Hardest hit. Now younger people are making up the larger number ofpeople falling ill. Since the beginning 65of july of the cases are between the ages of 18 and 49. Domingo. E by skype is dr. Thank you for joining us. Reporter thank you. The age of affection is dropping drastically. Why is this . Is it related to reopt ing . Tis a great question. We see the average age of earlier in the pandemic was 65 years old. Now some reports are as low as 35 years old. We have seen the shift, it has gone down word there are probably two ways to think about is. We ask older people tostay home. We said you are more at risk for this type of infection. What wreopen peopledid stay home. It was the younger people that went out. They probably did oftwo types things, they worked, that is what we asked them do. They also had a good two time. The reason why the younger people, they are the people we said you can go out and helpus to reopen the economy. That is why they are at risk now. Reporter you enforce t
Falling il since the beginning of july 65 the cases are between the ages of 18 and 49. Joining me by skype is. Domingo. Thank you for joining us. Repter thank you. The age of affection is dropping drastically. Why is this . Is it related to reopening . That is a. Great questi we see the average age of earlier in the pandemic was 65 years old. No some reports are low as 35 years old. We have seen the s ift, it gone down word. There are probably two ways to think about this. We asked older people to stay for this type of fection. What we reopen people did stay home. Went out. Ounger people that they probably did two types of things, they worked, that is what we asked them to do. They also had a good two time. The reason why the younger said you can go out and help us to reopen the economy. That is why they are at risk now. Reporter you enforce the protection. The younger ople are not getting as sick as people that are older. They are not dying at the same rate. Does this mean if you are
Investigation and analysis that needs to be done on these topics . Were learning more information every day, supervisor. Thats the important of the tip line as well as the Public Integrity tip line, and our report will give you a breakdown of the large departments, so happy to talk to you about that as soon as we publish it. Supervisor haney are there specific topics that you identified in this report or more broadly that your office has identified as a need for a lot further investigation . And with that, what are the next steps for your office . I mean, one of the concerns that i have and i understand that we have, you know, recently been through a pandemic, and im sure you all are being pulled in all sorts of different directions. But it has been, i guess, about five months since this process first started, and theres a lot more that needs to be investigated and analyzed and reported on. What are the next steps for your office, and what topics are you going to be working on . How ca
Golf courses, acres and acres of land for the wealthy to sport while the poor are housed in tents and encampments. We need to change and we need this to be a real city solution. That means not concentrating it in one, two, three neighborhoods. That means around the city to all san franciscans that are committed to solving the problem and something they shrug off when they roll their eyes at San Francisco and how awful. No. Spread it around. Get it to places where people can spread out safely until we can build enough homes and actually get everyone off the streets for good. Thank you. Next speaker, please. Hello. My name is gail see crest. Resident of tenderloin. I was on eddy between larkin for 10 years. Now, i am on may son for the last year. All i have to say is whoever is working with this plan, it is not working, and i challenge just one of you to come spend one night in the tenderloin. Then go back to the drawing board. You dont know what you are talking about. It is so bad. It i
Activation . Its part of expanding our staff in the hotels, expanding our street presence, working with c. B. O. S to see if we can do contract modification so that we have more workforce to draw on so that we can get the successful programs that predated covid19. I dont have a cost on it right now. As i try to articulate, a lot of what we have quickly put into place, more quickly than anybody expected, during phase one of the activation, i think its given us sort of a foothold, a building and expanding into those areas that i talked about. Supervisor mandelman although that doesnt i hear that youre doing the work on the on the street response, but i guess im still missing the where folks in crisis would be taken, you know, over the next year if we dont have adequate capacity in p. E. S. Right. We we i mean, i think what we need to really focus on is with some slight reduction in capacity at urgent care. Weve been able to maintain most of our capacity in our diversion units and a. D. U