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tv   Government Access Programming  SFGTV  August 7, 2018 2:00am-3:01am PDT

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look like because it is different than the school district. the other -- my biggest suggestion to parents, particularly because i really sit in the workforce development area is to start talking about what you want to do for work now, the way that you would with any child. what do you want to be when you grow up, identifying places that you go in the community where you see people with disabilities working. i would be happy to provide you with a list of all the places where our participants work. i think it's really important to have that vision the way that anyone else would as you're growing up of the things that you're interested in and how that could potentially be leveraged into a career and having that conversation now. and i would also recommend, you know, there are some other supports for families, for sure and just some other wonderful events where you're able to connect to places that serve both youth and adults so there's sort of a familiarity
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as you're growing up. one of the challenges i think that we have on the parent side is that adult services are so different. we don't have i.e.p.s. the way your plan looks is very different, and i would encourage parents to see what an individualized service plan looks like for adult programming maybe prior to going through the transition i.e.p. process so that you're kind of prepared for what that will look like and make those connections now. i mean, it's pretty easy to give us a call and come by for a tour. we're always more than happy to have people just kind of build that familiarity. and don't be afraid of benefits. work is important. >> and just a follow up question for that. do you have any specific services or does the arc provide specific services to parents of kids with
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disabilities. >> yeah. so we've tried a couple different times with support groups. it's a really interesting thing with adults. it seems when things are going well, we don't hear from parents as much as would be when your child goes off to college, you're a little less involved. we have -- i know j.c. cohen who comes to a lot of these meetings, she has hosted a variety of just different informational events at the arc, so we do full power workshops, where you can learn about community safety, and those are really appropriate for all ages. we've done some person centered training thinking workshops, as well, which are really kind of open to everyone. one of the marquis programs that we have that really kind of branchs all ages is our ready, set, fly program where you can come to s.f.o. and practice going through security, getting on the plane, and really get that under your
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belts. that primarily is taken advantage of by families, but at this time, we don't actually support any -- or we don't provide any support groups specifically. but lots of -- a lot of educational contents, yeah. >> any other comments from staff? thank you. i want to thank you for your presentation and for the work that you do and for waiting patiently. >> happy to. >> thank you very much. >> thank you. >> we're going to go ahead and close this presentation. we're going to open -- yeah, we're going to open -- thank you. we're going to open up public comment on this presentation. do we have anyone on the bridge line? okay. i don't see a speaker card. does anyone want to come up to the podium and make a comment? okay. thank you. with that, we're going to go ahead and close public comment. we're going to go onto
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information item number 10, correspondence. do we have any correspondence? >> there's one correspondence item, and director nicole bohn will be discussing that. >> thank you. >> hello again. i just wanted to mention briefly that council received an e-mail of concern regarding the state of some of our programs specifically downtown and in portions of the financial district, and i just wanted to let the council know by way of follow up that m.o.d. is working with our colleagues in d.p.w., department of public works for the appropriate follow up related to that correspondence that you all received earlier. that you all received, i believe, a week and a half ago or so. >> thank you very much for the update. discussion item number 11, council member discussions and announcements. i just have one. i'll be brief. next month, we are not having our monthly meeting. in august, we're having our
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leadership session development, so we will be back here september 21 from 1:00 to 4:00 here in room 400 here at city hall, so we look forward to seeing you then. any other comments or anything from council members? okay. i'm going to go ahead and, at this point, going to adjourn. thank you very much for your time and have a good weekend.
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>> providing excellent customer service to each other so that we can succeed together. because we're a small division out here, and we're separated from the rest of the p.u.c., a lot of people wear a lot of different hats. everyone is really adept not just at their own job assigned to them, but really understanding how their job relates to the other functions, and then, how they can work together with other functions in the organization to solve those problems and meet our core mission. >> we procure, track, and store materials and supplies for the project here. our real goal is to provide the best materials, services and supplies to the 250 people that
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work here at hetch hetchy, and turn, that supports everyone here in the city. i have a very small, but very efficient and effective team. we really focus hard on doing things right, and then focus on doing the right thing, that benefits everyone. >> the accounting team has several different functions. what happens is because we're so remote out here, we have small groups of people that have to do what the equivalent are of many people in the city. out here, our accounting team handles everything. they love it, they know it inside out, they cherish it, they do their best to make the system work at its most efficient. they work for ways to improve it all the time, and that's really an amazing thing. this is really unique because it's everybody across the board. they're invested it, and they do their best for it. >> they're a pretty dynamic team, actually.
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the warehouse team guys, and the gals over in accounting work very well together. i'm typically in engineering, so i don't work with them all day on an every day basis. so when i do, they've included me in their team and treated me as part of the family. it's pretty amazing. >> this team really understanding the mission of the organization and our responsibilities to deliver water and power, and the team also understands that in order to do that, we have a commitment to each other, so we're all committed to the success of the organization, and that means providing excellent customer service to each other so that we can succeed. >> shop and dine the 49 promotes loophole businesses and changes residents to do thirds shopping and diane within the 49 square miles of san francisco by
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supporting local services we help san francisco remain unique and successful where will you shop and dine shop and dine the 49. >> my name is neil the general manager for the book shop here on west portal avenue if san francisco this is a neighborhood bookstore and it is a wonderful neighborhood but it is an interesting community because the residents the neighborhood muni loves the neighborhood it is community and we as a book sincerely we see the same people here the shop all the time and you know to a certain degree this is part of their this is created the neighborhood a place where people come and subcontract it is in recent years we see a drop off of a lot of bookstores both
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national chains and neighborhoods by the neighborhood stores where coming you don't want to - one of the great things of san francisco it is neighborhood neighborhood have dentist corrosive are coffeehouses but 2, 3, 4 coffeehouses in month neighborhoods that are on their own- that'sready. i think we have a full house tonight. i call to order. welcome to the tuesday, june 19, meeting of the san francisco entertainment commission. my name is bryant tan, the commission president. we don't have a lot of people to send this message out to
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tonight, but if you have -- if you are a member of the public and would like to speak when i call public comment, we have public comment forms. you can fill one out and hand that to the staff or just come to the microphone. second, we ask you turn off your cell phones or put them on silent, including commissioners and myself. and then three, thank you to sfgov tv and media services for airing this meeting to the public every time we meet. we can go ahead and start with the roll call. >> commissioner lee. >> here. >> commissioner bleiman. >> here. >> commissioner thomas. >> here. >> a commissioner comino. >> here. >> commissioner perez. >> here. >> and president tan. >> here. we are still waiting on a law enforcement rep. which is all good. okay. first order of business is general public comment. is there any public comment on matters related to the san
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francisco entertainment item that is not on the agenda? i don't see any. public comment is closed. two is the approval of minutes from june 5. commissioners, unless there is a change you would like to make, happy to entertain a motion to approve. >> just correct the spelling of my name. under call to order, it's thomas. thank you. >> all right. any other changes? if not, would someone like to make a motion? >> a i move to approve minutes. >> a second. >> an any public comment on the minutes? seeing none, public comment is closed. let's take a vote. >> a commissioner lee. >> aye. >> a commissioner bleiman. >> an aye. >> a commissioner thomas. >> aye. commissioner perez. >> aye. >> a president tan. >> aye.
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we will move to item three, report from the acting director. ms. wyland. >> hi, guys. this evening i just wanted to give a couple of minor updates. we are in the midst of hiring a second part-time sound inspector to replace the person who could not commit before. we will be conducting more interviews this tuesday, the 26th. we have five candidates we will be interviewing. and we are hopeful that we can find a great choice from that group. so i will keep your guys all posted. i am hoping to on board them by mid july. and it looks like the training process from this time around has taken about two months in total. so i also wanted to say as a part of the update that inspector furintino has been doing really well and this
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weekend will be his first weekend on his own. taking the training wheels off, and he's going to go three days in a row out to about probably 25 pride events. we really will be covering the city. i'm excited about that. thank you, inspector. one more update on the retreat and this is basic and you already all know this. we had to change the date of the retreat. that is scheduled for july 28. commissioner bleiman is perhaps unable to join us, but we will have a full house otherwise. again, just some ideas on the retreat that you have passed to me are around sound science and perhaps having someone come and present the good neighbor policy and by then we are hoping to have an almost totally ready
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draft to look at and hopefully adopt at that meeting. so that we can flush through any ideas. the ideas that we have in the working group can also be discussed. and that will go to the city attorney prior to coming to you guys at retreat. one other idea is to come up with any specific questions that you might have surrounding code that are still feeling iffy about. and i will do the work on that and provide the answers at the retreat. if not, by provide the questions to the city attorney prior to retreat so she can help answer those, although she is likely unable to attend it sounds like. any other questions for me?
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>> i just had a question. maybe you have some insight. what is the timeline on the new commissioner? >> a for the law enforcement seat? >> i have been told by mayor farrell's office that they are not technically not going to act on this during the end of his term, so probably something that will happen or i will start working on it again after july 11. >> question. did we find a venue for the retreat? >> not yet. do you have any ideas? >> not yet. >> i'll figure something out. but yeah, if you think of anything, let me know. i want light coming in and so that is a little challenging with a lot of our bar venues. and also having a projector and screen capability, but i'll figure it out.
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and is there any public comment on the director's report? no, all right, public comment is closeed. item four. report from our sound inspectors, but via our main inspector, mr. burke. >> good evening, commissioners. and president tan, i am inspector sean burke. a couple of complaints to tet you know about starting from the top. chug bug, no entertainment, and i believe there was an outside after party at one point, and since then they have had no entertainment, but there is music and inspector purintino has worked with the operator and complainant to be in touch. and bomb's bar, this is the first complaint we have heard about them. unsure as to what the complaint
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is in regard to. they're stating that the sound is coming from a noise deterrent, so i am not sure what that is. we did a sound test at ghiradelli square for an outdoor l. l.p. and we followed up after two citations were written for 3910geery. they are unpermitted. and on the third visit, they were found not to be hosting entertainment, so that is good. our work in the field is paying off. >> and i.d. scanners were in use and guards had shirts with security in plain view. there was a small crowd. we waited until they closed, and everything went off without a hitch. those are the new conditions
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that were placed on the permit last time. redford had imagine and we have reached out to them regarding the permitting process to see if there is something they are interested in do you think. just one complaint and i think it was a one-off event. we did a sound inspection on june 16. they were found to be in compliance. and i believe that is all i've got for you. happy to answer any questions. >> is hugh on the weekly inspection schedule? what is the plan around monitoring them?
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>> the inspectors have gone twice already and by the time they got there and were already completely closed. and that is the date that is listed here in which they saw them in compliance with the security plan. the next plan since this weekend is pride is we're probably not going to be focussing on the same venues that we normally might. but next weekend we will send the inspector out on saturday because the previous two times is a friday evening. we'll start mixing it up. i don't need to be going there every single weekend. >> encouraging to hear they are in compliance. that is one thing we will keep hoping they do.
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>> commissioner perez. >> i am hope nothing news is good news. >> their abc license was essentially revoked. so that is no longer an issue. >> thank you. i have one. great america music hall. the last complaint is june 17. is that a door being open? and new neighbor across the street? >> complaints about music and crowd noise outside. we have yet to fine them or go by when there is a show that we can hear outside. we haven't seen crowds outside. it is an anonymous complaint.
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we are waiting to follow up with them and we have stopped by great american music hall and talked to them about the doors closed and using drapes. controlling the cout outside. and they are usually pretty good operator. we will keep it on the route. >> does the manager of the condo across the street -- should they tell -- and maybe they don't have to. and they should tell there is a club across the street. >> they should. we don't get that many complaints, right? from across the street. >> it has been occurring more than i have seen, so we are trying to get to the bottom of it, but it is challenging when you get anonymous complaints to figure out where exactly they
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are coming from. >> right. i don't know. even my brother lives on that block and he can't hear them at all. i am assuming it is someone directly adjacent. >> somebody just moved in or something. >> who knows? i'm not sure, but we will keep it on the route. all right. >> all right. any other comments from commissioners? >> i am curious what pride venues will be monitored? >> i feel bad. inspector furintino didn't bring his notes. i don't know if you remember any off the top of your head. >> all of them. >> great. so we are going to check out both juanita moore events and one a the new space and we are
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monitoring the events and venues and managing the lines and sounds bleeding on the outside. some are outdoor events, too, and in compliance. and a couple of rooftop parties and intersperse one or two venues that we are trying to honor at the same time. going to the center and mezzanine, jones -- >> we got a list in crystal and people who applied for one times with us. mike put together a list based off of websites. and a couple of venues that being b going to each weekend.
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and dylan has mentioned this and looks like he may go into this in his talk, but taking over the master special events calendar for the whole city. and so he is going to send out an aggregated list from our office, m.t.a. street closures, from police department, in anything that mike has researched online, and sending that over to d.e.m., police department, fire department, and so they're going to have this and be able to create hopefully a heat map of where everything is going on so they have situational awareness this weekend. the emergency operations center is activated all weekend. and so mike is actually also going to go for a training on sunday while pride is happening and going to be there with all the first responder agencies so that he can get a better bird's eye view of how the city works for these kind of events. there are essentially using that as a training for an actually
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emergency event that might occur in the future. hopefully not. >> hopefully not. better safe than sorry. all right. thank you. that is exciting to hear. and glad we have the capacity to have another inspector out there. is there any public comment on the sound inspector report? seeing none, public comment is closed. we move on to item number five. report from the senior analyst, mr. rice. >> good evening, commissioners. dylan rice, senior analyst for community and cultural events. i have a few updates, not too many, but some big ones. and i have received final edits and feedback from all the departments on the outdoor events guide and permit fee estimator and it includes nine
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deputy city attorneys and rec and park, sfpd, we have all their feedback and edits. great points were brought up to make the guide. clear and user friendly and drive home the idea of that you can apply for x, y, and z and do x, y, z steps but it doesn't guarantee you are going to get the permit approved. just so these points that are sort of larger legal conversations are being taken into account. and i am working with commissioner perez next week to incorporate the edits and make the design sing, look beautiful. and so we are on schedule for a publication at the beginning of july. and i am really excited about that. there will be the initial roll out of the guide and estimator and so on social media pages we will do a deep blast and get
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highlighted in the next event industry bulletin. so then i am also -- and maggie referenced the master special event calendar and is fully transitioned to us now from d.e.m. the proof concept is done. and d.e.m. is already using it for their daily emails that they send to first responders. andr andrea jorgenson will be sharing wit the stakeholder departments in the coming weeks now that we have ironed out the del days, and we want to get their feedback to make ate living, breathing, useful calendar that they can use in realtime. the last thing i will talk about is i have been pulled into some conversations with the environment department and katie
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tang's offers about the proposed legislation which you may have heard about which is single-use plastic ban. and commissioner bleiman is very aware of it. there is a section of the legislation that directly speaks to events that take place on city property. that is a huge part of my stakeholder group. and not just outdoor but indoor and any event on city property midwest ensure that at least 10% of the attendees have reusable cups. this would not just for water, but for beverage sales. and i need to qualify that by saying right now it's 100 attendees or higher is the threshold for when this ban goes into effect. so it can be that the attendees
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are bringing the cups with them or it can be that the event provides the cups and sell them or have a service provide them, but long story short, this has potential impacts on many of these community and curl churl events that are really tight with their budget and are just try ing trying to finish the year in the black. so i just have my main point right now is do we know enough about how to play out in the real world. have we talked to the stakeholders? have we heard from them and what does this look like? and if we imagine this happening. this consideration in terms of labor and sanitation and extra storage required if you are going to be staging these cups in your event footprint. and also speed of lines when you
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have an event that requires lots of turnover of beverages, that's a consideration. and so i am actually convening a group with environment department of event producers next wednesday. that is the tentative date. we are finalizing that any day now. and ask them what does it look like in terms of your business practice and the real world scenario. and i just want to make sure that if this legislation is passed, it's the language is crafted in a way that's practical and smart and mitigates as much financial impact that it could have on in the group, which is essentially, primarily nonprofit organizations and small business owners. i feel like i am wearing the advocacy hat and this cuts to the really core of what i think my role is in this job is rea y
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really, you know, being a voice and just making sure that we're being responsive and inclusive to this sector. so i know that it's going to the safety committee in a few weeks. i'm just working with environment as well as katie tang's aide to go over some considerations and get as much data as possible. >> a question on that. so you're telling me that they want to provide cups, like reusable cups either when they come to the venue -- let's say it's golden gate park. and they're going to provide these plastic cups that you can reuse to fill drinks and things. and then they're also saying it is okay to bring in containers? like their own containers? or is that not allowed? how do you prevent them from bringing alcohol in?
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>> yeah, so one of the stakeholders brought up that point. i would be curious to know what abc has to say about this as well. >> yes. >> so these are all really good questions. the language in the ordinance says that the event must ensure there are at least 10% of attendees -- sorry, at least 10% of the attendees have cups. so it could be that the attendees are bringing them with them or could be that the event is providing them. >> i guess if they are -- >> very broad. >> when they get the security, they just make sure it's empty before they go in. i guess that is what i am saying. >> that is one way to do it, yeah. >> interesting. >> question. >> commissioner perez. >> it is the responsibility of the event organizer to provide the reusable cups? >> that is actually not clear. right now it says the onus falls on -- it could fall on the
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attendee or on the food provider. i just want to get more clarity on that. so the bigger ideas is that we're trying to bsh there's a lot of this compostable plastic that is already being used for the events. and environment is concerned that while it is good that it is compostable, it is tox fick the material gets into the ocean or to the ecosysteecosystem. it takes a special kind of facility to really breakdown that material. i want to make sure we're being as considerate and smart about any kind of major implementation like this. and this would definitely be a big change. >> i want to make one note. we tried this at a festival we did and had about 6,000 people
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and incentivized people monetarily to purchase the clean canteen style glass and nobody bought it. we ended up with, i don't know -- i think we brought 3,000 and of the 3,000, we brought back 2,800 and even with the financial incentive, nobody did it. that is another consideration. and conceivably printed the name and the year of the event on it because it is like a souvenir cup, and you can't sell them the next year. that is another added cost we had to do and just eat 2,800 cups because we thought we could convince people to do it. >> how is this going to be enforced? a cup police? walking around? >> so i am not clear on if there will be actual inspectors, but right now environment is with the authority to issue fines and
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there is an event that has too much plastic in the composting stream. and so they get audited because the primary service provider has this report that environment gets ahold of. and they can go to the permit authority and say, well, this event has been a bad actor. we would like you to either cancel the event or threaten to withhold the permit whatever teeth for the enforcement that the authority has. but that's not entirely clear and going to be rolled out in year one in a very proactive way or if they are going to wait and see how it goes.
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>> i want to get -- what happens if they get a sponsor and the city is going to complain if a sponsor wants to provide 5,000 cups, and i mean, they going to step in and say, no, you can't use that sponsor? >> you can still have -- you can still use recycleable cups and compostable cups, but you are still supposed to either provide them, the reusable plastic cups -- i should say reusable cups, not plastic cups, or promote to your attendees that they should be bringing their own cups as well. so it's just a way to really promote using these reusable cups. and it is -- they also -- the legislation also says the director of environment can also increase the percentage at their discretion whenever they feel it's appropriate.
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>> i think it's an interesting idea to see how the math will take it. because speaking from experience, at burning man, you are supposed to bring your own cup. everyone kind of knows it, but it is a cultural norm that people understand, and people aren't served if you don't bring a cup. so they're kind of s.o.l. trying to get a drink at a bar kout without a cup. i think it will take a while for it to pick up, but it works out there great. and that is another plan. to some people, that is another planet to some people, but i think there are things that can be implemented here and tried out here, too. but i am curious. i worry a little bit about people taking a cup that is supposed to be reused and treating it like a disposable cup and then having even bigger problem on their hands. understanding that it will probably have some time before the real cultural shift happens. but i think it's possible.
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i think only because i have seen it happen at burning man. >> i am just saying who pays for it? that's the big thing. >> i think we have the opportunity to be really creative with this. i think it's a great idea that you are bringing event producers together to get their input, and maybe together you can create some strategies and do some piloting. and see what works. i think it's a great branding opportunity. and i personally would love to bring my own cup to things because it's never cute when you see somebody else's lipstick stains oen a wine glass. >> right. any cup washing stations probably. >> that is the issue that i am concerned about is burning man you don't have d.p.h. monitoring the bars and we do. and we're required to have a three compartment sink even if we have a glass washer, and the literally every beer you pour at an event, you touch the beer cup to the tap because the foam comes out and otherwise you are dumping foam out and losing
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beer. i am all for this, not that we have to have a debate on this, but as an environmentalist, i am for it, but in practice and in a highly regulated city atmosphere, ite terrifies me. >> just the cost, too. who pays for it? and they bring their own cup, okay, but they have to wash it somewhere, and we have to provide that. >> interesting. >> it sounds like we can get into a very, like, heated conversation about this right now. not heated. but just a healthy conversation. and if commissioners or other folks want to plug into those conversations, how do they do that? not tonight? >> do you want to speak to that? >> sure. >> so you should definitely reach out to both dylan and i directly. and we are going to have a conversation with commissioner bleiman today because he's very concerned about this legislation, rightly so.
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it will impact not only outdoor events but also brick and mortar businesses as well. we're having a conversation tomorrow with supervisor tang's legislative aide. hopefully we'll know a lot more then. and we'll definitely know more after having little focus group next week with outdoor event producers and environmental producers. in the interim, you guys should just reach out to. any of your concerns, questions, things that we can pose to both supervisor tang's offers and department of environment would be super helpful in getting the big picture of concerns here. >> yes. echo that. and i will send you guys tonight before i leave the link to the legislation. so you can see it. >> thank you. >> commissioner perez looks like he has one more comment. >> with regards to the community calendar that you are doing, how can the public submit their
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events? just like when we submit our own description and event? >> right now we are getting information from permit entities for the calendar. and we're also looking on some of the websites that will -- the free event websites to find out if there is an event that is in the public right-of-way or impacts public right-of-way that might not be on the radar of m.t.a. or rec and park. so there is no real publicly facing way to receive the data. it's all through, again, these entities that permit and if we find it on facebook, for example, that in the parking lot which is technically a private property space, there could be an event that maybe police
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doesn't know about. >> thank you. >> all right. thank you very much for that report. is there any public comment on our senior analyst report tonight? i don't see any. public comment is closed. we move on to item six. police department comments and questions. i don't see any police and move that -- moved past that item to item seven, hear rg and possible action regarding our application for permits that looks like everything is on the consent agenda tonight, so that is great. >> this should be pretty quick. to give you an overview, two limited live performance applicati applications. one is for visuvio. and victor harlan parlor and note the location on that that this is a totally different business from the one that was previously located here.
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victory hall and parlor is a restaurant with entertainment as an accessory use. and nate valentine here from august hall. in the beginning they did not think they would want to go for a mechanical amusement device, and they changed their mind. they want to have some machines downstairs adjacent to the bowling alley. so all of these were approved by the police department with no standout conditions from what you can see. vesuvio and august hall were signed off without anything added. victory hall has the standard conditions from the southern station police department. everyone has received those. and i didn't receive any negative feedback from neighbors for any of these applications. and i just want to congratulate janet from vesuvio because she did get a lot of public support for her application.
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and there is a few that came in today from ccdc, and they are not in your files, and one from san francisco independent business alliance. so if
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congratulations, everyone. looking forward to the entertainment. u tem eight is commissioner comments and questions for item eight. commissioner, anyone like to bring something up tonight? commissioner perez. >> just a belated happy father's day to our first-time daddio. >> thank you very much. and also to mr. bleiman, i believe, who is also a father. belated happy father's day. >> great. any other comments or questions? happy pride weekend to everyone out there who is proud and celebrating and an ally. and all right. is there any public comment on our comments and questions? no. we'll close that up. and move to item nine.
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public comment -- hold on one second. there is a specific way we have to say this. sorry. thanks for your patience. so item nine is public comment on all matters pertaining to item 11 below. it is a closed session including public comment on vote for whether to hold item 11 in closed session. so item 11 is about the hiring of the executive director. because i am a candidate, i will have to recuse myself. and so i have to take a motion to see if you will vote on my recusal. interesting. >> motion to allow president tan to recuse himself. >> to step away. >> second.
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>> all right. there is a second. let's do a roll call vote on that. >> commissioner lee. >> aye. >> commissioner bleiman. >> aye. >> a commissioner thomas. >> aye. >> commissioner camino. >> aye. >> a commissioner perez. >> aye. >> i think you can't vote on that. >> perfectly fine. thank you, everyone. have a good weekend. i am recusing myself and leaving. and passing the gavel over to commissioner thomas. >> yep. >> so the commission is pleased to report that the search for new executive director of the entertainment commission -- we have to wait until he leaves the room? >> you can take public comment on this first. so you can stay if you want. >> is there any public comment on that? on this matter? seeing none, public comment is closed. >> thank you, president tan.
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>> thank you for bearing with us through this. so the commission is pleased to report that the search for a new executive director of the entertainment commission is underway, and that this evening the commission will discuss and possibly select nominees to submit to the mayor. the san francisco administrative code and the brown act allow for that discussion to be held in closed session. if the commission votes to convene in closed session, all members of the public and entertainment commission staff will be excused from the room. before a vote is taken to convene in closed session, public comment will be taken on all matters pertaining to the closed session. is there any public comment? seeing none, public comment is closed. and now we move on to item 10, the vote to hold item 11 in
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closed session. as there is no further public comment, is there a motion to hold a closed session to discuss and possibly select nominees? >> i move to hold a closed session. >> motion has been made. is there a second? >> second. >> motion has been made and seconded. could we have a vote please? >> commissioner lee. >> aye. >> commissioner bleiman. >> aye. >> a commissioner thomas. >> aye. >> commissioner camino. >> aye. >> commissioner per resz
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>> all right. we good to go? excellent. thank you, katelyn. the meeting of the entertainment commission is reconvened in open session. thanks, everyone, for your patience during the closed session. the commission generally chooses not to disclose matters discussed in closed session. the privacy of the candidates and commission's ability to freely discuss the nominations are paramount. and may i have a motion not to disclose any of the discussions held in closed session? >> i make that motion. >> is there a second? >> second. >> any public comment? seeing none, let's take a vote. and lets a take a vote.
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>> and all right. then we're back and now we're going to adjourn the meeting. all right. the meeting is adjourned. thank you. week. >> ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ the san francisco. the reporter: has many opportunities to get out and placing play a 4 thousand acres of play rec and park has a place
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win the high sincerely the place to remove user from the upper life and transform into one of mother nachdz place go into the rec and park camp mather located one hundred and 80 square miles from the bay bridge past the oakland bridge and on and on camp mather the city owned sierra nevada camping facility is outings outside the gate of yosemite park it dates back before the area became is a popular vacation it i sites it was home to indians who made the
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camp where the coral now stands up and artifacts are found sometimes arrest this was the tree that the native people calm for the ac accordions that had a high food value the acorns were fatally off the trees in september but they would come up prosecute the foothills and were recipe the same as the people that came to camp camp is celebrating it's 90th year and the indians were up here for 4 thousand we see every day of them in the grinding rocks around the camp we have about 15 grinding sites in came so it was a major summer report area for the 92 hawks.
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>> through there are signs that prosperity were in the area it was not until the early part of the century with the 76 began the construction of damn in helpfully a say mill was billed open the left hand of the math for the construction by which lake was used to float logs needed for the project at the same time the yosemite park and company used the other side of the camp to house tourists interesting in seeing the national park and the constructions of damn when the u son damn was completed many of the facilities were not needed then the city of san francisco donated the property it was named camp mather the first director it was named after him
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tuesday morning away amongst the pine the giant sequoia is the giants inventories first name if our title is camp means there's going to be dirt and bugs and so long as you can get past that part this place it pretty awesome i see i see. >> with a little taste of freedom from the city life you can soak up the country life with swimming and volley ball and swimming and horseback
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riding there you go buddy. >> we do offer and really good amount of programming and give a sample p of san francisco rec and park department has to offer hopefully we've been here 90 years my camp name is falcon i'm a recession he leader i've been leading the bill clinton and anarchy and have had sometimes arts and crafts a lot of our guests have been coming for many years and have almost glutin up, up here he
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activity or children activity or parent activity here at camp mather you are experiencing as a family without having to get into a car and drive somewhere fill your day with with what can to back fun at the majestic life the essence of camp mather one thing a that's been interesting i think as it
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evolves there's no representation here oh, there's no representation so all the adults are engine i you know disconnected so there's more connection the adults and parents are really friendly but i think in our modern culture i you know everyone's is used to be on their phones and people are eager to engagement and talk they don't have their social media so here they are at camp mather how are i doing. >> how are you doing it has over one hundred hundred cabins those rustic structures gives camp mather the old atmosphere that enhances the total wilderness experience and old woolen dressers and