Of the public. So thank you all for joining us. Madam secretary, please call the first item. Clerk thank you, mr. Chair. The first order of business is item 1, roll call. Commission members, please respond when i call your name. Commissioner brackett. Present. Commissioner scott. Here. Vice chair rosales is absent. And chair bustos. Here. And all members of the commission are present. And item 2 is announcements. A, the procedures. Please be advised that a member of the public has up to three minutes to make Public Comments on each agenda item unless the Commission Adopts a shorter period on any item. Viewers online will be instructed to dial 1 888 5578511. And enter the passcode 7500645. Followed by the pound sign. Press the pound sign again to enter as a participant. And again that number is 1 888 5578511. And then enter the access code which is 7500645. Press pound and then pound again to enter as a participant. The members will show up on the screen during each Public Comment secti
With the disappearance of this brother and sister from hide show missing since september. Their mother already behind bars. Now their stepfather is in plus, the cont d and s gone from a popular streaming service. Highs how one astronaut made histohout ever leaving earth. And the stunning scene from the Great Barrier reef. The great turtle migration caught on camera. Good wednesday morning, everyone. Just hours after a beautiful celebration of George Floyds life, there is new hope that lasting and meaningful change will be possible. Lawmakers from capitol hill to city halls across the country are considering ways to Reform Police procedures. One example is in houston where the mayor is signing an executive order to ban chokeholds. Police in phoenix are also banning them. In other cities here and around the world, demonstrators are knocking down statues they say are monuments to racism, and there are new calls to ban the confederate flag. In recent days, new cases of alleged Police Bruta
Coming up, the recent white house summit on Mental Health. The secretary of housing and urban Development Ben carson and others discuss efforts to address Mental Health challenges. This is about 50 minutes. Ms. Sullivan hello, everyone. We are going to go ahead and start the final panel today. Im Katie Sullivan at the department of justice. I just want to say thank you so much to the white house and the president , to the domestic policy council, steve wagner, thank you so much for hosting this and taking this serious issue and elevating it in this way. Thanks to all participants. And at this time i have the best and easiest job of all of the moderators today. Look at this amazing panel. I have very little introduction to do. I will start with a man was just talking about, secretary carson. Secretary carson leads us at hud currently, but i want to point out that he has had an amazing career as a doctor and is a passionate advocate for housing issues in this country. We couldnt ask for
Fallback on. We are taking a massive chance to open a business in the neighborhood that we love. We are two Small Business owners trying to give back to the property who followed all the steps set forth by the city of San Francisco and we need your understanding that there is a gray area in the legislation. This isnt a simple mistake, this is a misinterpretation of a law that was mental to help people just like this, instead, this is costing us time and money that we are running out of. The city has had a long and complicated relationship with Small Businesses. Weve all heard the story before, and we know what usually happens to the little guys, except this time, you have a chance to change the ending. Thank you. Clerk thank you. Okay. We will hear from the Planning Department. Commissioner honda youre going to have a fun night tonight, scott. These are the worst nights, actually. I love coming to the board of appeals. Commissioner honda but you love coming to the board of appeals. The
This journey is not something that happened overnight. Throughout this process, i spent many weeks away from the city, spent many nights working 12hour days, doing my come and coming back just in time to get to class. By the time i finished Elementary School i saw the beast of poverty. I ran out of fingers to count the youth in my community that lost their lives to gun violence. The club made sure to stay open the nights of shootings, making it so we would have a caring and dependable place to go when it wasnt safe to go home. The club gave me a place where i could be my authentic self. The club showed me the power of a good education and encouraged me to go into private school. It wasnt easy. I found my sense of self slipping away as i switched between environments, but i could always find myself back at the club, a place i didnt have to alter who i was. Every tragedy and piece of divert that i went through in my community, the club was right there to help me through it. When everythi