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tv   [untitled]    August 15, 2010 6:30pm-7:00pm PST

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francisco and shanghai. as has been mentioned before, this will be, in june, our 30th anniversary between our two great cities. it has been a wonderful relationship, and we will be bringing, in june, a delegation of approximately 300 or so people to shanghai to celebrate this 30th anniversary. this delegation will be divided into two components, prime army. a performing component which will celebrate the diversity of san francisco. but the other thing it will also bring, we have a very long sustainable energy component while there. san francisco is the only american city in the united states to be granted official participant status at the world expo. we believe that is in large
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part due to the wonderful relationship we have had between our two cities. it will be a fantastic trip in june, june 17-june 25. before i conclude, i wanted to make a couple of quick last points. first, i want to thank many of the sponsors that we have for the sister city committee. this thing is a volunteer organization. i want to acknowledge our presenting sponsor and founders. thank you so much. marsh arvel has been a key sponsor. the second thing i want to say is in chinese culture, the letter 3 is very important. i want to thank the leadership for setting up three. first it was jay and his asian art museum right there, the shanghai commibblet. the second one obviously is this wonderful statue, and third will be san francisco week in shanghai.
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this shows that the bonds between our city and the vision of our mayor is really incredible to craft this whole year around our 30th anniversary. it is very well of respected in shanghai and clearly here i know we very much appreciate it. i will say without getting too much political i will miss him when he leaves san francisco. thank you. and i would like to pren -- i was at the opening ceremony of the world expo, and i would like to present an opening program from the world expo to the mayor. thank you very much. [applause] >> as he will soon find out, you never really do leave san francisco. all right. not only is this an incredibly important and spectacular work by one of the world's most important artists, but as my
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4-year-old daughter who goes to day care in the basement of city hall said here, that is really could. and i think we can all agree. i am going to ask the artist to speak next. a city is only as great as its people. san francisco is a great city. and its cultural life is only as great as its artists and the creativity, inspiration and things they bring to the life here. we are glad to be able to call him one of our own. [applause] >> good morning, my friends. [speaking chinese]
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>> i'm really honored today to share this moment with everybody here in san francisco , to actually have this ceremony of this giant god from the orient to san francisco today. [speaking chinese] >> he wasn't expecting that the mayor is so young and handsome and has such good taste of art. [laughter] [speaking chinese] >> he was hoping last night that the mayor can honor him as an honorable citizen of france -- san francisco.
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[speaking chinese] >> in about five years ago, i actually spent more than 10 years to go performance art, and i was really young and energetic. and i have a strong hormone in my body, so i want to use them all. [laughter] [speaking chinese] >> now i am 45, and the level of my hormone in my body has gradually lowered down, but i
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want to use my art to give this new hormone to the world and to the arts. [speaking chinese] >> i want to thank everybody who worked really hard on this project, their intelligence, their hard work, people working in the city hall and the sponsors. [speaking chinese] >> nobody wants war and hurtful things happening in this world any more. so i do hope any work, three
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hands and six arms, will bring peace and harmony to our withhold world. thank you very much. [applause] >> all right. thank you. >> moving on from the hormone part of the program, this is usually the part where i talk about how incredible our mayor is when it comes to the arts, and it's true. no mayor has done as much to promote and protect the arts and the cultural life of this city as mayor newscom. you have all been gracious standing here in the sun waiting to get to the america. here is mayor newscom. >> thank you all. based on his comments, as far as i am concerned, he is an honorary citizen of san francisco. so thank you for your comments. thank you for the spirit that brought you here and for your art and for your commitment to
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the cause of bringing us together, which is the cause of understanding, and an appreciation of our capacity to recognize that we all have some remarkable and interesting differences that it is right to celebrate. but at the end of the day we are all bound together by the things that bind us together in terms of our common humanity. it is i think appropriate that this day is occurring here in san francisco and not some place else. we are the birth place of the united nations. this is a city with a population of over 30% asian. this is the city with the first and largest chinatown in the united states, a city that is appropriately celebrating three decades of specific relationship with the people of shanghai and china. this is a city that again has always maintained itself as other people oriented, that recognizes that it's real inspiration is by looking for inspiration not just
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internally, but looking for instance operation around the world. so i am very proud to be here, and proud to be here at this important moment. i am proud of the incredible team at the arts commission. luis, p.j. johnson and the entire commission, and to the passion, persistence, dedication, focus and follow-through of jill, who deserves a big round of [applause] , wherever you want. [applause] >> and to all of our sponsors. i won't begin again, but the hu family and all of you for your contribution. thank you for making this happen. we did want to be audacious, we wanted something bold, something that would get some attention and generate some controversy. the only thing missing -- were seems to love this thing. it doesn't seem to be
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particularly controversial, which i am surprised. trust me. 10 years ago if someone said they were going to put a 15-ton sculpture anywhere in this tone three stories high, there is no way it would generate anything but headlines and controversial columns. remember the days we were trying to put a foot in the embarcadero and a peace sign? there was a giant spider on thedom of city hall, and everyone we want crazy. you thought the sky would fall in because people were so upset. but in the last few years we have changed perceptions and changed people's hearts and minds. you don't have to like everything, but we want to challenge you, get you to pause and reflection and get engaged, and art can do this. i have had the privilege of seeing this go up and how
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people are reacting to it, the physical changes in their body. they walk by, look up, stop, pause, sit down and reflect. that is what this is all about, to challenge you. the chief of staff said as the first head went up, what were the other heads and arms? he said where is the torso and the legs? that is exactly what we should be talking about and what great public art is all about. i am very proud of this piece and produced of the -- and proud of the team that brought it here, proud of our work with shanghai as our sister city. this is a big deal. there is no city anywhere in the world that was given a designation to have a separate celebration of sorts in concert with the shanghai 2010 expo. this is a big deal. but san francisco was afforded that privilege and that honor, again because we recognized the
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importance of that relationship. at the end of the day, that is truly what we are celebrating with this remarkable piece of art. thank you to all of you that took the time to come out here, particularly these kids. this is what it is all about, those young artists. a bow. well done. [applause] keep up the good work. they are all better artists than i, that one in particular. well done. and to all the other children that are out here that are inspired by this work, and to all of those that maintain that quality of imagination, regardless of your time of life, but your state of mind, for being here, that artist inside of all of us, that creativity that all of us need to cherish, celebrate, explore and share. with that, i will end my thing. nothing more than what i have already said, and wish you all
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a wonderful afternoon, wish you lots of luck, wish me luck with the budget that i am submitting that clearly is being leveraged against any cuts to the arts. that is what i'm hearing. that is why they are being so nice. thank you rec and park for letting us do this and breaking every rule. these are things you are not supposed to do. that is another topic for another day. thank you to the city administrator. thank you to virgin airlines for being here and promoting this city around the world. have a great afternoon. thank you. [applause] >> all right. thanks, everybody. we are going to take some pictures. the artist is going to consecrate the piece. check it out, enjoy it and have a greaday. thanks very much.
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tape 55 >> welcome, this is carl. >> great to meet you. >> great to me you, and i want
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to thank you for your interest and this is the city's animal shelter. and come in and a lot of people come here to adopt a animal or if they have lost their animal or looking for other animals. and we deal with other animals like birds and rabbits and you name it. this is more to see in this facility and more to see in the community. and i suggest you go with an animal control person and see what they co, whether rescuing animals in distress or hit by a car or dealing with aggressive animals or wildlife or a variety of things. you can only get that flavor with them and doing it first hand. >> i have been with animal
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control for about six years, i spent a year in the kennel and then the office came up and i started doing it and it really fit. it's really the job for me. and animals i have to handle and i know what i am doing, i rarely get scared. [whistle]. we do a lot of investigations and most are not as bad as people report but everyone once in a while they are. and i had one and people had moved out and the dog was in the inside and it makes me teary and when the dog is in the backyard, and i can pull an animal out of a horrible
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environment and feel good. >> where does this animal go after this? >> they go for the shots and then the kennel. >> and if they just found this, and once we enter everything in the computer and they can track to find out if the dog went back home. we hold them for five days. >> this is a stray dog and it came in today and we immobilize it and then put it in a room with food and water. >> and then evaluate for medical behavior and see if anyone is interested in adopting then. >> we want to be sure that their behavior is good for the average adopter and not
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aggression problem, toward people or animals. >> and if they growl and don't bite the hand, she passes that. and good girl, in case she has something in her mouth, we get it out. and one more test, called the startle test and it startled hear but she came to me. and passed the handling test. >> for the mental exam i feel for lumps and bumps. and the ears and see if they are infected and look at the eyes and be sure they are clear and don't have cataracts and look at their teeth and heart. this is the first job that i feel i make a dvrngs.
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-- difference. and we may do 40 to 80 animals a day for treatments. and do blood work and skin scrapings and cultures to diagnose different diseases. and x-rays, i can take an animal that would be euthanized at a different shelter and fix it and get it ready for a home. >> we have a partnership and we let a professional groomer run a private business from our facility and in turn grooms our shelter animals. what is the big deal of that? when someone comes to adopt an animal, if it looks good, chances are it will be adopted more. >> and we groom and clean the
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ears and the works. >> typically a shelter wouldn't have grooming? >> not at all. and these dogs are treated with the utmot -- utmost care that others can't provide. this is a shampoo to bring out the luster. and i feel satisfied in helping the shelter pets be adopted and to be a part of such a wonderful staff, from the top all the way down. if she passes our evaluation, she will stay until she's adopted. if you are interested in adoption and don't want to put them to sleep, that means at a last resort, we will give you a call before putting to sleep. you are not bound to the dog, and we would give you a call,
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and it's an actual adoption and cost $107 and it will be your dog. >> the volunteers to meet are the unsung heroes in this field that take the animals to hope and nurse them to get strong enough to come down and rehome. without volunteers, i would have to be honest to say this wouldn't be much more than a pound. we thank god that we have the number of committed people coming down and helping us out, it makes all the difference in the world. >> when you want to come in and volunteer, you go through a general orientation, about two hours. there is a lot of flexibility. and the various programs available, are baseline dog walking.
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you can work with the cats. you can work with tony's kitty rescue, with the small animals and guinea pigs and birds and chickens. >> you always have an appreciative audience. >> do you feel that what you have learned here helped you with your own dogs? >> the training they don't have? yes. and it's things that you learn, we usually outlive our dogs and every time you get a new one, you have skills to teach them. >> one of the programs is training program and it's staffed by a member of the community and one of the programs she has is dog socialization. >> we started this program for
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canine socialization. and all the dogs available for adoption get to play for two hours. and it's a time for them to get incredible exercise and play with other dogs and we have remedial socialization. and it's incredible the dogs and they get exercise and run and tumble and when most adopters come to look in the afternoon, they are quiet and settled. >> and i want come and someone sees a dog and loves it, it's quick. and after three weekends, i saw him and he connected and i connected and came back. >> what is your experience of working with the animals? >> unbelievable. from the guy that is came to
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the house and everyone here, they are friendly and knowledge believe and -- knowledgeable and they care about the animals. >> and it's a great place to visit and look at the animals and maybe fall in love and take one home. and look at our grooming program and volunteer program and many say, hey, this >> the public wants to access particular information about your house or neighborhood we point them to gis. gis is a combination of maps and data. not a graphic you see on a screen. you get the traffic for the
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streets the number of crimes for a police district in a period of time. if the idea of combining the different layerce of information and stacking them on top of each other to present to the public. >> other types of gis are web based mapping systems. like google earth, yahoo maps. microsoft. those are examples of on line mapping systems that can be used to find businesses or get driving directions or check on traffic conditions. all digital maps. >> gis is used in the city of san francisco to better support what departments do. >> you imagine all the various elements of a city including parcels and the critical infrastructure where the storm drains are.
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the city access like the traffic lights and fire hydrants. anything you is represent in a geo graphic space with be stored for retrieval and analysis. >> the department of public works they maintain what goes on in the right-of-way, looking to dig up the streets to put in a pipe. with the permit. with mapping you click on the map, click on the street and up will come up the nchgz that will help them make a decision. currently available is sf parcel the assessor's application. you can go to the assessor's website and bring up a map of san francisco you can search by
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address and get information about any place in san francisco. you can search by address and find incidents of crime in san francisco in the last 90 days. we have [inaudible] which allows you to click on a map and get nchldz like your supervisor or who your supervisor is. the nearest public facility. and through the sf applications we support from the mayor's office of neighborhood services. you can drill down in the neighborhood and get where the newest hospital or police or fire station. >> we are positive about gis not only people access it in the office but from home because we use the internet. what we used to do was carry the large maps and it took a long time to find the information.
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>> it saves the city time and money. you are not taking up the time of a particular employee at the assessor's office. you might be doing things more efficient. >> they have it ready to go and say, this is what i want. >> they are finding the same things happening on the phone where people call in and ask, how do i find this information? we say, go to this website and they go and get the information easily. >> a picture tells a thousand stories. some say a map
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