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[Supervisor Myrna Melgar (Chair, Land Use & Transportation Committee)]: Good afternoon, everyone. This meeting will come to order. Welcome to the 03/09/2026, regular meeting of the Land Use and Transportation Committee of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors. I'm Supervisor Myrna Melgar, chair of the committee, joined by Vice Chair, Supervisor Chyanne Chen, and Supervisor Bilal Mahmood. The committee clerk today is Mr. John Carroll. I would also like to acknowledge Jeanette Eichellauf at SFgov TV for staffing us during this meeting. Mr. Clerk, do you have any announcements?
[John Carroll (Committee Clerk)]: Yes. Thank you, Madam Chair. Please ensure to please ensure that your silence, your cell phones, other electronic devices you may have brought with you into the chamber. Documents to be included as part of any of today's files can be submitted directly to me. Public comment will be taken on each item on today's agenda. When your item of interest comes up and public comment is called, please line up to speak along your right hand side of this room. Alternatively, you may submit your public comment in writing in either follow either of the following ways. First, you may email your comments to me at john,period,carroll@sfgov.org. Or you may send your written comments via US Postal Service to our office in City Hall. The address is 1 Doctor Carlton B Goodlett Place, Room 244, San Francisco, California 94102. If you submit public comment in writing, I will forward your comments to the members of this committee and also include your comments as part of the official file on which you are commenting. Items acted upon today are expected to appear on the board of supervisors agenda of 03/17/2026, unless otherwise stated.
[Supervisor Myrna Melgar (Chair, Land Use & Transportation Committee)]: Thank you so much. Mr. Clerk, please call item number one.
[John Carroll (Committee Clerk)]: Agenda item number one is a resolution adding the commemorative street name James Richards Way on Oakdale Avenue between 3rd Street and Newell Street. This item is on our agenda as a potential committee report. It may be sent to the Board of Supervisors for consideration tomorrow, 03/10/2026.
[Supervisor Myrna Melgar (Chair, Land Use & Transportation Committee)]: Thank you so much. This committee welcomes District ten Supervisor, Shimon Walton. The floor is yours.
[Supervisor Shamann Walton (District 10)]: Thank you so much, Chair Melgar, thank you to the committee. Colleagues, James Richards is a community trailblazer that is responsible for providing jobs for hundreds of District 10 residents and people across all of San Francisco for decades. He is also electrician by trade and has provided opportunities for entry into the trades not just for electricians but for trades across the board. He fought early in life with the big five with the likes of Eloise Westbrook, Osceola Washington, Julia Comer, Ethel Garlington, and Bertha Freeman for housing rights and accessibility for low income and black people in this city. And, this is how his organizing began. James Richards also co founded Aboriginal Black Man United and is responsible for community building that has led to successes never before seen. He created a legacy of ensuring that residents in their own neighborhoods have the first opportunity to work on development projects and receive the jobs benefits available through these projects. He was a key instrument of achieving local mandatory hiring goals on projects funded by the city and county of San Francisco and legislation here in San Francisco along with supervisor Walton, all of labor, and community at the time. In recognition of the very same location of the tragic shooting of his friend and community member outside of the Bayview Opera House, as well as the longtime headquarters of ABU for many years, this resolution commemoratively renames one block of Oakdale Avenue, east of 3rd to James Richards Way. And, I just wanna thank the committee for hearing this this morning. I also wanna say that I hope that you can move this forward with the recommendation as a committee report. And, there is a slight amendment that I will be requesting that on line one, page one, we change from we add an S to Richard, and also on page one line three, add an S to Richard. Because right now it reads James Richard Way, and it should say James Richards Way. But thank you so much, and I know that we will have some public comment on this item.
[Supervisor Myrna Melgar (Chair, Land Use & Transportation Committee)]: Thank you so much. And amendment noted. I don't see anyone on the roster with questions or comments. Please add me as a cosponsor, And Mr. Thank you so much, Supervisor Walton. And with that let' go to public comment on this item please.
[John Carroll (Committee Clerk)]: Thank you land use and transportation will now hear public comment related to agenda item number one if you have public comment for this item please line up to speak along that western wall I'm indicating with my left hand and the first speaker may begin.
[Ashley Rhodes (Public Commenter, ABU member)]: You. Thank you to the board, to the supervisors today. I really appreciate you letting us have this opportunity. My name is Ashley Rhodes. And, boy, it's really been said in Supervisor Walton's open statement.
[Unidentified Public Speaker (ABU member/supporter)]: Although, I would like to speak directly regarding my relationship with James Richards. I've been with him since the 1970s, a longtime soldier in the ABU, the aboriginal black man united. And, I could speak about a whole lot of things, but I wanted to more so speak about ABU and the aboriginal black man united, what we have accomplished to do in our Bayview Hunters Point community. For years, James Richards has took the panel of going out and making sure the young men and women in the Bayview Hunters Point community were have a different way in life. His number one motto was we take the dope out of their pockets and put a broom or put a shovel or put a tape measure in their hand and give them an opportunity to change their lives around, which is his most successful trait that he's done over the years. What we've been able to do is take these young men and women and put them into the unions, into the construction arena, not only to construction, but also in public service with SFPUC. We've gotten the relationships to deal with them there, to get them in the p to park and rec and to DPW. My time is up?
[John Carroll (Committee Clerk)]: Thirty seconds.
[Unidentified Public Speaker (ABU member/supporter)]: Wow. That was not much. There's so much I have to say. But for mister Richards, for what we're doing for him, it's it would be something that really would be a great attitude to what he's done. We call him the unproclaimed mayor of Bayview Hunters Point. This is how much love he has in this community. In every walk of life, he is there in our community. I believe he could've done just about anything in life, but he chose to do that. One last If
[John Carroll (Committee Clerk)]: any comments,
[Deputy City Attorney Brad Russi]: we have to move on to the next speaker.
[John Carroll (Committee Clerk)]: Thank you so much for your comments.
[Alex Westoff (San Francisco Planning Department)]: Thank you
[Unidentified Public Speaker (ABU member/supporter)]: very much for your time.
[Supervisor Myrna Melgar (Chair, Land Use & Transportation Committee)]: Thank you.
[John Carroll (Committee Clerk)]: Next speaker, please.
[Anthony Travis (Public Commenter)]: How are doing? My name is Anthony Travis. I'm the liaison for Logan two sixty one. I wanna speak about James Richardson. James Richardson, I've been knowing him for a very long, very long time. I remember James when I was a little boy watching him through the Bayview neighborhood, and and it's a miracle. It's just weird because I grew up, you know, knowing James, and James and my father is very close. And my father and him run run and do so much stuff together. Right? And I have watched James make a big difference to a lot of the brothers and sisters in the neighborhood. They they all been successful. You know, some of them didn't like went on and and became laborers and became, you know, different in different trades. They didn't get jobs in different trades. So, you know, change giving James the opportunity to giving him an opportunity to be seen in that in that and and name that street after him, it'll be something that will be there forever, that his kids can come and see, that the people that he did help throughout, you know, throughout the years, they can come and see. And when James is gone, he would never really be gone because the street would be there with his name on it. So I'm all for that. You know? And thank you all for just giving me the opportunity to, you know, just force my opinion. Thank you.
[John Carroll (Committee Clerk)]: Thank you for your comments. Next speaker, please.
[Joshua Arce (Laborers Union)]: Afternoon, supervisors. Joshua Arce with the Labors Union. I wanna thank you, supervisor Walton, for your years of work to get us to this point now and also to our newest cosponsor, chair Melgar. Appreciate you, chair Melgar. Brother Ashley Rhodes had said the last thing to make sure to remember is that the hallmark of the ABU action and organizing model as developed by mister James Richards is the barbecue, the barbecue pit and bringing together folks for food. We hope to see you all there when we join supervisor Walton for the unveiling, maybe around the time of mister Richards' birthday later in June. I'm one of the more recent soldiers in this journey of of mister James Richards. He brought me under his wing about fifteen years ago during the time that supervisor Walton and I were getting involved in the local hiring campaign to have mandatory local hiring. And for me in my life to have his mentorship and the tools that he taught me about organizing direct action, bringing the fight to the street right there at the job sites where we're fighting for change and justice, he's still doing it to this day. And to be able to recognize his leadership and impact in his lifetime as we're doing is so powerful for the next generation. I know that one of the things with respect to local hiring, when I had the opportunity to work as the city and county's director of workforce development, everyone around the country wanted to know how we do local hiring in San Francisco, including, at that time, the White House administration moved local hiring to the Build Back Better Infrastructure initiative. Without let's go back in reverse. That conversation doesn't happen but for San Francisco mandatory local hiring. San Francisco local hiring does not happen without ABU. ABU does not happen without mister James Richards. His legacy is beyond Hunters Point, beyond San Francisco, beyond California. His legacy is and forever will be national. Thank you, supervisor.
[John Carroll (Committee Clerk)]: Thank you for your comments. Do we have anyone else who has public comment for agenda item number one? Madam chair.
[Supervisor Myrna Melgar (Chair, Land Use & Transportation Committee)]: Okay. Public comment on this item is now closed. Supervisor Chen.
[Supervisor Chyanne Chen (Vice Chair)]: Thank you, chair Melgar. Clerk, will you please add me as a cosponsor to this legislation as well? I am very heartened by the story of James Richards. I love the ways that women elders in his community share their knowledge and how and know how to mentor him as a young man. James Richards has such an important legacy. He is a warrior that pushed our city to do better when it comes to housing conditions, violence preventions, and employment for youth and adults. Our city is a home to too many injustice, but it is the resilience, perseverance, and heart of people like James that makes our city worth fighting for. Thank you, Supervisor Walton, for moving forward this commemorative street name, and I would also like to make a motion to adopt Supervisor Walton's amendment.
[Supervisor Myrna Melgar (Chair, Land Use & Transportation Committee)]: Do you want to read that? And also move it as a committee report And as
[Supervisor Chyanne Chen (Vice Chair)]: also move it as a committee report as amended to the full board. Thank you.
[Supervisor Myrna Melgar (Chair, Land Use & Transportation Committee)]: Thank you, supervisor.
[John Carroll (Committee Clerk)]: Recording motions by the vice chair that the resolution be amended then recommended as amended as a committee report on those motions vice chair Chen.
[Supervisor Chyanne Chen (Vice Chair)]: Aye.
[John Carroll (Committee Clerk)]: Chen aye member makhmood Mahmood, aye. Chair Melgar?
[Supervisor Myrna Melgar (Chair, Land Use & Transportation Committee)]: Aye.
[John Carroll (Committee Clerk)]: Melgar, aye. Madam Chair, there are three ayes on each of those motions.
[Supervisor Myrna Melgar (Chair, Land Use & Transportation Committee)]: Okay. That motion passes unanimously. Thank you. You, Supervisor.
[Unidentified Public Speaker (ABU member/supporter)]: Thank
[Supervisor Myrna Melgar (Chair, Land Use & Transportation Committee)]: you. Congratulations, Supervisor. Okay. Let's go to item number two, please.
[John Carroll (Committee Clerk)]: Agenda item number two is a resolution initiating a landmark designation under Article 10 of the Planning Code for Engine Company Number thirty three located at 117 Broad Street.
[Supervisor Myrna Melgar (Chair, Land Use & Transportation Committee)]: Thank you so much. And we have Alex Wessoff here from the planning department. But Supervisor Chen, would you like to make any opening remarks? This is your item? Yes.
[Supervisor Chyanne Chen (Vice Chair)]: Thank you, Chair Melgar. First, I would like to thank the planning department for their work in preparing for this landmark. I know that this is an introductory resolution, and this item will be going before historic preservation commissions before the landmarking process can be completed. This firehouse was constructed in 1896, and it's among the oldest standing firehouses in San Francisco. Engine company number thirty three was the last horse drawn unit in San Francisco Fire Department, not converting it to using motorized apparatus until 1921. The property owners are serving as a proud stewards of the property, which is among the best preserved the interior historic firehouse in San Francisco. And I'm very pleased to support the cultural historical heritage in my district. And thank you for my colleagues in advance for your support. Thank you.
[Supervisor Myrna Melgar (Chair, Land Use & Transportation Committee)]: Thank you. Hi, Alex.
[Alex Westoff (San Francisco Planning Department)]: Hello. Good afternoon, supervisors. Alex Westoff, Planning Department staff. I'm here today to present one property that is being considered for initiation as individual Article 10 landmark in District 11 as part of the Family Zoning Plan Landmark Program. I previously presented to this committee about the family zoning plan landmark program so I will not go into great detail about the larger effort. However, a reminder that as part of the broader family zoning plan the city is committed to ensuring that growth associated with ambitious housing production is aligned with San Francisco's longstanding dedication to preserving historic places deeply embedded in San Francisco's unique cultural identity. The planning department has been working with a number of different district supervisors on identifying and designating properties with exemplary architectural, historical, and or cultural significance as city landmarks. We appreciate supervisor Chen's support in this effort as we identify properties in District 11. Unlike many of the other supervisor districts, however, just to note that District 11 has not yet had the benefit of extensive historic resource surveying. Thus, as a first step in District 11, we have broadened our initial review to also include residential areas in addition to commercial districts, as historic properties and residential areas are also vulnerable to state housing bills which allow for ministerial projects without taking into account the impacts to historic resources which CEQA has traditionally provided it's important that we expand the family zoning plan landmarking into residential districts as well. Currently there are only 47 category A properties in District 11, some of which are already article 10 landmarks, and many of which are in historic districts and have not yet been evaluated for individual eligibility. A reminder however, that the citywide cultural resources survey eventually will survey every property in San Francisco, at which point we will have a better understanding of additional properties in all supervisor districts which can be considered for landmarking as part of this program in future phases. Thus we have identified one property in District 11 which we recommend for landmark designation, specifically Engine Company number thirty three at 117 Broad Street in the Ocean View neighborhood. Supervisor Chen has already shared details on the property's history. I'll also mention it retains a great deal of integrity with features including its denticulated cornice, its central molded panel with intact lettering, classical inspired moldings, wood siding, and wood windows with OG lugs, transoms, carriage doors, and an alarm tower with semicircular openings. As Supervisor Chen noted, we have notified the property owner, and I was able to answer his questions about the implications of landmarking. That is all I have to present. But I'm available to answer any questions. Again, the planning department recommends approval. Thank you.
[Supervisor Myrna Melgar (Chair, Land Use & Transportation Committee)]: Hey, very cool. Is that an earthquake shack right next to it?
[Alex Westoff (San Francisco Planning Department)]: That's a good question.
[John Carroll (Committee Clerk)]: It looks
[Alex Westoff (San Francisco Planning Department)]: a little tall, but, you know, again, we haven't evaluated a lot of District 11, so I'm sure we'll realize that through survey.
[Supervisor Myrna Melgar (Chair, Land Use & Transportation Committee)]: Yeah, very cool. Thank you, Mr. Wessoff. With that, let's go to public comment on this item, please, Mr. Clerk.
[John Carroll (Committee Clerk)]: Thank you, Madam Chair. Land use and transportation will now hear public comment related to agenda item number two. If you have public comment for this item, please come forward to the lectern at this time. Madam Chair, present, no speakers.
[Supervisor Myrna Melgar (Chair, Land Use & Transportation Committee)]: Okay. With that, public comment on this item is now closed. Supervisor Chen.
[Supervisor Chyanne Chen (Vice Chair)]: Thank you, Chair. Thank you, Chair. I would like to move this, a committee of the whole, to the full board with positive recommendations.
[John Carroll (Committee Clerk)]: Motion to recommend the resolution to the Board of Supervisors?
[Supervisor Chyanne Chen (Vice Chair)]: Yes.
[John Carroll (Committee Clerk)]: On the motion offered by the vice chair that this resolution be recommended to the Board of Supervisors, Vice Chair Chen.
[Gia Dandler Katz (Public Commenter; consultant to JFCS)]: Aye.
[John Carroll (Committee Clerk)]: Chen, aye. Member Mahmood? Mahmood, aye. Chair Melgar? Aye. Melgar, aye. Madam Chair, there are three ayes.
[Supervisor Myrna Melgar (Chair, Land Use & Transportation Committee)]: That motion passes. Great. Thank you. Let's go to item number three, please.
[John Carroll (Committee Clerk)]: Agenda item number three is an ordinance amending the planning code and zoning map to establish the 2245 Post Street Special Use District, affirming the planning department's determination under CEQA, making findings of consistency with the general plan in the eight priority policies of Planning Code Section 101.1, and making findings of public necessity, convenience, and welfare pursuant to Planning Code Section three zero two.
[Supervisor Myrna Melgar (Chair, Land Use & Transportation Committee)]: Thank you so much. We have Audrey Maloney here from the Planning Department. And right now, I'm going to turn it over to the project sponsor to make a few remarks. Supervisor Mahmood.
[Supervisor Bilal Mahmood]: Thank you, Chair. Today, I'm presenting legislation to establish a special use district at 2240 Five-two Thousand 2 And 55 Post Street to facilitate the development of a new purpose built facility for the Jewish Family and Children's Services Holocaust Center. The Holocaust Center has been a cornerstone of Holocaust and genocide education since 1979. And this project will allow them to expand their work by hosting students, educators, and the public in a dedicated educational and cultural facility with exhibition space, classrooms, lecture hall, and archival resources. At a time when anti Semitism and other forms of hate are rising across the country and around the world, institutions like the Holocaust Center play a critical role in education, remembrance, and prevention. Supporting this project is an opportunity for San Francisco to lead by example in promoting tolerance, confronting hate, and investing in education that strengthens our communities. Before moving the item forward, and before bringing planning up as well, I would like to request colleagues' technical amendments to the environmental findings to reflect the Planning Department's review of the project under CEQA. These amendments summarize that in December 2025, the planning department published a preliminary mitigated negative declaration finding that any potential environmental impacts could be mitigated to a less than significant level. In January 2026, the department issued the final mitigated negative declaration following the required notice and appeal period. The planning commission adopted sequel findings in a mitigation monitoring and reporting program, And, the Board finds that the legislation before us is within the scope of the project analyzed in the environmental review, and does not introduce new or more severe impacts. These amendments are technical in nature and ensure the ordinance accurately reflects the completed environmental review. Deputy City Attorney Brad Russi, can you please confirm if these amendments are non substantive?
[Deputy City Attorney Brad Russi]: Deputy City Attorney Brad Russi, I confirm that they're not substantive, and the committee can act on them today.
[Supervisor Bilal Mahmood]: Thank you, Deputy City Attorney. With that, I would love to turn it over to the planning department to share more about the project.
[Supervisor Myrna Melgar (Chair, Land Use & Transportation Committee)]: Actually, I'm sorry, Supervisor Mahmood. Sorry, Ms. Maloney. Before you come up to fill out the very thorough report that Supervisor Mahmood, if I could ask Morgan Schneider, who is the director of the Holocaust Center at JFCS, to come up and say a few words.
[Morgan Schneider (Director, JFCS Holocaust Center)]: Thank you very much. Thank you, Chair Melgar, and to the committee for having us here today. I stand here today as the director of the JFCS Holocaust Center, part of Jewish Family and Children's Services. We've been serving the community for more than a hundred and seventy five years. And the Holocaust Center itself founded about forty years ago in response, as you may know, to a neo Nazi bookstore that opened in the Sunset District of San Francisco. And I often tell that story of where we started to where we are now as these forms of hate continue to impact our students, our teachers, and our community at large. Currently, we're reaching about 165,000 students, teachers, and community members throughout the state of California. We're honored to be working in partnership with the state and with the California Department of Education to have an extremely broad reach. But only about 20% of those programs and those students have their programs within the four walls of the Holocaust Center due to our limited space. There's an interest, there's a need, there's a passion, there's a commitment, and we are here to work in partnership with our California teachers and San Francisco public schools to empower our teachers to resource them and to give them the confidence that they need and that is best done engaging with primary sources. Our new facility will have 34,000 square feet with the opportunity to engage our students with primary source archival items, working with survivor testimony, engaging with each other in classrooms. The need is clear. The interest is strong. The passion is here. And this zoning matters because this legislation before you is essential in making this project possible, providing this modest zoning flexibility so that our educational facility can meet the needs within San Francisco into our broader community. As you may know there is no holocaust museum center or facility of this kind in Northern California we will be serving our San Francisco students as well as our communities throughout the Greater Bay Area and Northern California. Thank you on behalf of the 165,000 students and teachers in the state for supporting this.
[Supervisor Myrna Melgar (Chair, Land Use & Transportation Committee)]: Thank you so much, Ms. Schneider. Okay. Ms. Maloney, please come up.
[Deputy City Attorney Brad Russi]: Good afternoon, supervisors. Audrey Maloney, Planning Department staff. The Planning Commission heard this item on January 29 and voted to approve it. In addition, the department is supportive of all of the amendments that Supervisor Mahmood read into the record. In addition to myself, if there are questions, we have John Dacey from our staff who was the case planner on this. Thank you.
[Supervisor Myrna Melgar (Chair, Land Use & Transportation Committee)]: Okay. I don't see any questions or comments from my colleagues on the roster. I oh, Supervisor Chen.
[Supervisor Chyanne Chen (Vice Chair)]: Yeah, think your comments. Thank you, Chair. I just want to also congrats for moving this forward. This is a time that's really not easy for cultural facilities in our city and nationally. The whole cost center is an important resource in our city. Everywhere we look at today, there are reminders of the injustice that occurred in the past. We are stronger as a city when we create time, space, and learning to ensure that, as we move forward, we carry the lessons of the past and present with us. I'm very pleased to see that this special use district will enable the facility to expand, to provide exhibit space, educational program, a lecture hall, and archival centers. And I hope that I would be able to visit when it's all done. Thank you.
[Supervisor Myrna Melgar (Chair, Land Use & Transportation Committee)]: Thank you, supervisor. And thank you so much, Supervisor Mahmood. Would you like to make a motion?
[John Carroll (Committee Clerk)]: Madam Chair.
[Deputy City Attorney Brad Russi]: I'm sorry. We have not yet taken public comment on this item. Let's do public comment.
[John Carroll (Committee Clerk)]: GIA Thank you, Madam Chair. Land Use and Transportation will now hear public comment related to agenda item number three. If you have public comment for this item, please let
[Supervisor Myrna Melgar (Chair, Land Use & Transportation Committee)]: Yes, us yeah. Go ahead. Sorry.
[Gia Dandler Katz (Public Commenter; consultant to JFCS)]: Well, don't want to miss this opportunity. My name is GIA Dandler Katz. And Disclosure, I am a consultant to JFCS, but I am also a thirty year active community member and resident here in San Francisco, the president of the San Francisco Jewish Democratic Club, Rebel Wallenberg, and perhaps most importantly, what we call a two g, a second generation survivor, my mother being a child survivor, my 87 year old mother being a child survivor of the Holocaust. And so I just wanted to thank you, all three of you, and supervisor Mahmood, in particular, for being such a steadfast partner and supporter. Even before you were sworn into office, you embraced working together on this initiative and on this project. And chair Melgar, you've been an amazing friend of the agency and many of us in the community and a member of the community for so many years. And thank you, supervisor Chen, for for also being so supportive. And you are absolutely invited. Consider your invitation sent. In fact, all of you were invited, and I'm hoping we'll we'll see many of you on April 13 for the annual Holocaust Remembrance Day ceremony and reading of the names and lighting of memorial candles will be taking place at the Jewish Community Center here in San Francisco, a wonderful institution. And we look forward to being able to have this annual celebration in our new building. Again, thank you so much.
[John Carroll (Committee Clerk)]: Thank you for your comments. Do we have anyone else who has public comment for agenda item number three? Madam chair.
[Supervisor Myrna Melgar (Chair, Land Use & Transportation Committee)]: Okay. Public comment is now closed. Supervisor Mahmood.
[Supervisor Bilal Mahmood]: Thank you, colleagues. I just want to thank, again, Chair Melgar and Board President Mandelman for their cosponsorship, Heather Goodman in the City Attorney's Office for drafting legislation alongside Sam Logan on my team as well for leading on the legislation. John Dacey at the Planning Department for his assistance and the project sponsors of course at JFCS Holocaust Center for their partnership. I respectfully ask for this committee's support and for the item to be forwarded to the full board with a positive recommendation.
[Supervisor Myrna Melgar (Chair, Land Use & Transportation Committee)]: Amendments first,
[Supervisor Bilal Mahmood]: Oh, yes. Can we vote to have the amendments as read into the record, and then the motion to send it the full board with a positive recommendation.
[John Carroll (Committee Clerk)]: So I'm recording two motions, both offered by Member Mahmood. The first to amend the ordinance as presented, and the second is to recommend the ordinance as amended. On those motions, Vice Chair Chen. Chen, aye. Member Mahmood. Mahmood, aye. Chair Melgar?
[Supervisor Myrna Melgar (Chair, Land Use & Transportation Committee)]: Aye.
[John Carroll (Committee Clerk)]: Melgar, aye. Madam Chair, there are three ayes.
[Supervisor Myrna Melgar (Chair, Land Use & Transportation Committee)]: Okay. That motion passes. Thank you. Mr. Clerk, are there any other items on our agenda today?
[John Carroll (Committee Clerk)]: There is no further business.
[Supervisor Myrna Melgar (Chair, Land Use & Transportation Committee)]: Okay. We're adjourned. Thank you.