We dont have it on the screen [ overlapping speakers ] the first chart i want to pull up here, this is a i know that the Fire Department is going to show you this map as well. This is the San Francisco department of Emergency Management and cal fire, fire hazard severity zone map. You can see that San Francisco is depicted there and as per cal fire criteria, San Francisco has a low wildfire risk and some areas of fire risk, but no moderate or extreme. On the righthand side for comparison weve inserted the sonoma county, the same map for them where the horrific kinkaid fire was. You can see their circumstances are markedly different. I only put those up for context since we were talking about wildfire, the circumstances very wildly throughout the state and there is a point of comparison in how the city compares to the most where the most recent wildfire in california just occurred. For us, our best practices, first and foremost, we consult and stay aligned with the San FranciscoFire Department on we consult with them on their recommendations and we want to stay aligned with the fire code. In particular, we want to stay aligned with the state line on this which i know the Fire Department is going to mention. The title descriptions in title 19 where they describe Defensible Space wherein the wildfire abatement and vegetation abatement, youre trying to create 30 feet around structures. So this is a large part of how we handle our wildfire abatable in our unmaintained and natural areas is that we look at this in terms of adjacent Property Lines to Residential Properties and these types of things to be able to create that defensive space in the case of a fire starting. We look through the fire Property Photo here and conduct Vegetation Management removal in the mayjune time frame in advance of the wildfire season. That includes removal of vegetation and dead wood from structures and properties to create that 30foot defensible area and the focus is on flammable material, not on green shrubbery or trees, but those things that are high and have a high probability of a flash point. We also believe this type of management of vegetation is consistent in trying to also balance park and Land Management with biodiversity with other Sensitive Habitat preservation which is part of our mission. Thats the proactive approach we tabling every year. On the reactive side if the department receives a complaint or a flagged situation, we immediately dispatch staff out there to evaluate it, take a look at it, and if we see a credible fire hazard, we will do that Fire Management abatement at that site. We maintain a list of properties where we do this, especially where we have an adjacent residential parcel shared Property Line so we can keep up with this. If we find new spaces, we add them to that list. Because that is the list we start with every year to do the wildfire abatement. Those are enumerative and proactive approaches. On this slide you can see places where we do some of this work every year, glen park, glen canyon and others as well. Another example of this taking glen canyon and glen park as an example, you can see we have highlighted on this overhead of Glen Canyon Park four areas where there is an yachbt line to the park line. When we do this in glen canyon itself, these are the four areas where we manage this through those practices we just laid out there. So if we get public complaints, 311 requests, if the Fire Department contacts us with something they heard, we go out and check it out and to maintain this Immediate Response to any suspected fire hazards. On the resources and challenges end, the there have been small fires in our parks by and large, it pains me to say this, but we do have legal encampments in the park from time to time. There have been arson events or just uncontrolled if they started the fire for cooking or whatever, it gets away from them. To date these fires have been small. The Fire Department has been wonderfully responsive in getting out there. In our end we now have three environmental staff crews that go out to look with our park rangers for areas where this might be occurring to get this cleaned out and to make sure theyre not going to be posing any kind of fire hazard while there. The resources we have right now allow us to do the effort they have ongoing. Its basically shared with our urban forcery division, by our Natural Resources section, and all the gardners that we have in all our parks and open space know how to handle this stuff and also how to participate in our abatement procedures. That summarizes my presentation. Id be happy to answer any questions. A few years ago, the board i guess supported the Management Plan for trees. [ overlapping speakers ] from your department. Yes. Our significant Natural ResourcesManagement Plan addresses all of this in its very large context about urban forestry management, Vegetation Management, and these types of things. How i know that during that time there were many trees that were identified as probably dead or not very healthy. They were supposed to be i guess taken down. Has that happened . Every year, supervisor, we have several tree assessments where we take a third party. One of the leading companies, actually internationally, theyre placed here in pleasanton, they go out the and do an entire analysis and identify the trees and give recommendations on whether they should be removed, pruned, monitored, or if theyre suitable for preservation. We do about six of these a year, depending on the size of the property. Then once the assessment is in, the recommendations on those assessments comprise the work plan from our urban forestry unit the following year. And the in terms of working with the Fire Department, have they gone out with you to look at in particular, i mean if not all, seeing as you have a consultant, but in regards to the innovations that you may have in the residential area, even 30 feet sounds like not much of a clearance. Between you and i is about 30 feet, i believe. We consultant the Fire Department on a casebycase basis. Its not an issue of regular meetings. As issues come up, we meet on site and see and discuss it and see what our analysis is. But if i guess my question is to be proactive, why wait for the issue. Are there opportunities for rec and park to work with the Fire Department to actually go out and do look at some situations and see what recommendations they might come out with . We actually chartered one tree assessment which was to address specifically adjacent Property Lines, which is more universal throughout the city. So it wasnt specific to stern grove or specific to glen canyon. It was a set of specifications how to manage adjacent lines between parkland and Residential Properties, that urban park face. Im pushing this because i know rec and park has a lot of the parks. Many of them in my district and many in other supervisors districts are concerned, and i would love to see few like to identify any hot sots. Wed be happy to do that. Thank you. As we mentioned mainly our approach is ke decree ating tha creating that space around buildings and structures. For trees we try to thin as space allows. What i want to know is what specifically you have done in the park . Have you done that or are you planning to do that . Have you used goats . Do you plan to . What are the aggressive strategies you have employed in glenn canyon and mi and mcclaro. We have done those things. It is around the Defensible Space. To my knowledge, we have not used goats. Managing grassland or trees within the property has not been our approach. It has been looking to find out where the areas we have to create that Defensible Space. You know we have had fires over the last couple years, not even in the areas that are over leo o what is the word . Vegtateed . Grassland fires. If you go to the forests the discussion about the ladder. There is a lot of under brush, a lot of area that could be trimmed and pruned. I want to hear you talk more about what you plan to do there in the future. We need to anticipate that those fires had been blown over, you know, a lot of the park would have gone up in flames. I will be straightforward with you here. We have to look at that. We dont have a current plan at present. Given the Climate Change discussion, given the fire discussion here, we are trying to hit the right balance. I dont have specifics to share with you for the park. It would be great if you could follow back up with us. Thank you. I already asked public works. This small area that jumps out on the map in terms of hazards. It is outside of your park. For the record i want to work with public works on that area as well. Can you catch me up on where the park is and this thinks about native versus nonnative . We are at the point. We dont remove whole forests. We know within our parkland, not the city as a whole, there are three predominant tree species. We woman age it through would try to thin the forest as we can so that it is thriving better, it is more resilyet, that type of thing. Augusthere are those who hate ad love the augus the th it. It is part of the species here in the city and trying to manage through thinning, pruning or deadwood removal so that it will do the best it can. Are you planting new . Not to my knowledge. You know, in the presidio they have a wildfire Risk Assessment shaping the management of their land. There is, i think, i know a great deal of anxiety, as i said earlier and concern from People Living around some of these very woody areas, you know, a, about whether the 30foot standard is the right one for a city as dense as San Francisco. B, if that is being adhered to in the ways it should be. I know you are having sort of casebycase consultation with the fire marshal. I wonder if it would make more sense to have a more kind of comprehensive check in on whether the standard rec and park is using is the right one. I think it would be meaningful to residents to know that there had been an outside check from the fire marshal or through an outside assessment, yes, San Francisco publicly owned properties are good, manage understand the appropriate way and brookly hills is not going to happen here. The record. We believe we are managing it is right way. I have not seen the presidio assessment. They will also evaluate low to moderate risk which aligns with the cal fire. The hazard assessment as well. It seems to be, you know, cohesive to me. We are always happy to seek thirdparty validation and to test best practices to make sure that they are still best practices. Thank you. Thank you. Next up i will bring up the Public Utilities commission, and that will be joh john and damon. Good afternoon. The ss p. U. C. To talk about our in city Fire Prevention measur measures. We want everyone to unbopped p. U. C. Land we have lake merced in the southwest portion of San Francisco. While the pc is the owner of the area, actually, rec park takes care of the main affairs. I wont touch too much on the lake. We have the reservoir land. We have the track. That is mostly o on the west sie of the boulevard as it comes down towards glenn canyon. Not the east side but on the west side, which is your district, supervisor yee. Then we have sunse sunset reser. These bottom four. The next slide. I am not sure if everyone knows where they are. We also have four areas, all in a close together location within San Francisco. To orient everybody on the left of the photo we have the laguna reservoir. That is one of the larger areas in the city. We dont quite have large areas like pc opened and san mateo counties. We have large watershed lands. There are 27. 75acres. We have number two on this slide here. Right across the street from clarendon elementary school. We have the Summit Reservoir up the hi hill. Then we have our twin peaks which is number four. The only reservoir feeding to the emergency firefighting water system. I want to orient everyone to where they are located. What are the proactive measures we are taking on these lands . Removing leaf litter, underbrush, creating fuel breaks 30 to 100 feet, managing grass lands and shrubs. Tree trimming and removal of dead trees. What is really important to us is working with neighbors to identify Property Ownership and responsibility. A lot of times these are old lands with old, old real estate maps. It is my land or p. U. C. Land . We went with a constituent recently around confusion whose land it was. We meet with the homeowners to make sure it is very clear. What are the more reactive measures . We work with sfpd and city agencies to get homelessen camp meantceenemeant cleaned out. We established ongoing relations with neighbors, not funneling through the general p. U. C. Phone line, while that is great for a lot of calls, we want direct contact t to damon and his crew. They can speak directly to our experts. They know the lands and concern in the area. We do a lot of those consultations. They have his cell phone number to come on out there. The local Fire Department to know the ins and outs of the lands. Some of those lands are steep, hard to get to, we want to make sure they know the best weighs in and out, also to review what we are doing with Vegetation Management and firefighting strategies. If there is any support to change maintenance on our land to increase ability to fight fires, we are looking forward to doing those tours. In the past it has been too long now to do them again. What are the challenges . Biggest fire threats are from campfires, folks starting fires within our property. Working again with police to make sure fences are upandin shape. We need to train staff to have training in the realm of fuel management. We have folks up country with this skill set. We need to make sure we are hiring folks with thi with thise and training folks. We have adjacent unemployment private property. Laguna is a well example. Our land and the homeowners land is well maintained. There is private property teen our land and the homeowners. They wont be able to develop it or maintain it. You have the area unmaintained. Looking forward to getting guidance from public works and teaming up with them to get guidance so we can address those problem areas. I am happy to answer any questions. This is good. I am familiar with district 7. I believe this last issue seems to be the problem of what you are dealing with. Something that we need to be concerned about. Why are you here . I have some handouts matching this. Good afternoon, supervisors. Port Government Affairs manager on behalf of the executive director joined by the executive director for maintenance. Unlike our sister agencies we feel good about our fire risk. Looking at the map on the opaque projector we have three different types of properties that fit what was requested for this hearing. The first in dark blue are three types of undeveloped properties. They are all on the city side of the embarcadero. All of these within 30 feet of commercial or residential districts. They are all paved. Others for the theater project. Rather than fire risk we feel like those make good fire breaks and offer some protection. With the exception of the south being the giants ballpark parking lot. Thithis is the purpose of the hearing. Second what appears in light green here. The improved parks are mostly irrigated landscape. It mitigates fire risk. For the most part these are on the water side of the embarcadero. We have a large fire break. For us. The prevailing winds are easterly blowing offshore. If there were a grass fire they would move toward the water, not away from it. This has been graded and road ways are added in and prepared for leasing. Really nothing left. Vegetation has been managed. At the port, unlike other agencies, we dont have stands of trees for the 7 and a halfmiles of water front we have less than 2000, some of which are on the properties on the maps. Seasonably we take down the grasses on the waterfront that are not more fully developed. Then we also have, you know, most of the land is rented where we have in the leases requirements to maintain the grounds. We keep an eye on that. Enforcement action there. We also work with dhsh on homeless encampment resolutions as potential source of fire. Seasonal removal of shrubs and grass that gets over globe i grn over grown. It is how we work with the Fire Department, we host a fire boat. Pier 70 and mission rock will include the extensions of the city atlarge. We are fortunate to have a fire marshal colocated at the port. Ken coghlan is a great asset. We are in close communication with him. I have tom carter with us. He can answer any questions about our maintenance practices. With that we are happy to answer any questions. I dont have any questions. It looks like there is a chance of anything from the port igniting any major fires probably a low percentage. Thank you very much for coming and presenting. Next is the department. I somehow skipped department of public works. Did i call you already