Us . Seeing none, closing. Clerk announcements. Item 2, the planning staff report in announcements. Ill mention that commissioner melgards last day was january 30th. Shes resigned her post as a Planning Commissioner. And board president norman yee has nominated a replacement. She went before rules on monday or tuesday and was forwarded unanimously to the full board for their consideration. Thats all i have. Anything . Okay, great. Clerk president s reports and announcements. None. Clerk item 4, consideration of adaption of draft minutes from january 15, 2020. President hyland back to the commission. Clerk on that motion to adopt minutes for january 15, 2020, commissioner black, commissioner foley. Commissioner johns, commissioner pearlman and commissioner so and commissioner mcspadden. That passes 70. And item 5, comments and questions. President hyland any comments, okay, none. Clerk commissioners, consideration of items proposed for continuous. You have one item number 6, 2019022536d
With us tonight is mike presidency dio of the center for arts and culture. Prior to joining fort mason he was an nonprofit sf heritage in opened up the directors efficacy of the los angeles conservancy and the National Trust for Historic Preservation. We asked mike to moderate tonights program because his preservation work in los angeles is the subject of tonights talk in here in San Francisco. Thank you for being with us mike. Mike. Welcome and theyll hand the microphone over to you. Thank you so much frances. Such a pleasure to be here tonight with my two longtime friends and colleagues Ken Bernstein and Stephen Schafer to talk about their stunning new book preserving los angeles how preserving historical cities can transform americas cities published by angel city press. Dare i say this book is a monumentalda achievement in the preservation field. Ken has devoted his career h to enhancing the heritage of los angeles and when i joined in 2006 i had big shoes to fill. Ken had just lef
Hi. Im jessica, and it is a pleasure to be here today with the Honors College students and the university of South Carolinas 421 course with the south made exhibiting South Carolinas industrial past. I want to start with a quote. This quote comes from a very prominent american historian. A guy named ed ayres who wrote, while the coal mines and textile mills have become a visible and memorable part of southern history, the souths largest industry has remained virtually ignored. Lumbering is often written off as if little consequence and little dramatic interest. Yet, lumbering more often than any other industry captures the full scope of economic change in the new south. Its limitations as well as its impact. And we are about i dont know, a third of the way through the semester and i think you guys are already convinced of this. But, i thought it might be interesting to share with you a little bit more about how we got to this place. So, about five or six years ago the National Park Ser
And it is a pleasure to be here today with the Honors College students in the university of south. Here today with the Honors College students at the university of South Carolina for 21 course exiting South Carolinas industrial patch. I want to start with a quote. This quote comes from a very prominent american historian. A guy named ed harris, who wrote, while the coal mines and textile mills have become a visible and memorable part of southern history, the south as an industry has remained virtually. Lumbering is often written off as of little plants and little dramatic interest. Yet lumbering, more often than any other in the, captures the scope of economic change in the new south. Its limitations as well as his impact. We are about a third of the way through the semester and i think you guys are already convinced of this. But i thought it might be interesting to share with you a little bit more about how we got to this place. So about five or six years ago, the National Park Servic
And it is a pleasure to be here today with the Honors College students in the university of south. 421 course what the south made exhibiting South Carolinas industrial i want to start with a quote this quote comes from a very prominent american historian a guy named ed ayres who while the coal mines and textile mills have become a visible and memorable part of southern history, the souths largest industry remained virtually ignored. Lumbering is often written off as of little consequence, and little dramatic interest, yet lumbering more often than any other industry, captures the full scope of economic change in the new south, its limitations as well as its impact and about, i dont know, a third of the way through the semester. And i think you guys are already kind of convinced of this, but i thought it might be interesting to share with you a little bit more about how we got to this place. So. About five or six years ago, the National Park reached out to uscs department of history and