tv Government Access Programming SFGTV January 15, 2019 4:00am-5:01am PST
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>> to all the families in the district, to all of our merchants and our business owners and the people who helped make our district a vibrant, and the people who will make sure that you give us the resources to keep our district vibrant, thank you for your work and our support. i want to acknowledge my future colleagues, supervisor hilary ronen,. [cheers and applause] >> supervisor vallie brown, supervisor matt haney, my friend , and former and future colleagues, and one of the hardest working women in the city, supervisor sandra fewer. president of the board of education? -- [applause] >> supervisor rafael mandelman which i'm looking forward to working with.
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we have several commissioners here. i want to acknowledge all of you collectively. thank you so much for your service and your work. i see several of you here. if i start naming names, i will forget. but i want to say thank you to all of the commissioners for your work, and for being here today. we have several department heads i see the leader of the department of public works, mr mohammed nuru. [cheers and applause] i know i am missing someone, but again, we will have plenty of time to acknowledge. i must thank all of the crew at the resource centre. thank you so much. [cheers and applause] >> i see some of the team from the department for children,
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youth and families. the work continues. my entire family from the community developers, thank you for being here. it has been hard to let go. and of course, one of our constituents, and his work for the campaign. i see our public defender is here. thank you. to my predecessors, and hard-working women of this district and this city, supervisor maxwell. [cheers and applause] , and president, malia cohen, who could not be here today, because she had to be in sacramento. i want to thank her for her tireless service and her work for the last eight years. [cheers and applause]
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>> so i have to tell a brief story. i am done with the thank youse. i will say a few words that it is time to get to work. by tracy brown, who was also part of our team and my office. tracy brown. [applause] >> by the way, natalie g., who is our chief of staff, and percy who is also one of our aids. that is an amazing team that we take to city hall. but this is a true story. a little over a decade ago now when i first got here, and i met tracy and i interviewed her on a panel as a community member for her job at the department of children and youth and families. i came over and we were having a conversation, this is about 11 years ago. she said, you will be the district ten supervisor. i'm not making this up. this is not a joke. she had no idea that i had
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written an essay that was public in high school. i said i wanted to effect change and be an elected official. she had no idea that i was already ready to come and plan to get together for my community and make sure we can be in a can in a position to make sure we could do what we could to represent us. she made that epiphany. she made that statement over 11 years ago, and she worked with me on both of my runs for the board of education. my run on the board of supervisors, and she called it. thank you so much for believing in me. i was taught by my mentor, my fraternity brother, father fillmore graham, that if you believe it, and you see it, you can achieve it. and although he is not here with
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us today, if it was not for him, i would not be standing before you. i always want to pay homage to him for saving my life. [applause] i was taught by his mentor that the more you know, the more you owe, and that is how we will live every day of our life. you can bet on that. i am just excited to be in a position to help others. i know a lot of time in this city, everyone is focused on the differences in all of us, but i can assure you we will be focused on the commonality is said that we can get the work done to improve this great city together. the only thing i have in common with everyone in this room is that we will disagree at times. i can guarantee that. but we can, and we will work
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together to resolve the present issues in this city, with tax, with decency, and focus on those commonalities. we have to address affordability , homelessness, employment disparities, complete testing and cleanup of the shipyard, transportation. [applause] equitable transportation, community safety, and economic viability and opportunity in this district, and in this city together. i know some people get in the office and start making lots of promises, and start talking about visions that they develop on their own, and of course, i have a lot of vision. we know what we need to do in the city and we have a lot of ideas. i want to be focused on the broken promises that we have been promised for decades in our district. so no matter whom you voted for,
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i am the supervisor for all of you, for everyone. it does not matter. i don't hold those kind of grudges about boats, because i know everyone once was best for the cute -- wants what's best for their communities, but i am proud and happy to fight for each and every one of you. because with me, it is 100% always about the work. i am ready to fight for potrero hill, i'm ready to fight for bayview, i'm ready to fight for visitation vallie, i'm ready to fight for little hollywood, i'm ready to fight for every single neighborhood and community in district ten. [applause] >> in our first hundred days, we said we would begin to address affordable housing by meeting with all relevant parties to
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ensure our housing stock and the pipeline gets built. we said we would fight homelessness and ensure proxy resources are spent how intended we said we would address transportation needs and eliminate the institutionally racist prep -- recessed practice we said we would meet and focus on adequate testing of the entire shipyard and push the navy,, the department of public health, that the state department to work with academia to eliminate the conflicts and build trust back within the community. and we have been meeting with the city attorney, the navy, the e.p.a., and the leadership of this city already to address that. we are ready to work on the quality of life issues, and make sure that people stop disrespecting our streets in district ten so they can look pristine and clean like every other community in the city.
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and so for the past month or so, i have been volunteering and we met with the leadership of the department of public works, the navy, the e.p.a., housing authority, mayor's office, sfmta , hope s.f., my colleagues on the board of supervisors, community leaders, merchants, family is, because it is time to get to work. i'm excited about our district, and all of the opportunity, in by the way, to all of our supporters and all of our folks and communities who spend a lot of money in our city, patronizing our restaurants, if you want to do a celebration for us, if you want to do a celebration with us, come and do it in d10, because we have a lot of businesses that need to support. [applause] unto the people that say we won
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because we are connected to a power source, let me just say this. we won because we are connected to the communities because we are connected to the neighborhood, and there is no better proof than that, than the data after the election. i just want to thank my community. i want to thank all the neighborhoods in district ten. i want to thank all of the leaders here in the city. i want to thank everyone for coming out and supporting us. as we do this work, we will always remember the children and families in this city. it is game time. thank you. [cheers and applause] all right
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2, 1 you innovation on or was on over 200 years they went through extensive innovations to the existing green new metal gates were installed our the perimeter 9 project is funded inform there are no 9 community opportunity and our capital improvement plan to the 2008 clean and safe neighborhood it allows the residents and park advocates like san franciscans to make the matching of the few minutes through the philanthropic dungeons and finished and finally able to pull on play on the number one green a celebration on october 7, 1901,
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a skoovlt for the st. anthony's formed a club and john then the superintendent the golden gate park laid out the bowling green are here sharing meditates a permanent green now and then was opened in 1902 during the course the 1906 san francisco earthquake that citywide much the city the greens were left that with an ellen surface and not readers necessarily 1911 it had the blowing e bowling that was formed in 1912 the parks commission paid laying down down green number 2 the san francisco lawn club was the first opened in the united states and the oldest on the west their
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registered as san francisco lark one 101 and ti it is not all fierce competition food and good ole friend of mine drive it members les lecturely challenge the stories some may be true some not memories of past winners is reversed presbyterian on the wall of champions. >> make sure you see the one in to the corner that's me and. >> no? not bingo or scrabble but the pare of today's competition two doreen and christen and beginninger against robert and others easing our opponents for the stair down is a pregame strategy even in lawn bowling. >> play ball.
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>> yes. >> almost. >> (clapping). >> the size of tennis ball the object of the game our control to so when the players on both sides are bold at any rate the complete ends you do do scoring it is you'll get within point lead for this bonus first of all, a jack can be moved and a or picked up to some other point or move the jack with i have a goal behind the just a second a lot of elements to the game. >> we're about a yard long.
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>> aim a were not player i'll play any weighed see on the inside in the goal is a minimum the latter side will make that arc in i'm right-hand side i play my for hand and to my left if i wanted to acre my respect i extend so it is arced to the right have to be able to pray both hands. >> (clapping.) who one. >> nice try and hi, i'm been play lawn bowling affair 10 years after he retired i needed something to do so i picked up this paper and in this paper i see in there play lawn bowling in san francisco golden gate park ever since then
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i've been trying to bowl i enjoy bowling a very good support and good experience most of you have of of all love the people's and have a lot of have a lot of few minutes in mr. mayor the san francisco play lawn bowling is in golden gate park we're sharing meadow for more information about the club including free lessons log. >> i just feel like this is what i was born to do when i was a little kid i would make up performances and daydream it was always performing and doing something i feel if i can't do that than i can't be e
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me. >> i just get excited and my nickname is x usher my mom calls me i stuck out like a sore thumb for sure hey everybody i'm susan kitten on the keys from there, i working in vintage clothing and chris in the 30's and fosz and aesthetic. >> i think part of the what i did i could have put on my poa he focus on a lot of different musical eras. >> shirley temple is created as ahsha safai the nation with
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happens and light heartenness shirley temple my biggest influence i love david boo and el john and may i west coast their flamboyant and show people (singing) can't be unhappy as a dr. murase and it is so fun it is a joyful instrument i learned more about music by playing the piano it was interesting the way i was brought up the youth taught me about music he picked up the a correspond that was so hard my first performing experience happened as 3-year-old an age i did executive services and also
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thanks to the lord and sank in youth groups people will be powering grave over their turk i'll be playing better and better back la i worked as places where men make more money than me i was in bands i was treated as other the next thing i know i'm in grants performing for a huge protection with a few of my friends berry elect and new berry elect and can be ray was then and we kept getting invited back you are shows got better we made it to paris in 2005 a famous arc we ended up getting a months residencey other than an island and he came to our show and
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started writing a script based on our troop of 6 american burr elect performs in france we were woman of all this angels and shapes and sizes and it was very exciting to be part of the a few lettering elect scene at the time he here he was bay area born and breed braces and with glossaries all of a sudden walking 9 red carpet in i walgreens pedestrian care. >> land for best director that was backpack in 2010 the french love this music i come back here and because of film was not released in the united states nobody gave a rats ass let's say
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the music and berry elect and performing doesn't pay very much i definitely feel into a huge depression especially, when it ended i didn't feel kemgd to france anymore he definitely didn't feel connected to the scene i almost feel like i have to beg for tips i hey i'm from the bay area and an artist you don't make a living it changed my represent tar to appeal and the folks that are coming into the wars these days people are not listening they love the idea of having a live musician but don't really nurture it like having a potted plant if you don't warrant it it dizzy sort of feel like a potted plant (laughter) i'm going to give san francisco
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one more year i've been here since 1981 born and raised in the bay area i know that is not for me i'll keep on trying and if the struggle becomes too hard i'll have to move on i don't know where that will be but i love here so so much i used to dab he will in substances i don't do that i'm sober and part of the being is an and sober and happy to be able to play music and perform and express myself if i make. >> few people happy of all ages i've gone my job so i have so stay is an i feel like the piano and music in general with my voice together i feel really powerful and strong
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>> welcome. my name is caroline, i am the director of community real estate at mission economic development agency. happy new year, welcome to 25 sanchez who have not been here before. i returned to the -- as we turn the calendar to 2019, it is a perfect time to reflect on new beginnings, and that is definitely the case. looking around at this refurbished property, i'm delighted to see a prime example of collective impact. it was four and a half years ago when taking on the city's call for nonprofits to take on the rental assistance demonstration, rad for short, it seems like a daunting process for us. after all, this was a brand-new process for us. that is why the support of many partners was enlisted. it meant city officials, funders , community members, and
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the residents of 25 sanchez itself, and to you, i now offer thanks for the key role you all played in making today a reality please give yourselves a round of applause. [applause] >> it should be noted that when taking a difficult project and putting all the pieces together, such as 25 sanchez, it takes a trusted partner, and/or codeveloper co. developer, bridge housing, has been that trusted partner. thank you bridge. we could not have undertaken this work without such an experienced player in the fields [applause] >> it is interesting to note that the last two mayors of san francisco grew up in public housing. the late mayor ed lee championed the rehabbing of public housing and his beloved san francisco, having grown up in seattle public housing, and our new mayor, mayor london breed, is
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furthering that dynamic vision. we are honored she is with us today to cut the ribbon. [applause] >> what was our vision for the r.a.d. properties, it was to create functional, quality homes for senior and disabled residents, welcoming community spaces, and community ownership of those spaces. redefining public housing was our goal, and i'm proud to say that that goal has been met. twenty-five sanchez is just one of five r.a.d. properties we have now successfully rehabbed. all part of the mission castro clustered that totals 349 homes pervert -- preserved for seniors and disabled san franciscans. we sincerely think their residence -- we thank the residents for letting us become part of their lives. your input was vital, and engagement was high, as evidenced by how interactive this building was during our teatime community meeting when we translated in our multiple
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different languages and in our many one-on-one conversations. additionally, throughout construction, we learned lessons based on your feedback. during the last three construction phases, you shared with us how we could consolidate our construction and then you worked together to prepare yourself for the changes as neighbors and as roommates. thank you for all that you have done. thank you also for your community input on these beautiful murals, on the plans and the plants in the garden, choosing paint colors, and basically making this warm your home, which it already has been. thank you so much for making yourselves part of this. you epitomize what it means to be a community. you entrusted us as stewards of your longtime home, and that was a true gift. today we rededicate this building which represents the beginning of a bright future for this community. thank you. [applause]
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>> i would like to introduce cynthia parker, president and c.e.o. of bridge housing. [applause] >> thank you caroline. we were talking earlier about when we first met, i guess it was almost five years ago, to talk about our partnership and how we might approach the potential of becoming partners and rehabilitating some of the public housing under the r.a.d. program. i'm very pleased to say that it has been a great success, and i thank you for your partnership, and i thank the city also for their incredible dedication to making this happen. this kind of public housing facility, which was originally built in 1972 really, due to a lack -- lots of factors had
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fallen behind, and really needed to have someone from the city and the housing authority champion it and say we are going to make a difference, we are going to put money into these projects, we are going to seek out federal funds, we will do what we need to do in order to make this place the kind of home that people believe in, and that will help them succeed in life, and unfortunately, i love that dog. [laughter] >> i wish i had mine here. the kind of home that people have is the type of place that they need to be able to age in place in. this building had fallen behind, and now i think it is significantly better. i think with our partners, and our partners at bank of america who helped finance, we were all able to make incredible improvements to people's lives and improvements in this community room, and i think that
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with that, everyone can call this a place that they are proud of, and one they can call home. with that, i just said i would make a few comments on the kind of dedication it takes for this type of rehab of a public housing facility. the city of san francisco is just an incredible safety, and it is supportive housing. i wanted to make a comment about that because we do have a mayor in london breed who is a champion. as with ed to lead, but certainly she is taking that mantle further, and also knows from personal experience how important a home is for someone. with that, i wanted to thank the office of housing, bank of america, our partner, and mayor breed, you really have made a difference in people his' lives, and i know you will continue to do so as mayor. i would like to introduce mayor london breed today. [applause] >> thank you and good morning.
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is that morning still? good morning everyone. i am so excited to be here today every time we do a dedication or rededication ceremony in one of our public housing developments where we are rehabbing them all over the city, 3900 units, i get really excited, but i also think about mayor lee because when i first started on the board of supervisors, and he and i sat down and talked about what my priorities would be as a member of the board of supervisors, i made it clear that my top three priorities was public housing. because i lived in public housing, as was stated to, for more than 20 years of my life. we never had a shower, we had a lot of challenges with our bathroom and mould, we had a lot of issues with the plumbing in general, we had roaches, we had
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stuff that really, when you have to live like that for so long in your life, you never forget it. it becomes a part of who you are , so when you are in a position where you can change that for someone else who sadly is still living in a really terrible conditions, there is nothing you wouldn't do to fight for the people that you know deserve better, and i am so proud and honored to now be a mayor who is continuing that fight for so many of our residents throughout san francisco who need us to be champions, who need us to focus on changing the lives of people who we know need for us to invest and improve the conditions of many of our public housing developments in our city so that people don't feel as though they are not part of san francisco, because as i said, growing up, i did not always feel like i belonged in san francisco, or didn't feel like i was part of the city, and i want
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residents of the city, no matter where you live, to feel like yes , you are part of san francisco, and today's investment is just one step in making sure that the seniors and the folks with disabilities who live in this community can live in place indignity, and know that we are here to support you with the many great services and things that we will continue to do. this community here will not be forgotten. i want to thank so many amazing people who made that possible. starting with bridge and their partner. they really worked with the community and the people who live here to really ensure the residence that we are not trying to displace you, we are trying to work with you to make this community a better one, and i think, again back to my childhood, and when the property that i lived at just over the hill, 300 units of public
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housing. we were told they were going to be completely torn down and rebuilt, and only 200 units were being rebuilt, and that clearly meant that some people weren't coming back. it was important to us to make sure that we worked with a partner that would work with the residents to ensure people that the whole point of this is to make sure that you have a place to live and that this place is taken care of and i know this community had a lot of inputs in the rehabilitation process, including developing this amazing community room, which is absolutely incredible, and also double pane windows, which i actually don't have myself. so i am just so happy about the little things that will make a huge difference in the quality of life for the residents here and i want to thank bank of america for your sponsorship and your investment and what we know has really made a difference. i saw all the work that was
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happening, and the scaffolding that was up, and even some of the folks who grew up in this neighborhood who worked on this project, it was really a team effort of so many amazing people , amazing city departments , and i'm really grateful to all of you he played a role in helping to not only get this project going, but get it going and moving it in a very fast pace, in comparison to how projects take place in san francisco, we know they can take years, and here we are, not too long ago, we are at a place where this, along with so many other places throughout san francisco, where we are making the investments, making the properties that are, so i want to thank the residents does the residents for their patients, and i'm excited about the future at this location and so many other places in san francisco where we are committed to making these properties sustainable for
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years to come. thank you all so much. [applause] >> hey, everybody. i'm the district eight supervisor. welcome to district eight. i did nothing on this project. so it is an absolute delight to be able to land here. i'm sure i will in the future. i have some friends who work here, and live here, but i just want to say how this is such a wonderful occasion, and how grateful i am to be part of it. one of the first jobs i had as a lawyer, two decades ago, was doing a finance project, representing local governments and housing authorities around the bay area. i am painfully familiar with how hard it is, how impossibly complex it is to put together the various funding sources to
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make 90 affordable -- to rehabilitate 90 affordable units , and to all the people at bridge and focus with the city and the mayor's office of housing and the housing authority, the investors, the other public partners around this, thank you so much for the hours of phone calls and document review and planning, and looking at spreadsheets, and all the work you did just to get us these 90 units. i do also want to say how pleased i am and grateful on behalf of my district that these 400 plus units are being rehabilitated around district eight, and that there are thousands more around the city. we have received, from the middle of the last century, a precious legacy, which is these units that were given to us for folks who were not going to be able to afford housing on the market, in the first task has been and is to make those units rehabilitated and make sure they are available and that seniors and disabled folks are getting the best that our next london
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breed, that our next ed lee is growing up in a decent home, with a shower, and a bathtub that works, that we do not lose the cure for cancer or the solution to global warming that is happening that we might lose if that kid doesn't have a chance. so safeguarding that legacy and rehabilitating those units and bringing them into the 21st century is so important. but we all know that this city is so much less affordable than it was in the 1970s when this building was given to us. so the work of bringing on the tens of thousands of additional units of subsidized housing that we must develop over the next year is critically important, and i'm so happy that i have a mayor who believes in that, who is pressing forward and prioritizing affordable housing, and i know will be relentless along with the rest of us and in looking for additional sources of funds for housing for middle-class and low income people, who must stay in san
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francisco if this is to be a healthy, dynamic, diverse city. i am grateful for what everyone has done here, and i'm eager for so much more in my district, and throughout the city. with that, i will introduce barbara smith, the acting executive director of the san francisco housing authority. [applause] >> good morning everyone. so i want to say that we at the housing authority are thrilled that 25 sanchez and other public high-rise buildings could get the improvements they needed to provide and preserve this wonderful housing for our residents. before this, i would get into bed and pray that none of our senior disabled residents in the high-rise buildings would be out without elevator service, or worse yet, be stuck in an elevator. all too often, i would get a call during the night and scramble to get emergency service from our elevator repair company and send our duty
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officer take to help residents get to and from there departments and retrieve any essentials that they needed. i know how stressful this situation was for our residents, but with declining federal dollars, the housing authority was not able to do critical elevator and other modernization work at buildings like 25 sanchez. this enormous conversion effort to, over $2.2 billion in financing, for over $750 million of construction improvements required the brilliant dedication and support from an incredible team, beginning with mayor ed lee, and now our new mayor london breed, including the mayor's office of housing and community development, bridge, bank of america, h.u.d., i wish you were here. the federal home loan bank of san francisco, freddie mac
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multifamily, our commissioners, our s.f. ha staff who worked very hard with this transition as well, the board of supervisors, the architects, fine line construction and others. thank you to all of you who made this possible for 25 sanchez and our other public housing residents. the results are beautiful, and a special thanks to the 25 sanchez street residents who had faith in the process through temporary relocation, and living in a construction zone. at last, you have decent state housing with community-based management and connection to services. congratulations to all of you. thank you. [applause] and now i would like to introduce liz minnick from bank of america. it certainly couldn't have happened without you. thank you. [applause] >> thank you so much.
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i don't know how to make this taller. thank you all for having us today. it is thrilling to be here at 25 sanchez to see the rehabilitation of these 90 units in this beautiful community room , and see the light pouring in from the garden. i will continue to think. thank you again, mayor breed, for your commitment to housing, supervisor mandelman, our amazing partners, you are just really a pleasure with whom to work, and of course, the san francisco's mayor his office of housing and community development. this is found in 115 years ago in 1904 and one of the first things we have the ability to do was, followed the earthquake, help get people back in their homes. housing is of key importance to us, and when the r.a.d. opportunity came to us, we were thrilled to be able to support the $2.2 billion in our level of
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financing here. that is the largest project in the united states, absolutely the largest project by far from a bank of america standpoint. we are so pleased to be able to do so in the city in which we are founded. thank you for having us today. congratulations on this amazing amazing space, and all the best part of the program, let me please introduce a resident here who will sing. [applause] >> good morning everybody. good morning neighbors and distinguished guests. is a pleasure to be here this morning. i am a resident of 25 sanchez street and i am also serving on the tenant association during the time of the renovation. it is a pleasure for me to be here today to thank all the partners, mayor breed calculates mayor ed lee, and also as a
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resident -- and the former president of the tenant association, i would like to say that the renovation was a very trying at times, but we worked very closely with bridge housing , also the northern california presbytery and housing services, it is also an integral partner in the development. we were very successful, and we collaborated very closely. i am very happy to say that as a resident, and on behalf of my neighbors, i would like to say that it is a pleasure to be living in this wonderful location, we are all grateful that the renovation took place because we now have even more beautiful dwellings and homes, and that is all i would like to say. thank you so much for being here and for the celebration today. thank you. [applause]
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>> hi everyone. i had the pleasure of working on this really briefly with a large number -- large team of city staff and a number of you. thank you for serving for so long and listening to all of the gratitude that everyone is expressing. i will have an opportunity to thank a lot of specific people and i on a want for you to hear not just their names, the feel how many people really did come together to make this project happen, to make this building a place where we are. thank you all for their your patients and they are snacks waiting so i promised to go fast first, fine line construction. and then our architect, wayne and melody tam, and tank design group, construction management, bridge housing, a huge team.
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and thank you to another few folks. i wanted to thank elaine g. -- elaine heat for starting off the project and others. they all helped the project management and the changes in this building. augustus was also help of purging the neighbors move. the construction manager who works with the bank of america team, mo hcd, and of course, kate hartley for being amazing in helping us through this process. bank of america, we would like to thank you as well for all of your work in investing and
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believing in the financing of this building. thank you to our lawyers, and c.h.p. see, the people who helped us with putting together the numbers on this building. from our services team, we want to deeply thank you for helping to make sure that our residents continue to have a strong community. john mcdonald, molly marriner, and cynthia rodriguez. >> she gave me all the challenging parts. this is the rapidfire round of all the vendors that we brought on. i may say them wrong, and you might not have any idea what they're doing, but is a big list good job to the brothers. put my moving. mhc engineering, acg engineering
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, tipping structural, rcl communications communications, already hsl, red cloud, watchtower security, and others. last, of course, is our funders, you really came together and helped us figure out the pile of matrixes and paperwork that make this real, the mayor's office of housing, the housing authority, bank of america, a lot of this was mentioned before. merrill lynch, the tax credit allocation committee, freddie mac, enterprise community partners, and the u.s. bank. generally, thank you so much. please enjoy the snacks. we are really happy to have you here. [applause] >> i think we are going out
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i am the executive director of a local art space nonprofit that showcases work that relate to the latino community and i have been in this building for seven years and some of my neighbors have been here 30 year. we were notified from the landlord he was going to sell the building. when we realized it was happening it was no longer a thought for the landlord and i sort of had a moment of panic. i heard about the small sites program through my work with the mission economic agency and at met with folks from the mayor's housing program because they wanted to utilize the program. we are dealing with families
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with different needs and capacities. conversations were had early in the morning because that is the only time that all the tenants were in the building and finally when we realized that meda did have the resources to buy the building we went on a letter writing campaign to the landlord and said to him we understand you want to sell your building, we understand what you are asking for and you are entitled to it, it's your land, but please work with us. what i love about ber nell height it represents the diversity that made me fall in love with san francisco. we have a lot of mom and pop shops and you can get all your resources within walking distance. my favorite air area of my homes
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