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tv   BOS Land Use Committee  SFGTV  May 16, 2020 6:40pm-7:01pm PDT

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you a letter in october and they're responsible 230r collections. for more information, visit our website,. >> good afternoon. welcome to the land use & transportation committee for with monday, may 11, 2020. i am the chair of the committee, chair peskin. clerk, do you have any announcements? >> clerk: we, due to the
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covid-19 pandemic, the board of supervisors legislative chamber and committee room are closed. members will be participating online as if they are present. channel 26 and online we are streaming. people will be allowed two minutes to speak. ability to make comments are available by phone by calling 888-204-5984. the access code is 3501008. press pound and then pound again. when you are connect with, dial 1 and then 0 to be put in the queue. when you are waiting, the system will be silent. you will be notified. everyone must account for time delays between live coverage and
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streaming. best practices are to call from a quiet location, speak clearly and slowly, and turn down your television or radio. alternatively, you may submit public comment by e-mailing me. if you submit public comment by e-mail, it will be included in the legislative file as part of the matter. written comments may be sent via u.s. postal code service. >> chair: thank you, ms. major. could you please read the first and only item. >> clerk: yes. planning code - zoning controls - urban mixed use district - office uses ordinance amending the planning code to provide that in the urban mixed use district all office uses are prohibited, except that a professional service, financial service, or medical service is allowed as a conditional use on the ground floor when primarily open to the general public on a client-oriented basis; affirming the planning department's determination under the
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california environmental quality act; making findings of consistency with the general plan, and the eight priority policies of planning code, section 101.1; and adopting findings of public necessity, convenience, and welfare under planning code, section 302. members of the public should you wish to make a comment, call the phone line. >> chair: thank you, ms. major. this item which has been before this committee on a couple of occasions is authored by supervisor ronen and her staff ms. amy binart is in this virtual meeting and i believe would like to ask for another continuance. ms. binart, the floor is yours. >> thank you so much, chair, supervisors. once again, thank you for opening this meeting and hearing this item. you are correct, we would like to continue this item at this time to the call of the chair.
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unfortunately, we probably should have done that last meeting, but we will set it for a date certain. so here we are. so if you would entertain that motion to continue to the call of the chair, we would be very much appreciative. >> chair: thank you, amy. are there any members of the public who would like to comment on this item? >> clerk: thank you, mr. chair. the staff are checking if there are any staff in queue. >> you have zero questions remaining. >> chair: okay. >> there are no members of the public wishing to speak. >> chair: thank you. so public comment is now closed and i would like to make a motion to continue this item to the call of the chair, and on that motion, madam clerk, a roll call, please. [ roll call ].
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>> chair: the item is continued to the call of the chair and the land use & transportation committee is adjourned. >> today's special guest is
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claudia dume. >> hi. today, my guest is claudia gorham. she's the deputy managing director of the real estate dri division at the city and county of san francisco, and she's my special guest. thank you for joining us. >> thank you very much. >> i know that your department is the department for managing and renting properties, and also cleaning for the city. how has your department been preparing for the crisis? >> well, because our citizens are sheltering in place and our buildings are closed to the general public, a substantial amount of city staff and city departments are still open and operating and doing city
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businesses. so we still have to do the cleaning and engineering on the portfolio and things that need to be service. and the other thing is all our workers are disaster service workers, so we have been providing the emergency operations center with various staffing needs such as drivers of trucks and accounting staff to assist them in this crisis. >> have you obtained additional space for the city to use during this crisis? >> yes. the crisis has actually required numerous transactions, and so we help basically the department of public health, the department of human services, and the department of homelessness determine where they can put the services that they need. so, for example, if they need a testing site or if they need a building -- a vacant building to put supplies or if they need to put some trucks, we will help them locate that office
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building or that property based on their factors that they need. we will then contact the landlord or the property owner of the space or the building owner decides they want, and then, we negotiate the terms that they need, whether it's a permit or a lease, we'll help the city attorney draft that agreement. >> nice. so can you talk about how some of our iconic buildings, such address the palace of -- such as the palace of fine arts, has been repurposed during the pandemic? >> certainly. the city needs as much space as it can use during this pandemic, and the department had to relocate to moscone south convention center so that we could do social distancing as required by both the city and the state. we have hundreds and hundreds of staff people working on this
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covid-19 crisis. all of the department of public health and the departments of homelessness and human services, including several other hundred people, they need several different sites. they need testing centers, they need shelters for the homeless, those with the covid-19 virus, those who need a place to stay after they get out of the hospital. so we've been assisting them with places to stay. you mentioned the palace of fine arts. it has over 100,000 square feet of space. it could it -- we were going to use it as a shelter, but now, we're going to use it for different needs. we're going to negotiate a different lease so that the city can use it for this crisis. we're using the bill graham
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civic auditorium and tfor the deployment of ambulances. the fire department needed additional supplies, so we're using it for that service. >> that's great. i also understand you have a staff of custodians, electricians, janitors and other support workers. how are they helping the city? >> we could not be more thankful for our civic and engineering staff under our real estate division. they have been working 24-7 since this crisis began, not only doing their daily responsibilities to keep the public buildings open and operating for the city staff continuing to go into the office but also because once the crisis started, several memos came down as to additional cleanings and how to
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do disinfecting, and we have to do the c.d.c.s recommendation does. so not only do they do -- recommendations. so not only do they do their regular cleaning, they are also doing deep cleaning and disinfecting in places like the public safety building and the haul of justice. but they're also going in and doing a deep cleaning and disinfecting after we had a suspected case or a confirmed case of a person having the coronavirus. so they're going in and doing this every night since this started. our workers are continuing as laborers to make the buildings safe and secure and maintained. and however we help or however we can help the e.o.c., we do that. >> well, thanks for coming on the show, claudia. i'd like to thank you and your entire team on behalf of all the residents of san francisco for all the work you continue
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to do. >> thank you very much. it's been a pleasure. >> that's it for this episode. we'll be back with another pandemic-related episode shortly. this is coping with covid-19. i'm chris mathers. thanks for watching.
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>> i went through a lot of struggles in my life, and i am blessed to be part of this. i am familiar with what people are going through to relate and empathy and compassion to their struggle so they can see i came out of the struggle, it gives them hope to come up and do
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something positive. ♪ ♪ i am a community ambassador. we work a lot with homeless, visitors, a lot of people in the area. >> what i like doing is posting
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up at hotspots to let people see visibility. they ask you questions, ask you directions, they might have a question about what services are available. checking in, you guys. >> wellness check. we walk by to see any individual, you know may be sitting on the sidewalk, we make sure they are okay, alive. you never know. somebody might walk by and they are laying there for hours. you never know if they are alive. we let them know we are in the area and we are here to promote safety, and if they have somebody that is, you know, hanging around that they don't want to call the police on, they don't have to call the police. they can call us. we can direct them to the services they might need. >> we do the three one one to keep the city neighborhoods
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clean. there are people dumping, waste on the ground and needles on the ground. it is unsafe for children and adults to commute through the streets. when we see them we take a picture dispatch to 311. they give us a tracking number and they come later on to pick it up. we take pride. when we come back later in the day and we see the loose trash or debris is picked up it makes you feel good about what you are doing. >> it makes you feel did about escorting kids and having them feel safe walking to the play area and back. the stuff we do as ambassadors makes us feel proud to help keep the city clean, helping the residents. >> you can see the community ambassadors. i used to be on the streets.
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i didn't think i could become a community ambassador. it was too far out there for me to grab, you know. doing this job makes me feel good. because i came from where a lot of them are, homeless and on the street, i feel like i can give them hope because i was once there. i am not afraid to tell them i used to be here. i used to be like this, you know. i have compassion for people that are on the streets like the homeless and people that are caught up with their addiction because now, i feel like i can give them hope. it reminds you every day of where i used to be and where i am at now. >> hi, you're watching "coping with covid-19." today i'm going to the grocery
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store. now, i'm not an authority about the virus. i'm just showing you what i'm personally doing. to find out the most definitive and up-to-date information about the pandemic, i highly recommend the f.a.q. available at sf.gov. i'm taking a list and before i leave i put a sanitizing wind and pair of gloves into a plastic bag. i'm wearing a mask and taking the smallest number of items with me. just my car key, credit card, i.d. and the batching i'm not taking my phone with me. even if i use it to pay, i either have to touch the p.i.n. pad or sign the screen anyway. i'm concerned about cross-contamination. i don't want to transfer the virus from my gloves to the phone and then to my face. whin i get out of the car, i put on my gloves and get a grocery cart. the essential workers at my store are doing a great job. they're sanitizing every cart
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and limiting the number of shoppers. having a cart can help you protect your space. in this store, there are two new science on the floor. one's directional to encourage everyone to take the same route around the store. the second is to remind shoppers to maintain a safe distance from each other. when i'm done shopping and ready to pay, i stand in line at least six feet from the shopper in front of me. after unloading my car at check out, i go past the cashier and pack my own bags. that is one less person touching my groceries and less of a burden on the store's employees. i thank the cashier and leave the store. on my drive home, i'm careful not to touch my face. i leave my outside shoes on the porch and as soon as i get through the door, i wash my hands for at least 20 seconds. next, i wipe down my debit card, i.d. and car key. and then i wipe down the front doorknob, clean the sink taps and wash my hands again. i wash my vegetables in cold
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water and remove the package aing from my proteins and other items. i leave the nonperishables in my garage for a few days unless i need them immediately. my refrigerated items get a quick winddown to be on the safe side and, of course, i wacker my hands again. here's a quick recap of my visit to the grocery store. that is it for this episode. >> good afternoon, welcome to the may 12, 2020 meeting to the board of supervisors. madam clerk, will you please call the role. (role call)