Hello everybody and i hope you can hear me. Sonnon the secretary of agricule along with my co moderator and and rated and you are here today to welcome you to this Bipartisan Policy Center food summit. We want to thank you all for being here. We want to thank our guests and especially secretary sonny perdue who we will introduce in a minute. This is become one of the most talked about issues of the whole covid19 issue. It has to relate to the food supply. From the production to the processing to the distributing to the consumption. And how it affects farmers, how it affects processors and how it affects the average person and particularly the hungry. So we are delighted to be here. We can dove into every issue in great depth because of the time. But its a way to start the discussion and we think we will have an interesting time listening to this very important issue about feeding this country. So i would like to again welcome everybody and thank the Bipartisan Policy Center for their h
Nonessential businesses. San francisco and San Mateo Countys are now leading the charge, saying monday, may 18th, is the day so many Small Businesses have been waiting for. Retail shops will be allowed to reopen for Curbside Pickup, but many questions remain as several other bay area counties are holding pat. Good evening, thank you for joining us, im dan ashley. Im ama daetz, liz kroits has been closely following our reopening timeline and now different counties are taking different approaches, live with more on what well be seeing next and, when. Liz . Reporter hi, ama and dan, all the different bay area counties seem to be splitting off a bit in terms of gradual steps to reopening. We learned today San Francisco is taking big steps next week, other counties as well. Heres what we know. When it comes to reopening the bay area, its baby steps toward. I am kpiexcited to announce e good news for a change. London breed said the city will formally enter phase two on monday and allow stree
And say the market is reaching extremes of being oversold theres been signs of internal panic and we were set up for at least some kind of snapback. A couple caveats there, we did have a couple tuesday rallies of 5 and 6 the past couple weeks that did not arrest the downtrend. One thing you can hang a little bit of weight on right now is the fact that over the past several days youve been able to look below the surface of the indexes and see more differentiation, separating winners from losers and a little more stock picking and less indiscriminate selling all sets us up for a good bounce on obviously expectations of policy traction that were getting from the fed and congress likely. All that seems to say its a bounce, a very strong one, its an overdue one will it carry on to anything i dont know that we can say for sure, but i like to say every bottom start with a bounce, not every bounce becomes a bottom. In the meantime just i think to put your point into one phrase, its turnaround
Driving the action first and foremost of course the heightened fear about the coronavirus. More countries go into lockdown as the steady spread of cases continues. The fed made a dramatic move cutting rates to zero and announcing new assets. And the economic slowdown with weak manufacturing data this morning from both china and the u. S. As we just said we are down about 9 on the dow. The low of the session was down 12 or 2,800 points. The dow is down about 31 from the recent market highs as we stand with just under we have every angled covered for you. Lets drill down on the selloff Mike Santelli at the market dashboard and lets begin with bob on the floor of the exchange. Trading halt this morning, 15 minutes right after the market opened our third trading halt in the last six sessions. Look at the s p 500. Our low is just a tad above 2,400. So well off of that number everybody down here waiting to see what if anything the president might have to say. Take a look at the dow movers, t
Hyoshin na, who has a concert coming up in San Francisco. Youll hear from her here first, all that on our show today. Well, the census count for 2020 is shaping up to be one of the most important population counts ever, especially with 330 million people. But also for Asian Americans because its the Fastest Growing ethnic group in the us, but the least likely to participate. And our next guests want people to know that hurts the community. In order to highlight that, we are going to focus on the challenges facing Asian Americans in the east bay. Joining me now is alexander saingchin, the Vice President of Community Investment and partnership for the east Bay Community foundation, helping to fund efforts to get the count done. And vivian huang, the Deputy Director for the Asian Pacific Environmental Network, an organization with deep roots in the states asian, immigrant, and refugee communities. Welcome to the show. Alexander saingchin thanks so much. Vivian huang thank you so much robe