it is absolutely free. you just need to have the location open. you are set to go. president olague: good evening. this is a special joint hearing between the san francisco planning commission and the treasure island authority board. before i take roll, if i can just ask everyone to turn off your cell phones, any pagers, any computers, anything that may sound off during these proceedings, we would very much appreciate it. roll call for the planning commission. president christina olague. here. vice president ron miguel. here. antonini. here. borden? here. kathrin moore? here. and mr. sugaya. here. president claudine cheng. here. larry del carlo. present. john elberling. larry mazzolla. linda richardson and honorable jane kim is not seated tonight. thank you. commissioners, the first category on this joint agenda is public comment on agenda items where the public hearing is closed. and that s an opportunity for the public to speak prior to the c
don t guarantee that we re going to have the transportation. thank you very much. president olague: thank you. good evening. my name is paul and i m a candidate for mayor of san francisco in november of 2011 and i speak on behalf of the citizens of the state of california and object to the whole proceedings where the e.i.r. is being accepted or certified for acceptance, when the property and the title of the treasure island belongs to the people of the state of california, not the u.s. navy. it was not the navy s to sell for $110 million and it s not private developers to develop. this is privatization of the public commons and i object to it. the value of one piece of property at 110 embark darrow is $6 million without any development. that s lands value alone. if you extrapolate that to treasure island, the property is worth $20 billion, that s b as in billion, 100,000 million. $6,000 million dollars. we sold this or allegedly tried to sell it to lenar for $110 million. t
1% by attendance both bump in attendance translates to about $2 million or $3 million roughly. if we increased by 1%, that would be an increase of 500 ada, and roughly with funding of $500 per, that is quickly, somebody, do the math. it is about i m sorry, what? here is a calculated. $4,500 multiplied by 500. in that ballpark. where are we with our attendance? 65%? 95, and site. 95% on average. ok, so we need to tackle and bring in that outstanding 5%, the outstanding 5% could be somewhere between $10 million or $15 million? 1% is about $2 million. 5% would be close to $10 million, correct. thank you. just add to that, i just actually went out to one of the superintendent zones and had a meeting with the attendance liaison there, and she is finding great success because she not only works with the executive in the superintendent zone, she is from the community and knows the community, and that is one of the caveat is we have asked, and i think they are
president olague: good evening. this is a special joint hearing between the san francisco planning commission and the treasure island authority board. before i take roll, if i can just ask everyone to turn off your cell phones, any pagers, any computers, anything that may sound off during these proceedings, we would very much appreciate it. roll call for the planning commission. president christina olague. here. vice president ron miguel. here. antonini. here. borden? here. kathrin moore? here. and mr. sugaya. here. president claudine cheng. here. larry del carlo. present. john elberling. larry mazzolla. linda richardson and honorable jane kim is not seated tonight. thank you. commissioners, the first category on this joint agenda is public comment on agenda items where the public hearing is closed. and that s an opportunity for the public to speak prior to the certification or the commission s consideration of the certification of the final en
just asking you and them to trust your compassion that you have for people in this condition and to remember foster children haven t done anything wrong. on the contrary, wrong has been done to them. and we have an opportunity and an obligation to right that wrong. this is your opportunity right here. please take it and approve this project. thank you very much for my two minutes almost. [laughter] good afternoon, planning commissioners. i m steve unschum. i m a senior program manager with the corporation for supportive housing, c.f.h., a national nonprofit that works in communities across the country to create permanent housing to prevent homelessness we strongly believe thatnd and the evidence is promising that when providing with decent housing along with access to relevant services, transitional youth can heal past traumas, access the services they need and building build stable lives and achieve progress toward reaching their potential. we have been for these reaso