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[Rafael Mandelman, Board President (District 8)]: Alright. Good afternoon, and welcome to the 06/10/2025 regular meeting of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors. Madam Clerk, will you please call the roll?

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: Thank you, mister president. Supervisor Chan? Present. Chan present. Supervisor Chen? Present. Chen present. Supervisor Dorsey? Dorsey present. Supervisor Engadio? Engadio present. Supervisor Fielder? Fielder not present. Supervisor Mahmood? Mahmood present. Supervisor Mandelmann?

[Rafael Mandelman, Board President (District 8)]: Present.

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: Mandelmann present. Supervisor Melgar? Melgar present. Supervisor Sautter? Present. Sautter present. Supervisor Sheryl? Sheryl, present. And supervisor Walton? Walton present. Mister president, do you have a quorum?

[Rafael Mandelman, Board President (District 8)]: Thank you, madam clerk. The San Francisco board of supervisors acknowledges that we are the on the unceded ancestral homeland of the Ramaytush Ohlone, who are the original inhabitants of the San Francisco Peninsula. As the indigenous stewards of this land and in accordance with their traditions, the Ramaytush Ohlone have never ceded, lost, nor forgotten their responsibilities as the caretakers of this place, as well as for all peoples who reside in their traditional territory. As guests, we recognize that we benefit from living and working on their traditional homeland. We wish to pay our respects by acknowledging the ancestors, elders, and relatives of the Ramaytush Ohlone community and by affirming their sovereign rights as first peoples. Colleagues, will you join me in reciting the pledge of allegiance? On behalf of our board, I wanna acknowledge the staff at SFgovTV and today, especially, Kalina Mendoza. They record each of our meetings and make the transcripts available to the public online. We've received a communication from supervisor Fielder that she's not gonna be able to attend today and has requested to be excused. Can I have a motion to excuse, supervisor Fielder? Motion from Chen, seconded, by Mahmoud. Madam clerk, will you please call the roll?

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: On the motion to excuse supervisor Fielder, supervisor Melgar. Melgar, I. Supervisor Sauter. Aye. Sauter, I. Supervisor Sheryl. Cheryl, I. Supervisor, Walton. Walton, I. Supervisor, Chan. Aye. Chen, I. Supervisor, Chen. Chen, I. Supervisor, Dorsey. Aye. Dorsey, I. Supervisor, Engadio. Aye. Angadio, I. Supervisor, Mahmood. Mahmoud, aye. And supervisor Mandelmann? Aye. Mandelmann, aye. There are 10 ayes.

[Rafael Mandelman, Board President (District 8)]: Alright. Without objection, supervisor Fielder is excused from today's meeting. And with that, madam clerk, can we go to our 2PM special order, the mayor's appearance at the board of supervisors?

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: Yes. Special order at 2PM is the appearance at today's meeting by the honorable mayor, Daniel Lohrey, present to engage in a formal policy discussion with eligible board members. Prior to discussion, the mayor may address the board for up to five minutes.

[Rafael Mandelman, Board President (District 8)]: Welcome, mister mayor. Thank you. Do you have any opening remarks? I do.

[Mayor Daniel Lurie]: With liberty and justice for all is a good way to start this meeting. As you all are aware, there are immigration enforcement actions taking place downtown this afternoon. I know there is tremendous anxiety and fear in communities across our city. I know you all feel that too because these are our communities. I wanna assure this board and everyone in San Francisco that as mayor, my goal is to keep everyone safe. I have been and will continue to be clear that these federal immigration enforcement tactics are intended to instill fear, and they make our city less safe. I have been and will excuse me. Under our city's long standing policies, local law enforcement does not participate in federal immigration enforcement. Those are my policies and our policies, and they make our city safer. I am coordinating with local law enforcement, and we have activated our emergency operation center. I am also in touch with community leaders who are on the ground right now. We will continue that close coordination so that we can keep everyone safe in our city. I wanna thank all of you for the work you are doing to support those who are scared and who are struggling. I'm here to support you in any way that I can. As we keep our city safe every day, the work of our city continues. Across our city every day, people are living in RVs and oversized vehicles. It affects our neighborhoods, public safety, and most importantly, people's lives. Families in our city deserve better options, and our neighborhoods and small businesses deserve safe and clean streets. Now we have a comprehensive approach that achieves both of these critical goals. Today, I am introducing new legislation along with supervisors Melgar, supervisor and board president Mandelmann, supervisor and Guardio, supervisor Dorsey, and supervisor Cheryl to tackle RV homelessness with both action and compassion. Here's what it does. First, we're putting in place citywide parking limits of two hours for oversized vehicles. This is a necessary step to address a significant impact these vehicles have on our public spaces. Second, and more crucially, we are expanding outreach and prioritizing housing and services, not just enforcement. This is core to our approach. Simply moving people along isn't a solution. We will restore our streets and public spaces, but we will do it the right way with dignity and support and with real solutions for those experiencing homelessness. And we will do it in a way that builds on the work we're doing under the breaking the cycle plan. That includes a proposal we've included in our budget to unlock $90,000,000 over three years to significantly expand our interim housing capacity. That means more beds and services specifically targeted to the needs of those struggling on our streets right now. We have the resources, and we can give people on the street a better option. We all know these challenges are multifaceted, and our response must be as well. With compassionate care, real housing alternatives, sensible regulations, and real enforcement, with expanded compassionate care and housing options, we can make a real difference for our residents and our neighborhoods. I wanna thank the board for your consideration of this legislation and of my bud budget proposal and look forward to engaging in the days and weeks ahead. Thank you.

[Rafael Mandelman, Board President (District 8)]: Thank you, mister mayor, for those remarks. Madam clerk, could you please call the first topic?

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: The first topic submitted by the district ten supervisor, Shamone Walton, is shelters.

[Shamann Walton, Supervisor (District 10)]: Supervisor Walton. Thank you, mister president. Good afternoon, mister mayor. Our shelter system is in urgent need of permanent solutions to address homelessness. Families and residents in my district have shared their struggles. Unhoused persons have been pushed into shelter stays that extend far beyond temporary solutions. District ten has stepped up in major ways with three navigation centers and now home to an unsupported, forced, unilateral tiny home site on Gerald, with the intention of increasing the blueprint at Gerald and the Bayshore Navigation Center without community buy in. And yet, there are other areas of the city with unhoused populations and no plans for shelter or any type of homeless services. At the height of the pandemic, in addition to three navigation centers, District 10 hosted a vehicle triage site, two safe sleeping sites, a RV site at Pier 94, and the v l vehicle triage center. No one can say that we are not doing our fair share in District 10. As you make efforts to address downtown and other parts of the city, my district has even been more impacted than many other neighborhoods in San Francisco. These pushouts of our unhoused neighbors across the city has resulted in increased number of unhoused residents in District 10 with no real resources or strategies to address this. You committed to working with all my colleagues and community when you make decisions, and yet this supervisor in the entire Bayview community is against the shelter on Gerald Street because you changed the footprint that was agreed on by community. You continue to try and grow the footprint without the support of anyone in community. No one in the area, no one in Bayview, not one business, and not one resident supports the shelter that is in place. You continue to say you work with the board of supervisors in good faith, but yet you continue to make unilateral decisions in an area with two navigation centers in close proximity. My question is, will you pause the proposal to add beds to the site on Gerald, or will you continue to disregard community voice and pretend like you wanna work together in good faith when in reality, you make unilateral decisions and stress low income communities, communities of color, and communities that don't have big pockets.

[Rafael Mandelman, Board President (District 8)]: Mayor Lohrey, you may respond to the opening question.

[Mayor Daniel Lurie]: I I appreciate the the tone and the tenor, in which the question was asked, supervisor. And I'm gonna answer it broadly and can get more specific. Interim housing capacity is one of the most urgent and humane steps we can take as a city to meet the needs on our streets. My breaking this cycle initiative is not just about creating adding or just adding capacity. It's about providing the right type of beds tailored to meet the specific needs of different populations and neighborhoods. The general common site represents a critical part of that effort. Phase one of general commons opened in April with 60 cabins for older adults struggling with hope homelessness. The proposed expansion will allow us to add 82 more beds for older adults living on the streets. This will help us alleviate street homelessness in the Bayview and surrounding neighborhoods. This project is a first of its kind collaboration between HSH, DAS, and DPH to bring on more necessary clinical services to our shelters. The The departments are working with HomeBridge, an in home supportive services provider, to offer comprehensive support and caregiving services to meet the needs of older adults staying in those cabins. They will also assess other supportive social services needed to effectively move guests experiencing homelessness into stability. The city has engaged in a robust community engagement process that began in August '23 and and continues today. My staff, along with HSH, meets every other week with the market zone working group to address community needs and concerns. This area is in need of infrastructure investment, and the community has legitimate ass of the city. My team is working closely with stakeholders to make requested lighting and safety improvements in the area, and we will continue to work closely with community stakeholders to ensure that this project is serving the community and giving people sleeping on our streets a better option. As part of our work with neighbors, we have set up a public phone line at Gerald Commons that community members can call if there are issues with the project. We put that number on flyers and shared it at community meetings, and since opening on April 3, we have not received a single complaint from the community. The city has been working with the community for two years on this project and that will continue. But we have an urgent crisis on our streets and those who are struggling deserve help right now. I believe we can do both, supervisor.

[Rafael Mandelman, Board President (District 8)]: Thank you, Mayor Lohrey. Supervisor Walton, you may ask a follow-up question directly related to the opening question.

[Shamann Walton, Supervisor (District 10)]: Thank you, president Madelmann. And mister mayor, you did not answer my question. Again, you may be meeting with the market zone. You may be having conversations with folks in the area, but no one supports it. And this is not just supervisor Walton making playing make believe. Everyone in that area does not support it. You have not one quote in your press release from anybody from that community, not a resident, not a business, because nobody supports it. So you can come here and misrepresent because you're having conversations and make it seem like there's community support, but it's not. And they may not be complaining to you, but they most certainly are complaining to me. So, again, I'm gonna ask you, because you continue to claim that you work with supervisors, that you work collaboratively, but you unilaterally put the shelter in Bayview. You're unilaterally trying to put an amendment on budget that will increase the footprint, not only at Gerald, but also at the Bayview Navigation Center. And in some of our conversations, you claim that you would like to address homelessness in the areas where we see people who are unhoused.

[Mayor Daniel Lurie]: Yep.

[Shamann Walton, Supervisor (District 10)]: But yet there's not a proposed shelter by the beach. There's not a proposed shelter by Golden Gate Park. There's not a proposed shelter by Lake Merced. So will you continue to unilaterally make decisions about how we address homelessness in areas already stressed without the input of community?

[Mayor Daniel Lurie]: I I am going to work with community. I may continue to be out in Bayview. We continue to work with other supervisors around putting, shelters, the right kind of shelter beds all over the city. I believe the RV legislation that is coming forward is going to help improve the lives of Bayview residents. And I will continue to be in community. You know I'm out there often, and you and I are gonna just disagree on the fact that you say not one single person supports it. But I am happy to continue the conversations. I'm going to do what I think is is best for San Francisco and for all communities, and I think I'm doing just that.

[Rafael Mandelman, Board President (District 8)]: Mayor Lohrey, you may now ask a question to supervisor Walton or any other supervisor in attendance pertaining to the same topic, but not necessarily related to the previous question.

[Mayor Daniel Lurie]: Sounds good.

[Takeshi Onishi (honoree)]: Okay. Perfect.

[Rafael Mandelman, Board President (District 8)]: That concludes the District 10 topic discussion. Madam Clerk, can you please call the next

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: topic? The next topic submitted by the District 11 supervisor, Cheyenne Chen, is centering community needs in capital investment projects.

[Rafael Mandelman, Board President (District 8)]: Supervisor Chen, please ask your opening question.

[Chayanne Chen, Supervisor (District 11)]: Thank you, Preston, and good afternoon, mister mayor. From District 11, we want to know what what process are your office implementing to ensure that major capital investment that are currently underway in historically neglected parts of our city are responsive to community needs and priorities. Specifically speaking, what are you doing to make sure that neighborhoods' needs are being identified and addressed in the Giant's Crocker Amazon renovation, Ingleside Police Station, Ocean View Library, and the other major public private capital projects?

[Mayor Daniel Lurie]: Thank you, supervisor Chen. I appreciate your consistent advocacy on this topic. You and I have had many conversations about this and talks. The infrastructure you mentioned not only serves District 11, but the entire city. First, I wanna say ensuring major capital investments in historically underserved neighborhoods are responsive to community needs is a priority for my administration. San Francisco's capital planning process is designed with transparency and equity at its core. Every two years, the city develops a ten year capital plan reviewed and adopted through the publicly noticed capital planning committee meetings and approved by the mayor and board of supervisors. This plan prioritizes investments that advance equity and directly respond to the needs of vulnerable communities. Community input isn't limited to plan adoption. Departments engage in local stakeholders throughout planning, design, and construction to ensure projects reflect neighborhood priorities. Let me touch on a couple of the projects. The new Ingleside Police Station will include a 1,250 square foot community room located prominently near the entrance, intended not only for police led community meetings, but also for youth programs, safety education, and neighborhood events in partnership with Rec and Park. This $109,000,000 investment is is slated for completion in 2029. In response to the strong community feedback, the ocean view library shifted from a renovation plan, as you know, to a full rebuild. Since 2019, the library has conducted numerous public meetings to co create a vision with residents. $42,000,000 has been allocated through fiscal year twenty six, and the library is actively exploring site options with real estate services. And we welcome continued input to shape the future of the facility. Ultimately, our goal is to ensure that capital projects are not just investments in infrastructure, but in community well-being. I look forward to continue to work with you, also with the Giants on Crocker Amazon, and I appreciate your support and your collaboration on that.

[Rafael Mandelman, Board President (District 8)]: Thank you, Mayor Lurie. Supervisor Chen, you may now ask a follow-up question directly related to to the opening question.

[Chayanne Chen, Supervisor (District 11)]: Thank you. Thank you, mister mayor, for your response. We are also hearing from constituents that these efforts haven't fully delivered the needed access to planning and design process. So can I have your commitment that you will prioritize working together with me to be also in District 11 talking to my constituents and our constituents about these major investments that will impact our future generations?

[Mayor Daniel Lurie]: Absolutely. Thank you.

[Rafael Mandelman, Board President (District 8)]: Alright. Mayor Lohrey, you may ask a question to supervisor Chen or any other supervisor in attendance pertaining pertaining to the same topic, but not necessarily related to the previous question. He's good. Thank you very much.

[Mayor Daniel Lurie]: Alright. You all.

[Rafael Mandelman, Board President (District 8)]: That concludes the District 11 topic discussion. And the matter has been discussed and will be filed after general public comment. And then we go back, madam clerk, I think to communications.

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: Meeting minutes. Do we do a meeting? Communications. Okay. Here we go. Thank you, mister president. San Francisco Board of Supervisors welcomes you all to attend this meeting in the board's Legislative Chamber within City Hall, 2nd Floor, Room 250. If you can't make it to the chamber, you're able to watch channel twenty six. That is SFgov TV's channel, or you can view the livestream at www.sfgovtv.org. If you have public comment that you would like to submit to the board, you can either send an email to bos@sfgov.org or use the US Postal Service and address the envelope to the San Francisco Board of Supervisors, the number one, Doctor Carlton B Goodlet Place, City Hall, Room 244, San Francisco, California 94102. If you need to either make a reasonable accommodation request under the Americans with Disability Act or if you need to request any language assistance, you can contact the clerk's office at least two business days in advance by calling (415) 554-5184. Thank you, members.

[Rafael Mandelman, Board President (District 8)]: Thank you, madam clerk. Let's go to approval of our meeting minutes.

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: Thank you, mister president. Approval of the 05/06/2025 board meeting minutes.

[Rafael Mandelman, Board President (District 8)]: If anyone has any changes, I don't see anyone popping up on the queue. So can I have a motion to approve the minutes as presented? Moved by Chen, seconded by Cheryl. Madam Clerk, will you please call the roll?

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: On the minutes as presented, supervisor Melgar? Aye. Melgar, aye. Supervisor Sautter? Aye. Sautter, aye. Supervisor, Cheryl? Cheryl, aye. Supervisor, Walton? Aye. Walton, aye. Supervisor, Chan? Aye. Aye. Chan, aye. Supervisor Chen? Chen, aye. Supervisor Dorsey? Aye. Dorsey, aye. Supervisor Angadio? Angadio, aye. Supervisor Mahkud? Mahkud, aye. And supervisor Mandelmann?

[Takeshi Onishi (honoree)]: Aye.

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: Mandelmann, aye. There are 10 ayes.

[Rafael Mandelman, Board President (District 8)]: Alright. Without objection, the minutes will be approved after public comment as presented. Madam clerk, let's go to our consent to our consent agenda, items two through nine.

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: Items two through nine are on consent, which means that these items are considered to be routine. If a member objects, an item may be removed and considered separately.

[Rafael Mandelman, Board President (District 8)]: Seeing no one on the roster, madam clerk, can you please call the roll on the consent agenda?

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: On items two through nine, supervisor Melgar. Melgar, I. Supervisor Sautter. Aye. Sautter, I. Supervisor Sheryl? Cheryl, I. Supervisor Walton?

[Shamann Walton, Supervisor (District 10)]: Aye.

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: Walton, I. Supervisor Chan? Chan, I. Supervisor Chen? Chen, aye. Supervisor Dorsey? Aye. Dorsey, aye. Supervisor Engadio, aye. Supervisor, Mahmood? Mahmood, aye. And supervisor Mandelmann? Aye. Mandelmann, aye. There are 10 ayes.

[Rafael Mandelman, Board President (District 8)]: Without objection, these ordinances are finally passed. Madam clerk, let's go to unfinished business, item number 10.

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: Item 10. This is an ordinance to appropriate approximately 7,900,000.0 of ambulance service revenue in the fire department and to deappropriate approximately 1,500,000.0 in permanent salaries in the Department of Emergency Management, approximately $6,866,000 in the fire department and 500,000 in the Public Utilities Commission, and to appropriate approximately 3,700,000.0 to permanent salaries and approximately 5,000,000 to overtime in the fire department, approximately 1,500,000.0 to overtime in the Department of Emergency Management, and 500,000 to overtime in the Public Utilities Commission. In order to support the department's projected increases in overtime in fiscal years 2024 through 2025. And, mister president, this ordinance requires a two thirds vote of all members of the board for approval of the fire department's appropriation of approximately 7,900,000.0.

[Rafael Mandelman, Board President (District 8)]: Thank you, madam clerk. Let's take this item, same house, same call. Without objection, the ordinance is finally passed. Madam clerk, please call item 11.

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: Item 11, this is an ordinance to amend the administrative code to establish and define the membership and duties of the board of directors of the San Francisco Downtown Revitalization and Economic Recovery Financing District.

[Rafael Mandelman, Board President (District 8)]: And we'll take this, same house, same call, without objection. The ordinance is passed on first reading. Madam clerk, please call item 12.

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: Item 12, this is an ordinance to authorize the clerk of the board of supervisors to sell licenses to third parties to legislative management system software developed by the Clerk's Office and to amend the administrative code to establish a fund to receive revenue for licensing the legislative management system software to third parties, and from interdepartmental fund transfers from city departments to use for the legislative management system.

[Rafael Mandelman, Board President (District 8)]: We'll take this item, same house, same call. Without objection, the ordinance is passed on first reading. Madam clerk, please call item 13.

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: Item 13. This is a resolution to approve a second amendment to the grant agreement between the San Francisco adult probation department and the regents of the University of California on behalf of its San Francisco campus for case management services to increase the grant amount by approximately 7,760,000.00 for a new total of 17,100,000.0, and to extend the grant term by two years from 06/30/2025, for a new new total term through 06/30/2027.

[Rafael Mandelman, Board President (District 8)]: And we'll take this same house, same call without objection. The resolution is adopted. Madam clerk, please call item 14.

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: Item 14. This is a resolution to approve a port commission lease with three forty Jefferson Street Partners LLC for approximately 3,750 square feet of a single story restaurant space located at 340 Jefferson Street for ten years with five two five year options to extend and to estimate to produce approximately 1,500,000.0 in revenue over the ten year term with the port contributing 470,000 for improvements to the premises.

[Rafael Mandelman, Board President (District 8)]: We'll take this. Same house, same call. Without objection, the resolution is adopted. Madam Clerk, please call item 15.

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: Item 15. This is a resolution to approve the direct current fast charging hub lease with Skychargers LLC and the city for a fourteen year term with one two year option to extend and a minimum annual guarantee of 190,000 for the first year of the lease.

[Rafael Mandelman, Board President (District 8)]: And, again, same house, same call. Without objection, the resolution is adopted. And, madam clerk, let's go to our 02:30 special order.

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: Yes. It is now 02:30, end time for the board of supervisors to approve the recognition of commendation for meritorious service to the city and county of San Francisco.

[Rafael Mandelman, Board President (District 8)]: And first up, District 7, supervisor Melgar.

[Myrna Melgar, Supervisor (District 7)]: Thank you so much, president Mandelmann. Today, I'm excited to honor the student organizers of Saint Cecilia's Church and Schools, socks, shoes, and so as donation drive. If you could please come up, I'd appreciate it. So Madeline Patrick James McAuley, Gianna Monje, Reese Roland, Ava Endo, Alexander Gonzalez, Liam Kearney, Amari Saines, and their advisor, Jean Roland. This donation drive was led by this group of seventh and eighth graders from Saint Cecilia's, making this the school's first ever student run community service project. This donation drive ran through the month of March. And during that time, the student leaders worked really hard to spread the word and encourage donations. They made announcements in their school and parish, the community newsletters, weekly announcements after Sunday mass, made presentations for the donation drive on their school TV platform. And at the end of the donation drive, they sent out lovely thank you letters to everyone in the community. They were always up for the organizational tasks, making sure to check on the collection barrels, and working hard on the last day to sort and record many of the donations. Initially, the students planned to just, host a sock drive for the unhoused. But once they connected with Saint Anthony's Foundation, they discovered that many other items were also needed. So they decided to expand their collection to donations of, in addition to socks, shoes, and sweatpants. This willingness to reach out, learn what was needed, and adapt their project based on feedback is really admirable. It shows flexibility and creativity. It also led to an incredibly successful donation drive, in which students collected many essentials for the unhoused, including fifteen twenty one pairs of socks, 49 pairs of sweatpants, and 47 pairs of shoes. Other donations also collected included sweatshirts, shirts, bags, masks, gloves, and food. After donations were collected, the items were given to Saint Anthony's Foundation to be distributed to people in need. The students' determination to organize and run this project themselves demonstrates an exemplary commitment to community service. Thank you all for everything that you've done. Thank you for, being amazing students, for stepping up, for making the effort to serve your community. And of course, thank you to Jean Roland, your wonderful project advisor. Your work has made an impact and no doubt helped many people. We need more hope and humanity in this world right now. May your passion to serve and never wane, And may this serve as an inspiration to other young leaders, and adults, frankly, about what can be done in service to others. Thank you so much for being here.

[Patrick McCauley (student honoree)]: Thank you, supervisor Melger, president Mandelmann, and the board of supervisors for inviting us here today. My name is Patrick McCauley, and I, along with a few other junior high students from Saint Cecilia, have worked hard to organize and participate in a donation drive to benefit Saint Anthony's. This drive meant a lot to us, and we are extremely honored to be here today to receive a certificate of recognition.

[Amari Saines (student honoree)]: My name is Omari Sinas. We volunteered to lead this project because we wanted to gain experience in leadership, learn and show responsibility, help the San Francisco community, and help grow our faith.

[Alex Gonzalez (student honoree)]: My name is Alex Gonzales. We learned that Saint Anthony's Foundation needed shoes, sweatpants, and socks particularly for men. The purpose of the donation drive was to bring our community together and contribute both the donations and time to meet this need for those who are less fortunate.

[Reese (Rhys) Roland (student honoree)]: My name is Rhys Roland. In the Tenderloin struggle with poverty, addiction, and mental illness, Saint Anthony's Foundation has been a beacon of consistency, companionship, and caring for seventy five years. They provide a range of services, including including clothing, hot meals, addiction recovery, medical care, workforce development, women and children's services, and a place to rest.

[Gianna Monje (student honoree)]: Saint Anthony's takes a different approach, one that delivers meaningful results, hope, stability, renewal. My name is Gianna Munji, and we'd also like to thank Saint Cecilia Church and School for giving us this opportunity to give back to our community. I wanna recognize additional members of our team, Madeline Mabrey, Ava Endo, and Liam Kearney. Thank you again, board of supervisors, for this honor of recognition.

[Rafael Mandelman, Board President (District 8)]: Good job, everybody. District 10. Supervisor Walton.

[Shamann Walton, Supervisor (District 10)]: Thank you, mister president. Colleagues, today, it is my honor to celebrate Mac Allen, affectionately known as Mac. Mac is a beloved muni transit operator who currently serves out of the woods division located in the Dogpatch area of San Francisco. Mac was born and raised in Las Cruces, New Mexico, and moved to San Francisco in 2011 to study architecture. From the very beginning, he felt a deep connection to the city and quickly knew he had found a home. It was here he met his wife, Holly, at Cafe de Nord. The couple married at City Hall in 2007, and now raised their two children, ages 15 and 13, in the same Dog Patch neighborhood where Mac begins and ends his daily muni routes. Since joining the MTA in 2021, Mac has become familiar and an uplifting presence for many riders. He currently operates the 44 O'Shaughnessy and 37 Corvette lines, where he is known not just for his skill behind the wheel, but for his warmth, attentive attentiveness, and unmistakable joy he brings to each ride. Mack is a poet at heart, offering writing about Muni and San Francisco. He is a two time champion of Muni Diaries Live, a local storytelling and poetry event. His words reflect the humanity, humor, and soul of everyday city life. And his mission is clear, To raise the profile of public transit, and the people who help make it run. Parents from community have shared with our office how touched they were when Mac handed out drawings and handwritten cards to students who regularly lot ride the 44 line. This is going above and beyond. These small acts of kindness and creativity speak volumes about the impact he has beyond his duties as a driver. He is not just a transit operator, but a deeply woven part of the community. In a feature published by Mission Local, Max shared his reflections on the meaning of his work. He spoke about how much it lifts his spirits to receive commendations from passengers, especially knowing that many operators never receive such recognition. Earlier this year, Mac led a heartfelt effort to bring attention to Transit Operator Appreciation Day on March 18. His goals were ambitious to increase ridership by 10% and to collect 500 accommodations for fellow operators across the city. For Mac, it was about supporting his colleagues and helping San Franciscans see the people behind the wheel with new appreciation. Mac's love for public transit began during what many remember as the Muni meltdown summer of two thousand eighteen. That year, after widespread service disruptions, he and his children took on some challenge of riding every muni line in the city. The experience was both frustrating and inspiring. And it sparked the idea that he could contribute to making the system better by becoming an operator himself. Nearly

[Reese (Rhys) Roland (student honoree)]: four

[Shamann Walton, Supervisor (District 10)]: years into his service, that love is as strong as ever. Mac has a special connection to the students from Willie Brown Middle School who ride his route every afternoon. He watches out for them as if they were his own children, and they have come to count on his steady and familiar presence. Even in the face of budget challenges and potential service cuts being discussed all the time, Mac remains hopeful and committed. He is a reminder that every Muni line is more than a route. It is a lifeline run by someone who cares deeply about San Francisco and his future. One of Mac's professional goals is to operate SFMTA's iconic f line, which runs along Market Street and out to Fisherman's Wharf. He carries a sincere aspiration to uplift public transit in San Francisco, not only through excellent service, but through art, advocacy, and everyday acts of kindness. We are proud to honor Mac Allen, a poet, an advocate, a neighbor, and a true stalwart of San Francisco's public life. Thank you for all that you do.

[Mac Allen (SFMTA Muni operator, honoree)]: Thank you so much, supervisor Walton, president Mandelmann, board of supervisors. I'm extremely honored to be recognized here today. I'll keep my statement very brief, and I'll read my poem that I shared with the Willie Brown students. I want to extend my gratitude both to supervisor Walton and the school community of Willie Brown Middle School, the teachers, staff, administrators, and parents who are doing something really special over there. Most of all, I want to thank the Willie Brown students who have been riding my bus this last school year. They're awesome kids, a joy to serve, and I expect that they will continue to make us proud for years to come. I love Muni and San Francisco, and I wish to remind this board that our public transit system needs to be properly funded to meet the needs of this community. Furthermore, no human being is illegal. Apollish ICE. This is my pro poem for the 44 O'Shaughnessy Willie Brown students. Run one seven four. I signed on run one seven four from the bank of Lake Yellowstone. One to nine on the 44 with Saturdays off looked good in principle, and I took it. That first Monday, at Silver And Revere at 04:04, as a throng of kids swarmed my bus, I thought 174 may have been a mistake. Rolling up to Willie Brown Middle, right after school every day, my bus would be packed front to back, top to bottom. Lucky if the doors close. A coach load of middle schoolers might be a nightmare, but this crew won my heart within the week. As I pulled up, horn beeping a little ditty, the kids are cheering for the bus, and that's all it takes. I'm a rock star stepping on stage as the crowd roars. And when the kids rush the bus, it's as thrilling as a wave breaking at Mavericks and scary every time. I swing open the doors and greet them in the customary manner. No pushing. No running. No pushing. While they push and run and find their place on my bus, I hit the buttons that say I'm drop off only. Brooklyn dad, always the last to board, squeezes in. We dap up and go. Within the week, the kids from Willie Brown Middle become my kids. And I'd never want to miss this trip. Can't bear thinking of them waiting at the curb, and no bus coming. Not on my watch. So it was awful, understand, that day. The operator, I relieve, sends a message, blocked on silver by Topeka, cops at the school with guns drawn. Every parent in America can feel the panic gripping the edges of those words. A pip on the map of the crime app, possible gunmen centered on the campus. Those are my kids in there. And if only I could, by magic, bring them to me on that dingy corner by the machine shop where operators swap seats, the relief I would have felt at that point. Understand, it was awful. It resolved happily. No one was hurt, and no shots fired. The cops weren't even at the school. They were next door, stupidly doing an armed house raid at lunch hour on a school day. So I pulled up beeping that afternoon, and my kids are all there, shouting and smiling and rushing the bus like they'll live forever. I took them away from silver and revere, learned bits and pieces. They were locked down, and it's like they practiced, but nothing happened. Brooklyn dad and I compare notes, how the hair stands up on your neck. All you can think is, what do I do? Who do I call? How do I get there? My kids are on my bus now, and I don't want to let them off at San Bruno, or Mission, or Glen Park. I want to take them to the beach and buy them ice cream. Of course, I can't. So I'll do the one thing I can like I always do. I'll call out the stops. I'll open the doors, close the doors, roll the coach down the hill. The one thing I can do, I'll take them home.

[Rafael Mandelman, Board President (District 8)]: District five, supervisor Mahmoud.

[Bilal Mahmood, Supervisor (District 5)]: Mister Takashi Anishi, come up stage. Colleagues, today I have the deep honor of recognizing a man whose influence on Japantown's cultural and commercial life has spanned generations, and whose passion for storytelling helped introduce an entire country to a new way of seeing the world. We are here to commend the remarkable legacy of mister Takeshi Onishi, the founder of Japan Video and Media, a pioneer of anime and manga in America, and a steadfast steward of Japantown's traditions, festivals, and community life for more than four decades. We are here because this past May, after forty years of business, Japan found Japan Video and Media closed its doors for the last time. This commendation is both a thank you and a tribute to a legacy that shaped not only a neighborhood, but a generation. Mister Onishi didn't just sell stories. He built a sanctuary for imagination, a haven for subcultures, and a landmark where San Francisco's youth, families, and artists could gather, learn, and dream. When I first learned of mister Onishi's story, I expected to hear exclusively about his work in creating a robust DVD and VHA selection for his customers. What I didn't expect, though, I should have, was just how deeply personal his impact had been. I heard about people who grip visiting Japan video every weekend, children who are now artists, animators, teachers, and parents themselves. I heard about the celebrities who quietly frequented the stores, including Robin Williams, Joe Montana, bringing their kids to explore a world unlike any other. But most of all, I heard about mister Onishi's heart, his generosity, his curiosity, his belief that culture could cross oceans, generations, and genres, and still feel like home. When mister Inishi founded Japan Video in the nineteen eighties, anime and manga were virtually unknown in The United States. Blockbuster didn't carry it. No longer does either. Amazon didn't exist. And yet, Mr. Inishi believed fiercely that there was an audience here. He curated, imported, subtitled, and evangelized a genre that would go on to shape a global pop culture before many others did. Japan Video wasn't just a store. It was a gateway. For thousands of customers, it was the first place they encountered titles like Akira or Sailor Moon, one of which I have seen and the other I have not, before they were household names. Mister Onishi gave people access to stories they didn't even know they were looking for. And in doing so, he helped create a whole new fan base, one customer at a time. In 2020, his vision and impact were officially recognized with San Francisco's legacy business designation, a reminder that culture memory, like any landmark, deserves a preservation. Beyond the storefront, mister Nishi was a cornerstone of Japantown civic life. He served as a member of the Japantown Merchant Association for four forty years, four decades of dedication to the community. He helped organize nearly every major cultural event in Japantown, including the Tanabata Festival, the Oban Festival, the Akimatsuri, and the year end Garagara Festival. And fittingly, he brought cosplay to the Cherry Blossom Festival, creating the anime costume contest and parade, which became a beloved tradition for young fans and artists alike. Having dressed up as one punch man once, that would have been fun to attend as well. As Rich Hashimoto of the Japantown Merchant Association reminds us, Mr. Inishi's presence made the neighborhood feel alive, joyful, and in tune with both tradition and transformation. There's something poetic about the way mister Inishi blended the past and the future, honoring the depth of Japanese culture while also bringing new stories into the fold. He believed in fandom before it had a name. He preserved rituals while cultivating new ones, and he built a small business that was, in truth, a cultural lighthouse. Even on Japan Video's final day this past May, hundreds of fans returned, not to shop, but to say thank you, to honor the man who gave them their first glimpse into another world. So colleagues, please join me recognizing Mr. Onishi I'm forgetting your last name Mr. Takeshi Onishi for his visionary leadership in introducing Japanese pop culture to The US, for his decades of dedication to Japantown's civic and cultural life, and for the joy, imagination, community he nurtured through Japan Video And Media. Mister Onishi, we've given generations the gift of wonder, and doing so made our city so proud and animated. Thank you.

[Takeshi Onishi (honoree)]: Thank you, supervisor. You actually mentioned everything I wanted to say, so I can my world showed. It's hard to believe it's been forty years since I opened the store in 1984, and time flies. We had the we have managed to overcome a lot of difficulties. Recently, we had a pandemic, then the recession, and ever changing market trend. I sponsored and the I introduced, promoted Japanese culture to make Japantown more attractive and vibrant for the shoppers to come to visit. For that purpose, I organized a series of events like as he mentions, Baba is mentioned, Tanabata Festival or Bon Dance, and Japan Town anime fair, and probably my biggest contribution to the community is in 1999, I introduced and organized anime costume parade. Anime being popular in nineteen nineties. Ceremon, Pokemon, Dragon Ball, One Piece, you know, was very popular, and a lot of young people just connected with the anime costume parade right away. Anime costume parade were super glue in a way. Up until that, Cherry Blossom Festival was mostly tradition dominated festival. Tradition dominate cultural festival. So it's the first time I brought in contemporary culture anime to the festival, which help to draw young people to the festival and help to increase the participation of young people to the festival. Incidentally, my introduction of anime costume parade was first in The United States. So I'm kind of proud of it. I could not have done let's see. Supporting and contributing to the community is my mission. So I did, I think, all I can do, and I'm really happy to recognize today my contribution. Thank you, supervisor. Thank you, everybody.

[Rafael Mandelman, Board President (District 8)]: And now, district eight, Darcy Drolinger. Come on up.

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: Hello.

[Rafael Mandelman, Board President (District 8)]: It is amazing when a when a drag queen walks in the room. You really you know you do notice. You notice. Colleagues, it is my great honor to present a special commendation on the second Tuesday of Pride Month to San Francisco's first drag laureate, Darcy Drolinger. Darcy is a native San Franciscan actor, writer, director, choreographer, producer, and entrepreneur in addition to being the country's first ever drag laureate. San Francisco's LGBTQ plus cultural heritage strategy, published in August 2020, proposed the creation of or establishment of a drag laureate during the darkest days of the pandemic. The Human Rights Commission's l g b two LGBTQIA plus advisory committee advocated for implementation of the proposal. And in 2023, Mayor Breed named Darcy the city's first drag laureate just in time for Pride. It would turn out to be an inspired choice. Darcy, you have done an absolutely amazing job at a difficult time, many difficult times for the city. You have brought unmitigated queer joy, and you are leaving behind a very difficult set of heels to to fill. One example, that same year, Darcy worked with Honey Mahogany from the Office of Transgender Initiatives and Juanita Moore to produce San Francisco is a Drag, a citywide event that had a 100 drag queens and kings outperforming on streets across San Francisco at the same time. Darcy is a founder, owner, and artistic director of Oasis, which was voted best cabaret venue and best drag show by the Bay Area Reporter, in supervisor Darcy's district, and he has put himself into the queue. He will be offering some remarks also. Darcy and her then co owners o opened Oasis in an 8,000 square foot converted gay bathhouse on New Year's Day twenty fifteen in San Francisco's SoMa District. Happy ten year anniversary.

[Takeshi Onishi (honoree)]: Thank you.

[Rafael Mandelman, Board President (District 8)]: She launched Oasis Arts to support BIPOC and LGBTQ plus artists by providing mentorship, venue spaces, equipment, and other resources to elevate historically marginalized communities. In that vein, during the pandemic, Darcy brought drag to the streets of San Francisco through Meals on Heels, an initiative employing out of work drag artists who brought food, drinks, and socially distanced outdoor lip sync performances to communities spreading joy and light in hard times. Now, of course, for some, Darcey will always be known, for her portrayal of Betty White as Rose Nylund in The Golden Girls Live. But for me, my personal favorite Darcey Drolinger creation is SEXITUDE, a body positive, sex positive dance and fitness program that she describes as more than a class, a community, a movement, a dedication to being more amazing in everyday lives. Shortly after I was elected back in 2018, my predecessor, Scott Wiener, and I were invited to participate in a dance off, wherein we could each recruit, thank God, a crew of dancers to represent us in a competition. Can you imagine how bad, how awful that would have been? But, I think it was at Beau. I asked Darcy if I could have Sextitude be my team, and she said yes. And, of course, I won. I believe classes are still, taking place in District 8, at the Academy Ballet on Sunday mornings. Darcy Drollinger has dedicated her life to dazzling San Francisco with positivity and providing LGBTQ plus San Franciscans opportunities to express and celebrate their fabulousness. Through her writing, performances, programs, and initiatives, Darcy elevates the queer community and ensures that San Francisco is the vibrant and beautiful city that it is. Darcy Dralinger, soon to be drag laureate emerita, We are eternally grateful. And I would say the floor is yours, but it's not because supervisor Dorsey wants to say some things.

[Matt Dorsey, Supervisor (District 6)]: Thank you, president Mandelmann. As one of the supervisors who, along with president Mandelmann, proudly represents some of our city's gayest and most fabulous neighborhoods and establishments. I just want to express my gratitude, first, to President Mandelmann for just a great choice and a great job of honoring Darcy. But second to our honoree, Darcy Drolinger. Now, I suppose I can claim as a District 6 icon, Oasis, the legendary nightclub and cabaret that you own and serve as artistic director of. This is something this is a spot that my then partner, now husband, loves for the drunk drag awards show for the Oscar party. So we will be attending that regularly. But as San Francisco's inaugural drag laureate, you are bigger than District 6 now. And I think this is given the history making role, this is something that is to me, you're now a citywide star and a LGBTQ community pioneer nationwide. Congratulations.

[Darcy Drollinger (San Francisco Drag Laureate, honoree)]: Well, you said a lot of things I'm gonna say, but I'm gonna say a few things. You know, I'm I'm very honored to be here. So to all the members of the board of supervisors, friends and family that are in this room, and anyone who's watching out there Mhmm. Thank you very, very much. This means the world to me for many things. But as the first drag laureate of San Francisco and of the world, this is deeply humbling and and really a a powerful moment for me as my two years serving in this capacity have come to an end. It's it's not lost on me that we are celebrating today something that is that is bigger than me, that is bigger than myself. We're honoring the art of drag and the strength of queer culture and the legacy of a city that has always dared to lead with love, creativity, and radical inclusion. Over the past year, I have had the joy of, showing what a drag glory it can be the past two years, not just in wigs and sequins, but in action. And I'll admit there have been some, really amazing personal experiences, like getting to throw the first pitch at the Giants, the Giants game. Actually, Will Will, my facilities operator is here, my facilities manager. There he is. He helped me learn how to pitch. I did practice. I did practice. And ringing the bell at the Warriors game with Steph Curry was pretty amazing in Chase Center. And being able to program and host the pride stage for both Saturday and Sunday last year was an epic an epic journey, and it was very rewarding. And I even got to marry a couple right here in City Hall. That was pretty cool. San Francisco has long been a beacon for those who dare to live, love, and express themselves freely. And I've had the privilege of representing drag and our community on some of the biggest platforms in the city. But I've done so knowing that I'm standing on the shoulders of giants, of queens and kings and performers and artists who have paved the way, many of whom never got the spotlight they deserved. So today, I also want to honor them. From the Compton cafeteria riot to the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence, our queer history is written in bold eyeliner and even bolder actions. It's in the feather boas, the protests, the laughter, the mourning, and the unyielding creativity the dragon bodies. I also want to be clear that none of this happens alone. I am surrounded by an extraordinary team of people who show up with brilliance and passion every single day. To everyone who works with me and for me and inhabits my orbit, this commendation also belongs to you. I'm only as strong as the community that lifts me up. I am not only the drag laureate, but as you said, I'm a small business owner. I'm the executive director of an arts nonprofit, a playwright, a filmmaker, a dance teacher, and a San Francisco native. And over the past two years, I'm very proud of my organizations. Collectively, we've been able to pay upwards of $1,600,000 to performers, artists, and designers. That is not just a number. It is livelihoods. It is rent. It is health care. It is dignity. It's a commitment to building a sustainable future for queer art and artistry in the Bay Area. Being Drag Laureate is also about more than celebration, it's about responsibility, it's It's about using this platform to create opportunity, amplify voices, and challenge systems that attempt to dim our light. So to the city of San Francisco, thank you for recognizing the power and the purpose of drag. Thank you for giving this art form the official space that it has always deserved. And to every young queer person out there wondering if there's room in the world for your magic, let this be your sign that, yes, there is. You know, it it may feel particularly scary right now when our federal government is literally out to erase us, but our power, the real power, is the power we have together, and it is the power of a strong, unshakable community. So I, for one, and I invite all of us to keep pushing, to keep shining, to keep strutting and marching forward in heels and love and in unity. Thank you from the bottom of my very full and glitter encrusted heart.

[Rafael Mandelman, Board President (District 8)]: Thank you, Darcy. I don't know. I really love our two thirty special commendations. We had some great, great people today. All right. So we will now try to recover some of our time. Madam clerk, can you please call item 16?

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: Item 16. This is a resolution to authorize the Department of Homelessness and Supportive Housing to retroactively accept and expend an approximate $8,000,000 this is a grant in proposition 47 grant program funds cohort four for a program entitled housing and expungent and recovery through treatment and supportive services or HEARTS for costs incurred beginning October through 06/30/2028 and to authorize the execution of a grant agreement with the California Board of State and Community Corrections.

[Rafael Mandelman, Board President (District 8)]: Alright. I think we can take this same house, same call. Yes. Without objection, the resolution is adopted. Madam Clerk, can you please call item 17?

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: Item 17, this is a resolution to authorize the director of the Municipal Transportation Agency to execute contract number, SFMTADash2025Dash28DashLOC phase one LRV four brake system overhaul with Wabtec passenger transit to perform the scheduled overhaul of key components of the LRV four brake system on 68 vehicles for a contract amount of approximately 15,500,000.0 and a two year and six month term.

[Rafael Mandelman, Board President (District 8)]: And we'll take this same house, same call without objection. The resolution is adopted. Madam Clerk, please call items 18 through 21 together.

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: Items 18 through 21 are four resolutions that retroactively authorize accepting and expending gifts and grants for the Department of Public Health. Item 18 is for $265,000, a grant from the California Department of Health Care Services through the Blue Cross of California Partnership Plan Inc to participate in a program, California Advancing and Innovating Medi Cal Capacity Building Incentive Payment Program through 06/30/2025. Item 19 is for a monetary gift of 37,500 from the EPIC Systems Corporation to support the community resource directory and behavioral health project through 06/30/2025. Item 20 is for a monetary gift entitled Rams Richmond Area Multi Services for 37,000 from the Epic Systems Corporation to help low income and at risk populations for the term through 06/30/2024. And item 21, this is for a gift valued in the amount of 1,740,000.00 from the San Francisco Public Health Foundation in support of various public health programmatic needs, through 06/30/2025.

[Rafael Mandelman, Board President (District 8)]: Same house, same call. Without objection, the resolutions are adopted. Madam clerk, please call item 22.

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: Item 22, resolution to approve for purposes of section one forty seven f of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 as amended, the issuance of tax exempt obligations pursuant to a plan of finance by California Statewide Communities Development Authority in an amount of 165,000,000 issued by the Sequoias San Francisco for the purpose of financing, reimbursing, acquisition, construction, renovation, equipping, and furnishing of a senior, residential, and care services, and certain other matters relating thereto.

[Rafael Mandelman, Board President (District 8)]: And, again, same house, same call. Without objection, the resolution is adopted. Madam Clerk, please call item 23.

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: Item 23, ordinance to amend the planning code to eliminate retail use size limits on health services uses and reproductive health clinics in the MUO, the mixed use office district, East Of 7th Street. To eliminate retail ratio limits in the MUO District East Of 7th Street, and to affirm the CEQA determination and to make the appropriate findings.

[Rafael Mandelman, Board President (District 8)]: Same house, same call. Without objection, the ordinance is passed on first reading. Madam clerk, please call items twenty four and twenty five together.

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: Items twenty four and twenty five are two motions that approve the mayor's nomination for reappointment to the historic preservation commission, terms ending 12/31/2028. For item 24, Chris Foley. For item 25, Diane Matsuda.

[Rafael Mandelman, Board President (District 8)]: Same house, same call. Without objection, the motions are adopted. Madam clerk, please call item 26.

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: Item 26. This is a motion to approve the mayor's nomination, for the appointment of Stuart Parmenter to the Sanitation and Streets Commission, term ending 07/01/2028.

[Rafael Mandelman, Board President (District 8)]: Same house, same call. Without objection, the motion is approved. Madam clerk, please call item 27.

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: Item 27 is a motion to appoint Bruce Wolf to the Sunshine Ordinance Task Force, term ending 04/27/2027.

[Rafael Mandelman, Board President (District 8)]: Same house, same call. Without objection, the motion is approved. Madam clerk, let's go to committee reports. Please call item 28.

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: Yes. The following items will be considered by the gov were considered, excuse me, by the government audit and oversight committee at a regular meeting on Thursday, June 5, and were recommended as committee reports. Item 28 was recommended as amended with the same title. It reads, ordinance to fix compensation for persons employed by the city and county whose compensation is subject to the provisions of charter section a 8.409 in job codes not represented by an employee organization and to establish working schedules and other terms and conditions of employment and methods of payment effective 07/01/2025.

[Rafael Mandelman, Board President (District 8)]: Same house, same call without objection. The ordinance is passed on first reading. Madam Clerk, please call item 29.

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: Item 29 was recommended as a committee report. It's an ordinance to adopt and implement the second amendment to the 2024 through 2027 memorandum of understanding between the city and county and the Service Employees International Union, local ten twenty one staff and per diem nurses to address the order of selection for filling vacant nursing positions.

[Rafael Mandelman, Board President (District 8)]: Same house, same call. The ordinance is passed on first reading. Madam clerk, please call items thirty and thirty one together.

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: Items thirty and thirty one are two resolutions that authorize the mayor or his designee to cast assessment ballots in the affirmative for the proposed renewal and expansion for two property and business improvement districts with respect to certain parcels of real property owned by the city subject to assessment in the following districts. For item 30, it's known as the Ocean Avenue Community Benefit District. Item 31 was recommended as amended with the same title. It is known as the Dogpatch And Northwest Potrero Hill Green Benefit District.

[Rafael Mandelman, Board President (District 8)]: And again, same house, same call. Without objection, the resolutions are adopted. Madam clerk, please call item 32.

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: Item 32 was recommended as a committee report. It's a resolution to authorize the mayor, members of the mayor's office, and the director of the Office of Economic and Workforce Development to solicit donations from nonprofits, private organizations, grantmakers, foundations, and other persons and entities for the purpose of supporting the continued economic revitalization of San Francisco for six months from the effective date of this resolution, notwithstanding the behest of payment ordinance.

[Rafael Mandelman, Board President (District 8)]: Same house, same call. Without objection, the resolution is adopted. Madam Clerk, please call item 33.

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: Item 33 was recommended as a committee report. It's a motion to direct the budget and legislative analyst to initiate a performance audit in fiscal year twenty twenty five through '26 of the recreation and park department.

[Rafael Mandelman, Board President (District 8)]: Same house, same call. Without objection, the resolution is or the motion, rather, is approved. Madam clerk, let's go to roll call.

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: First member up to introduce new business is supervisor Melgar. Submit. Submit. Thank you. Supervisor Sauter. Submit. Thank you. Supervisor Sheryl. Submit. Submit. Thank you. Supervisor Walton.

[Shamann Walton, Supervisor (District 10)]: Thank you, madam clerk. Colleagues, today I'm introducing a resolution in support of AB twelve forty two, authored by assembly member Stephanie Wynne. AB twelve forty two strengthens California's language access laws to ensure that people with limited English proficiency and those who are deaf or hard of hearing can equitably access government services. The bill expands the definition of who is considered a substantial language group to include those eligible for services. Not just those already served, helping close access gaps proactively. It modernizing outdated surveys by requiring comprehensive data driven assessments using US census data and community input. AB twelve forty two also establishes a language access director within the Health and Human Services Agency to coordinate implementation across departments. Each of which must develop a language access plan with state oversight and funding. This bill aligns closely with San Francisco's long standing commitment to language access, equity, and cultural competent delivery of public services for its diverse communities. The rest I submit.

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: Thank you, supervisor Walton. Supervisor Chan.

[Connie Chan, Supervisor (District 1)]: Thank you, madam clerk, colleagues. Today, I would like to close today's meeting in memory of Sean O'Neil McGrew, who passed away on Friday, February 28, before he retired in 2023 as the general manager of the Mill Valley Recreation Department. Sean contributed over twenty six years of his career here at the San Francisco Recreation and Park Department, where he served as the recreation director who created the first surfing camp, supervisor for latchkey and aquatic programs, and community service supervisor at the Richmond Recreation Center. Sean was a fourth generation born and raised San Francisco. He went to George Washington High School and later graduated from UC Santa Barbara. His passion for recreation and arts started in his teenage years, where he used to spend his summer breaks working as a youth worker at many of our public swimming pools, including one summer at Lake Merced. His favorite pool remained to be the Mission Community Pool, as really the one the only outdoor pool in San Francisco, public outdoor pool in San Francisco, and many locals called it Nickel Pool because of the historic entrance fee of only a nickel. Sean touched many people, myself included, with his amazing energy, and through his friendships, travels, and career. My deepest condolences, to his mom, Shauna, who is here today in the audience. We, entire board of supervisor, and really, the city, we send, our love to you. Thank you for being here. And, Shawn will be greatly missed, not just for who he was to all of us, just all his love and care for our community. We are just so grateful. I am just so grateful to have known Sean. And so and the rest, I submit. Thank you.

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: Thank you, supervisor Chan. Supervisor Chan.

[Chayanne Chen, Supervisor (District 11)]: Thank you, madam clerk. Colleagues, today, I am introducing a resolution condemning the adoptions of immigrants by the Immigrations and Customs Enforcement, ICE agency. This resolution, it's in response to the devastating and widespread removal of immigrants, including those with no criminal record, who are dig diligently cooperating with law enforcement. Last week, ICE used military style operation to size people going to work, school, graduations, and immigration court in San Francisco and Los Angeles. Many do not have criminal records, including a child as young as three years old, youth with bright futures ahead, hardworking parents, and the SEIU California Union president David Herrera. They are our neighbors, our friends, our coworkers, our fathers and mothers, grandparents and children. These individuals were seized without clear identification or explanation of charges, being detained without immediate access to legal counsel or family notification. We are seeing excessive force and and intimidation during arrest. This removals have a chilling effect on the rest of our city too, as other working people, immigrant communities, and small business are impacted. This this disrupts our workforce, destabilizes our economy, undermines public trust in law enforcement, and incites fear so everyday people will be too scared to access public services. I hope this board can stand together in calling for an immediate cessation of this brutal brutal of this brutal practices, and urging ICE to a heath strictly to dual process, the universal rights to family unity, the human treatments of migrant communities who safely and lawfully pursue their claims. I want to thank my colleagues, supervisor Walton, Ma'amu, Melga, Mendelmann, Salter, and Felder for their early cosponsorship. I look forward to my other colleagues' cosponsorship and vote. Madam Claire also have a in memorial. College, I would like to adjourn today's meeting in memory of Louisa Bu. She was a fierce leader, fighter, sister, and bright light in the Asian American labor movement. As a union leader, she fought she fought for fairness and justice. During her fifty years career, she makes sure working people, especially those in health care and public services, were treated with dignity and respect. She made history as the first American to be elected to serve as the executive vice president of SEIU, one of the largest union in the country. In 1977, Luisa started working as a nurse at San Francisco General Hospital. At a time when people with AIDS were often ignored and feared, Luisa stood up and said they deserve care and compassion. She pushed public health official to make sure frontline workers had the training and support they needed. That was just the beginning of her lifetime of standing up for leaders for others. She went on to cofound the SEIU Nurse Alliance, organize health care workers in Las Vegas, and the TSA workers at San Francisco Airport. She believed everyone deserved to be her, and she worked hard to make that happen. Luisa was a strong voice in the Filipino community, a mentor to many organizers. She always led with kindness and strength, whether she was on the picket line, in a meeting, or mentoring young leaders. Luisa is one of the highest ranking API leaders in the labor in the labor movement, and I had the privilege of working alongside with her since 2008. Together, we have four four health care workers across California navigating city, county, state, federal budgets, negotiating contracts at individual health care facilities, and even organizing internationally in The Philippines, India, Cambodia, and China. Luisa has shown me what is possible when when courage, commissions, and compassion all come together. Luisa has joined the ancestors, but her spirit, it's with us always. Her legacy lives on the people who stand tall because of her. And young leaders should pave the way for and in countless fight for justice that she champions. Rest in power, Louisa Bu. The rest I submit.

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: Thank you. Thank you, supervisor Chen.

[Rafael Mandelman, Board President (District 8)]: Madam Clerk, can we do that for the full board?

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: Thank you, mister president. Supervisor Dorsey. Submit. Thank you. Supervisor and Guardio. Submit. Thank you. Supervisor Mahlood.

[Bilal Mahmood, Supervisor (District 5)]: Colleagues, today, we are witnessing history unfold before our eyes. Last week on 06/05/2025, at least 15 people, including a three year old child, were detained by federal immigration agents at a San Francisco Ice Field Office during what advocates described as a routine check-in. This morning, we heard of additional incidents where the ICE facility had to be shut down due to, again, unjust intervention by the federal administration. And let's be clear about what is happening. These were people who were attempting to follow our legal process, abide by the law, and were instead met with what which they feared most would happen. This tactic from ICE traumatizes families and erodes trust in public institutions intended to serve and protect all residents. It makes our communities less safe. It stokes the flames of fear for our most vulnerable. It's why I was honored to cosponsor supervisor Chen's legislation as well. In our sister city of LA, though, we've seen labor leaders like David Huerta detain for exercising their First Amendment right. The National Guard and Marines have been deployed. The armed forces have been deployed against our own people to intimidate us and divide us. This is a fundamental violation of our civil rights. Protesters across California and San Francisco have mobilized in response, calling for the protection of immigrants, the demilitarization of civic life, and the upholding of fundamental democratic rights. In doing so, reports have surfaced of journalists, both in Los Angeles and San Francisco, journalists being threatened, harassed, or injured while covering recent protests. In San Francisco, the reports were of student journalists. This is a threat to the freedom of press, the the people's safeguard of transparency, and a key tool to holding power accountable, which should operate with guaranteed freedom to report without government interference or retaliation. All of us sitting in these chamber chambers swore an oath of office to protect and defend the constitution from all enemies, foreign and domestic. We don't have to wait for the history books to judge us. There has never been more clarity about what is right. Our city has always been a beacon of hope, has always led the way on what is right. And colleagues, I hope we show our residents that there is no chance of that stopping anytime soon. At a time when many many of our constituents are living in fear, it is our responsibility as elected officials to act bravely and fight for the fundamental rights of our residents. Because despite what the president may say, that is what it means to be an American. To our residents, our hope must be stronger than our fear, and you have my commitment that this body will fight for our democracy, and we will fight for you. So I'm introducing a resolution today affirming the public's right to peacefully assemble and protest actions of the federal government, condemning the militarization of civilian response to peaceful protests, and reaffirming San Francisco's commitment to immigrant justice and the city's sanctuary ordinance. I know supervisor Fielder couldn't be here today, but I'd like to recognize her for her continued advocacy and partnership on this legislation. I'd like to thank supervisors Fielder, Chen, Walton, and Melgar for your early support for this resolution as cosponsors as well. And lastly, I would like to thank Sam Logan in my office for working on this resolution in real time and adapting to the changing conditions that we're seeing nearly every hour over the last twenty four to forty eight hours as well. Thank you all and colleagues, and I hope you'll join us in supporting this as well.

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: Thank you, supervisor Buffwood.

[Bilal Mahmood, Supervisor (District 5)]: Next, I'd like to have my second introduction. Colleagues, we are elected to serve our residents and to make sure they feel safe, but to also listen to them and improve their quality of life. We can call out the injustice at our doorstep and take care of business here at home. So today, I will be introducing two letters of inquiry regarding the three one one mobile app. Two weeks ago, the Chronicle reported that while homeless tent encampments have reached a five year low, reports of encampments on the three one app are increasing. So it begs the question, what is causing this discrepancy? The issue lies in how three one one reports are categorized. Residents don't have options to report issues like non emergency drug activity, open air drug use, public intoxication, drug use within the the encampments directly, so they often just choose encampment as the closest match. This leads to misleading data. And when city departments rely on bad data, they can't deploy the right resources to help those residents in need. The three one one system remains one of the most direct and vital tool residents use to engage with our government and participate in San Francisco as actively engaged citizens. Understanding how this platform is evolving, especially to increase usability, responsiveness, and coordinated integration with city agencies, it is essential to ensure it meets the needs of all its communities. The purpose of these letters is twofold. The first will inquire from the city administrator's office and the Department of Emergency Management about planned improvements or enhancements to San Francisco's three one one system, particularly the 311 mobile app, which is of particular interest given the last PSA video created on how to use the app came out eleven years ago. The second will request that the city administrator's office, Department of Emergency Management, and San Francisco Police Department share how we can improve data accuracy to better respond to cases and improve our understanding of safety and street conditions. I look forward to the responses from these respective departments. The rest, I submit.

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: Thank you, supervisor. Supervisor Mandelmann.

[Rafael Mandelman, Board President (District 8)]: I will submit my legislation.

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: Thank you, mister president. And seeing no names on the roster, that concludes the introduction of new business.

[Rafael Mandelman, Board President (District 8)]: Thank you, madam clerk. Let's go to public comment.

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: At this time, the board welcomes your general public comment. You can line up on your right hand side of the chamber along the curtains. You may speak to the mayoral appearance. You may speak to the minutes as presented to items thirty six and thirty seven and other general matters not on the agenda, but must be within the board's subject matter jurisdiction. We are setting the timer for two minutes. Let's welcome our first speaker. Welcome.

[Unidentified public commenter]: Welcome back. What I've just heard means that, yes, the revolution is on a is working. Excellent. Anyway, anyway, nobody want can stop it. We're gonna melt the ice, of course, towards clear water, no poison. Okay. You just pay attention, you, to after minutes, you just listen. After that, you decide if you just want to be a witness of what I'm gonna say or act accordingly to what is possible for you to do. K? So the 15 next to the 15,000 miles are covered on the road to inspect the country in the last two over two months enables me to give you a gift to have a gift for you. No. Don't celebrate too fast because it's wrapped into an ultimatum. So you have until July 1, which is Saint Thierry on the Catholic calendar. Wow. Coincidence. To start taking down all the five g nefarious towers that you installed installed all over the countryside of this country. However, it is nefarious. You know it, which is exactly why you put this ugly stuff, sometimes 150 feet high, against the people permission. You didn't ask anyone. That's no good. Okay? One, you start taking them down step by step. First, in places of less, let's let's say, than 70,000 people. Okay? We'll see for the rest. Second, you're gonna have to eat for breakfast your orange signalization for your fake road works that you put also all over the country to piece sorry for the word, people off. You decide the dressing. I will suggest ranch. Talk to you soon. After that, we take down these towers ourselves. You still gonna have to clean them up. It's your, not the people's.

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: Thank you for your comment. Welcome to the next speaker.

[Chris Ward Klein]: Good afternoon, board of supervisors. For the record, my name is Chris Ward Klein. I also go by sergeant Klein of the United States Marine Corps. For several months now, I've been telling San Francisco that there would be violence and there would be riots. And that is because police department officials are not arresting the right people. So people had to be called in to arrest these people. You will be seeing that playing out over the next couple days, couple weeks. Things will probably get worse before they get better. Signal intelligence is not never a good thing when granting access by to third parties such as foreign countries, universities, and other corporations that should not have access. Over the last two day two days, I, we, have identified vehicles parked outside of your fire departments. They're placed there to reverse engineer signal intelligence to cause violence in LA, Colorado, Boston, and vice versa. It comes back the same way. That is what is happening. People are caught causing or influencing the violence. It's it has to stop. 700 marines were deployed to LA, and for one reason, to bring peace, and to fix the communication equipment, to squash the violence by simply changing the Oracle communication system. That's all it takes. I, we, invite San Francisco to be part of a class action lawsuit versus state sponsored terrorism naming several countries to claim over $5,000,000,000 in unclaimed damages. We need that money. We need this peace. We need unity in community. Again, if you or others gave out access to universities, to corporations, or to a foreign country, you need to cease and desist immediately, or you risk getting arrested. It is that very simple. Thank you.

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: Thank you for your comments. Let's hear from our next speaker.

[Myrna Melgar, Supervisor (District 7)]: Can you get that

[Rafael Mandelman, Board President (District 8)]: for me?

[Shane Michael Sleeper]: Shane, Michael Sleeper here. I was shingled for thirty five minutes in San Francisco, but only have two minutes to speak. How could you possibly understand how to fix something when the abuse lasted longer than you will ever allow to listen? I've got a court date to attend accomplishing no change thanks to Christina Tullock, someone that I would define as a cunt for attempting to refuse my constitutional rights, in addition to some officers that I would define as pigs for doing the same, to silence abuses I'll be speaking of today. Last time I was here, I was getting laughed at by the individual next to speak in line who thought it was funny when I told her I had months of my freedom stolen for taking down a curtain with shit on it, while she bitched about Trump stealing her rights for wanting to still be an ignorant cunt, likely not living with shit stapled to her wall or being arrested should she choose to take it down. You haven't heard a peep from mister Leary's accountability agenda though, have you?

[Takeshi Onishi (honoree)]: Used to

[Shane Michael Sleeper]: This is San Francisco Pride. Pride and ignorance that wants to continue to define me as a terrorist when I speak up to abuses among many, such as someone getting sexually harassed by officers who get to partake in strangling me with a seat belt for sticking up for them without consequence while I'm already fully restrained. I have yet to speak of the sexual assaults by the queer community, but I'd like to state happy pride to America over any queers attempting to silence the sexual abuse and exploitation they have chosen to take part in, that many of them still attempt to silence. Black, white, brown and yellow, gay and straight, republican and democrat, there's shit in every race. I think we'd all do good understanding that motto versus the divisional bullshit regularly pushed by those that sweep others lives under the rug for the destruction of a country they never wanted to be a part of, only conquer. We've got an $840,000,000 police budget with more than three quarters of our officers, not even residents of San Francisco. I think I understand the problem quite well despite being labeled delusional by John Julian Howard who asked me how much of a martyr I'm willing to become for the system as I have my clothes cut off of me and be told I'm going to have my ass raped with a broomstick before being put unconscious. Is this justice to you?

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: Thank you for your comments, except for the curse word. Missus Brown, were you going to go next? Or okay. Let's hear from our next speaker. Welcome.

[Unidentified public commenter]: Can I have someone pick up something I'd like to hand out to the board?

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: Certainly. I'll have the sergeant of arms come help you.

[Unidentified public commenter]: Okay. Hello. First, I noticed that at the pride flag raising ceremony this year, as opposed to the three previous years that I checked, there was no transgender flag alongside the the rainbow flag. So shame on all you cisgender people who partook in that ceremony, and were okay with trans erasure in a transgender sanctuary city in a transgender sanctuary state. Second, I came from the protests over at Montgomery Street with ICE. I call it kidnapping people. There was a call put out to show up because that was happening. I showed up early, and I witnessed one of these kidnappings. It was horrifying. It was an unmarked van. These agents were masked in plain clothes. If you were a person walking by on the streets, you wouldn't know it was a government anything happening. It would just look like a civilian kidnapping. We were not allowed to speak to the person that was being kidnapped. The vehicle was very aggressively driven into protesters. I really thought someone was gonna get run over. I I showed up thinking I could just hand out some stupid red cards with immigrant rights. And after seeing that, it's like, fuck that. Fuck fuck fuck those fucking pieces of paper. And I'm sorry if that hit you. And it it it was nothing in comparison to what I witnessed happen. I saw mothers and fathers with their children go into this ice court, and I was afraid, like, are they gonna come out next all kidnapped? Kids asking me in English how to open the door to the court, and I had to show them because their parents didn't know English.

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: Let's hear from our next speaker, please.

[Unidentified public commenter]: When you look in the mirror, tell me, what do you see? Do you walk with the giants, or do you catch a flea? We are nothing more but what we think we are. I'm asking you to be heroes. I've been tortured for six years, victim of violence, illegally or evicted. I was the victim, not the perpetrator. All my healing arts in school for the kids, robbed in a well oiled machine, put in with rapists and killers, unbelievably traumatized with five broken bones from violence. And then, this spring, kidnapped, tortured again for the second time. I ask you to make people with education, integrity, no criminal records, elders, and not to be allowed to be tortured and kidnapped. I was also tortured and kidnapped because I was kidnapped after one violent assault by the paramedics who wouldn't let me not go to the hospital. At the hospital, I was beaten for seven hours. As an epileptic and disabled person with hidden disabilities, I fight problems all the time, racially, xenophobic. There is no justice. There are rewarding and rewarding bad bad behavior. Now they're saying it's my fault and on me that I can't move in time, that I wasn't able to, with my head not being able to speak because people crash music, or people are masturbating down the hall, and threatening to chop off heads and kill me. There are kidnappings going on. Yes. There are there's unbelievable, not recognition of people's need for safety, and to change the status quo that has not changed since the gold rush. A hundred and fifty years of landlord supremacy. Jails, and I mean, not jails, courtyards that are kangaroo courts. No visibility. No help for

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: Thank you for your comments. Let's hear from our next speaker. Ma'am, you can come back next week.

[Adar Duffy]: Yeah. I was born in Milwaukee. I'm of a age where if I had been born in Vietnam, I probably would have died fighting for my country. And if I'd been born five years earlier than that, than I was born, I probably would have wound up serving in our military, killing the people who are dying for their country. It's been it's been some ups and downs in the times. I I I wanna speak about something pragmatic. My name is Adar Duffy. I live in the neighborhood nearby here. One of the other supervisors talked about it. When the Taylor Street construction was completed, they put some flourishes on it, some flowers, some benches. And before the construction, that block of Taylor Street was the narrowest sidewalk in the downtown area, and it was very difficult to get get by. And now with all this furniture, it is now once again the most narrowest sidewalk. Although they made it larger, as it stands now, it's the narrowest sidewalk in the downtown area. It's very difficult to get around. And it is a issue of congregation of homeless people. So maybe the overall picture is doing better, but certainly that block of Taylor Street, yeah, could use some some some radical reconstruction, deconstruction.

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: Thank you. Next speaker, please. If you are here to provide general public comment to the board, it's your turn to line up on your right hand side. Otherwise, these will be our last two speakers.

[Takeshi Onishi (honoree)]: I'm here

[Unidentified public commenter]: to ask a question. Go ahead. Yes. Well, I'm here because it it knows that at San Francisco Law Debt, y'all don't let the police, check the database. And, I can't say too much because I'm standing here and I'm nervous. And, unfortunately, I I need to find out how can I go about putting that on the voting for November because they can't check the database? So I don't wanna go no further saying whatever I have to say because people's watching me on TV. So after this over, can someone come talk to me?

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: Certainly. Ma'am, if you wanna have a seat on the front row, I'll have staff come over and take your information from you. Alright. Thank you. Alright. Sir, come on up. If there isn't anyone else, this will be our last speaker unless you get up now.

[Shane Michael Sleeper]: I'm

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: sitting. Okay. Thank you, miss Brown. We'll hear from you next.

[Unidentified public commenter]: Unfortunately, some of us need to sit. We can't stand too long. I have vertigo. My dog is named Sly. His full name is Sly, the family stoner. And I think that this board and this community ought to recognize the recent death of Sly, who was the leader of Sly and the Family Stone, and noticed that the group comprised of men, women, blacks, whites, Latinos, everybody in the city. The other comment I wanted to make is on the City Mall. The best idea I've heard so far that was floated is why don't you turn the Nordstrom area into a supper club? Something like it was once proposed to be managed by a Las Vegas entrepreneur manager. And that seemed to me to be the greatest idea of all. It would bring life down to the mid market center. Anyway, thank you.

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: Thank you for your comments. Alright. Miss Brown, welcome.

[Ms. Brown (public commenter)]: I need for him to fix this thing.

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: SFGOV TV and the projector, please. Thank you.

[Ms. Brown (public commenter)]: Where you start my time. Oh, okay. Okay. Thank you. I would just want to thank everyone too on yesterday at the rules committee for passing the the legislation, at the rules committee. I bring this because why I'm standing here, I'm talking about, about the lack of rewards being paid out in a decade. And I bring these because I've been asking for this for, like, years now. Here's another one that was brought up at the police commission about the rewards and information. Here's another one. This was in 2022. This is 2024 about rewards for unsolved and cold case homicides. So on on January, seventeenth and twenty fourth of this month, we'll at the board of supervisors on Tuesday, I'm I'm pleading that you pass this this legislation into law on the twenty fourth on the seventeenth and the twenty fourth. I bring the pictures of of my son who was murdered August 2006, to this day his case has been solved. Here is other un unsolved homicides too, that these cases haven't been solved. Here are other homicides that these cases haven't been solved. Here are other homicides that these cases haven't been solved. Mothers like myself are asking for justice. So I pray that on the seventeenth and the twenty fourth that this legislation be passed. This is what the perpetrators left me with, a lifeless body. My son just laying in a casket. This is what I have to think about every day that my son is laying on a gurney lifeless. I stand here as a mother of a a a child that was full of life, and now I don't have him. He was my only son. Thank

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: Thank you, miss Brown. Are there any other members of the public who would like to address the board? Alright. Mister president.

[Adar Duffy]: Alright.

[Rafael Mandelman, Board President (District 8)]: Public comment is now closed. And madam clerk, let's go to our for adoption of that committee reference agenda, items thirty six and thirty seven.

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: Item thirty six and thirty seven were introduced for adoption without reference to committee. A unanimous vote is required for adoption of a resolution on first reading today. Alternatively, a member may require a resolution to go to committee.

[Rafael Mandelman, Board President (District 8)]: Colleagues, does anyone want to sever any items? I do not see any. So madam clerk, could you please call the roll?

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: On items thirty six and thirty seven, supervisor Melgar. Melgar, I. Supervisor Sautter? Aye. Sautter, I. Supervisor Sheryl? Aye. Cheryl, I. Supervisor Walton?

[Shamann Walton, Supervisor (District 10)]: Aye.

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: Walton, I. Supervisor Chan? Aye. Chan, I. Supervisor Chen? Chen, aye. Supervisor Dorsey? Aye. Dorsey, aye. Supervisor Wingardio? Aye. Wingardio, aye. Supervisor Mahmut? Mahmut, aye. And supervisor Mandelmann?

[Rafael Mandelman, Board President (District 8)]: Aye.

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: Mandelmann, aye. There are 10 ayes.

[Rafael Mandelman, Board President (District 8)]: Without objection, the resolution is adopted, and the motion is approved. Madam Clerk, do we have any imperative agenda items?

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: I have no imperatives to report, mister president. Alright.

[Rafael Mandelman, Board President (District 8)]: Then madam clerk, could you read please read the in memoriams?

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: Yes. Today's meeting will be adjourned in memory of the following beloved individuals. On behalf of supervisor Chan, for the late mister Sean O'Neil McGrew, on behalf of supervisor Chen, noted here is supervisor Walton and Chan, and a motion made by the board president to be on behalf of the entire board of supervisors for the late miss Louisa Blue.

[Rafael Mandelman, Board President (District 8)]: Thank you, madam clerk. I think that brings us to the end of our agenda. Do we have any further business before us today?

[Angela Calvillo, Clerk of the Board]: That concludes our business for today.

[Rafael Mandelman, Board President (District 8)]: Well, then we are adjourned.