Skip to main content

tv   SFDPH Covid-19 Webinar  SFGTV  August 7, 2021 3:00pm-4:01pm PDT

3:00 pm
again. we're looking forward to make it safe. >> i want to go back to what chief smith was saying, we one of the things i said back a year ago important. it's how important it is we take care of each other. tell your parents. any signs, stay home. >> thank you. sadly, that is the end of our time. we want to thank all our panel and people participating for making the time to be with us today. as well as the host partners,
3:01 pm
the department of public health, uc san francisco. we know that there are many more questions that we have time to answer. we will work to get these answers to these questions and share that information through your organizations. we'll send material and esend out recording of this meeting that is on sfgov tv youtube channel and facebook live. thank you again for being here and good night. thank you for joining us today.
3:02 pm
to sign this budget. now that everyone has gotten what they wanted they've all went on vacation except the real, true, dedicated people here in san francisco. so, thank you to the members of the board of supervisors, joining us today. thank you to the members of our budget team, joining us today, and others to sign this budget and to make it official. i, for one, am really glad that we are at this point so that we can take a much needed break and they're feeling the same way. he started his break going to the giant's game. >> i should have got better results. >> i was wondering if that was going on and goodness. we came can't do that with the dodgers. they talk so much mess. the mayor already texted me about the dodgers. with the giants, they're coming back. thank you to we had today the
3:03 pm
budget chair and we have members of the board of supervisors and including supervisor and gordan mar, merna melgar and supervisor safai. clearly, your other colleagues went off somewhere, knows knows where they went and after all the hard work we did to get point, i will say that we all have a budget we can be proud of and and yes, we wish we had more resources. at the end of the day, we work together ask we should be proud about what we have been able to accomplish. in addition members of the board of supervisors, i want to thank our budget. thank you to ashley, and sophia
3:04 pm
kid ler, thank you for helping to facilitate this process because i know it wasn't easy and the budget annal cyst takess away my money and i appreciate the work they continue to do for the city. so thank you to them. thank you to all the legislative aids and so many people who work countless hours to many of the advocates who want san francisco to make the right investment. before i talk about those investments and signs and we can all go and total of and have a glass of apple cider with our glasses because we are not drinking alcohol in city hall, right, supervisor safai --
3:05 pm
[laughter] >> let me just say we see this delta variant taking flight. 77% of san franciscans are fully vaccinated and that's absolutely incredible and we should be proud. there's clearly more work to be done. kids under the age of 12, cannot be vaccinated at this time. and we know that kids will go back to school and we have a commitment from the school that will occur. we have to protect our children. people who are hospitalized now are younger than they were at the beginning of this pandemic. so we have to think about what is happening with this delta variant and the need to make sure ha we do our part.
3:06 pm
yes, we are looking at mask mandates for vaccinated and unvaccinated people. yes, we are looking at mandatory vaccines for folks who are not just city employees. we are looking at those with the city attorney's office now and as soon as we have the details of what we are able to do, we will do them. we do not make these decisions lightly. it's very difficult to move move and felt like we came out and but the celebration can't completely start until more people are vaccinated and just to give you a perspective, over the course of the pandemic, we've had not more than 600
3:07 pm
deaths. we anticipate if we do nothing and we continue down this path, we can be assured that 300 people will die within a short time period. what does that tell you? this delta variant is very, very deadly. so i want to appeal to other members of san francisco, our employees of the city and county of san francisco and others, please, get your vaccine. let continue to reopen our city and reopen our economy. that is what these budget investments are about. we wish we didn't have to put money aside to deal with this pandemic. in this budget, $380 million, we
3:08 pm
know testing and access to vaccines is important. we know healthcare and treatment for those hospitalized is important so we have to make those level of investments and continue to move our city down the road of recovery. so in this budget, an unprecedented investment in homelessness and shelter, in mental health and resources, one billion dollars over the next two years to deal with one of the most challenging problems that we have faced as a city. it's important to make sure that we get people off the streets, we get them housed, and we get them into treatment. we did not take the decisions that we made to make these investments lightly. let's make sure that these dollars work to change the
3:09 pm
conditions that we see on our streets. it's not just about housing, we have the hate cash bee and our street overdose team, these are groups of people who are equipped to handle crisis situations. we are investing heavily in resources to try to deal with not just homelessness but the conditions that you see on the streets. we have got to help people and meet them where they can, because it is not easy, it's very complicated, it's challenging, so the city has adjusted to meet those needs so invest north or response, investing in our various neighborhoods where we know tourists will continue to visit. additional academy classes.
3:10 pm
making sure our communities are not forgotten, this is been a really hard year for the a.p.i. community, around the violence and the attacks that have existed. so investing heavily in not just the community organizations, that served so many of our seniors but embassador and escort programs in this particular community. investing heavily in the community hardest hit because of the pandemic, our latino community, making sure that food security is provided for the latino community but also other parts of san francisco. also, continuing our promise to the african american community with a dream keepers initiative. making sure that home ownership a systemic racism that exited in this country requires a response
3:11 pm
that is aggressive, and that going to change the outcomes of that community in this city and the county of san francisco. so many great investments. everything that makes sense to do we did it and thinking about our recovery and making sure that we make the right investments and i wanted to just also say, because when we look at this budget, over $13 million, it's not just one thing or a few things that we're paying for, this $13 billion includes our enterprise departments, it includes our airports, it includes our public utilities commission which runs our sewer, water and power systems. it includes our port, it includes our public-health system, we have our own country public-health system unlike any other in the state of california. so a lot of expenses are
3:12 pm
associated with this budget. there are a lot of incredible investments. what i have said to department heads and non profits and anyone else who receives resources from the city and county of san francisco, every single dollar. the people of city are counting on us to make sure the sidewalks are clean, when a crime is committed, that the perpetrators held accountable and make sure that housing opportunities are provided for those who are struggling with homelessness and make sure our kids are back in school and more importantly with our 132 million-dollar investment in early childhood education those low income are able to get access to childcare and those people who are right above than threshold, who may not qualify for a low income
3:13 pm
subsidy can receive support for childcare in san francisco. yes, these are investments we can be proud of. and the people of san francisco are counting on us to make good on our promise to deliver with these investments. i want people to see and feel a difference in our city and feet when they walk outside, the sidewalks are clean and there's not someone having a mental health breakdown but if there is, they have someone to call to get that person help. i want to make sure when we make these investments we're held accountable to deliver for you and so with that, i want to thank everyone, again, for their hard work on making this budget a reality and thank the people
3:14 pm
of san francisco for trusting us with the ability to make these decisions and i want to also, at this time, introduce the budget shares for some remarks and supervisor haney has been great to work with with our team and tough and long nights but we got it done and we got it done together and i want to applaud him on his leadership and please welcome matt haney. >> i'm going to be brief, because all of the folks here have been working so hard to get us to this moment and they deserve a little bit of a break in relief. first of all, on behalf of the board of supervisors and i want to thank my colleagues, mar, melgar, chan, mandelman and safai and president walton and supervisor ronen, we want to say thank you, mayor breed, for your
3:15 pm
leadership and for your steadfast commitment and to the health and well-being of our city and we had a budget process and a budget in front of us today and that our residents can be proud of and that prioritized the urgent meet of recovery and that prioritize the most urgent needs of health and safety and economic development and it's one that i think came about through a process that we can be proud of and this was a magical budget process and i'll let him speak to what he means by that but what i think he means and this is a time when our residents needed us and they have sacrificed so much over the last year and they have had to shut down in small business and stay away from their families and all to keep themselves and is our city safe. during this budget process, it's
3:16 pm
for us to honor those sacrifices and for us to focus on their needs and recovery, and for us to work together. and so i also want to thank ashley, i want to thank sophia kitler, and the budget team who is here and all the department heads. they are the ones we're fighting for and they have a budget that will meet their needs and make them proud. i want to thank our legislative staff. my chief of staff, who led the budget process for our board and this budget focuses on recovery but focuses on making sure we come back better than we were
3:17 pm
before. we invested in the community that have been far much left out on the city and the latin x community, lgbtq community, black, api community and they needed us more now before this recovery but they need us more moving forward and we also, innovated in this budget. i want to thank you mayor breed for coming back in this budget and of drug addiction and meet the challenges of homelessness and affordable housing and our seniors and our children and our families and so what we see in this budget, is not only a focus on recovery and equity we see inovation and thank you to all the staff and as mayor breed
3:18 pm
said to the residents who intrust us with these resources and the work to not end today in anyway, the work what is in this budget and the commitment in it begins today and to actually ensure that people in our city feel these positive changes. part of this process seriously and i believe we work together to make this budget better and i will say, it came to us pretty dang good. the mayor did a tremendous job in this budget proposal with her staff and it's our part of our process, we added to it and we supplemented it with a focus on our children and families and those in debt from rent and i'm proud of about what we did together. we hope to build on this as we move forward forward to and let's give this budget time, thank you, mayor breed.
3:19 pm
>> >> all right, it's done.
3:20 pm
>> hi. my name is carmen chiu, san francisco's aelectricitied assessor. today, i want to share with you a property tax savings programs for families called proposition 58. prop 58 was passed in 1986 and it was helped parents pass on their lower property tax base to their children. so how does this work? under california's prop 13 law, the value we use to calculate your property tax is limited to
3:21 pm
2% growth peryear. but when ownership changes, prop 13 requires that we reassess properties to market value. if parents want to pass on their home or other property to their children, it would be considered a change in ownership. assuming the market value of your property has gone up, your children, the new owners, would pay taxes starting at that new higher level. that's where prop 58 comes in. prop 58 recognizes the transfer between parents and children so that instead of taxing your children at that new higher level, they get to keep your lower prop 13 value. remember, prop 58 only applies to transfers between parents and children. here's how the law twines an eligible child. a biological child, a step child, child adopted before the age of 18, and a son-in-law or
3:22 pm
daughter-in-law. to benefit from this tax saving program, remember, you just have to apply. download the prop 58 form from our website and submit it to our office. now you may ask, is there a cap how much you can pass on. well, first, your principal residence can be excluded. other than that, the total tap of properties that can use this exclusion cannot exceed $1 million. this means for example if you have two other properties, each valued at $500,000, you can exclude both because they both fit under the $1 million cap. now what happens when the total value you want to pass on exceeds $1 million. let's say you have four properties. three with current taxable value of $300,000 and one at $200,000, totaling $1.1 million in value. assuming that you decide to pass on properties one, two, and three, we would apply the exclusions on a first come,
3:23 pm
first served basis. you would deduct properties one, two, and three, and you would still have $100,000 left to pass on. what happens when you pass on the last property? this property, house four, has been existing value of 2 -- has an existing value of $200,000, and its existing property value is actually higher, $700,000. as i said, the value left in your cap is $100,000. when we first figure out your portion, we figure out the portion that can be excluded. we do that by dividing the exclusion value over the assessed value. in this case, it's 50%. this means 50% of the property will remain at its existing value. meanwhile, the rest will be reassessed at market value. so the new taxable value for this property will be 50% of the existing value, which is 200,000, equaling 100,000, plus the portion reassessed to
3:24 pm
market value, which is 50% times $700,000, in other words, 350,000, with a total coming out to $450,000. a similar program is also available for prepping transfers fl interest r from grandparents to grandchildren. if you're interested in learning more visit our website or this special occasion. i am community ambassador for the hottest team in baseball right now. your san francisco giants. right, kids? right? i'm so happy to be here with
3:25 pm
you for this ceremony in honor of a new baseball field right here at gillman playground. and now to begin our program for those of you that are seated, would you kindly please rise and remove your cap for the national anthem. for the latin jazz ensemble, mr. jorge elington. ♪ oh, say can you see by the dawn's early light. what so proudly we hailed at
3:26 pm
the twilight's last gleaming ♪ whose broad stripes and bright stars through the perilous fight. or the ramparts we watched were so gallantly streaming ♪ and the rockets red glare, the bombs bursting in air gave proof through the night that our flag was still there ♪ oh, say does that star spangled banner yet wave ♪ for the land of the free and the home of the brave ♪ >> thank you, mr. elington. thank you, sir.
3:27 pm
thank you so much. and, everyone, i would like to acknowledge all of the v.i.p.s that are with us this morning. we are pleased to be joined by san francisco mayor, the honorable london breed. state senator scott weiner. assembly member david chu. san francisco and recreation park commissioner andy jupiter jones. [cheers and applause] >> president and c.e.o. mr. larry bear. giants broadcaster and good tidings sports caster david flemming. co-chair of the giants community fund kelly larkin cooper. founder of the good tidings foundation, larry harper.
3:28 pm
[applause] >> giants community fund executive director sue peterson. and, you know our giants players do so much community outreach and one of whom is very involved in the community all while raising her precious children and supporting her all star husband jenn crawford. >> and a three-time all star who's having one heck of a season, your giant's short stop number 35 brandon crawford. [cheers and applause] >> i also like to recognize staff members of the san francisco recreational parks
3:29 pm
department. staff members of the good tidings foundation along with the larry harper family. board members and staff of the giants community fund. and, we have members of our giants front office staff as well. thank you all for being here and always show your support. oh, no. i have not forgotten you because it would not be a giants celebration without our very own mascot, the great lucille. now this is a great community project with many organizations and joining hands. we've got a great lineup of speakers celebrating today. in the leadoff spot, see what i did there she is really our true host for the day and we
3:30 pm
thank her for her bold and extraordinary leadership for this difficult year and a half. it's my pleasure to bring to the podium the 45th mayor of the city and county of san francisco, the honorable london breed. >> thank you. it's so great to be here in the bayview hunter's point community. this is exactly what i hope for for communities like the bayview and all over the city. and, in fact, brandon, i was a short stop when i played softball. i wasn't so bad and you played at this field when we played teams when i was in junior high school and let me tell you, this field does not look like it does today so i am so happy for all of you. the junior giants and for the
3:31 pm
sf bayside. all girls, one of the largest public baseball teams for girls in the country and annie jupiter jones is here. so if any of you want to play, any of the girls who are here today, please make sure that you talk to annie because we want to make sure that young people know there are no limits to what they can do. that they can be whatever they want, participate in whatever they want and so making sure that they have places like this to play, to grow, to thrive. it is so important because you know, like i was one of those kids, i didn't always listen. i wouldn't have been able to listen like some of the kids are doing right now because i always wanted to be into something. always playing. always active. always wanting to do what i wanted to do. and, in fact, when we provide
3:32 pm
spaces so that kids can do what they want to do, so that they can learn incredible sports. so they can learn about team work, this is what we're doing. we're preparing them for the future. so if you want to hit a double like brandon crawford did just yesterday and be apart of a world championship team, you can do exactly that. so i want to thank the giants for their investment in this and i also want to thank the tidings. i want to thank the san francisco rec and parks department because they put together the resources to renovate this particular field and, in fact, i want to also say to all the voters of the city and county of san francisco, thank you for the parks fund in 2012 and continued support for park. we're able to renovate fields like this, but that playground that these kids are going to go play in after this is over, thank you so much that we are
3:33 pm
able to make these investments. and, i want to lastly say this to all the speakers, keep it short because i know these kids don't want to sit here for that long, do you? >> you guys are ready to play, right? >> yes. >> okay. let's be patient. we've got a few run ups. be patient with us and we'll make sure we get out there and have a good time. everybody, thank you so much for the rec and park staff, to the community in the bayview hunter's point. to the elementary school and all the folks who are part of this amazing community. well, we can't play right now, but we will be soon. and thank you, for coming out here and hosting this great event. have a wonderful day everybody. [cheers and applause] >> thank you, madam mayor. i have a feeling you were an all star short stop when you were playing softball.
3:34 pm
and, now, we are joined by our state senator representing senate district 11 which includes all of san francisco, broadmore colma, please welcome state senator scott weiner. thank you. i was not an all star first off. first of all, let's hear did for our mayor for leading us through this pandemic and it's not over yet, but i know that mayor breed is going to lead us through. i thank the mayor and when we were on the board of supervisors. we fought so hard for funding for our parks. i think a lot of times, it gets
3:35 pm
criticized. the buses aren't on time. there's always criticisms of the city. but when you look at what the city of san francisco has done with our park system over the last 20 years, it is extraordinary. as the partnership with the voters, it's a partnership with the community organizations like the giants, but we have been renovating every single park in san francisco. every rec center, every pool. every baseball field. everything has gotten renovated of what our government can do and what our city can do when we all come together and move in a common direction. and resources that this community deserves and our southeast neighborhoods are part of the heart of san francisco and it is amazing to
3:36 pm
see gilman or the work being done in the mcclaron park. we are all in it together and we know from this pandemic, our parks matter. we're told you should be outside and the parks were a lifeline during this pandemic and it's going to continue to be a lifeline for our community. this is incredibly exciting. thank you to the giants for being such an amazing community partner. it's truly the heart of san francisco and let's just enjoy this baseball field. thank you everyone. [applause] >> thank you so much. appreciate you being here as well. next up is another tireless public servant and actually, we did a community event earlier this week on tuesday. it's great to see him out here again. please welcome my friend assembly member david chu. >> good afternoon san
3:37 pm
franciscans. i've always wanted to do this. boys and girls if i say "let's go" what do you say? let's go. >> giants. >> i'm going to be very brief. when i'm in sacramento and senator weiner knows this. we have rivalries. we talk about democrats and republicans, we talk about red and blue, but there's one rivalry we often don't talk about. when our whole people crushed them i've got to tell you, we might of sent some texts. to say we beat l.a. this is what it's about. it's about our team taking the
3:38 pm
field. i just want to say all of you are part of a team here in san francisco that's making it happen for our city and not just our amazing giants. i want to thank larry and our community. we have a team led by our c.e.o. and our coach mayor london breed who has hit that out of the park with so many of you representing the community, representing public safety, representing the nonprofit community, representing philanthropy. and let me just end with one final thing which is this is my neighborhood park. i live three minutes from here. my son and i come here on weekends to play and gilman has never looked better. [applause] >> and, as scott said, you know, under the leadership of mayor breed, the south neighborhoods of the bayview is getting the investments that it
3:39 pm
deserves. ten years ago, when we came to this playground, we thought will the bayview ever get the resources it needs. and this year, this is the third playground revitalization playground that i've been to. just thank you to all of you. we're making sure that while these kids are junior giants. some day, someone on this park might be the next brandon crawford. someone in this park might be the next london breed. and we know that every kid in this park is a winner today thanks to the giants and thanks to all you're doing. have a wonderful afternoon, thank you. [applause] >> thank you, david. and now batting in the clean up spot, is a woman who loves her baseball. please welcome annie jupiter-jones.
3:40 pm
>> thank you. thank you everyone. my name is annie and i have the honor to represent the rec and park commission along with my fellow commissioners. we are so excited to be here. we are so grateful to the giants community fund, the crawford family and the good tidings foundation to help us re-open this playground. as a city kid, i was born and raised in san francisco and that means i learned to love the giants right here. how many of you got to see a giants game at state park. maybe not as fancy as being at oracle park. i'm so happy in the giants in being able to make the adjustment where it was so important. please welcome board member of the good tidings foundation, your giants broadcaster dave flemming.
3:41 pm
>> mayor breed had the right idea. sometimes it's better just to grab that microphone, it's a little easier to do. real quick from me because i am here. i am a proud san francisco resident. being here today just as somebody who loves the city makes me really proud. i'm the broadcaster for the giants. our giants have the best record in all of baseball. brandon crawford is having an amazing season. so i'm here on behalf of the giants and the city, but also on behalf of the good tidings foundation. it's a wonderful organization. those of you who don't know much. take a minute to learn as much as you can about all the great stuff that we do. i do want to acknowledge i don't know where larry and ronnie are hiding right now. can we just give them another round of applause. we really appreciate your
3:42 pm
efforts. also, the grass that you're sitting on comes from west coast stir ups. i think that's pretty cool. i just want to say to brandon and jaylin, it has been a pleasure for me. i watched just about every game brandon's been in. our giants franchise goes back to 1883. but it has been even more of a pleasure for me to be around brandon as a person. he is a delightful young man who cares about this city, cares about his team, cares about kids and not just his own kids. i'm really proud of you today for all that you've done over
3:43 pm
the course of your giants career. and you should be proud too. thank you everybody for having me. [applause] >> thank you so much. i appreciate you. and i want to take this opportunity to piggy back on what the mayor and assembly member chu and annie was saying. the there could be a future giants announcer out here as well. because momma's getting old. baseball is such a part of this community as you heard from all of our speakers in so many ways and these wonderful kids also participate in our junior
3:44 pm
giants programs and the city of san francisco as well as 85 other communities throughout the state of california. it is a free program for more than 2,300 boys and girls and this program teaches our kids both baseball skills and important life skills because i know you all heard it before, baseball really is a metaphor for life. as they continue on with their education and their sports. now, it is my honor to introduce to you giants president and c.e.o. larry bear. >> thank you. i'm going to it take my cues from the boss, the mayor of san francisco and i'm going to keep remarks short because after me as they said is the greatest short stop in history of the san francisco giants and new york giants. so that's back 138 years. i just want to share a couple
3:45 pm
of things. one is how special it is to come to this neighborhood where really most of my childhood memories were made. watching willy mays and barry bonds play. and at bayview hunter's park. there's a member of all the volunteering from giants staff would do and still does at brett heart school and incredible community relationship we have here. so it's just such a pleasure to return to gilman field. we had a situation back in 1992 where the office moved and we had a rally in one thousand nine hundred ninety-two and there was a four-year-old and
3:46 pm
this picture exists in our ball park, we had a four-year-old on the shoulders of his father holding up a sign that said, "save my giants." you want to guess would that 4-year-old was? yes. pointing over here. brandon crawford. this is also giving back to this neighborhood and to our city for brandon crawford. just a round of applause for brandon. the greatest giants short stop in history. as we mentioned, this is 21 fields have been rebuilt. many in san francisco and it's just such a pleasure for the junior giants and the bay side to be able to use these fields and, you know, it's probably one of the greatest things that i think any of us from the giants can do.
3:47 pm
we're going to lose games. we're going to win games. we're going to open the world series a lot. we aspire every year. this is something we can do that will live forever and i cannot thank enough mary and larry and ronnie harper. larry has literally lived here at this field to make sure it's as beautiful today. it just completely fulfills our dream of what gilman field could be. where david chu lives nearby. so thank you for your partnership with junior giants. it's been mentioned that san francisco rec and park is a very involved partner.
3:48 pm
working with phil ginsburg and we thank so much all the work that park and rec has done because it's literally a partnership. and the public private partnershipses, you can talk about them, but you have to do them and this is done and several others in the city have done and our goal is to do one a year and if not in san francisco, we work with communities in east paloalto and richmond. but we really do believe that the focus should be as much as possible in our back yard in san francisco. so thank you to the city of san francisco and park and rec and thank you for the amazing partnership that i have to acknowledge the giants community fund board and kelly coover who has been is mazing
3:49 pm
with her leadership. and cassandra hoffman. russel maps who cannot be here today who has been truly a leader for us in norwegianing these so now we can get to the person we all want to see and hear from to thank. someone who's leading us in a really powerful way on this field and we had a game tonight against houston. so let's hear from the man who at 4 years old said "save my giants" with a sign. brandon crawford.
3:50 pm
[cheers and applause] >> thanks, larry. and, thank you everybody for being here and who helped put this thing together and helped at the field and just honored to be here with my family, all these special guests that we've heard speak, the junior giants and everybody here. as we -- as we're here to celebrate the opening of the gilman playground baseball field. it looks awesome. my relationship with the giants started 34 years ago. i was fortunate enough to go to a lot of games with my naernts.
3:51 pm
i was such a big fan that when i was your guys' age i did an assignment in kindergarten and that's what i wanteded to do when i got older and grew up. and that was an easy answer. and my parents always emphasized getting an education first, but they also supported me in every way of chasing my dreams. my dad was my little league coach. he emphasized the importance of fundamentals, discipline, and hard work. he taught me that if i wanted to be the best, i needed to not just show up for team practices, but put in the extra work. needed to take extra batting practice, extra fielding practice as well and work on speed and agility. i also need to be a good teammate and be respectful. i hope to instill these qualities into my own kids.
3:52 pm
the importance of hard work and being respectful. and baseball has gotten me to the position i am in today. it's important to key life skills, a way to give back to the community. it gave me an opportunity to go to college and get an education. it's helped me meet some of my closest friends. taught me the importance of team work. to work together and be an unselfish team member. it taught me how to deal with pressure. learning how to adjust in life and embrace challenges. it helps all areas of life. teaches you to deal with failure as well as success. there's plenty of failure in baseball. you'll get out, strike out, make mistakes and make errors.
3:53 pm
but then you'll also make corrections, try harder, work harder and be successful. our theme this year for the giants has been resilience. baseball teaches resilience and resilience helps you deal with the ups and downs of life. so my wife and i are so happy we're able to give back to the community in this way and bring young people together here and give them an opportunity to learn life lessons that will help them chase their dreams also. thank you. [cheers and applause] >> thank you so much, brandon. we appreciate all dough on and off the field and lucille i think you'll help me on this.
3:54 pm
mvp! mvp! so now we thought it would be fun to do a little 7th inning stretch. for the kids of the bayview and lead please welcome community member earnest east. earnest and the kids, take it away! yes. you guys ready? >> yeah. >> all right. you've got this. >> how's everybody. how about a wonderful hand for these wonderful children out here. i guarantee it's and
3:55 pm
encouraging them to do their best. give me a round of applause, parents. you can join us if you will. ♪ take me out to the ball game take me out to the crowd ♪ buy me some peanuts and cracker jacks ♪ i don't care if i never get back. ♪ it's root root root for the giants ♪ if they don't win it's a
3:56 pm
shame ♪ it's one, two, three strikes you're out at the old ball game! [cheers and applause] >> great job. check check. there we go. how about a round of applause for our kids. special cameo appearance. that was fantastic. all right. as we close out today's ceremonies everybody, it is time for a ceremony alfirst pitch just like we do every night before the baseball
3:57 pm
games. and, brandon, if you wouldn't mind, we'd like you to do the catching. have you do the catch, brandon. everyone doing the pitching for us. headed to the mound as one special junior giants player. she is 11 years old. angel wisinger. whenever you're ready, angel. you know what to do. [cheers and applause] >> way to go, angel.
3:58 pm
good job. very well done. all right. we're almost about to wrap things up here if we can just have you all be patient and wait a little while and then get to the car. brandon's got to take to the field tonight as you take on the houston astros. we're going to have a little time and let them get to the car and i wangt to thank all of you so much for coming and all of you kids, we want you to look to your camp leaders for instructions after the crawford family has. so be sure to look to your camp leaders.
3:59 pm
if anybody wants to go to the giants game, we have tickets. so look for our staff in the orange shirt. if you can or anybody that would like to go tonight. they're going to be over here. okay. right outside the gate there as you exit, check in with them. game one of your san francisco giants. let brandon and the family get out. >> : and given the public healtw
4:00 pm
some agreed lifting the restrictions until the conference. participating today via tele conference. this will ensure the safety of the board an staff and the
4:01 pm
publ