tv Mayors Press Availability SFGTV June 3, 2024 5:00pm-6:01pm PDT
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>> good morning everyone. we are excited to have it gathering today. i'm with self-help for the elderly. thank you mayor for coming and making a very very important announcement for all of us today. [speaking chinese] [applause] let's welcome our supervisors, supervisor melgar, district 7 supervisor. [speaking chinese] thank you for all your support
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supervisor melgar. and supervisor hillary ronan. [applause] also, supervisor catherine stefani. [applause] catherine and also supervisor matt dorsey. [applause] [speaking chinese] [applause] i think plan this a few days ago. we would like the seniors to be part of this really joyous occasion, so a lot of the seniors who want to come in and then we welcome all the guests from the consortium and council. people that worked in this domestic violence child abuse, elder abuse area a long long time, so we welcome
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all our friends from the community to come to share in joy today. so, now with no further delay, i am sorry for all the guests that have to stand behind the room today. we are very crowded and of course, our seniors also will have the lunch program at 12 o'clock. i like to now welcome mayor breed to come up to the podium to make remarks. [speaking chinese] [applause] >> good morning everyone and thank you so much annie for all the extraordinary work that you do to support up lift and protect seniors all over san francisco. in fact, i think i said that i think there are five of you, because i can go to all most every neighborhood and you are well represented in terms of the incredible work you do to support one of our most vulnerable communities. it is so great to be here with our supervisors, because this is a
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long time coming. i do want to take back, because a lot of reason why i got involved politically had everything to do sadly with the gun violence happening in my community. it forced us to create new tools that never existed in san francisco. there was of course victim services in the district attorney's office, but there wasn't really the kind of support that people needed to be uplifted and are be helped through the crisis. it was more about prosecution, holding people ap countable. but what happens to the wrap around support necessary to help victims that have experienced such tragedies? an organization called the community response network was created, and from the community response network, street violence intervention program, we have a number people joining us here today as well as [applause]
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the extraordinary work of lynne restry of being in the homes of the mothers and families who experience extreme tragedies in our city. we continue to see changes in how the challenges persisted around violence in our community. not just with domestic violence, which we know there was a consortium of women and people in general who fought for additional resources and advocacy, and who has been able to generate efficient, not efficient, but generate resources to provide housing, wrap around and supportive services. after endureing the pandemic we experienced a height in antiasian hate and it was clear our seniors needed culturally competent services and people they could trust to communicate with and work with comes in sarah wan and cyc working together with street violence intervention program
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and we have so many of these different programs. we have so many-some in the women department of commission on status of women and some in the department of public health and just a little disorganized. in comes catherine stefani to take to the ballot so the programs are assessed and organized and structured in a way that inshrines what we dain the city and how to make accountability andcordsinator to provide the services necessary no matter who the supervisor is or mayor is these services live on to protect victims and witnesses with challenges in san francisco. we are excited to be here because the other thing is, we are all working
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together. supervisor hillary ronan who created a organization through the depart assist women who are abused and that is another program that we are folding under to this umbrella. we are working with supervisor ronan, melgar, catherine stefani and the guys want a piece of the action, so supervisor matt dorsey jumped in and i want a piece of this too, because i believe in this work and this is what happens when we work together. we make extraordinary things happen for this city. wept to get to a point where these services are no longer needed, but the fact is, san francisco is a major city with significant challenges and when people are at their worst, we need to make sure that we are coordinated in our response. we are working with advocacy organizations including asians are
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strong and other groups to help protect and uplift all citizens of san francisco. now here we are. after the assessment of these services, after a clear understanding of the dollars spent, the accountability tools and how we can make them more coordinated and more strong, we now have a leader who is prepared to take on the helm and can do this work. i am so excited to honored ivy lee accepted the position. [applause] ivy lee is a true public servant through and through. whenever given the opportunity she answers the call. first, working as a legislative aid from the time i met her. she has done other things because she is a attorney, but worked as legislative aid for jane kim when i first met her and appointed her to the
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city college board where she continued to work and provide opportunities and support community. she worked for other supervisors, including supervisor norman yee and then came to my office about four years ago to work on her true passion, victim services and provide the policy direction my office needs and the support to organize these services and to insure that we are making the right investment, we are holding organizations accountable and working together to create a more structured system. the system that i'm talking about now has everything to do with the leadership of ivy lee, so i'm grateful and excited she has accepted this responsibility to lead this organization and to insure that all victims, people struggling during their most vulnerable times are supported and to the service providers here, prp,
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united playas, sbip, cyc. the domestic violence consortium. we have so many organizations and people who do this work every single day, and now you have a city department that is leading the effort and will make sure that we do the analysis necessary to provide you with the support and resources you need. [applause] this is extraordinary. and this is how government should work. so, with that, i want to again take this opportunity to thank you all so much for being here. i know there is a lot of technicalities but this means more support for those who are victims of any sort of crime in our city so that you are at the forefront of these services. with that, i want to take this opportunity to introduce the author of proposition d to help make sure no one can mess with this office and
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[applause] >> thank you mayor breed for that introduction. i am just beyond overwhelmed to be here today and just so proud of these incredible women i call my friends and colleagues that we are doing this together and all the community providers, it thrill and so grateful to be with you as we launch the office of victim and witness rights and celebrate ivy lee's appointment as the inaugural director. [applause] i put this measure on the ballot in june of 2022 because we knew not all victims of crime were being served by the city, and we knew they absolutely needed a place to go. from those suffering from hate crimes,
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domestic violence, vandalism, we were not doing enough and delivering the services in a way streamlined or made sense to anyone who needed help. for too long crime victims were not being heard in san francisco. we knew all most 20thousand times per quarter a person in san francisco reported being a victim of crime, including domestic violence, assault, property crime and more. we also knew only about 3,000 of those incidents resulted in a arrest and charges filed in less then a thousand of the incidents. until now, about 90 percent of those people our neighbors colleague es and friends and constituents couldn't get the help they needed from the city or not easily and that meant no critical services were there to help people rebuild their lives. it meant no restitution.
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worst still, victims who qualified for services found layers of processes the mayor was saying, red tape and bureaucracy that made their experiences more difficult. also, our services for victims were spread across many different agencies as the mayor said, making it very difficult for people to navigate and i knew somehow we need to streamline those services to make it easier for victims of crime. it is why i put the san francisco victim right initiative, proposition d on the ballot and why the voters overwhelmingly passed it. a key component the office of victim and witness right is wrun stop resource for anyone. anyone who experiences a crime in san francisco regardless whether they feel safe going to law enforcement and a good thing about this office, it is outside law enforcement, so those that are uncomfortable with law enforcement will have a safe place to go. whether their case result in charges or
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whether anyone is convicted they get help at this office. the office will connect san franciscans with the services that survivors cited most critd e crital. housing, legal help, mental helths support. i knew it was good policy and personal for me. for many years my mother suffered through an abusive relaceship. 41 years she was in a marriage where i saw a-you can rebuild a new life. she is 76 and single so there is a way out. [applause] but i saw the toll that relationship exacted on my mother and those around her, including her 4 children and i committed myself being a
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champion for all who experience that trauma. when i introduced prop d, calls to the domestic violence up 45 percent and restraining order clinic up by 166 percent and turn away rate for victims seeking shelter for domestic violence was 79 percent. i knew we needed 250 do more. the other core responsibility of the office is manage a pilot program to provide victims of domestic violence with full scope legal counsel. we work to reduce crime of all kinds, we must remove obstacles to survivors getting help they need. make it easier for san franciscans to trust that the government will actually work for them and that is exactly what the office of victim and witness rights will do. ivy lee is the perfect woman for the job. [applause] i am so fortunate to have
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known ivy a long time. we met as legislative aids together and became my friend and someone i confided in and believed in and her decades of experience as civil rights attorney and policy leader and victim rights will serve the office well. her background makes me confident she will lead the office with compassion, integrity and resolve necessary to deliver results and break down barriers for survivors. ivy, thank you so much. i cannot thank you enough for stepping up and agreeing to take on this responsibility. mayor breed, i can't thank you enough. i remember sitting in your office when i brought the idea to you. you looked at me like you do sometimes and you said, that sounds like a good idea and we talked about it. we talked about services in different departments and you told me some i didn't know about and said, yeah i'll get behind it and immediately endorsed prop d and saw as something
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good to do and can't thank you enough and in your appointing ivy lee and recommending here, i can't thank you enough. i also like to thank supervisors hillary ronan and myrna melgar for unwavering support of this office and to hillary, we have been friends a long time. legislative aids together and worked together and been working on womens and victim issues, immigrant issues so long and see you here knowing you fold in the issues you care about and all care about i cant tell how much it means to me. to myrna melgar, a signatory on the initiative breveing it from the start. i can't thank you enough again for your friendship and all the things we care about and work on together. you are just two women in my life, my colleagues and friends that i look up to and i am so happy to have you here today. also i want to thank my staffers demin cudonovan and andy mullen for
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hard work on the measure. we put a lot of time and effort into it. and all those who helped get prop d over the finish line and especially the you do and looking at you lynne and sarah and bev and so many people in this room, hudson and mark and everything you bring to the table, janice, i saw you earlier. junted playas s. when we were doing this and talking about the services we really wanted to bring together, i consulted with many and i'll name them because they deserve it. open door legal, [indiscernible] justice diversity center san francisco bar association, jewish family, cooperative restraining order, rsh api legal outreach, the brady campaign [indiscernible] the american indian cultural dist rblth. ricate.
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[indiscernible] national coalition to right for civil council. [indiscernible] self-help for the elderly and so many more. without your work and your tireless advocacy and your dedication to serving victims and survivors, none of this would have been possible. today marks significant milestone in our collective efforts to support and protect victims, witnesses and survivors of crime in san francisco and i am so grateful that we will have the key resource as we continue that fight and again, congratulations to ivy leon her appointment. thank you. [applause] [speaking chinese]
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[applause] >> thank you so much supervisor catherine stefani for summarizing it and also for working with my office as well as your colleagues on helping to consolidate these services as well as with these various non profit organizations. supervisor ronan created an office to help victims of sexual harassment and assault. an office that has worked to not only implement policies and investment, but
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more importantly, to insure that those victims specifically were supported and uplifted, similar to so many of the other programs that we talked about earlier here today. she and supervisor catherine stefani are working together to insure those offices are consolidated , we are working together to have a holistic approach to address the needs and desires of victims. i cannot thank supervisor hillary ronan enough for her work and her advocacy. this makes sense and this is how it should be done. it is not only going to save us a lot of money, it will make the services better for the people we are trying to serve, so please welcome, supervisor hillary ronan. [applause] >> thank you so much mayor breed, supervisor stefani, director lee. yeah!
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i will be really short. i created sharp about, gosh, 5, 6 years ago after holding a hearing, where about 7 women who had been victims of rape and who had a horrible time going through our legal system trying to get justice against their accusers. i decided we needed a department that looked inward into the city and figured how to make our police department, district attorney department, health department more friendly towards survivors of these horrible horrible crimes. sharp has been in the human rights
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commission all this time and done extraordinary work but didn't give the policy changes we were looking for. it looked outward and amazing work outside the city, but we wanted to look inward because we want to improve. during the budget process when i was budget chair a few years ago--that was last year, sorry, i wasn't budget chair anymore. it was under supervisor chan. i don't know if it was supervisor stefani, but someone had a brilliant idea putting sharp under the new office of victim and witness services and said that is what we needed to do. and when mayor lee told us she was leaning towards appointing ivy lee as the director of this office, i said, this is going to thrive like never before, because i know ivy well and i know that it takes someone extremely
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special that people have a lot of faith in and a lot of respect for internally and understand how the city functions. to look at other departments inside the city, and criticize them frankly, right? that is not a easy job to do. setting up sharp was never easy. ivy is that person. she has the diplomacy, the credibility, she has the relationships that she is able to give constructive criticism in a way that our departments will take it and that's why i know sharp is going to succeed like it never has before. i know that's the reason why women and men and non binary people who are victims of horrible crimes are going to feel much more comfortable coming forward and seeking help, and i know that it will make our city better mayor breed and it is because we are all working together. i just want to end by thanking supervisor stefani so much for
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[applause] >> alright. ladies and gentlemen, as mentioned we are in westportal and supervisor myrna melgar's district and supervisor melgar is a bridge-builder, she worked together with colleagues to insure the success of this program and we wanted to invite you supervisor melgar up to say a few words, please. [applause] >> thank you so much mayor and welcome to west portal to district 7. ivy, i have known for a long long time, and i cannot say enough about how much i respect you. your brains your brilliance, but your heart.
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a unique combination of things the community needs to make sure we are safe and we are whole. i am so grateful mayor that you had the forsight and brilliance to put this woman in charge of something that my colleagues have been working on for so long. we have been talking for a couple years now about sexual assault in schools. it is something i have been very active in after i was approached by a bunch of kids from loelhigh school experienced increase in harassment and assault and things kids now just missed during developmental stage when they were on zoom. had to learn to do consent. resolve conflict in a way that would keep them safe. so, it makes sense that victim services incompass all the things we know people need in our community.
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our elders need. our kids need. women need. people who are experiencing violence, experiencing crime, they are experiencing trauma and we need somebody who understands the law, who understands the system, but also is deeply rooted in the values of community,b and that is you ivy. i'm so just thrilled and beyond excited that you are stepping in just at the right moment to bring all these different efforts that mayor breed has been working on, my colleague catherine stefani, hillary ronan and matt dorsey, everybody has been working on different pieces of it and bringing it all together with this deeply rooted community heart is what i know you are going to do. thank you so much for stepping up. i am so glad everybody is here to support ivy to support the mayor, support this effort of my colleagues and i think that we are going
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has done. she is extremely accomplished, clearly, and in every job she has chosen to do throughout her career, it has had everything to do with having the heart to want to help people. i think that say s a lot about her character and why everyone here agrees she is the perfect person to take on this responsibility. because at the end of the day, she will always look out for the people who need the kind of support and services that so many of the people here, the service providers providing to the public. there are little things that matter. showing up to the hospital, being there, being in the living room of a victim and not like taking their tragedy and using it in a irresponsible way, because it is their tragedy and their challenge and their issue. she will understand that, and she will understand how we work together to insure that this city is being held accountable to make those investments and to be there and i see it is
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so great to be in this room, because i see so many people that represent the world of non profit and city workers who have been in this fight for victims in various capacities for decades. we appreciate the work that you all continue to do and now under this office, under the leadership of ivy lee, we are taking this work to the next level. ladies and gentlemen, presenting the new director of the office of victim and witness protection, ivy lee! [applause] >> i want to thank you mayor
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for trusting me with this responsibility and supervisors, i really want to thank you for putting your faith in me that i can do justice and do right by this office. i wanted to welcome my good friend, michael wong. he's going to be helping me today to make sure what i say could be properly communicated, but he is one of the many people in this office that do the hard work every single day. so, it is really humbling to be here, because i feel like i am here with the real people that deserve acknowledgment and support. mayor, one of the first things i want to say, they need the city support. there are federal cuts to
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victims of crime, dollars that is happening this year. it happens every year. on a state level, there are resources cut from this community of providers of service providers and advocates every year. they are the first on the chopping block and they are the ones that are first at the table, first in the room, first on the phone standing shoulder to shoulder with people that are going through some of the worst experiences of their lives. so, they absorb all that pain and then they stand up and turn it into really a way to help people start to stand up and heal. so, we need the city every single department of this city to stand up and put their money and make their words into action. they need to support the people in this room and beyond doing the work. [applause]
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[applause] >> this job, doing this job actually feels very full circle, and that is because this work is why i wanted to become a lawyer in the first place. a lot of the clients that i've severed in the past have actually been coming to me over the past couple weeks . it is because of them that-- [applause] like you supervisor, i think their
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courage, their resilience, the families of the survivors, they are the ones that i think compel us to do this work and to do it better. so, i don't want to keep the seniors from their meal, but i want to say thank you for coming and i want to thank you for all of you for doing the work that you do. it is a honor for me to support you, because that is what this office should do. this office will have one purpose, which is try to make government work better for survivors and the people who serve them. [applause] [speaking chinese]
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to hopefully make it easier for him to interpret for me and i didn't speak to it. >> it doesn't matter. [laughter] [applause] i spent 4 hours translating it. just kidding. >> thank you. annie, thank you for letting us take up space so much. appreciate you and all the work that you do and that you've done. you are a role model and inspiration to me so thank you. [speaking chinese] [applause] >> and very last but definitely not least, i want to thank my husband who is here. one of the only judges in san francisco superior court who every day
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talks about marcy's law and rights of victims, as he is doing his job as court. i want to thank my son for being here, who is hiding in the back. [laughter] [applause] >> [speaking chinese] [applause] >> my grand mother raised me like your grand mother raised you, mayor, and one she always told me was, dont take more then you give, always give back
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more. so, i hope that that's what i am able to do in partnership with all of you. thank you. [applause] [speaking chinese] [applause] >> thank you again ivy for that heart-warming comments and again when it comes from the heart, it just makes all the difference. to so many of the service providers here today, when you take on the responsibility of the people you serve, sometimes it can be taxing on your mental health, and it is so important and i'm looking at lynne, because lynne when there is gun violence, she is in those living rooms and at san francisco general and so many folks here
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today, it is always important that in the work that you do that you take a moment to take care of yourself too. because, as much as i know you want to go 24/7 and be there for the people we need to be there for, we need to make sure you are strong, but on your oxygen mask before assisting others. we have to do that, because we need you all for the long-term. this is a long-term challenge that we are up for, and we are up for it because all of you have the heart for this work. it is so great to be here. this office, supervisor stefani is finally headed in the direction you envisionism the work and collaborative spirit of what we here to do is there, and the leadership of heart and integrity at the helm. i know this signals a new day for victim services and right in
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city county of san francisco and grateful for the work we have done and will continue to do to support, uplift and be a blessing to the people who deserve the support that this office will deliver under your extraordinary leadership ivy lee. thank you. [applause] [speaking chinese] [laughter] [applause]
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>> how i really started my advocacy was through my own personal experiences with discrimination as a trans person. and when i came out as trans, you know, i experienced discrimination in the workplace. they refused to let me use the women's bathroom and fired me. there were so many barriers that other trans folks had in the workplace. and so when i finished college, i moved out to san francisco in the hopes of finding a safer community. >> and also, i want to recognize our amazing trans advisory committee who advises our office as well as the mayor, so our transadvisory community members, if they
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could raise their hands and you could give a little love to them. [applause] >> thank you so much for your help. my leadership here at the office is engaging the mayor and leadership with our lgbt community. we also get to support, like, local policy and make sure that that is implemented, from all-gender bathrooms to making sure that there's lgbt data collection across the city. get to do a lot of great events in trans awareness month. >> transgender people really need representation in politics of all kinds, and i'm so grateful for clair farley because she represents us so
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intelligently. >> i would like to take a moment of silence to honor all those folks that nicky mentioned that we've lost this year. >> i came out when i was 18 as trans and grew up as gay in missoula, montana. so as you can imagine, it wasn't the safest environment for lgbt folks. i had a pretty supportive family. i have an identical twin, and so we really were able to support each other. once i moved away from home and started college, i was really able to recognize my own value and what i had to offer, and i think that for me was one of the biggest challenges is kind of facing so many barriers, even with all the privilege and access that i had. it was how can i make sure that i transform those challenges into really helping other
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people. we're celebrating transgender awareness month, and within that, we recognize transgender day of remembrance, which is a memorial of those that we have lost due to transgender violence, which within the last year, 2019, we've lost 22 transgender folks. think all but one are transgender women of color who have been murdered across the country. i think it's important because we get to lift up their stories, and bring attention to the attacks and violence that are still taking place. we push back against washington. that kind of impact is starting to impact trans black folks, so
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it's important for our office to advocate and recognize, and come together and really remember our strength and resilience. as the only acting director of a city department in the country, i feel like there's a lot of pressure, but working through my own challenges and barriers and even my own self-doubt, i think i've been try to remember that the action is about helping our community, whether that's making sure the community is housed, making sure they have access to health care, and using kind of my access and privilege to make change. >> i would like to say something about clair farley. she has really inspired me. i was a nurse and became disabled. before i transitioned and after i transitioned, i didn't know what i wanted to do. i'm back at college, and clair farley has really impressed on
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me to have a voice and to have agency, you have to have an education. >> mayor breed has led this effort. she made a $2.3 million investment into trans homes, and she spear headed this effort in partnership with my office and tony, and we're so proud to have a mayor who continues to commit and really make sure that everyone in this city can thrive. >> our community has the most resources, and i'm very happy to be here and to have a place finally to call home. thank you. [applause] >> one, two, three. [applause] >> even in those moments when i do feel kind of alone or unseen or doubt myself, i take a look at the community and the power of the supportive allies that are at the table that really help me to push past that.
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being yourself, it's the word of wisdom i would give anyone. surely be patient with yourself and your dream. knowing that love, you may not always feel that from your family around you, but you can (laughter). >> hi, i'm pilipinas chi chai mateo and am the artist here. i'm current working on a title
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meaning together and the reason why i choose that theme because celebrating the legacy of some of the latin tennis especially with the power that put us together as formed when he come together and before us putting for our recognition and housing. but through our art culture and we see that today which we're together and it is always a hope for the generations after us. >> here in this district where we revising the languages and culture but in yes or no answer why we do this i get to see kids come out of this kind mr. ryu
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rattle where they came from and we are here. such an honor to be part of this legacy of togetherness and those opportunities have painting a mural such as this but teaching different skwashgs and learning more about my culture i thought i already knew but so much more to this is beautiful we have so much to give each other and we're also willing to work
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>> usf donates 100-120 pounds of food a night. for the four semesters we have been running here, usf has donated about 18,000 pounds of food to the food recovery network. ♪♪♪ ♪♪♪ >> i'm maggie. >> i'm nick. >> we're coe-chairs of the national led organization. what food recovery does is recover and redistribute food
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that would go wasted and redistributing to people in the community. >> the moment that i became really engaged in the cause of fighting food waste was when i had just taken the food from the usf cafeteria and i saw four pans full size full of food perfectly fine to be eaten and made the day before and that would have gone into the trash that night if we didn't recover it the next day. i want to fight food waste because it hurts the economy, it's one of the largest emitters of greenhouse gases in the world. if it was a nation, it would be the third largest nation behind china and the united states. america wastes about 40% of the
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food we create every year, $160 billion worth and that's made up in the higher cost of food for consumers. no matter where you view the line, you should be engaged with the issue of food waste. ♪♪♪ ♪♪♪ >> access edible food that we have throughout our lunch program in our center, i go ahead and collect it and i'll cool it down and every night i prep it up and the next day i'll heat it and ready for delivery. it's really natural for me, i love it, i'm passionate about it and it's just been great. i believe it's such a blessing to have the opportunity to actually feed people every day.
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no food should go wasted. there's someone who wants to eat, we have food, it's definitely hand in hand and it shouldn't be looked at as work or a task, we're feeding people and it really means so much to me. i come to work and they're like nora do you want this, do you want that? and it's so great and everyone is truly involved. every day, every night after every period of food, breakfast, lunch, dinner, i mean, people just throw it away. they don't even think twice about it and i think as a whole, as a community, as any community, if people just put a little effort, we could really help each other out. that's how it should be. that's what food is about basically. >> an organization that meets is
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the san francisco knight ministry we work with tuesday and thursday's. ♪♪♪ ♪ by the power ♪ ♪ of your name ♪ >> i have faith to move mountains because i believe in jesus. >> i believe it's helpful to offer food to people because as you know, there's so much homelessness in san francisco and california and the united states. i really believe that food is important as well as our faith.
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>> the san francisco knight ministry has been around for 54 years. the core of the ministry, a group of ordain ministers, we go out in the middle of the night every single night of the year, so for 54 years we have never missed a night. i know it's difficult to believe maybe in the united states but a lot of our people will say this is the first meal they've had in two days. i really believe it is a time between life or death because i mean, we could be here and have church, but, you know, i don't know how much we could feed or how many we could feed and this way over 100 people get fed every single thursday out here. it's not solely the food, i tell you, believe me.
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they're extremely grateful. >> it's super awesome how welcoming they are. after one or two times they're like i recognize you. how are you doing, how is school? i have never been in the city, it's overwhelming. you get to know people and through the music and the food, you get to know people. >> we never know what impact we're going to have on folks. if you just practice love and kindness, it's a labor of love and that's what the food recovery network is and this is a huge -- i believe they salvage our mission. >> to me the most important part is it's about food waste and feeding people. the food recovery network
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national slogan is finding ways to feed people. it's property to bring the scientific and human element into the situation. i give it to you. all right. good morning and welcome to our june 3rd, 2024 rules committee meeting. i'm supervisor shaman walton. i am your acting chair of the rules committee. this morning, joined by committee member, supervisor safaí and supervisor chan, who will be substituting for supervisor ronen this morning. our clerk is victor young, and i
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