental Health support, because those of you who have family members who suffer with addiction addiction, you know how challenging it is to get them on the right path. We have to do more as a city to provide alternatives. And then we know the challenges that exist. The people who are being trafficked to sell drugs on our streets from other countries. The folks who are coming from other bay area cities because they know San Francisco is a place where they can make a lot of money. San francisco has become the place to go to sell drugs. It is known widely. And that has got to stop because there has to be consequences. Look i understand there might be financial challenges but the fact is we cant tolerate what we see happening in the tenderloin or any other neighborhood in our city. People have got to be held accountable for the destruction they are causing to these communities. And when we talk about destruction were talking about the people who are dying in record numbers from drug overdoses right in the tenderloin. This is a commonsense solution to a very very complex problem. And i really want to again express my appreciation to our City Attorney Dennis Herrera for not only putting together a unique plan but for caring about this issue in the first place. And i want to thank him for working with the San Francisco Police Department to actually use data to inform this decision. We know that there is a lot of work to do. And we cant continue to let the tenderloin be the breeding ground for all that is problematic and challenging in our city. Its going to take helping with homelessness. Its going to take drug treatment. Its going to take supporting lowincome families and people who live in that community. And, yes, its going to take holding the people who are holding this community hostage with the rampant drugdealing that is completely devastated this neighborhood. We have to do better and we will do better. This is a step in the right direction. And im looking forward to seeing the results of this work. And i want to thank all those who have been involved and supportive of this issue. And we have got to get the job done and thats what this is about. With that, i want to introduce the police chief of San Francisco, chief scott. Good morning. Thank you, mayor breed. First i want to start off by thanking our mayor london breed for her relentless leadership when it comes to this issue. As the mayor stated this problem is pervasive and i also want to thank our City Attorney Dennis Herrera for an innovative strategy that really gives us a much better opportunity to turn the corner on the drug dealing in the tenderloin. I would like to thank supervisors peskin and haney for their support and leadership on this issue. Youll hear from them as well in a second. The men and women of the San Francisco Police Department and those say sign assigned to the tenderloin have been working very, very hard to address the rampant drugdealing in the tenderloin. During a recent threemonth operation to focus on narcotics dealers the tenderloin officers and the narcotics detail officers arrested over 267 individuals for drug sales. 267. And although that number may sound high, its just a drop in the bucket. Our officers seized over 144,000 in u. S. Currency and a combination of over 7,000 grams of cocaine methamphetamine heroin, fentanyl and other drugs. 210 of those arrests had prior arrests in San Francisco and 55 of the 267 arrests were in violation of courtissued stay away orders where they were prohibited from the area where they were selling drugs. 58 of those arrested live outside of the city of San Francisco. Now our efforts to combine or combat narc sales in the tenderloin are ongoing as of today. And todays announcement of injunctions filed by our City Attorney will help us address the concerns and complaints of tenderloin residents and merchants. And those complaints come pouring in daily. These dealers prey on a vulnerable population and contribute to the drug degradation of the quality of life who work and live in the tenderloin. These injunctions give Law Enforcement officers another tool in our tool kit. Violators face up to a 6,000 fine, misdemeanor arrest and officers can potentially seize money and drugs along with other contraband. With the combined efforts in the drug treatment and other Public Health strategies, we hope to have a positive effect on the quality of life in the tenderloin area. As was stated by the mayor i cant emphasize this enough we have to do more we have do better and we will do better. We cannot and will not further tolerate drug dealers coming into the tenderloin from wherever theyre coming from throughout the bay area to ruin our community. The injunctions will make coming back to the tenderloin have more serious consequences. And, drug dealers if youre out there watching this news conference, know that your actions will not and cannot be tolerated any longer in the city and county of San Francisco. With that id like to turn the mic over to supervisor aaron peskin. Thank you. Supervisor peskin chief, thank you City Attorney herrera, mayor breed, for what is truly a creative solution. This is not a silver bullet. It must be coupled with Mental Health services, with drug treatment, with the addition of sorely needed Affordable Housing in and around the tenderloin. A year ago supervisor haney and i went to a meeting together just up the street in the tenderloin wherein we witnessed an individual who was literally dying of a fentanyl overdose. We were able to locate some narcan and that individual is alive today, but that should not be happening on our streets. This is not only a creative solution, but it is one where City Attorney herrera has crafted it very carefully in conjunction with my office. Has done so in a way that honors the civil rights of individuals in our community. It is structured fairly and will be supported by the board of supervisors. I want to thank the City Attorney. Were going to make a difference in the tenderloin. And if this works this is a model that be exported to other parts of San Francisco because when you look at those 441 deaths, it is true a disproportionate number of them are in the tenderloin but those individuals who are preying on weak individuals in our community are not just operating in the tenderloin. And if this is a success i look forward to working with the City Attorney office the chief of police and mayor to export this model to the rest of the city and county of San Francisco. We are available for questions and comments. Thank you, supervisor peskin. Well begin with the q a portion with City Attorney herrera. The first set of questions are from kate wolf. The aclu and other Community Groups have said injunctions like gang injunctions used in the past dont address root problems and violate peoples civil liberties. Can you address how these injunctions will be different from those . One thing you heard uniformly both from the mayor, from supervisor peskin and from the chief of police, this is part of a has to be part of a comprehensive approach that focuses on drug rehab, Mental Health and the like. So there is no doubt that we need to also get the root causes which are contributing to our problem. However this is different from gang injunctions. This is not based on affiliation or status it is based on going after individuals who have been known to engage in criminal conduct that has been charged by the District Attorney and arrests by the Police Department for known activity that has occurred in the tenderloin. The fact of the matter is we carefully crafted this to make sure it was based on conduct not on status or affiliation. And there is also the opportunity for if people have a legitimate reason to be in the 50square block area, the protected zone courts, city hall, have all been exempted from the limitation of movement. So this is very different from gang injunctions. I think it is something people need to be aware of. This is based on conduct not status. And demonstrable conduct from individuals who dont even live in the tenderloin and 27 of the 28 dont even live in the city and county of San Francisco. Thank you, City Attorney. The next question is from joe with bay city news. Why would civil injunctions be used instead of criminal actions if the city knows who the dealers are . Its another tool in the tool kit. Certainly there are criminal penalties that can accrue, but the fact of the matter is if someone is going to suffer a financial penalty of a significant dollar amount that is something that dissuades individuals from engaging. With respect to these injunctions you have two tools, a criminal sanction as well as a civil sanction which did not occur previously. This encompasses the whole tenderloin where something that the chief referred to earlier the stayaway orders in other criminal cases were designed to be with respect to one particular corner or block. It was not nearly as comprehensive as what were seeking here today. Thank you, City Attorney. That concludes todays press conference. Thank you, everyone, for joining us. Shop and dine in the 49 promotes local businesses and challenges residents to do their business in the 49 square files of San Francisco. We help San Francisco remain unique, successful and right vibrant. So where will you shop and dine in the 49 . Im one of three owners here in San Francisco and we provide mostly live Music Entertainment and we have food the type of food that we have a mexican food and its not a big menu but we did it with love. Like ribeye tacos and quesadillas and fries. For latinos it brings Families Together and if we can bring that family to your business youre gold. Tonight we have russelling for wrestle community. We have a tenperson limb elimination match. We have a fullsize ring with barside food and drink. We ended up getting wrestling here with puoillo del mar. Were hope og get families to join us. Weve done a drag queen bingo and were trying to be a diverse kind of club, trying Different Things. This is a great part of town and theres a bunch of shops a variety of stores and ethnic restaurants. Theres a popular little shop that all of the kids like to hanghang out at. We have a great breakfast spot call brick fast at tiffanies. Some of the older businesses are refurbished and newer businesses are coming in and its exciting. We even have our own brewery for fdr, ferment drink repeat. Its in the San Francisco Garden District and four beautiful muellersmixer ura alsomurals. Its important to shop local because its kind of like a circle of life if you will. We hire local people. Local people spend their money at our businesses and those local mean that work people will spend their money as well. I hope people shop locally. [ ] my name is sofy constantineo and a documentary film maker and cinema togfer, producer and director. It is inevable you want your movie to get out and realize yoi need to be a commune tee organizer to get people together to see the story you will tell [inaudible] pretty rich and interesting. In what we do as film makers is try to tell the best story possible so i think that is where i [inaudible] learn everything. Lighting and cinematography. I got jobs of stage manger at some place and projectionist. I kind of mixed and matched as i went and kept refining i feel like it isnt just about making things that are beautiful and appealing and rich and [inaudible] the way that the films [inaudible] it has to tell a story. My name is sumell [inaudible] free lance multimedia produce. My project is [inaudible] mostly oof street photographry with a few portraits. Im going arounds San Francisco and capturing the [inaudible] as we started to do this project i was reading about the decline of African American population in San Francisco and i wondered where the remaining population was and what they were doing and how life was for them. I wasnt very inspired by school, i wasnt very inspired by continuing to read and write and go to class. I watched a lot of movies and saw a lot of [inaudible] i said that is what i want to do. I had this very feminist [inaudible] and i felt like there was not enough of a womans vision on the stuff that we see, the movies that we make and the beginning of the [inaudible] the way we look at women and the roles women take in the stories being tolds. They felt [inaudible] they did want feel complex. I was like, i have a different frame i like to see the world shaped by. My grandsmother was a teacher and taught special education for 40 years in los angeles and when i was growing up she inspired me to record everything. We recorded our conversations, we recorded the [inaudible] we recorded everything to cassette players. Learning multimedia skills, from the other crossover Employment Opportunities for young people. Someone who grew up in la rks San Francisco feels like a small town. I lived in Western Addition and i was looking for someone to cut my hair, i found [inaudible] he seemed like a very interesting guy and grew up in the neighborhood and had a lot to say about something that was foreign to me. That local perspective and so important to me because i think as someone who isnt from here, knowing that history allows me to be more engaging in the community i live in and want the same for others. I want people to move into a new neighborhood to know who was there before and businesses and what cultural and [inaudible] shape what we see today. My Guiding Principles have been, if you stick to something long enough and know what it is and go for it you will get there. [inaudible] where i want to go, what i want to do and it is totally possible so, the impossible is you know, is not something to listen to. Working with kids, they keep you young. They keep you on your tones on your toes. Teaching them, at the same time, us learning from them, everything is fulfilling. Ready . Go. [ ] we really wanted to find a way to support Women Entrepreneurs in particular in San Francisco. It was very important for the mayor, as well as the Safety Support the dreams that people want to realize, and provide them with an opportunity to receive funding to support improvements for their business so they could grow and thrive in their neighborhoods and in their industry. Three, two, one because i am one of the consultants for two nonprofits here for entrepreneurship, i knew about the grand through the Renaissance Entrepreneur Center and through the Small Business development center. I thought they were going to be perfect candidate because of their strong values in the community. They really give back to the neighborhood. They are from this neighborhood, and they care about the kids in the community here. When molly molly first told us about the grant because she works with Small Businesses. She has been a tremendous help for us here. She brought us to the attention of the grand just because a lot of things here were outdated, and need to be uptodate and redone totally. Hands in front. Recite the creed. My oldest is jt, he is seven and my youngest is ryan, he is almost six. It instills discipline and the boys but they show a lot of care. We think it is great. The moves are fantastic. The women both are great teachers. What is the next one . My son goes to fd k. He has been attending for about two years now. They also have a Summer Program and last summer was our first year participating in it. They took the kids everywhere around San Francisco. This year, owner talking about placing them in summer camps all he wanted to do was spend the entire summer with them. He has strong women in his life so he really appreciates it. I think that carries through and i appreciate the fact that there are more strong women in the world like that. I met dandrea 25 years ago and we met through our interest in karate. Our professor started on cortland years ago so we grew up here at this location, we out he outgrew the space and he moved ten years later. He decided to reopen this location after he moved. Initially, i came back to say, hey, because it might have been 15 years since i even put on a uniform. My Business Partner was here basically by herself and the person she was supposed to run the studio with said great you are here, i started new Nursing School so you can take over. And she said wait, that is not what i am here for i was by myself before for a month before she came through. She was technically here as a secretary, but we insisted, just put on the uniform and help her teach. I was struggling a little bit. And she has been here. One thing led to another and now we are coowners. You think a lot more about safety after having children and i wanted to not live in fear so much and so i just took advantage of the opportunity and i found it very powerful to hit something, to get some relief, but also having the knowledge one you might be in a situation of how to take care of yourself. The selfdefence class is a new thing that we are doing. We started with a group of women last year as a trial run to see how it felt. Theres a difference between selfdefence and doing a karate class. We didnt want them to do an actual karate class. We wanted to learn the fundamentals of how to defend yourself versus, you know, going through all the forms and techniques that we teaching a karate class and how to break that down. Then i was approached by my old high school. One once a semester, the kids get to pick an extra curricular activity to take outside of the school walls. My old biology teacher is now the principle. She approached us into doing a selfdefence class. The girls have been really proactive and really sweet. They step out of of the comfort zone but they have been willing to step out and that hasnt been any pushback. It is really great. It is respect. You have to learn it. When we first came in, they knew us as those girls. They didnt know who we were. Finally, we came enough for them to realize okay, they are in the business now. It took a while for us to gain that respect from our peers, our male peers. Since receiving the grant it has ignited us even more, and put a fire underneath our butts even more. We were doing our summer camp and we are in a movie theatre and we just finished watching a film and she stepped out to receive a phone call. She came in and she screamed hey, we got the grant. And i said what . Martial arts is a passion for us. It is passion driven. There are days where we are dead tired and the kids come and they have the biggest smiles on their faces and it is contagious. We have been operating this program for a little over a year all Women Entrepreneurs. It is an extraordinary benefit for us. We have had the Mayors Office investing in our program so we can continue doing this work. It has been so impactful across a diversity of communities throughout the city. We hope that we are making some type of impact in these kids lives outside of just learning karate. Having selfconfidence, having discipline learning to know when its okay to stand up for yourself versus you just being a bully in school. These are the values we want the kids to take away from this. Not just, i learned how to kick and i learned how to punch. We want the kids to have more values when they walk outside of these doors. [ ]. President yee of the 26 neighborhoods we have in west portal its probably the most unique in terms of a small little town. You can walk around here and it feels different from the rest of San Francisco. People know each other. They shop here they drink wine here. What makes it different is not only the people that live here but the businesses and without all these establishments, you wouldnt know one neighborhood from the other. El toreador is a unique restaurant. Its my favorite restaurant in San Francisco, but when you look around, theres nowhere else that youll see decorations like this and it makes you feel like youre in a different world, which is very symbolic of west portal itself. Well, the restaurant has been here since 1957, so were going on 63 years in the neighborhood. My family came into it in 1987 with me coming in in 1988. My husband was a designer, and he knew a lot about art and he loved color, so thats what inspired him to do the decoration decorations. The few times we went to mexico we tried to get as many things as we can and wed bring it in. Even though we dont have no space, we try to make more space for everything else. President yee juan of the reasons we came up with the legacy business concept, man eel businesses were closing down for a variety of reasons. It was a reaction to trying to keep our older businesses continuing in the city, and i think weve had some success and i think this restaurant itself is probably proof that it works. Having the legacy business experience has helped us a lot, too because it makes it good for us because we have been in business so long and stayed here so long. We get to know people by name and they bring their children so we get to know them also. Its a great experience to get to know them. Supervisor yee comes to eat at the restaurant, so hes a wonderful customer, and hes very loyal to us. President yee my favorite dish is the chile rellenos. I almost never from the same things. My owners son comes out, you want the same thing again . Well, we are known for our mole and we do three different types of mole. In the beginning, i wasnt too familiar with the whole Legacy Program but San Francisco, being committed to preserve a lot of the oldtime businesses its important to preserve a lot of the old time flavor of these neighborhoods, and in that capacity, it was great to be recognized by the city and county of San Francisco. Ive been here 40 years, and i hope it will be another 40 year [ ] i just dont know that you can find a neighborhood in the city where you can hear music stands and take a ride on the low rider down the street. It is an experience that you cant have anywhere else in San Francisco. [ ] [ ] district nine is a in the southeast portion of the city. We have four neighborhoods that i represent. St. Marys park has a completely unique architecture. Very distinct feel, and it is a very close to holly park which is another beautiful park in San Francisco. The Bernal Heights district is unique in that we have the hell which has one of the best views in all of San Francisco. There is a swinging hanging from a tree at the top. It is as if you are swinging over the entire city. There are two unique aspects. It is considered the fourth chinatown in San Francisco. Sixty of the residents are of chinese ancestry. The second unique, and fun aspect about this area is it is the Garden District. There is a lot of urban agriculture and it was where the city grew the majority of the flowers. Not only for San Francisco but for the region. And of course, it is the location in mclaren park which is the citys second biggest park after golden gate. Many people dont know the neighborhood in the first place if they havent been there. We call it the best neighborhood nobody has ever heard our. Every neighborhood in district nine has a very special aspect. Where we are right now is the Mission District. The Mission District is a very special part of our city. You smell the tacos at the [speaking spanish] and they have the best latin pastries. They have these shortbread cookies with caramel in the middle. And then you walk further down and you have sunrise cafe. It is a place that you come for the incredible food, but also to learn about what is happening in the neighborhood and how you can help and support your community. Twentyfourth street is the birthplace of the movement. We have over 620 murals. It is the largest outdoor Public Gallery in the country and possibly the world. You can find so much Political Engagement park next to so much incredible art. Its another reason why we think this is a cultural district that we must preserve. [ ] it was formed in 2014. We had been an organization that had been around for over 20 years. We worked a lot in the neighborhood around life issues. Most recently, in 2012 there were issues around gentrification in the neighborhood. So the idea of forming the cultural district was to help preserve the history and the culture that is in this neighborhood for the future of families and generations. In the past decade, 8,000 latino residents in the Mission District have been displaced from their community. We all know that the rising cost of living in San Francisco has led to many people being displaced. Lower and middle income all over the city. Because it there is richness in this neighborhood that i also mentioned the fact it is flat and so accessible by trip Public Transportation has, has made it very popular. Its a struggle for us right now you know, when you get a lot of development coming to an area a lot of new people coming to the area with different sets of values and different culture. There is a lot of struggle between the existing community and the newness coming in. There are some things that we do to try to slow it down so it doesnt completely erase the communities. We try to have developments that is more in tune with the community and more Equitable Development in the area. You need to meet with and gain the support and find out the needs of the neighborhoods. The people on the businesses that came before you. You need to dialogue and show respect. And then figure out how to bring in the new, without displacing the old. [ ] i hope we can reset a lot of the mission that we have lost in the last 20 years. So we will be bringing in a lot of folks into the neighborhoods pick when we do that, there is a demand or, you know, certain types of services that pertain more to the local community and workingclass. Back in the day we looked at mission street, and now it does not look and feel anything like mission street. This is the last stand of the latino concentrated arts, culture and cuisine and people. We created a cultural district to do our best to conserve that feeling. That is what makes our city so cosmopolitan and diverse and makes us the envy of the world. We have these unique neighborhoods with so much cultural presence and learnings that we want to preserve. [ ] as a woman of color who grew up in San Francisco i understand how institutions can have an impact on communities of color. I think having my voice was important. That is where my passion lies when the opportunity to lead an office in such a new space came up. I couldnt turn it down. I was with the District Attorneys office for a little over nine years if you include the time as an intern as well as volunteer da, all most 13 years. During the time with the das office i had an opportunity to serve the community not only as the assistant District Attorney but as director of community relations. That afforded the opportunity to have impact on the community in an immediate way. It is one thing to work to serve the rights of those without rights victims. It is really rewarding to work to to further the goals of our office and the commitment we have as City Employees and advocates for people who dont have a voice. I dont know of anyone surprised to see me in this role. Maybe people have an impression what the director of the office of cannabis should be like what their beliefs should be. I smash all of that. You grew up in the inner city of San Francisco. My career path is not traditional. I dont think a person should limit themselves to reach full potential. I say that to young women and girls. That is important. You want to see leadership that looks diverse because your path is not predetermined. I didnt wake up thinking i was going to be a prosecutor in my life. The city administrator reached out and wanted to have a conversation and gave me interest in the new role. I thought you must not know what i do for a living. It was the opposite. She had foresight in realizing it would be helpful for somebody not only a former prosecutor but interested in shaping criminal Justice Reform for the city would be the right person for the space. I appreciate the foresight of the mayor to be open how we can be leaders in San Francisco. I was able to transition to the policy space. Here i was able to work on legislation, community relations, communication and start to shape the ways our office was going to reform the criminal Justice System. It is fulfilling for me. I could create programs and see those impact peoples lives. I am the change. It took truants youth to meet with Civil Rights Movement leaders who fought to have access to education. Being a young person to understand that helped the young people realize this was an important thing to give up. What we find is that young people who are truanted have a really high homicide rate in our city, which is a sad statistic. We want to change that. Coming from a community we are black and brown. I dont reach out to other people. I dont think they feel the same way. I had the great opportunity to work on Prison Reform issues and criminal Justice Reform issues. We created a program at san quentin where we brought district opportunities to to lifers and talk about how we are all impacted by the criminal Justice System. We brought over 40 elected das to san quentin for the situation. Now we are inviting the Police Department. Our formerly incarcerated group born out of this programming asked for the opportunity to work on a project where we could bring the men in blue on the outside to come speak to the men on blue inside to start the healing dialogue around how the criminal Justice System specifically in San Francisco impacts the community. I was attracted to the role. There was a component of equity that was part of this process. The Equity Community here in San Francisco is a community that i had already worked with. Before i took steps to visit cannabis businesses i thought it was important my team have a chance to go inside and speak to men who had had been impacted. That conversation needed to happen so we know how we are making an impact with the work that we are doing. The das office as we were leading up to the legalization of marijuana in the state we started having conversations on the policy team what that could look like. The District Attorney was really focused on the right side of history for this. We realized it would be quite a heavy lift for individuals who have been negatively impacted by the war on drugs to expunge the record. It was important to figure out the framework to make it seamless and easy. They put their minds to it after some time and many conversations the data analysts and other policy walk throughs on the team came up with the idea to engage the Tech Community in this process. Code for america helped us developed the rhythm to be used for any jurisdiction across the state that was important to create a solution to be used to assist all jurisdictions dealing with this matter. The office of cannabis is the first office to have a completely digital application process. We worked with the digital team to develop the online application. There are going to be hiccups. We are first to do it. It is one of the most rewarding parts to offer a seamless to offer a seamless approach. That is how they can find solutions to solve many of the community challenges. The best way to respond to prop 64 was to retroactively expunge 9,000 cannabis related records for San Francisco. It feels like justice full circle for my personal experience. In the past i was furthering the war on drugs just as my directive. Really coming from a place of public safety. That was the mandate and understanding. It is nice to see that pass a society we are able to look at some of our laws and say, you know what . We got it wrong. Lets get this right. I had the privilege of being in the existing framework. My predecessor Nicole Elliott did an incredible job bringing together the individuals superpassionate about cannabis. The office was created in july of 2017. I came in early 2018. I have been able to see the Offices Development over time which is nice. It is exciting to be in the space stickily in thinking about her leadership. Looking for the office it is always we might be before my time when i was working for the board offorboard of supervisors. I learn new things every day it is challenging and rewarding for me. We get the privilege to work in an office that that is innovating. We get to spearhead the robust exprogram. I am excited she came on board to leverage experience as a prosecutor 10 years as we contemplate enforcements but approaching it without replicating the war on drugs. I was hired by cam laharris. I havent seen a District Attorney that looked kind of like me. That could be a path in my life. I might not have considered it. It is important that women and certainly women of color and spaces of leadership really do their part to bring on and mentor as many young people as they can. It is superimportant to take advantage of as many opportunities as as they can when they can intern because the doors are wide open. Plans change and that is okay. The way this was shaped because i took a risk to try something new and explore something and show that i was capable. You are capable right . It was about leaning in and being at the table to say my voice matters. You find your passion, the sky smaings . Aings

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