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tv   Mayors Press Availability  SFGTV  November 26, 2023 7:10pm-8:01pm PST

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part of. i'm very proud to follow in their footsteps and able to maintain what the drag community has done in the past and move forward with creating a bright future. my job is to elevate and celebrate >> good afternoon. i'm carla short, director of san francisco public works. thank you. thank you. as the stewards of the city's
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125 thousand plus street tree, i'm beyond thrilled to welcome you here to celebrate this important milestone. we also wish to acknowledge today that we are here on the home land of the ramaytush oholone, the original people of the san francisco peninsula. public works is committed to working with the city indigenous groups to further understanding the history of the land. we also recognize that november is native american heritage month and in a effort to go beyond land acknowledgments, we are unable to return the land directly to the ramaytush oholone, public works is making this space available for use by indigenous groups for learning, connecting and teaching. we are honored to be joined by dr. jonathan [indiscernible] chair of ramaytush oholone and executive director of the
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ramaytush oholone. dr. cor dero. >> greetings everyone. in partnership with the city of san francisco department of public works, the ramaytush oholone humbly supported grant applications for tree plantings for the greening of marginalized communities which is our name for the city of san francisco. we now stand here in support of the realization of that vision, the opening of the street tree nursery. as native peoples our primarily responsibilities are care for the natural world and care for the people who reside in our ancestral homeland, especially marginalized communities. any project at intersection of ecology and equity counts as high priority for us so it was easy to offer our unwavering support for this project. first, we know that
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marginalized communities have less open space and greenery then others by greenery, i am referring to tree, parks, greenbelts, community gardens. scientific studies continue to show a strong correlation between greenery and race and between greenery and socio economic status. second, we know that being with nature has a positive impact on one's physical mental emotional health. the street tree nursey makes contribution to addressing these kinds of ecological injustices present in city of san francisco and it provides green job opportunities to members of the marginalized communities it actually serves. we want to thank especially john sway from it department of public works who shepherded the project through to fruition.
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mayor breed and the city of san francisco, governor newsom and state of california and numerous other supporters and granters who made this incredible vision a realty. thank you. >> thank you dr. cordero. our guiding vision for the street tree nursery is in the large circular graphic you can't see, but is behind you. justice, jobs, climate and trees. our mission embodies public works holistic approach to serving the people of san francisco. by planting trees and providing green jobs for residents in underserved neighborhoods lacking tree cover, the nursery will be a hub for elevating environmental and economic justice. this project was built on amazing partnerships that only continue to grow. thank you to the public works team that designed, managed and helped build the nursery, our
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hard working contractor crews lead by yerba buena engineering and construction and friends of the urban forest which will run the workforce development component of the nursery. the project would not have moved forward without the partnership and commitment of the state of california lead by governor newsom. now it is my pleasure to introduce san francisco mayor london breed, another staunch supporter of this nursery. she is someone who fights for her city every day with optimism and purpose. mayor breed. [applause] >> thank you carla. it is so great to finally be here after i think we had a discussion about this project maybe two, three years ago and we talked about what is possible. i want to step back a moment, because great things are happening in san francisco right now! we got dream forest returning, the nba all star weekend in
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2025, apec next week and in fact the entire purpose of apec is climate, and what they are focused on is building a more resilient and sustainable future for all. so, this is perfect timing to open a space like this where san francisco is going to be growing its own trees, working with community, working with rec and park and the department of public works and community as a whole to make it possible for us to do what our goal is by 2024 under our climate action plan. in san francisco, we are committed to planting 155 thousand trees and this is how we are going to get there! and i got to tell you, a partnership of this nature does not happen easily. it happens because your former mayor governor now of city and county of san francisco gavin
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newsom to continues to support the projects and things we do here in san francisco and this is no different. the department of transportation for the state, providing a opportunity for us as a city and county to actually lease the land and they gave us-usually they do it for $1 a month, but it turned out to be about $500. maybe you is can adjust our rent, who knows. never the less, it is still a really good deal for the state of california and so exciting to be here today to celebrate with all of you and i really want to thank our amazing partner, friends of the urban forest for all their commitment and making--i see brian over there. i was wondering where you were. for so many years people all over this city continue to plants trees and neighborhoods throughout san francisco and often times we are not able to
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grow those trees in san francisco but the nursery has given us a opportunity to do so much more. i want to thank so many great folks that are here today that helped make this possible. as i said, started with our governor gavin newsom who is committed to clean and green california, but also with financial resources to really put the icing on the cake and to get this project started sooner rather then later. i want to thank caltrans, cal fire, the california natural resource agency, the san francisco public works department and again, thank you all so much for being here to celebrate this incredible milestone. this property has been pretty much not used for most of nothing and now it will be made into something. something exciting, something sustainable and something open and available for the community. with that, i want to take this
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opportunity to introduce the secretary of transportation. >> good afternoon san francisco! how is everybody doing? good. good. good. i want to start off mostly with thanks. before i talk any--give you details about how important this project is and how important the clean california program division for it has been for california. number one, i want to thank mayor breed for the partnership. she has just a little bit of activity going on in the city. a small gathering of world leaders happening in a few days, so i want to commend her first of all for the partnership and for turning the city into what it has become more and more so thank you
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mayor breed for the partnership. director short, thank you as well for the partnership with our caltrans team to make a day like today happen and for the years and history you were sharing with me to make things like today happen so thank you as well director short for all the work you've done. director tavaresand his cal tran team. appreciate the work you have done. where is dina? district director. thank you as well. give them a hand for all the work both the teams for everything they have been doing to get to a day like today. and by the way, the folks in orange and neon jackets behind us, those are folks that really do the work. please give them a hand as well. [applause] public works staff, caltrans maintenance staff, really appreciate all the work that they've been doing. so, before i get into the project just a little bit and
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i'll try to be as brief as i can be, a day like today happens because of vision. i got a call in the spring of 2021, march or april 2021 from a guy name jason elliot, some may know who that guy is. he says hey, governor wants you-i was public works director at the time. governor wants to take on increased maintenance activities in the state to brighten the look of the state right away and highways and our budget at the time to clean up the entire state of california was $19 million a year. that was it. for the whole state of california. when jason called me and i talked to the governor, my proposal back to him was, maybe like $110, 120million with to bump it up by 20 or $30 million and jason was laughing on the phone and he was like no, the governor wants you to have a vision.
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he wants you to dream about the upmost you could be for the state. turned into a program called clean california. more then tripled our budget to clean up the states right of way. more then $300 million a year. a hand for that for clean california. [applause] the part i liked the most about it is the transformative nature. not just pick up litter, but to do programs like this, beautification efforts, landscaping, art and communities. very importantly, providing opportunities for people. jobs being created. there are more 300 people formally homeless experiencing homelessness that have been hired by the clean california project just because of that vision. yeah, please. [applause] more then 300 people. it is amazing what that vision can do.
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what happened since 154 total projects across the state? again, not just to pick up litter, but transformative efforts. we recently just this year the governor approved us moving forward with 15 additional million dollar for transit project, so bart, muni also getting funding. not just this right of way, but transit stations across the state getting funding and support as well. 28 projects just in this district alone and city of san francisco four projects and $9 million in the city, so kudos to the mayor for that as well. [applause] on this project specifically, as i close, when i think about a day like today, this project is about people. this is about families, this is about children. having access to things that they traditionally in a urban setting wouldn't have access to. they wouldn't be able to get to it.
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they would have to go out into nature to get access like this, but here in the middle of downtown, 500 trees will be planted, 500 trees and room for up to a thousand additional trees planted right here. they will be able to engage with arborist. please, a hand for--nearly a thousand trees potentially room for families to engage with arbalest and learn more about nature and that is quhat this is all about, people and our planet. exciting exciting to be a part of today. as i close, i mentioned the importance of vision and one of my favorite sayings is, where there is no vision, the people parish. where there is no vision, the people parish and the same goes for communities. if a community doesn't have a vision, they likely that community fails and perishes increases. a person with a vision that
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have been so glad to have a opportunity to work for has been a guy named gavin newsom. his vision for the state on issues related to equity, climate and projects like this, the clean california program is transforming the state. please give a warm welcome on a chilly evening, give a warm welcome to our governor of the great state of california, governor gavin newsom. [applause] >> thank you everybody. thanks for everybody taking--i like the cheering section over here. you should all be working, but that's for the mayor to decide but i know how hard you work to get here so here to celebrate your extraordinary contribution to this moment and look, i hear about vision. this is about the vision of every person that is struck in traffic that looks down on this spot and has been looking down on this spot for quite
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literally decades. well before my time here. wondering what the hell is going on. this is about addressing one of those mysteries of life, why the hell didn't we do this 25 years ago? it is a frustration that we all have about our state. you drive around and wonder who is responsible? why isn't that cleaned up? why is that graffiti there? why all the encampments? i spend more money on every taxes every year, clean it up, do your job. people are frustrated. we are here mindful of that mindset. i'm here mindful of that mindset and that is what brought us here a few years ago when we announced this project. especially when i realized that i had to look in the mirror and realize that this happened on my watch not someone else's watch. cal tran had a role to play in
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this and a responsibility to address this and really this is the spot, no exaggeration, talking about what happened in 2021, it was literally out of the frustration of coming in and out of the city at this particular spot that lead to clean california. $1.2 billion program. three year commitment. we set aside $1.2 billion. it was less then $90 million year for the entire state. $1.2 billion for three years. $200 million is matching grants with cities and counties to stretch the dollars and not just about cleaning things up, it is about beautification and leaving something behind more meaningful and also about the process of renewal and rebirth as it relaitss to a workforce program that now includes get this, 8700 folks that have worked through the clean california initiative since we launched this.
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[applause] wisely highlighted formally homeless but we have veterans, folks previously incarceratesed and folks we prioritize and also use as a recruitment tool to address the vacancies in the cal trans team. they saw the arts and nature component and something different then just throwing rocks or putting a bunch of chain link fences up. there was a true commitment to community so excited about this because--i get it, california is the size of 21 state population combined and even a billion dollars is a drop in the bucket, but the most significant commitment we have known of any state in the nation even on percapita basis to begin the process to turn it around. we get local artists, folks committed to long-term because what happens you have--how manyy have we been do and three weeks later it is completely
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abandoned and destroyed and then you get demoralized and the commitment here is to do something that is sustainable. literally and figatively and why we love the idea of a thousand or so trees that will be here that will be part of this renew and rebirth of san francisco and i can't just thank you enough mayor breed. she and i have been on the phone. so much--[indiscernible] sunshine request, get e-mails back and forth on just basic stuff, like what can i do on 7th and 5th and 6th street? i don't care about the jurisdictional non sense. how can we help? what do you need? 90 percent of the time, it is literally time. we have been waiting for a answer for a year and cant get a return phone call and it drives you crazy. it isn't about money, all this isn't about money, it really isn't. we put 3 and a half million bucks up for this, that isn't
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insignificant but the money is out there. it is about initiative, it is about commitment, about accountability, about leadership and about collaboration and it is about breaking down silos and all these stupid jurisdictions. i love and appreciate the mayor's comments about how many different state agencies are part of this, but each of those has their own damn process that can take weekends takes years and years and years of the process. if you haven't paid attention in sacramento, we have been blowing past all the old rules. we just got massive permitting reforms done in the state of california to move projects. it is time to deliver for the taxpayers of california. you deserve it. look, that is my emphasize. i see what you see and we all want and see a brighter future as well, so i'm really excited. i know folks say, they are just cleaning up this place because all the fancy leader are coming
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into town. that is true, because it's true, but it is also true for months and months and months prior to apec we had different conversations and raised the bar of expectation between the city, county and state and federal partners we all have to do more is and do better so that is the spirit of this. this is momentum, this is directional. i want folks to know, you see a lot more of this all around town and all around the bay area. there is 15 projects like this all around the bay area that are funded and happening. we are cleaning up this state and i'll close on this, because we love talking about the golden gate bridge as the iconic gateway to california, not just san francisco. we cleaned up the equivalent--i hate when they talk tons. i'm a public school kid, i don't know that metric talk.
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one thing i with know is how long the golden gate bridge is. they put it in language i can understand. since we announced this july 2021, they have as much garbage that fill the entire golden gate bridge 670 times that has been cleaned up because of the clean california initiative so i think that is pretty good. at least i get my arms around that, and yes, there is about 6,000 more that we need to actually do and so we are mindful of what we have to do going forward. thank you mr. chairman for beginning this. thank you caltrans and the leadership, madam director. thank you to jason elliot. once chief of staff of former mayor always chief of staff. once a mayor always a mayor. thank you to the mayor for allowing us to do all this and hur desire to see so many more of these projects done and we are seeing it. san francisco, don't count yourself out. the city, the state is
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resilient. i'm really proud of what's been happening here and so excited about showing this off to 21 fancly foreign leaderss around the world, 10s of thousands of people that come in and wonder what the hell fox news has been talking about all these years. thank you very very much. [applause] >> alright, are we ready? 5, 4, 3, 2, 1! [applause] >> this has been a important initiative. we are seeing a lot of progress. i think we-clean california has many different components, this
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is one component. traditional cleaning up the garbage and graffiti up and down the state of california is one component part of it. we now removed just as a component part of this over 3300 encampment as part of clean california initiative and of course, the beautification components which are a big part of the budget and what we are promoting as a component part here today. we want to see a lot more of these. i think universally these are the kind of projects people want to see. you can see behind me what this looked like. we have a large shelter next door. that is the image i have seen probably 20, 30 years. again, well before my time as mayor. even a county supervisor, so it is really nice that to know that hundreds of thousands of people will come into the city and the first thing they will see is this project and as they leave the city, they will have the opportunity to see this project and been talking to the mayor about other projects
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entrances and exits to the city to beautify together and amplify the work being done locally. we can find resources and then break down any barriers in terms of getting these projects done. as i said, this pre-dates apec but apec is a forcing function and that is a positive thing. any time there is a positive event it focuses the minds, keeps everybody's on the same agenda. the goal here is it isn't a situational commitment. this is long-term strategy beginning in july 2021 and momentumally and directionally we want to continue to see these projects up and down the state. with that, here to answer any questions. jrkss >> thank you governor. a it question about downtown revitalization. what can the state do for downtown san francisco so many officers are vacant and shuttered businesses. some called for the state to offer incentives to convert office building to residential?
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>> we have a work group we got a task force of sorts that is looking at downtown revitalization and best practices. not just throughout the state of california but working in partnership with experts from richard florida who has written a lot about downtown around the rest of the world, best practices across the globe not just the united states. this isn't a unique funomnm to san francisco. san francisco still has a lot of work to do, but none the less, we are recognizing that downtown is changing, it isn't just stacking people in offices, it is stacking people and that forces a function of reimagining future of downtown and looking at zoning issues and state components in terms of zoning. we have done a lot, probably more then any administration in modern times in terms of supporting local to break down barriers a relates to zoning and land use and the commitment is work with locals to do the
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same to move the downtown in a different direction. we formalized the work group, been meeting a year. have a lot of legislative leaders from the bay area eager to engage in the process and imagine you will see movement in the legislative session as it relates to tax incentives and the like and increments. those are more challenging. a lot of rules and regulations but those are component part of the discussion. >> governor newsom, urban california dealt with a image problem nationallyly for years and you talk briefly about that. why did this take so long and how far is this funded to keep going? a lot are saying this should have been happening years ago. >> it was. we started july 2021. we didn't wait for everybody to pile on and we recognize the need to do a lot more and we invested unprecedented funds in these kinds of projects and efforts and the end of the day we can't do it alone and why a
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component part of this is the matching grants that are also critical. we want everybody to have skin in the game and the challenge always with these projects is who maintains them after they are done and those are ongoing costs and that is always a burden in the past for locals say no, we are good or you commit to that and you get jurisdictional issues and finger pointer so we are trying to break the issues down. one of the first things we did back in 2019 one thing i was eager to do as a former mayor was address some of the legal issues and jurisdictional issues on caltrans sites that are directly in cities and allow for cities to take over the state sites without issues regarding liability. we changed the memorandum of understanding and legal rules and regulations to allow more collaboration. there is structural things that were done, unprecedented funding now in the space and as
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i said this is one of hundreds of projects complete or underway throughout the state of california. >> this is question for mayor breed. in light of apec coming what is done or already been done to clean up the city? >> just to be clear, we clean up the city every day. we have people who work for the department of public works. they are out in the middle of the night often times power washing the streets, picking up trash, getting what they need to out of the trash cans on a regular basis. they are still out there doing the work they have always done and we'll continue to do everything we can to maintain cleanliness in our streets. i'll give you one example, early in the morning whether un plaza, places in the tenderloin department of public works employees out there doing everything they can to keep the streets clean and we'll continue to do that throughout
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apec as well. >> this project we didn't know apec was coming. we had a press conference a few years back to announce this. wasn't considered in the context of apec, it was considered in improving the quality of life for all californians. here at this site first and sites in southern california off the freeway and near the 405 in los angeles. >> thank you. megan, i is a clarification on the number of encampments you said cleared. was that the state or right here, the 3300? >> it is just shy of 3270, but those are just--there are many component parts. clean california. when we initiated this you may
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not have fallowed this or written about it, maybe one of you did, we announced a goal of a thousand and exceeded it. we more then doubled that so we want to continue in that effort. we have a separate fund and this is unprecedented. when i started as governor, wasn't $1 the state provided for cities to deal with encampments, not a dollar. we put up two years in the administration, $52 million. wildly over subscribed and huge success. $750 million in that budget. $750 million. that is the encampment resolution grants that require a component part, which is we have to resolve the underlying issue in the first place. it isn't whama mole out of site out of mind and cleaning folks up and hope they disappear, this is hard work solving it and why it is substantively funded program so that is the
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second component. the billion dollars a year i provide cities and counties for homelessness generally where they have discretion, where i hope it is a priority and know it is for this mayor to address the issue of encampments and together working on the most frustrating subtext, the whole issue and that is what happened in the courts and the proversion of what happens as it relates to court orders that created a lot of the problems that persist. that isn't a excuse, we are not using that to advocate responsibility, it is a fundamental fact and been a impediment and why the state joined the cities and others with a brief to the supreme court to address some of those rules that have been made in the past. >> let me just add today, san francisco was awarded the 7th project home key grant, so these are also options that we have worked with the governor to provide housing for people who unfortunately are unhoused. in fact, since 2018 san
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francisco helped over 10 thousand people exit homelessness and any given night we are housing in the shelters and permanent housing units over 16 thousand people so we are getting a lot of state help including project home key to make sure there are options for people to live with dignity in places in san francisco and all over the state. there are a lot of solution out there, there is a lot of work being done and i'm really proud of the work we are not only doing in the city, but the support we can continue to get through the state under the governor's leadership. >> i don't want to belabor this, but look, year and a half ago or so the mayor and i started--different conversations. the usual partnerships were not enough. the usual back and 4th and grants. we increased funding but had to do something at a different level and innateed how can the
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california highway support. work with the federal government to do the same. those were difficult conversations that got into jurisdictional issue and values issues. a lot have strong opinions in this space and well reported and discussed. bottom line is status quo isn't acceptable and so we got chp 560 hours a week. component part with the guard dealing with cross jurisdictional issues with intelligence issue. working with federal government, dea never in the past. focus on retail threft. san francisco has out-performed many parts of the state. we still have problem s in the state. mindful of that. we put $800 million into the crime program. hire another thousand chp officers and provide grants to help jurisdictions with prosecution and investigations. all of these are component
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parts of addressing the issues i hear more often then any other issues, quality of life and the need to partner with new vigor and intentionality and i just think we are at a different place now then we have ever been and i say that as a former mayor, worked with governors and currently working with the legislature and partnership with them with cities like san francisco. i'm really encouraged directionally of the progress we are seeing. >> how important is it for the city to look when these leaders get here for apec? >> i have been in the city a lot and seen improvement consistantsly. we are not just waking up and say we should hire someone to clean the streets. this is what you do. this is the [indiscernible] everything has to get dialed up generally just generally and i think obviously any time you put on an event by definition, you have people over your house, you clean up the house.
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you make sure the kids make their beds. take the socks. put them in the drawer and hamper and that's 21 world leaders, 10s of thousands of people coming around the globe. what a opportunity to showcase the world's most extraordinary place, san francisco. this is a crown jewel. i was just with president xi. first thing he talked btd is san francisco. this place is beloved. and the bests are in front of it, not behind it and all the dooms dayer and negative folks, they haven't offered anything. they offered nothing, now counsel, advice, direction or support and one thing we are doing is offering hope to folks that we are going to get to the next level and i see it every day. those are tough years, covid. a lot of things happening across the country and we are
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working our way through that and i feel really good about this. this is small drop in the bucket but symbolic and one of many things happening. you don't want to ask the mayor--we talk about stop signs and things like that? >> they know it is looking good in the city. report that. >> report that.
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>> you are watching san francisco rising with chris manners. today's special guest, carolyn mante. >> hi, i'm chris manners and you are watching san francisco the stow about restaffing rebuilding and reimaging the city. the guest is carolyn manteto talk about the organization is helping to preserve the city cultural heritage and architecture. welcome to the show. >> thank you for having me e. >> good to have you here. >> can we talk bat the history of your organization and the mission. >> sure, thank you. san francisco heritage started 51 years ago and the main mission is to preserve and enhance the architectural and cultural identity of san francisco. when it started out the focus was really on the
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buildings, historic landmark listings and really concentrated on downtown area with all the development happening. our organization was raising a reg red flag with historic landmarks in danger and victorian mansions so a hallmark of our organization is moving these victorian mansions in the way of development to inwestern addition neighborhood and other areas to get out of the way of development and preserve them. our organization was around before there was the historic preservation commission of the city so we were at the forefront drawings attention to historic preservation, landmarking and over the last 51 years we have seen how there are more then just buildsings in safeguarding the city cultural resources, there is also small businesses and the different neighborhood icons that make a neighborhood special, so our
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outreach has really-it is really come full circle in a way because it moved downtown into the neighborhoods and now with the covid epidemic it is really going back to downtown again looking at how we can play a role in the economic recovery and revitalization of downtown san francisco. >> that's great. so, now i understand your organization is also responsible for maintaining a couple properties. could you tell us a little about those? >> yes, our non profit was gifted in 1973, the historic (inaudible) house. it is now a historic house museum but this was a family since 1886 built this victorian mansion in the same family year after year and one of the last resident of the family when she passed way gifted the mansion to san francisco heritage so since then we have been running this
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historic house and the home of our office. in 2018, one of the long time members nor aa lasten gifting a building on the e h-as hate polk became a commercial corridor after the earthquake, the owner at the time, he raised the house and put 6 store front underneath in order to take advantage of the commerce so we are in charge of the house on the corner and it has been a wonderful way to get new numbers, new audiences interested in the work of our organization. during the pandemic, we have been using it as a artson residents and partnering with different bay area artists as well as cultural institutions, cultural districts and then one of the storefronts we converted into
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a pop up galleries so gives a opportunity to raise awareness of the importance of the art and cultural resources in san francisco. >> that's fantastic. so, now, let's talk about legacy business. what does the designation mean? how does somebody get add today the legacy business registry and what benefits does being named a legacy business? >> i love this program. it was started by san francisco heritage and adopt ed by the city and run by the office of small business but the program looks what are the businesses really contributing to san francisco and the neighborhood. when we started the first focus was bars and restaurants but over the years it exb panded to include other businesses so these are places that contribute to the character of a neighborhood, so sam's grill downtown,
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the amazingarian press in the presidio. book stores like city lights oergreen apple recently named. this year we had a lot of attention on the legacy business program. we put out a contest to the public of what you think should be the next legacy business and one of the businesses that was recommended was the club deluxe, jazz club on the corner, and 2 or 3 days after we launched the contest, the owners announced they would have to close. the rent was driven up, they couldn't afford it, coming out of the pandemic so we worked at speed to get that application submitted with them and that status convinced their landlord to negotiate with them a lower rent and this way they have been able to stay, there was a lot of social media support around this, so when you become a legacy business, not only do you get marketing and business support
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from the office of small business, but you also eligible for grants and we work closely with the legacy businesses as we do our work for san francisco heritage. >> that's great. so, apart from architecture and buildings, you also work with cultural districts, and the castro theater strikes me as a place that is both. a beautiful building and cultural hub and center. what has been happening with the recent acquisition by new owners; >> it is leased to another planet entertainment and been in contact with planet entertainment by the castro theater is historic land mark building. it is recognized as a very important architectural
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monument. one thing-one of the main activist organizations of the preservation of the theater we work together with supervisor mandelman on a interior landmark historic landmark designation for interior, but what happened over the is summer and people learned is there is a lot of concern not just by san franciscans but people all over the world, movie directors, stars who are very concerned about the risk to the lgbtq and film programming at the castro theater. another planet hosted community stakeholder in august, and it was so moving to see the number of people who took the microphone-everyone had two minutes to say their testimony of what castro theater meant to them and those testimonys showed this building is contributing not just as a
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architectural monument but plays a role in the lgbtq community that is irrelaceuble able. >> it is beautiful theater. >> it is. my involvement in the theater raised awareness to not only the castro theater to be emblematic of the lgbtq culture and history but also there are many other sites in the city that also contribute to the identity. that is why so many people come to san francisco as a place of freedom and diversity so in my previous work i worked at the world heritage center, so when i joined san francisco heritage i was thinking why isn't san francisco a world heritage city? for the architecture alone it could be inscribed. golden gate bridge to name a few but the city is so
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unique in the architecture, the mansioned and historic landmarks so hoping to start a conversation on that with city stakeholders this year. >> that is great. let's talk about your relationship with other agencies. you mentioned economic and office of work force development and planning commission. how do you unt integrate to them? >> these relationships are essential. we are working with office of small business for the legacy business program and the planning department is really one of our most crucial relationships. we meet quarterly with them and we really see how we can support not only historic land mark listings and historical cultural context statements, strategy for culture districts and city survey among many other activities that really are of concern to both
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of us. for the office of workforce development, i attended a etmooing recently that the chamber of commerce organized with them on the downtown revitalization and a key goal in that meeting and in the downtown revitalization is to make sure that the city historic culture resources play a key #r0e8 in the economic recovery and revitalization especially after the pandemic. the office of workforce development has the city build program which is admirable program where youth are trained in construction techniques for rebuilding and especially with the new housing legislation, and we really want to see how can that workforce be expanded to include training in historic preservation. we have so many victorian homes, historic buildings and other places that really need a skilled labor force to make sure that they are preserved and that they help keep the special
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identify of the city. we really value these relationships, we meet quarterly with the various organizations and we are really grateful for grants of the arts we receive and other supports so definitely that is a key relationship for san francisco heritage. >> the city build is great. i like that a lot. thank you so much for the time you have given today. appreciate you coming on the show. >> thank you so much raising awareness about san francisco heritage. we hope the people watching will join us in the mission to help keep san francisco special. thank you. >> that's it for this episode. we'll be back shortly. i'm chris manners, thanks
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please stand by for the san francisco local agency formation commission meeting of november 17, 2023. >> the meeting will to order. welcome to november regular meeting of the local agency formation commission. our clerk is alyssa somera and i like to thank the staff