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tv   [untitled]    June 18, 2013 11:00pm-11:31pm PDT

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i'm '5 11 silk. i couldn't walk. i have no wheelchair. ~ under their hospice program which means they're pretty much going to make you comfortable [speaker not understood]. and now with their care, it looks like i'm going to be eventually walking out of there on my own two legs. so, i, you know, they're major important to so many people i've seen [speaker not understood]. i don't know, you know, i wouldn't have made it a week without them. so, thank you very much. thank you, supervisors, and dr. garcia. i'm stu smith and i've been a client and volunteer with [speaker not understood] for a quarter of a century. shante saved my life and gave me purpose in life.
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it trained me how to [speaker not understood] on an emotional support to others with terminal illness, especially aids. it did more than that, though. this training, i just went through the training again so i can have another client to work with. this emotional support as well as the other services introduced me to ward 86 and i've been at ward 86 for almost a quarter of a century also. i feel i feel like i'm the beneficiary of the best health care system here in san francisco. the federal government ~ whittles away with the models we've created here. i ask you to consider backfilling whatever you can, as much as you can. the services we at shante provide and the other programs here today really do save lives and really make life worthwhile living for those who don't have good lives. i please urge you to backfill as much as you can. thank you. >> next speaker.
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ladies and gentlemen of the audience and supervisors, for the record my name is emil lawrence. been a resident in the city and county 44 years. i'm a taxi driver in this city without any medical benefits either. we talk about budget cuts, but i don't see any cuts in your salaries and pensions. we've got 44 unions that run this town. not one of them have retracted their pensions, medical payments, or salaries. but we have a room full of people here that need medical attention and you're calling and talking about budget cuts. cut them down. throw them out, but leave my salary and pension alone. it seems like some of these programs are managed the way the department of public works
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is managed. throw cement, building blocks on people's doors while you're repairing the sidewalk. the way this sfmta is managing the taxi business, they are pure chaos in the city right now. drive your own car, run a limousine, use a mini bus. they're all good taxis now. totally out of control. you've got a medical problem in this city out of control because you don't want to cut back on your own check, paycheck that is, and that's where the cuts should start, with your salaries, pensions, et cetera. i thank you for your time. >> thank you very much. next speaker. hello, my name is stan adler. i realize there are lots of demands on the supervisors, [speaker not understood]. i'm here today to ask you to revive the project from the '90s, to place all utility
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lines underground and clean up our beautiful city, a city-wide program -- >> excuse me, sir, this is actually a bielenson hearing on projected cuts to the department of public health hearing. if you're here for general public comment, that will happen after this hearing. >> oh, excuse me. >> thank you. next speaker. good afternoon, i'm dr. [speaker not understood] and distinguished professor of [speaker not understood] university, and i want to thank you for your support. i just wanted to make a few comments, more extensive comments i sent to you in a letter. but if these cuts happened as approved, argules will be forced to close by the end of this year. so, we're an hiv prevention program for latino gay and bisexual men [speaker not understood]. we're only one of two interventions that have been published in peer review behavioral health journals a mid thousands of other
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journals, articles that have been written. we've gotten awards from the mayor for our services as well as other dignitaries. and the city has a surplus. so, i'm wondering why are we being cut. the latinos will be the largest residents of california by the year 20 42. so, why are we eliminating the critical health infrastructure to latinos and future and majority voters and residents of our state? i also want to -- my other hat, we're noting that in our pipeline in terms of work force, we're seeing a reduction of 20 to 25% applicants who are interested in entering into the behavioral health field in the universities. so, where are we going to get the people to do this work? and i think part of it is that people are hearing about all these cuts and their future is being threatened. so, therefore we ask that the funding be restored and the
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funding originally promised to the city in writing by city official through december of 2015 be honored accordingly. thank you. >> thank you. next speaker. my name is eugene gordon, jr. so, where's the revolution 17 76 to 2013? speculation market, capital currency class rank divide, capitalism, imperialism. we the people voted for it. still continuing voting for it. so, where's the revolution? >> thank you very much. next speaker. garv, my name is melinda pierson and i am currently a
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mental health rehabilitation specialist at a woman's place. i have had the pleasure of doing some glamorous things to raise money for hiv prevention and care. i promise you that there is nothing glamorous about a woman coming to you a she qualifies for your program, but you have to turn her away because it's full due to lack of funding. where i work today, there are women who really, really, really need and deserve these services, but we don't have the money to give it to them. and i really, really want you guys to understand that this is a beautiful city. i'm a native san franciscan. and if we can allocate funds for fountains and other things and beautify this place, we definitely need to allocate some funds to take care of our people. and my supervisor is going to talk to you now. she's going to talk to you about budgets, but i want to
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talk to you about people. i just want you to understand that people need help here in this city. it's not all about the sky rise buildings and making this place a tourist attraction. we've got to take care of who lives here and you guys need to understand that that's the real job here. thank you. >> thanks. next speaker. hi, my name is rachel howard and i'm the program coordinator representing woman's place transitional housing for women living with hiv. we have six beds currently and we're facing a cut of $13,000 which will result in the loss of two beds. so, that would mean we only will be able to serve four women with housing and this is simply not adequate to address the needs of specifically chronically homeless transgender women in san francisco. i want to specifically address that there is an ongoing
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problem with violence against transgender women in this city and by providing housing and support services, we are able to reduce the risk that these women face for being attacked on the street due to homelessness, due to having to perform and live doing sex work. so, the $6,500 per year is just a little bit over $500 a month to provide housing, case management, mental health services, food, hygiene supplies, and, you know, support from peers and other staff. i think that is a small cost for serving this important population. and i also want to echo what supervisor campos said with the reduction of just a small amount of funds, the $13,000. an uninsured resident can rack up that amount in a week in ambulance rides and hospital stays. so, with the services that we're providing, we're reducing
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the cost of medical and psychiatric services at sf jeff. ~ general. i implore you to restore the fund to our program and assist the women in san francisco. greetings to all of you. my name is jasmine young. on stage i'm known as lady jasmine, and you can google that. i come from a very prestigious background. however, my life has had some twists and turns, and here i am. the woman's place is there and it's here to shelter women, including transgender women. i am a transgendered woman, from alvarious backgrounds with present struggles that they face. they also have a care program which is for those who live with hiv. i am also a victim of hiv. however, i'm living with hiv.
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and because of the woman's place, i'm able to pursue my college education, which i am pursuinging my law degree to be a criminal defense attorney. ~ this is a vital need to have services such as the woman's place and we need more women's places here in san francisco. it's a wonderful place to live. i'm not from here, but i love it here. out of anywhere that i've lived, including -- i love it more than where i was born. but housing is difficult here to encounter that issue. and the woman's place helps a lot of women, including trans-women to not deal with the prostitution, stealing, robbing, killing and other acts of crime to survive. the woman's place is a necessity and not an amenity. and if we -- and we need such programs as this. without it, well, the two worlds will be calamity, more and more crime. thank you for your ears and i hope that you restore and keep
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it not just for myself, but for others that come behind me to give us a chance to make better of ourselves as i have. thank you. >> thank you. hello, my name is [speaker not understood], a transwoman staying at a woman's place. i kind of had something prepared to say, but i was not prepared for the looks i see on you guy's faces. it shows me the cut has already been done because you guys are not paying attention like you really don't give a dam, and these people out here do. i came to san francisco as a tourist and i caught hiv in your beautiful city. it's not the city's fault, but i notice the looks on your faces are like the tourist as faces that come and see the people on the park, the street corners, the lunatics -- i'm not going to call them lunatic, hiv people, on the street corner right across the street in the plaza. i know you guys see them and this is what you're going to be
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getting when you cut those cuts. so, if it's already done because the looks on your faces say you don't give a dam and that's a scary thing because even a tourist can't kao here and find somewhere to look. if you're cutting it, i hope it's investing money into really curing something or helping the people ~ because the looks on your faces are like saying it's done. that's a sad thing. it's a really sad thing because if i'm placing my life in the decision of you people, then i'm dead. let's just speak on that part. >> thank you. next speaker. honorable board of supervisors, i am karen [speaker not understood], third district. i did my chaplain is at saint luke that was in danger of being closed and while i was there the third floor, the psychiatric ward was closed just with no word. amazing number of beds were left empty. the oppression of ahsterity,
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screams with outrage, venom spills into the human spirit kurd ling the soul with anguish. the snake rise in our mind demanding justice, demanding the right of care, demanding the right to health, demanding the right to life. you can cut the budget. you cannot cut out the people. thank you. good afternoon, supervisors. thank you for taking the time to listen to us today. my name is greg lawler. i'm with project of open hand. we pro pair 500 nutritious meals and provide 400 bags of healthy groceries to our clients as they not only battle hiv, but depression and poverty, too. medical research has shown that nutritious food is one of the most powerful weapons available for fighting the effect of hiv and aids. because of cuts in federal ryan white funding there is a $7 million hole to fill the san
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francisco's hiv and aids services. i'm here to ask that you approve mayor lee's budget which provides 4 million to partially fill that hole. i also urge the board of supervisors to help cover the remaining $3 million gap. money that will ensure people in our community who are living with hiv and aids get the services that they need. it is unfortunate that while the cost of food goes up, funding to feed people with hiv and aids has decreased. any cuts, the ryan white funding will result in project open end having to reduce their services which in turn means some of the project open hand's clients will go hungry. for every $2 cut in public funding, there will be one less meal for a person living with hiv and aids. as a client, i rely on these meals. five years ago when i came to project open hand i weighed only $140 pounds. today with the meals and groceries i receive proproject open hands, i gained 40 pounds my lab results improved substantially and my life improved radically.
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my sole income after represent and expenses, there is little or nothing left for the food. i am so grateful the project open hand provides me with the necessary food and nutrition allowing me to maintain my health. if the ryan white funding is not restored, then i will be one of the clients that will suffer the added pain of hunger. can you imagine going for a week or two with barely anything to eat? i urge you to keep in mind that the many project open hand clients that would benefit the entire $7 million returned to the ryan white funding. thank you for listening to us today. >> thank you. next speaker. good afternoon, supervisors. my name is eric, and i am the coordinator for [speaker not understood] and an employee of automobile [speaker not understood]. it has been around for over 15 years. little over 15 years, we've seen over 2000 men in that time. we do hiv/aids prevention for females. we do support groups. we do testing, we do counseling individual couples counseling. we also do groups for men who are [speaker not understood]
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and men who are second generation la [speaker not understood]. these cuts would be vital for our organization to the state organization continue. not the cuts actually, i'm sawyer, but the cuts will devastate what we're providing. if these cuts go through -- there is potential loss of services to over 700 of our clients, and over 1500 with the other latino providers in the city such as groups for [speaker not understood] and [speaker not understood]. and over 700,000 in funds lost for hiv prevention for lgbt latino community. so, as you see, it's a huge chunk of this budget and it is going to devastate our community. so, please fund all our agency. it is vital to the health and well-being of our community. thank you. >> thank you. before the next speaker, i would like to go back to our first 3:00 p.m. special order to give dpw an opportunity to
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report back. this will hopefully take just a few moments. >> thank you. howard kwan again with the department of public works. we met out with the constituents and we have taken out 11 properties that are noted on the form that was brought to your attention. and i ask that the remaining properties for assessment be voted on and approved by the board of supervisors to be placed as an assessment. >> okay, thank you. do you want to read those properties out or name into the record? >> the properties that have been stricken through this block -- >> if you can just read the location description. >> okay.
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114 1 plymouth avenue. 20 50 van ness avenue. 1 001 lincoln way. 38 14 [speaker not understood] street. ~ 1932 - 1934 jefferson street. 11 20 diamond street. 1567 42nd avenue. 7 36 kansas street. 165 roosevelt way. 337 mississippi. and 23 44 15th street. >> thank you. colleagues, we have newly amended copy of the report of assessments related to our sidewalk repair and improvement program. if we could adopt that without objection.
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that should be the case. [gavel] >> and thank you very much for that report, unless there are any questions to dpw. let me ask are there any other members of the public that wish to speak with regards to this hearing? seeing none, the hearing related to the report on assessment costs has been heard and filed. [gavel] >> and if we could take a roll call on item 34. madam clerk. >> supervisor mar? mar aye. supervisor tang? tang aye. supervisor wiener? wiener aye. supervisor yee? yee aye. supervisor avalos? avalos aye. supervisor breed? breed aye. supervisor campos? campos aye. supervisor chiu? chiu aye. supervisor cohen? cohen aye. supervisor farrell? farrell aye. supervisor kim? kim aye. there are 11 ayes. >> thank you. that resolution is adopted. [gavel] >> and our first 3:00 p.m. special order hearing is completed. now let's go back to our second 3:00 p.m. special order, back to the bielenson hearing. let's hear from the next speaker. good afternoon, supervisors. my name is -- >> you can draw the mic to your
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mouth a little bit. my name is [speaker not understood]. i have five years in the [speaker not understood] group and there are other groups latino gay community. these groups bring for the people for me especially the [speaker not understood] alternative, bring for me know more about my life and they bring for the positive people to live in a better life. this group here for the peep to lead to education, to improve to serve, to prevention. god bless san francisco for [speaker not understood] this community. thank you. >> thank you. next speaker. good afternoon, supervisors. my name is [speaker not understood] and i am the
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director of programs at the asian and pacific islander wellness center. and our agency lives in the heart of the tenderloin neighborhood and our clients accessing our center are amongst the poorest, the most marginally housed immigrant communities and gay bisexual and transgender communities. and i am here today to ask the board of supervisors to act now to backfill the $3 million shortfall to keep our city's lean hiv/aids services whole. we're not asking for new resources, for new projects or programs, but to really keep our cost-effective model of hiv prevention and care intact for the well-being of the city of san francisco and all its residents. the wellness center looks to receive $195,000 reduction over the next two fiscal years, meaning we will serve 75 less clients who are living with hiv in the heart of the tenderloin. when making your decision, i
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hope you factor in the following information. according to the data from dph, the tenderloin neighborhood and san francisco's homeless population have the highest hiv community viral loads in the city. the five-year survival rate for aids cases in the tenderloin and the homeless population is the worst in the city, below 78.7%. and the study -- a study of people living with hiv show that those who do not have a viral load under control cost 2.6 times higher more for treatment, prescription, hospitalization than those that do, and destabilizing these clients will only increase the likelihood that they will fall out of treatment. i want to share with you really quickly incredible outcomes we're achieving in the tenderloin. through our innovative program model, our clients living with hiv have achieved the highest health outcomes in the city with an over 60% [inaudible].
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>> thank you very much. next speaker. hi, my name is jason and i am a peer advocate with asian and pacific islander wellness centers health clinic serving the tenderloin area. i am also a former client of the case health clinic, formerly tenderloin health and before that continuum. i've been conchronically homeless and used drugs since i was a teenager. in 2000 i was really ill with sepsis and it was at st. luke's hospital over a year. after release i was appointed with a nurse who connected me with continuum. i was in a wheelchair and wasn't sure i would walk again, here i am today. for some people it took hitting rock bottom and that's what it took for me to stay alive. at the day program in continuum i was able to get something to eat, a safe place in the tenderloin to learn harm reduction and find people who
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are rooting for me and help facilitate changes i needed to make. these services continue today at case. i am afraid that if these services are cut, people will end up in the emergency room for things that could have easily been prevented through outreach and engagement. the case health clinic provides. ~ going to their emergency room was a monthly occurrence for me, but in the last five years i've only had to go a few times. i don't think it's fair that i was able to get help, get support, get healthy, get housed, and most importantly, get employed and educated while others might not be able to have those opportunities if these cuts go through. i would humbly like to ask you to find a way not to have these cuts go through. thank you very much. >> next speaker. hi, my name is nathan [speaker not understood] and i am an hiv care advocate at the asian and pacific islander
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wellness center. i'm a respected member of the community but the road i've traveled has been long and hard. i discovered i was hiv positive in 1999 and finding out i was hiv positive turned my world upside down. at the time i was a student at sfsu but i had to drop out because of financial and psychological hardship. it was hard for me and my family. i could not live at home and with my family and with my family and i was unstable for 18 months. being in the jay system i was stuck in the cycle made me more depressed with such low self-esteem it was hard to do anything. i foundation and pacific islander wellness center in 2002. i got put on a housing wait list and i was happy to say nine years later my name came up and i am now able to focus on my work and life without worrying about where i'm going to live. i'm been a peer leader at the wellness center since 2007 and also help people care for people living with advanced hiv. i never believed i would be respected, but i see that people in the community look up to me. there are people out there who
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are going through what i've been through and i want to give back to the community and to the people who i help. without the help of case managers who were involved in my care, i don't think i would have been able to stay in treatment. if funding is cut, clients will not have their scheduled monthly social network meeting that gives them the safe space to meet work clients receive educational and treatment information. without our help some clients may not be able to navigate the system. if cuts go through, clients may disengage in care and not adhere to their medication and treatment. i have been under [speaker not understood] since march 2013. these proposed cuts will hurt me and all the people that help out at hiv wellness center. please support us in taking care of our health. thank you. >> thanks. next speaker. hi, my name is stephanie goss and i'm [speaker not
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understood]. i'd like to read with your permission a speech by one of our clients who unfortunately was not able to be here but she was very excited and wanted to share this with you. hi, everyone, my name is joline and i am from kansas city. i ran away at 17 because my stepfather abused me. eventually i ended up homeless. i came to san francisco in 2008. that's when i tested positive for hiv. my doctor told me i only had six months to live. five years later here i am. around the same time i was diagnosed bipolar disorder and started my transition to become a woman. it's hard living with hiv, being bipolar, and homeless. back then my t-cells were way down. when i went to casey started to get better. doing all these positive things makes my life more better. for the past year my viral load is actually undetectable. i feel 100% super about this. i love chase. they help me solve. they really help me feel more human. they make me feel 100% like i'm
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somebody. i feel like myself. we've done a lot of good things, me and the wellness center. we changed my health. we hope you keep supporting our work. please don't cut our budget. thank you. good afternoon, my name is david [speaker not understood]. i'm the media and communications coordinator at asian and pacific 52nder wellness center. i'm here to talk on behalf of one of our clients who was here earlier but couldn't stay because they had a 4 o'clock appointment. hi, my name is mark keefe. i'm 24 years old and a gay man. i'm homeless, hiv positive and a client at case. my step mom and i didn't get along. she was abusive. i ran away seven times before they decided to put me in foster care. i moved six times in just two yearx. i became homeless in 2007. ~ i started using drugs a year later. i moved to san francisco in 2008 to find support in a different environment. two weeks later i found out i
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had hiv. my hiv treatment was constantly changing because of the way my psych meds affect my hiv meds. i'm bipolar and it has been an up and down process. my doctor at case helps me manage how the drugs affect each other. i've only been on meds two months now but now i'm undetectable. i'm really glad and i'm really proud of myself. it takes a lot of work. at case i have stability. i'm there all day and live right around the corner. right now where i live there is a big posit of drug dealers. to get away from the temptation to use i go to case. as my safe cell. a year ago i used to smoke every day. now i'm only smoking twice a week and that is just with the help of case. case has been there for me, case is my home, they're my brothers and sisters. at case we are all building a healthier tenderloin community. i'm proud of that. i hope you're proud to support us, too. please continue to invest in us and in our community. thank you.