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tv   [untitled]    April 9, 2015 11:30am-12:01pm PDT

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, and the long-term preservation of affordable housing. i believe that my role as executive director of mission housing and before that the director of asaid management over the portfolio will provide valuable insight to the committee, mainly on using funds as efficiently and intelligently as possible in order to make sure that any upgrades or efficiency standards that are completed also last for decades to come. >> great, thank you. mr. moss, it's been a number of years that mission housing has been actively in the role of developing housing. i think the last project was the valencia gardens that had been started in a previous man manifestation of mission housing and you are new as executive director, what do you see for the coming years for
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mission housing in terms of where it's going to put its energy towards maintenance or we're actually looking at mission housing playing a larger role in the development process and, if so, what are the projects that you see moving forward? >> well, certainly as far as maintenance goes, like i said, we do have approximately 32 buildings. and so first and foremost the 1700 units and the 3,000 tenants that we serve, we need to make sure those units are efficient and quality affordable housing. and so we are embarking on that project but also we are an affordable housing developer. so at the moment we are working on our proposal for 1950 mission street, a new 100 percent affordable housing development that is near the 16th street bart station. we're also researching sites down near 24th street in the lower mission to purchase and
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develop what are relatively smaller sites but nonetheless are just as important in these days of gentrification and displacement in the mission. and so what i see as mission housing's role is that we will utilize our portfolio, our vast and very large, relatively speaking, portfolio to create and obtain the necessary funds and capacity which we will put towards new development because it's about boat, it's about making sure we have enough affordable housing and creating new, but also ensuring that that which we have is never ever lost. >> can you say how you are navigating the current controversy that's happening in the mission in general with development displacement? there's a lot of market rate developments being proposed. that's what's mostly being proposed and there's also been a great number of families, i'm hearing recently that the number being thrown around of
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around 7,000 latino families being displaced. where does mission housing fit in with that. >> one, our portfolio, making sure our units are open and affordable for those who qualify. second is looking for the small sites i mentioned. it's very great that there's an rfp and funds to develop a new large affordable housing project at 1950 mission. however, as we look at the current situation, that isn't enough and mission is trying to put its capacity and its resources towards establishing new ways to develop affordable housing, perhaps grouping together a few small sites and creating the economy of scale that's necessary to develop the housing. we're also talking with our community, those 3,000 tenants, as much as possible to get their viewpoint to see what they are focused on and what they are worried about because
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we are a trustee for those units and we are a trustee for those people and i would like there to be 6,000 tenants as soon as possible. 3,000 is great and it's been an awesome 4 1/2 decades, but we're focused on the next 4 decades and whatever we can do using the portfolio that we have developed and maintained very well to increase the amount of housing that's available. >> then where do you see mission housing stockfitting in with the level of energy efficiency that's already in place? do you see the vast majority of buildings needed that work for retrofiting and renovation or do you see you are ahead of the curve? >> i believe that, i think we're ahead of the curve in the sense we've been thinking about ways to accomplish the retrofits for a while now. but it's both. everything we do, anything is do is focused on efficiency and the long-term
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preservation because in affordable housing we're constantly trying to do more with less. funds aren't as readily available perhaps as the market rate developers can obtain, so we are retrofiting our buildings and first and foremost it's to create the efficiencies that perhaps weren't as prominent decades ago. but also in our new developments, in our new projects, whenever someone comes to us and suggests anything, one of the first things we ask is about energy efficiency and sustainability and not just because it sounds good now, but because that is truly what we believe will give us, put us in the best advantage to keep our buildings up to par for another 4 decades. >> very good, thank you. i appreciate you responding to my question. >> no problem. >> i see given the work and the stock that mission housing has that you could be a good fit for the energy efficiency committee here, but i do have, i have a lot of history with
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mission housing. i know you are new but that history i think has really, you know, things change and the sun rises and sets and new things happen. i am hoping your presence at mission housing can lead it back to where it was, being a big driver for tenant rights in the mission and elsewhere in the housing have hope for more housing to be built and a real strong pathway towards developing housing under your auspices. >> i look forward to showing you that you are correct. >> okay, we'll go on to our next applicant, is holly kaufman here? >> good morning, supervisors, i truly appreciate the opportunity to be here and to put my candidacy forward for the energy efficiency committee.
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i am a san francisco native, my mother was born here too, she grew up in the mission in the fillmore district. i grew up a lot in my grand father's shoe store on 24th street in the mission when it was an irish catholic neighborhood and we were some of the only jews there. so i really experienced the whole evolution of the city because i'm older than i ever expected to be. so i've also been very active in my city, which is the city that i love dearly, and i also happen to be both a tenant and a co-owner with my family of a 10 unit apartment building in the inner richmond which was my mother's business that she ran for about 40 years. so i think what i would bring to seat no. 4, which is the seat that i am apparently most being considered for and am the most interested in, is being able to bring a perspective of being both a tenant and an
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owner of small buildings here in san francisco. because i understand that multi family buildings are the largest component of our housing stock -- no worries, i hope everybody is okay -- the largest component of our housing stock and where most of our residents live and i've also been involved in environmental issues for over 40 years. so i would like to bring both my concerns about the environment and energy efficiency and my concerns about san francisco and its sustainability for the people who live here to bear on this committee. my very first job involved doing energy audits of buildings back in the days way before eye pads when we had to go measure crack spaces around windows and doors with tape measures and then go back and figure everything out by hand so i was doing that in the 1970's here in the bay area.
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my very first time dealing with the supervisors in the bay area was 40 years ago, i was horrified to learn when i was putting my notes together, in the save the stanislaus campaign. i also was the coordinator for mayor diane feinstein's urban forestry task force where we worked with 16 city agencies to get them to collaborate to change the concept of street trees to urban forests and drafted the first legislation here. up to the present day where i serve on the revenue bond
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oversight xlit on the san francisco public utilities commission public utilities commission and by the way i have already checked with the city attorney's office and there is apparently no conflict of interest for me being able to serve on both committees. i will briefly mention some of my other relevant experience. i have worked at the state level on ab32, our notable and progressive climate change law, including on the 32 percent renewable portfolio standards for the california wind energy association and for the energy foundation i worked on interviewing all of the various constituencies to identify what capacity needs they have to help pass the provisions of ab32 that were important to that community. at the national and international level, i was a member of president clinton's climate treaty negotiating team. so just want to bring that back to the fact that i think i could bring to this
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wearing both the hat of somebody who's a strong energy and environmental advocate and the fact that i am both a tenant and a landlord in san francisco so i can help figure out what would be practical to really advance energy efficiency in this important part of our building stock. i did review the mayor's 2012 renewable energy report, which i understand is one of the main charges for us to help implement the recommendations in that report, and at first i thought, well, why is energy efficiency committee supposed to be helping implement the renewable energy report and i was very pleased to find be that the report emphasizes how important it is to work on energy efficiency and achieve that to the maximum extent possible before working on solar or any other sorts of renewable energy. so reduce before produce, as it says in the report. so i look forward, hopefully, to working collaboratively with you and
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other members of the board of supervisors and other members of the committee to promote energy efficiency in san francisco. thank you. >> great, thank you very much. i'm very impressed with your range of work and your conversations for this work that we have here before us. i'm also very interested in you said you work at the san francisco conservation corps? >> yes, i did, i ran the summer program sometime in the 80's. >> i think, supervisor cohen, you are on the board? i used to work tr myself. >> so, i love that organization. >> i was there as a recruiter for 1992 and 3. >> i think i preceded you. >> you weren't there when i was there. we would have known each other. great, thank you for applying for this position. >> thank you, i appreciate it. >> we'll go on to our next applicant, megan kirkeby. >> she withdrew her
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application this morning. >> she withdrew her application? okay, james bryant. mr. bryant, please come forward. >> good morning, supervisors, i am obviously james bryant. i am coming before you today to apply for the seat no. 5. i currently have in front of me two of the three recommendations i thought i would have the third, but i think it is forthcoming, but i think most of you, i think two of you know my life. i've been around here for over 35, 40 years, almost, in labor. i continue to actively be a part of the afa brand institute on
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the national board representing west coast states from colorado to california. i am very interested in the energy efficiency coordinating committee because it's one of the areas that i studied as a while being the president of the afa brand institute where we had at one time wanted to partner with richard heath associates. i don't know if you know who they are, but they are the state facilitators of the energy efficiency programs. and so we went through a very tough education process ranging over many years, knowing all of
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the ins and outs of the energy efficiency business and the most important or interesting piece was the piece about jobs and how we deliver jobs and how we coordinate between the energy efficiency requirements such as restructuring places like public housing, restructuring places like the many buildings that are not meeting the energy efficiency rates. but, again, the most important piece is how we connect a group of workers that can be part of this process, how do we put together teams of folks, you know, locally that could be, you know, educated in
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that area, developed spin in order to do the basics of energy efficiency work such as, you know, checking homes such as applying the requirements of fixing homes and such as being part of the community that they live and work in. my many years of labor has come and gone, so to speak. i have retired from the city after some 35 years, but i am here, willing and able to broaden the education that i have with the energy efficiency with working with the community and with working with the
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connections bringing both energy efficiency and community together. i have three recommendations outside of the other qualifications of i would like to give to you and i'll put them over here and i'll give you the copies of it. one is from the hunters view mothers and fathers committee from hunters view i think you all know. one is from the alliance for jobs and sustainable grow *t , and the other is from bright line. >> do you have any questions? >> yes, i do have a question. one of the requirements is to receive a letter of recommendation from the mayor's office economic development. right? >> correct. >> and i think in your
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remarblgs you said you had two out of the three. >> yeah, i have recommendations from a construction committee and the other one is a letter. i think that you have received something, but i don't have it in hard copy so dwropbt to say that you have received something and you haven't. >> i understand that it needs to be from the director and it's signed by tom russo so i don't know if you're going to have a problem. >> i haven't zb the letter yet. so to the city attorney, what do we do with this matter, can we continue this particular seat or do we have all the documents? >> deputy city attorney andrew shen supervisor cohen, i think
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this is in transit but unfortunately it's not here yet. >> one of the legislative aides indicated it might have come from the city administrator and not the mayor's director. i just want to keep everything clean and move as quickly as possible, so my question is are we able to accept a letter if it's coming from the city attorney's office -- from the city administrator's office, even if the specific requirements must come from a department head. >> yeah, so think there may have just been some communication. the city attorney's office the letter can be put ph a seat but what's required is a letter from omd which we don't have yet. >> i think what we should do, since you are a strong and viable candidate, we should probably table this particular seat. >> or continue. >> thank you very much. just
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to continue it until we get the letter so that you can --. >> so all three of you know, i don't come to any hearings that have any mess. so what i want to do to you all in front of you all is respectively decline to accept the position. thank you. >> i did want the letter. >> mr. bryant, if you -- we cannot move without all the letters and we could be very well poised to support your position given the documents, but we can't legally move you forward without those documents and that's just not available for us to actually act on today. so when we say continue it, we would probably make a decision at the next rules committee meeting, which would be two weeks from today. >> okay. again, i've done too
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many years in the city to not -- to come before a board and feel as though -- i understand the requirements, i thought the requirement was going to be here, the letter, but it seems like a skate ball in that arena and i don't want to play that. i want to represent the city, i want to serve the city, but i don't want to be anybody's kickball and i respect all of you, you know, for considering to delay this matter but, you know, i don't know if that's something i want to do. >> well, i apologize for this inconvenience. any person who would be in the same position
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you are in without all the letters would be in the same position to have this seat continued to the next meeting. that's just how it would work. so i apologize for, you know, your feeling a bit slighted, perhaps. that's not the intention here. >> i appreciate all three of you, you all know that. may it be continued. thank you. >> so just one question. so you are still interested, we can continue it? >> sure. always interested in serving not only our community but the city. part of my life. so, yes, the answer is. >> okay, so i'd like to make a motion that we --. >> we can do that at the end after we hear all the applicants would be great. okay, our next applicant --
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thank you, mr. bryant. our next applicant will be renae steichen. >> hello, good morning and thank you for having me here today. i am applying for seat 6 on the energy efficiency committee. just a little background about myself, i have an educational background in environmental policy and a master's in public policy. i lived for a number of years in washington, dc, working for the federal government and as a consultant for the government on energy and environmental policy issues, mostly for internal programs and also with the department of energy on some of their programs. i've lived in the san francisco bay area for 3 years, in the city for the past two years, and at my current job at collaborative economics which
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is a company in san mateo, i manage the (inaudible) related to economic development. it's an economic strategy and policy analysis company. we work in the state and across the nation working on industry and innovation reports including in the areas of energy and also with directed technical assistance to local economic and work force development agencies. my personal interests, as demonstrated in my educational and career background, i'm very passionate about this area and have been looking for a way to get involved in san francisco and so i saw this committee opening and felt like i would be a perfect fit for it, so i'm excited to have the opportunity to serve the city. and just a little bit about my technical experience with collaborative economics at my current job, it's a mixture of research experience and also working directly with local stake holders in regions and in the
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nation working on various reports for the past 3 years. i've done the california green innovation index, which is a report with the nonprofit next 10 and it covers a variety of energy environmental issues, energy analysis, carbon emissions, renewable energy, innovation and start up. through reports such as this, follow industry trends in the green energy industry including new areas such as energy storage and energy finance issues and also part of these reports we do green jobs tracking analysis so we've been, the company has been working on this for the last sefrp -- 7 years so i've been doing it as long as i've been with them using different sectors to track the green economy. we track 15 different sectors including energy efficiency, water recycling and waste, so a very broad
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knowledge in these areas including some in depth knowledge on energy efficiency. also working directly with energy there's a project i've been leading with the california work force clusters of opportunity, i've been working directly with economic development agencies and work force investment boards to help grow the local industry for areas such as electric vehicles, which is one that we've been doing down in the silicon valley area, helping build the talent, working with community colleges, grow local markets and attract bitses businesses to the area. so kind of a broad overview with that. through this experience working through the state of california in various regions and across the nation on some nationwide projects such as with the recovery act grants working on green jobs training programs and such, have a broad
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variety of knowledge to be able to bring to the san francisco experience and i'm excited to see how they can develop in san francisco. >> very good. what do you see as the conditions and opportunities in san francisco for really maximizing our energy efficiency work and green jobs? >> yeah, so in san francisco there's, in looking at the green house gas analysis of san francisco, for example, i see commercial buildings as being one commercial electricity use as being one of the big areas. that seems like a big opportunity for being able to improve the energy efficiency, reduce the green house gas emissions in the area, and that also creates a lot of job opportunities with retrofits and with doing energy audits and there are new start ups in
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the area that are working on building optimization analysis and being able to improve the analytics, working with the new technologies to bring in, so i bring that's one big area for the city. >> do you see this coordinating committee playing a role in moving a lot of our commercial buildings towards the noncombustion sources? is that something that you would have some expertise in yourself? >> yeah. so renewable energy as being one big area, but also i think demand response programs that are in the area, i think there's a lot of new technologies that are out there to be able to tap into and different financing programs such as the new pace programs that are out there and also, you know, working with the local renters to help with them as being a local renter i
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wouldn't see any sort of payback on those if i invest in my local house i don't have any benefit of that other than, you know, a minor effect in my energy bill. so, yeah, i think there's a lot of different areas for renewable areas and demand response energy efficiency technologies. >> in 2012 we passed the proxy housing trust fund and there's actually a section of the housing trust fund that used to be called, before it went to the ballot, the home owners housing stablization fund. it has a fund available for various things to serve mostly single family homes if that's there and available, it's not necessarily being used for that, but part of it is for energy efficiency work. i think it's important if you would be on this committee to look at some some of the sources would be like the housing trust fund that could be used to support
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neighborhoods. we could look at neighborhoods en masse, a lot of old homes, not a lot of income there to make them energy efficient but if you have strong programs to do that you can change the stock across neighborhoods that could create a lot of jobs and actually help a lot of households, you have affordability brought into their homes. just want to put that out. >> yeah, i'm very excited to dig into the san francisco issues. >> great. thank you. >> thank you. >> let's see, going through our last persons here is miriam zouzuonis. i apologize if i didn't get your name quite right. >> thank you, supervisors, and staff, my name is miriam zouzuonis, i'm here seeking appointment for seat 7 on