Left please make sure the sound, speaker cards and copies of any documents shall be committed to the clerk. Items acted upon will be on the january 30, 2018 board of supervisors agenda unless otherwise stated. Supervisor ronen please call item number 1. Excuse me. Agenda item number 1 hearing to temperature the issuance of a Liquor License to the gum hua lee business located at 915 stockson street will serve the public convenience or necessity of the city and county. Supervisor ronen thank you so much. Im officer patrick mack from the San Francisco Police Department and you have a pcm report for gum hua lee and they have allied for a license and this would allow them to sell beer, wine. There are zero letters of protest. Zero letters of support. They are located in plot 148 considered a high crime area. They are in census track 113 which is a high saturation area. And Central Station has no opposition and alu approves with no recommended conditions. Supervisor ronen any questions, supe
In our newsroom now. justine the Oakland Police department wanted to be part of this study by stanford university. The findings. That no mater the officers race. They were more likely to be respectful towards white people in traffic stops. Than with black people. Nats Police Body Cameras get the most attention when it can capture an extreme situation. But this study examined the videos of everyday interactions of Oakland Police officers. Sot the way we communicate with our citizens has an impact on their ability to trust us researchers at stanford looked at almost 200 hours of footage, from about 1thousand traffic stops. During april 2014. Then people rated how respectful the conversations went. The cameras showed. White people were 57 more likelty to hear an officer say please and thank you. They also apologized to white people more. And officers also showed concern, telling them to drive safe. But with black drivers, 61 were more likely to have an officer would use their first names
"Taylor Mac's 24-Decade History of Popular Music" is an ultra-condensed look at the one-time-only very queer immersive theater piece by the performer Taylor Mac.
We all remember the early days of the pandemic, back in March of 2020 when the weird term shelter-in-place became our way of daily life. Suddenly the busy streets of San Francisco and Oakland and beyond were empty, eerily apocalyptic, as restaurants and shops closed and plywood boards covered wind.
SPUR's Alicia John-Baptiste sits down with Marcy Coburn from Pier 70 to talk about how the design and programming of public spaces can create a sense of belonging in the Bay Area.