tv Mayors Press Availability SFGTV July 21, 2022 6:00am-7:01am PDT
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>> really want to thank folks for joining us this morning for a host of reasons. i'm also very privileged this morning to actually serve as the mc. we will take you on a story today. one that we are not just so proud of, but everyone that is going it to have this experience today will leave i think excited, proud, but most importantly i hope energized for the work we are going to continue. today is marking an important moment. a important moment not just for home rise, not just for the city of san francisco, but really as we want to tackle
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homelessness. we for 30 years have known permanent supportive housing is the solutionmentf we also spnt 30 years building staff, building systems, building and supplying resources so people with secure housing but besome self-sufficient so we so sforchinate this is another shining example and also you will learn by jazzy collins who jazzy collins is. i'm excited to introduce rick aubrey for brief introduction and framing of who we are and where we are go. thank you so much. [applause] >> thank you gerald and as you can hear there is a bart training going underneath us as we speak. one of the many many obstacles that these amazing teams over-came over the last several years to get this building built. so, as joe mentioned i am the ceo
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of home rise rick aubrey. if i haven't had a chance to meet you. this project took as all projectss do in san francisco a lot of people working very hard for a very long time to get this done, so many folks here that i'm going to make a point of recognizing. some i want to mention, michael cohen who is great partner since day 1. this was a public private partnership people said couldn't be done. it doesn't work, this is not how things happening in san francisco but thanks to strada and michael's effort, here it is. this is part of a much larger project that is going on, but they were very committed to the irk work we do at home rise, permanent supportive housing has to be a part of new construction that occurs in the city and they championed the work with the board of supervisors with two
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different mayors to make sure that this would happen. some of those early conversations which predated me were with my predecessor gale gilman who is here today. [applause] and as a institution home rise is more then any one of us but it took the generation before me to be able to imagine this, to work with michael to work with the city to work with all of our partners. we are very grateful for the work gale made that happen. housing development at this project required many people to get this done. great team. gerald. serenea cal way here now and also helped carried forward. i remember the first day i got here when this wasn't a hole in the ground and snashing teeth is this
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going to happen and how to make it happen and had to deal with the fact there was a pandemic that hit us a few months after we started and are nobody wanted to lend to projects like this and provide fifanc. serenea lead the efforts to make it happen and here we are importantly and a little plug for home rise, not only are we here but here ahead of schedule. this is unprecedented in san francisco. ahead of budget. a tribute to all of the generations of people who worked on this project to make it move forward. takes a lot of money to make a projbect like this work. if i leave anybody else my apologies but huge thanks to housing development to be a ernest and steadfast partner. we hit the pandemic thing. we all recall that was and all a sudden everything look like it would shut down have had a dilemma. do we sit
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and wait a year and mayor's office said, no we got to move forward with this. we are you partners and figure what it will take to finance this, if it takes unusual things and stretch what we normally do we will keep moving forward and we did. here we are, done ahead of schedules thank you to the mayor's office of housing and community development. [applause] lots of other folks arefunding this as well. one of the great things about being on this site is this is a great union town and this is a union site and one of our essential partners in this has been the aflcio and their investment team and they are a core part of this so so proud to be union (inaudible) even more proud to be partnering with the aflcio to build housing for folks who are being pushed out of
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the e city and making this a possibility. we have funding from merchant capital a bank essential to make this work. in order it do this kind of work you need tax credit intervesting and enterprise community partners stood up and stood with us even during all the times during the pandemic. we also have of course a great partnership with the state and california department of housing and community development is also core to making this work. unusually for a project like this, we also have a significant private foundation that when things were looking somewhat dire could we gelt across the finish line and make it work the harry fineburg foundation said the work you do is essential, permanent spoteive is the solution. unusual for a private
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foundation to provide funding but they did it. thank you to the wineburg foundation. also, earlyfunding came in from the federal home loan bank of san francisco, so we are grateful for that. let me also talk about the people who actually did the work. first and foremost the workers on this project. [applause] some of us show up at the ground breaking and the ribbon cutting but every day all the works from suffolk construction were here rain and shine. whatever it took to get this done, they were here, they built it. amazing building we are so grateful to the union workers of suffolk who made the project so and it is beautiful building and you will get a chance to see it, but again, early. when do you get to say that in california? when do you get to say that in
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san francisco? this project came in earlier then promised so that is great thing and ua local 38 of course was a great partner in this. larry muzola is here. their site they could have done many different things with this project. they were really complited committed to what we are doing here and so grateful larry to all your brothers and ist sisters you represent. i would be remiss if i didn't mention we were privileged and fortunate jazzy collins and friends and family of jazzy collins is on the door. most know jazzy collins was a fierce advocate for the work we do throughout the city. a first in so many ways in the city in terms of advocating for people not getting the respect they needed and we were so happy that we were able to
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include jazzy in this permanent testimony to her long work that she did in defense of and in support of and in fierce advocacy for the people in the city that we will now be able to serve in this building. so, [applause] you know, she devoited a lifetime it to it, she did the work and so grateful for that. let me turn the platform if i might back to you gerald. many more folks you will hear from. let me just briefly mentiont that we have 3 board members from home rise. board members--sor ry-we have 4 board members from home rise. thank you very much for that. board members are a essential fabric of all non profits in the city. they work tirelessly.
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they make sure that the work gets done, here for the right reason for the core mission of the organization. they make sure we stay true to what we are trying to achieve so shealy, david and deborah, so grateful you were able to be here today. so grateful every keeping us true to what we signed up for and give us the guidance to make sure we do it work we need to do. if i might, back to you gerald. [clapping] >> thank you so much. you ready for the first part of the story about jazzy? many of you know and think many are familiar with jazzy's place. but many may not be familiar with the intricacy, the importance of her story. jazzy wasn't someone at 13 years old knew she would be this amazing advocate. in fact, she in late 30 into 40 she
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realized and had the life experience that told here she needed to move. she needed to move effectively, she needed to move expeditiously and glad to bring up a partner that embodied the same sentiment and that is strada. so much what you see around you, you delivered on time, delivered on budget. those are things jazzy believed in. she believed you had to step up, be there and make a way out of no way. i will not say we made a way out of no way because strada team does it all over it bay area but did it with us knowing the impact that this is the type of development that permanent supportive housing can live within, both the fiscal impact, the jobs created and most importantly not forget the convenience. bart is right here. think about the access that affords anyone in the community so grateful they partnered with us. michael will join us quickly but thank
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you william. sydney is out here somewhere. the entire team over at strada, thank you so much for keeping us humble. keeping focused and making sure we delivered on time. michael, please. [applause] >> thank you gerald. it is nice every once in a while to be overcome with feeling proud about something, and i think gerald said at the beginning, this is a day for a lot of us to be really proud and there's two things that i'm most proud of about this project. the first is we have been checking, but i think this is the only supportive housing project for formally homeless individuals that is built on private property as part of a market rate development not just in san francisco history, but we haven't been able to
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foond a example of this anywhere in the state of california, and it is really quite awesome and as you heard from gerald and i'm sure you will hear more of, it takes a incredibly collaborative effort to make something like this work, and you heard all the financial people who were integral related to the support of this effort. i do want to shout out and there is a bunch of them here, building a project like this on time and on budget in a pandemic is really hard, and i want to thank -we had great partnership from the city. i think i saw rich (inaudible) in the planning department and topea, judson true and his
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entire team. i was talking to robin a bit earlier, and it is not one thing, but it is over and over again, there is problem that if it is not going to be solved it will cause delay and cause budgets to sprirel out of control and having the city as a partner was incredibly partner. people have been asking like how did you guys do isthe at this price. we started november 2020. we had an aggressive budget, an aggressive schedule, and if nothing else it is testament when you have really smart people, you put them in a position to succeed and they work their butts off and i want to shout out to will, to nick, to sydney, to steve to lee, to clark, to everybody on the strada team. there is a huge amount of resources. i think we had more people working on
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this building then we dild on the 3 other buildings and it is wort it because this project is good for the city, it is great for this neighborhoods and hundreds and hundreds of peoples lives will be better because of this project. the second thing i'm immensely proud of is the fact that on time on budget during a pandemic, supply chain collapse and we did this project and think you heard gerald allude to it earlier, with 100 percent union labor. [clapping] and i hear it a lot, people say to you, you cant do it that way, you can't make this budget, you cant make this schedule with a 100 percent union job. you can tell them they are wrong, because we are
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living proof of it, so thank you. [applause] >> such a great segue into another really important speaker. impact on us and looking over at (inaudible) who is my colleague in housing who is negotiating our union labor agreement right now. we are so proud of the union staff members who make up home rise. they are our front line. they are the reason not only does the brick and mortar impact live but the service and impact and being there consistently is one of the hall marks of not just supportive housing but 30 years making sure families are housed and stay housed and get better, they achieve self-sufficiency. but all part of that and our own union labor was very much complemented by what you see around here. excited to have larry come up and talk about the impact on
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not just union labor on this project but the long-standing commitment. larry. thank you. [applause] >> thank you larry muzol isa plumbers union local 38 and president of san francisco building trade council. thank you all for being here today. this is exciting day, proud day for us. you guys takes a lot of smart people to build a building like this. i figured you would have done a eir for this event and had sunlight here but you screwed that up. anyway, i just want to say how proud i am in local 38 is of this development and it is long time coming when this property was bought in 1947, my grandfather joe muzolea had a vision of this but think he would be surprised of this part
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of it. 53 colten. we have done a lot. we helped the community out. we have gulf tournaments we like to give money to when we raise money for charities and we like to keep it local and do things for the citizens of san francisco. we have given to a lot of places in san francisco that helps our kids thrive but i think this is probably the most important and exciting and most proud one we have done in partnership with strada to build supportive housing for homeless people and low income people that are going to have a permanent home and couldn't be more proud to be partners with strada and suffolk. cant say enough about suffolk and strada. they are a great team with us, and we got to this point and like michael said, and everybody said, to have a job like this come in
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under budget, under the timeframe, ahead of schedule that was built 100 percent union and we didn't do it with modural housing and someone came to me early on and said you need to build this modural it isn't going to work and said 100 percent no. it can happen on site and be built better and look at it. beautiful building and done 100 percent union labor so any developer out there saying it cant be done, bull shit. i want to thank all the workers. they are already thanked but enough credit cant go to them because this doesn't happen with them and this is it proof that skilled labor what they can do and i'm proud of each and every one of the members that worked for all the different crafts and i want to thank them for the stand up working through the pandemic and this job actually kept a lot of members working like
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michael said during the pandemic. there was no other job that started when the pandemic hit. this job started and it is finished and it is a beautiful building and we appreciate the partnership we had. all the people involved in this so i want to say from our union as a partner with strada, thank you and we look forward to and we are proud of this commitment and we cant wait to see it come to fruition when everybody is moved in, so thank you. [applause] >> in the fall we were at the richardson apartments and the (inaudible) was with us. the bart is going by as you can hear. and secretary fudge was with us and we were on the roof and i pointed over and said ipa few mujts we will be opening a new building and who i dident know was standing behind me was the mayor and in that
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time and space i realized something that is important and i really hope everyone understands why jazzy collins and this legacy. today we have a vice president who is a black woman from the bay area, secretary fudge who is a black women, a mayor who is a black woman, a black women at hsh. that is progress and that is what jazzy was talking about, the advocacy and glass ceiling and path she created for us but so grateful are we we have a mayor who is blazing that trail keeping it moving, delivering over 1500 units of permanent supportive housing and the economic impact each of these jobs creates support and retain. grateful today not only do we get to acknowledge the legacy and progression with jazzy collins we have a mayor
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that will keep pushing us forward. please welcome the honorable mayor breed. [applause] >> thank you jerome and thank you to home rise and thank you to strada and local 38. it is good to be here with each and every one of you to celebrate jazzy collins apartment complex that truly does represent jazzy collins and her legacy and what she fought for here in san francisco for so long. let me just take us back just a tad bit because when muzola and i were kids growing up in san francisco even though i know he looks a lot older then i am, we are basically the same age, we grew up in a city where it had its challenges but we saw a lot of possibilities. we saw the possibility for a better life, a better opportunity and we in fact you know, i'll be
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honest, homelessness even existed back then, but it want as problematic and it seems to be because as someone who grew up in public housing, as someone who grew up around a lot of affordable development, one thing that even through our challenges of poverty and sometimes substance use disorder there was still a opportunity to access housing in some capacity. the people who built this city lived in the city, the people who worked in the city for the city and county of san francisco lived in the city. the people who started businesses in the city lived in the city and over the years something has changed. we can point to a number of challenges that existed that made things difficult for us to continue to move forward as aggressively as we should to build housing and who access the housing. we can talk about the challenges of those things, but today we have a real solution. we have a
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real tonight. we know what happens when we come together and we put aside our differences and we focus on what needs to be done. and specifically in my homeless recover y plan, we already as we committed built a thousand units of permanently supportive housing with 1500-we built and got about a thousand more in the pipeline and these 96 units that are for people who struggle with homelessness. this is a game-changer. when we provide a opportunity without the layers of bure ocacy that make it difficult for people to access housing we make a dif rnsh ference in san francisco and when we have partners who believe in this because this land, all of this is a legacy of the plumbers union with muzola, jr. grandfather who we
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know a park will be named for him people in the city can enjoy. the fact that he was willing to work with this city and partner to do something to give back to the city that he loved is significant. this place is born out of working together out of relationship, out of really trying to combat some of the real challenges that exist in san francisco. this is what happens when we put aside our differences and we make something happen for the people here in san francisco. so, yes i know we have our problems and i see former supervisor jane kim here. thank you so much for your work helping to get this project done in our city because it did take a village to get us here. but it is also going to take that village to continue to stay together to get us even further until not one person is sleeping on the streets of san francisco. until not one family
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is sleeping out on the streets of san francisco. untul we do a better job to address the challenges and disparities and access to this housing for the people that we knew know need it the most. that really represents san francisco values at its best and today as we celebrate i truly want to thank our partners who make it possible. who make it possible to do extraordinary work like this. my favorite favorite favorite thing of any project and believe this is probably the first project that i even saw in the notes and had to read it again because i couldn't believe it muzola, on time and under budget. thank you all so much for being here today. [applause] >> thank you your honor. as always privileged to be a part of the solution and moving things forward. i
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have one more guest. as rick pointed out not only does it take money but it takes money to not do it once but again and again and we have a unique partner in merchant capital who not only stood and supported this projpect but we will put another 58 units in rehab and keep this going. we are serious about the solution and serious about the partners who make it happen every day. lee. [applause] >> good afternoon. lee auler the executive vizdant of merchant capital out of caramel indiana and i run the chicago office. this was such a collaboration working on this project together. it started in the middle of a pandemic. you had forest fires, people were exiting the city.
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we never met a single person until this grand opening. i'm meeting everybody for the first time because i met you all over zoom. we spent months together, collaborating so i have to take a couple minutes here to thank a couple people and merchant capital is in partner with the housing investment trust. i worked with the housing investment trust all most 30 years and any time that my bank and the housing investment trust can partner together to create housing, affordable housing with hundred percent union labor i'm on board. it takes a lot of extra effort, but it is well worth it and as you can see the 96 units is beautiful. at merchant capital affordable housing is not a secondary line of business. it is not a after-thought. we are the third largest affordable housinglener in the country and we are so excited to be a part
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of jazzy collins. again, i want to give a special thanks to my partners in the afl housing investment trust, but also to the skilled union labor workers. without the general contractor of suffolk construction, we still be looking at blue prints today. to wrap it up. i to say how proud i am to be a part of this from merchant capital and celebrate the successful completion of jazzy collins apartment. the life changing benefits that will house people and that is what is important to the city of san francisco. thank you so much. [applause] >> alright. we all learned a little about how and why we are here. now let's go see this building. we are going to-thank you. we are going to do this in hopefully a way in which everyone really does get to see what does it
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really mean to be a part of a 500 unit mixed use multistage development. i want you to feel our building. i want you to know what we are proud of and really what we are now setting as a standard. i would love for folks to please join the mayor downstairs. we are going to unveil the heart of this building. we--yeah. i'm going to talk about jazzy downstairs. i'm going to have-(inaudible) dolores street to talk about jazzy's place and have hsh join us and also seen ocd join up so grateful for everyone to be here. please join us downstairs as we do a quick cutting of it ribbon then we will get into property tours and lunch. thanks everybody. one more part of the program downstairs. [applause]
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>> [difficulty hearing speaker] both organizations recognize and honored jazzy collins her advocacy, impact on the community and support of lgbtq seniors and other san francisco. it is exciting to be able to honor this space and recognize the services both (inaudible) to the san francisco community. at home rise we work with our residents to increase self-sufficiency once in housing. to heal from the trauma of homelessness experience and rebuild community and connection with each other within the building and within the broader neighborhood. i believe that this really speaks to
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>> i don't want to be involved in the process after it happens. i want to be there at the front end to help people with something in my mind from a very early age. our community is the important way to look at things, even now. george floyd was huge. it opened up wounds and a discussion on something festering for a long time. before rodney king. you can look at all the
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instances where there are calls for change. i think we are involved in change right now in this moment that is going to be long lasting. it is very challenging. i was the victim of a crime when i was in middle school. some kids at recess came around at pe class and came to the locker room and tried to steal my watch and physically assaulted me. the officer that helped afterwards went out of his way to check the time to see how i was. that is the kind of work, the kind of perspective i like to have in our sheriff's office regardless of circumstance. that influenced me a lot. some of the storefronts have changed. what is mys is that i still see some things that trigger memories. the barbershop and the shoe store is another one that i
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remember buying shoestrings and getting my dad's old army boots fixed. we would see movies after the first run. my brother and i would go there. it is nice. if you keep walking down sacramento. the nice think about the city it takes you to japan town. that is where my grandparents were brought up. that is the traditional foods or movies. they were able to celebrate the culture in that community. my family also had a dry-cleaning business. very hard work. the family grew up with apartments above the business. we have a built-in work force. 19 had 1 as -- 1941 as soon as that happened the entire community was fixed. >> determined to do the job as
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democracy should with real consideration for the people involved. >> the decision to take every one of japan niece american o japanese from their homes. my family went to the mountains and experienced winter and summer and springs. they tried to make their home a home. the community came together to share. they tried to infuse each home are little things. they created things. i remember my grand mother saying they were very scared. they were worried. they also felt the great sense of pride. >> japanese americans. >> my granduncle joined the
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442nd. when the opportunity came when the time that was not right. they were in the campaign in italy. they were there every step of the way. >> president truman pays tribute. >> that was the most decorated unit in the history of the united states army. commitment and loyal to to the country despite that their families were in the camp at that time. they chose to come back to san francisco even after all of that. my father was a civil servant as well and served the state of california workers' compensation attorney and judge and appellate board. my parents influenced me to look at civil service s.i applied to
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police, and sheriff's department at the same time. the sheriff's department grabbed me first. it was unique. it was not just me in that moment it was everyone. it wasn't me looking at the crowd. it was all of us being together. i was standing there alone. i felt everyone standing next to me. the only way to describe it. it is not about me. it is from my father. my father couldn't be there. he was sick. the first person i saw was him. i still sometimes am surprised by the fact i see my name as the sheriff. i am happy to be in the position i am in to honor their memory doing what i am doing now to help the larger comment.
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when i say that we want to be especially focused on marginalized communities that have been wronged. coming from my background and my family experienced what they did. that didn't happen in a vacuum. it was a decision made by the government. nobody raised their voice. now, i think we are in a better place as country and community. when we see something wrong we have change agents step up to help the community affected. that is a important thing to continue to do. you talk about change and being a leader in change and not knowing whether you have successes or results. the fact of the matter is by choosing to push for change you have already changed things. through inspiration for others, take up the matter or whether it is through actual functional
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change as a result of your voice being heard. i think you have already started on a path to change by choosing that path. in doing that in april of itself creates change. i continue in that type of service for my family. something i hope to see in my children. i have a pretty good chance with five children one will go into some sort of civil service. i hope that happens to continue that legacy. >> i am paul, sheriff of san francisco. [ music ]
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solution to poverty and addressing the issues of inequity so people and communities can have accesses to resources and financial freedom. one thing true anode dear to my heart was the power of business ownership in creating pathways to financial freedom. we have still in infancy. we had over 100 entrepreneurs come and start their businesses. some are food trucks. some are restaurants. some are in farmer's markets and so farther. that's an incredible legacy and record to build upon. this was the perfect opportunity for me to come back home, you know, come back to the neighborhood and take my skills and networks and resources and put it backseat in service of the community. given everything with racial reckoning and pandemic it was time for me and everyone else
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that had the opportunity to leave and get educated to come back home. we have a opportunity to grow our impact in terms of the number of people we serve and how we serve them. we grow our impact in taking the money we make with our entrepreneurs and circulate those resources back interview the community for community development. the third thing is we have a opportunity to have an impact on public policy in terms of the policies and practices the district has been notorious about interms of inequities. all of those are just the beginning of what is possible in terms of growth and impact. ♪ [ music ] ♪♪
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>> everything we do in the tenderloin, we urban outfit. here, this gives us an opportunity to collaborate with other agencies and we become familiar with how other agencies operate and allow us to be more flexible and get better at what we depo in the line of work in this task. >> sometimes you go down and it's hard to get up. so we see ourselves as providing an opportunity for the unhoused to get up. and so i really believe that when they come here and they've said it, this right here is absolutely needed. you can't ask for nothing
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better. >> the tenderloin is the stuff that ain't on the list of remedies, liked the spiritual connection to recovery and why would i? why would i recover? what have i got to live for? things like that. and sharing the stories. like i was homeless and just the team. and some people need that extra connection on why they can change their life or how they could. >> we have a lot of guests that will come in and say i would like -- you know, i need help with shelter, food, and primary care doctor. and so here, that's three rooms down the hall. so if you book them, they get all of their needs taken care of in one go. this is an opportunity for us here in the tenderloin to come together, try out these ideas to see if we can put -- get -- connect people to services in a
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learned and expand it across the city. [♪♪] the tenderloin is home to families, immigrants, seniors, merchants, workers, and the housed and unhoused who all deserve a thriving neighborhood to call home. the tenderloin emergency initiative was launched to improve safety, reduce crime, connect people to services, and increase investments in the neighborhood. >> the department of homelessness and supportive housing is responsible for providing resources to people living on the streets.
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we can do assessments on the streets to see what people are eligible for as far as permanent housing. we also link people with shelter that's available. it could be congregate shelter, the navigation center, the homeless outreach team links those people with those resources and the tenderloin needs that more than anywhere else in the city. >> they're staffing a variety of our street teams, our street crisis response team, our street overdose response team, and our newly launched wellness response team. we have received feedback from community members, from residents, community organizations that we need an extra level and an extra level of impact and more impactful care to serve this community's needs and that's what the fire department and the community's paramedics are bringing today to this issue. >> the staff at san francisco community health center has really taken up the initiative of providing a community-based outreach for the neighborhood. so we're out there at this
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point monday through saturday letting residents know this is a service they can access really just describing the service, you know, the shower, the laundry, the food, all the different resources and referrals that can be made and really just providing the neighborhood with a face, this is something that we've seen work and something you can trust. >> together, city and community-based teams work daily to connect people to services,
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the tenderloin is home to families, immigrants, seniors, merchants, workers and the housed and unhoused who all deserve a thriving neighborhood to call home. the tenderloin initiative was launched to improve safety, reduce crime, connect people to services and increase investments in the neighborhood. as city and community-based partners, we work daily to make these changes a reality. we invite you to the tenderloin
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history, inclusivity make this neighborhood special. >> we're all citizens of san francisco and we deserve food, water, shelter, all of those things that any system would. >> what i find the most fulfilling about being in the tenderloin is that it's really basically a big family here and i love working and living here. >> [speaking foreign language] >> my hopes and dreams for the tenderloin are what any other community organizer would want for their community, safe, clean streets for everyone and good operating conditions for small businesses. >> everything in the tenderloin is very good. the food is very good. if you go to any restaurant in
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san francisco, you will feel like oh, wow, the food is great. the people are nice. >> it is a place where it embraces all walks of life and different cultures. so this is the soul of the tenderloin. it's really welcoming. the. >> the tenderloin is so full of color and so full of people. so with all of us being together and making it feel very safe is challenging, but we are working on it and we are getting there.
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