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tv   Mayors Press Availability  SFGTV  January 15, 2025 5:00pm-5:31pm PST

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[music] ♪♪ . >> thank you all for being here . first i want to express my deep concern for everyone affected by the wildfires down in southern california and our first responders working to keep them safe. given this morning's earthquake and the one we had about ten minutes ago remind san franciscans of the importance of emergency
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preparedness. i'm working with the department of emergency management to ensure our city's resilience and i look forward to working with s.f. in a similar manner in 2017. when the north bay was ravaged by fires, we saw this devastation firsthand. entire communities lost overnight. we coordinated across regions when one of our communities is hurting we all feel it. the very best thing that we can do right now is to come together. san francisco has already sent a strike team down to support the efforts in southern california and stands ready to assist as we review our own emergency preparedness. it's never been more clear to
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me that one of the cornerstone cornerstones of public safety in this city is our great san francisco fire department and those who work tirelessly to safeguard the lives of san franciscans. today i am honored and privileged to announce that i am appointing battalion chief dean crispin as fire chief of the san francisco fire department. >> this is a role that carries immense responsibility and requires a unique combination of vision, leadership and a profound connection to the people of this great city. battalion chief chris ben brings 34 years of distinguished service and
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unwavering commitment as a first responder and advocate for underserved populations. he served as captain of chinatown, north beach and so much stations and battalion chief to some of the busiest stations across the city. he has been recognized three times three times for bravery and service for two san franciscans for rescuing the elderly from fires in the tenderloin. battalion chief bowen also served as a 911 responder and has acted as incident commander at over 50 major incidents in san francisco. dean, like myself is also a native san franciscan and a father of two boys. >> he comes from a family that is committed to service. his mother immigrated to the us from nicaragua at the age of 12 and his father is a retired captain of the fire department's arson squad. his grandmother was a senior
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citizen advocate in the mission and the founder of the latin american senior citizens association under battalion chief chris leadership. we will advance approaches that make san francisco safer, stronger and more resilient. in his role as fire chief, he will help coordinate san francisco's emergency preparedness public safety initiatives and lead san francisco fire departments community engagement programs while overseeing talented battalions of firefighters across this city. battalion chief crispin for your decades of service and deep commitment to community inspire us all and shown through these past few weeks as we got to know each other. as you take on this new challenge know that i have every confidence that san francisco will not only be safer but stronger under your leadership. please join me in congratulating fire chief dean
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crespin. one more step and finally i want to thank former mayor breed for her collaboration in this process and acknowledge interim chief sandy tung. where are you, chief? thank you, chief sandy tong for keeping our city safe during her historic tenure as our first asian american fire chief. thank you. >> and now the floor is yours. thank you, sir. congratulations. >> it is with a heavy heart that we gather here today in light of the tragic events unfolding in los angeles. our thoughts and prayers are with the citizens who are experiencing such incredible devastation. >> we also pray for our first responders who have committed to bring safety and stability
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to the affected communities. >>ointment. gathering here in this historic historic bell arts masterpiece is a reminder of the rich history of this city. our history is remarkable and our future is bright. under a new administration, optimism reigns supreme. mayor larry, thank you for bestowing this great responsibly city upon me. i look forward to working shoulder to shoulder with you to achieve the limitless potential of our city. surely there are great challenges but your vision of a more cooperative, efficient and effective city government is inspiring. your love for our city is contagious. i pledge to you that i shall work tirelessly to protect our citizens and visitors. public safety is at the center of your agenda. our department stands firmly with you members of the fire commission.
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thank you for your attendance. chief scott. thank you for your attendance. mary ellen, carol woody. thank you for your attendance. public safety chief paul yap. thank you for your attendance. >> i'd like to thank the current command staff led by chief tang. you have collaboratively supported the health and health and safety of the membership of this great department in unison. you have and share the goals in our missionn statement achieved. thank you. i received a stark reminder of the seriousness of this position this morning at 702 hours we were struck by a 3.7 earthquake. citizens of this city. our department stands ready to protect you and your loved ones. should disaster strike, we vigilantly train daily and have a comprehensive plan in place. however, we're not complacent. >> we'll continue to work with our partners at dbm to update and implement disaster plans.
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mom raised in the mission district. thank you for your love guidance and grace. you spent 65 years of your life worrying about dad and i getting injured in the fire. thank you for your sacrifice, dad. i know you're smiling down on us. >> for 30 years you told me to go to headquarters. well, it took 34, but i finally listened to you and kelly and the boys. >> the loves of my life. thank you for your willingness to embark on this journey with me. this is a new challenge. and as with all others, we'll meet it together. >> family from san diego. brother. sister. niece godson. great everybody. >> i appreciate you making a
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last minute trip. but thanks for all your love and support. my goal for this department is to ensure it remains in touch with the community it serves. >> department members must concern themselves not just with the beauty of the fire engine or ambulance but the beauty and health of the neighborhood. i will ask our members to engage with the public to form bonds that will move our city forward. >> i'm acutely aware of the potential budget shortfalls we face. i will work collaboratively with other departments and the mayor's office to tackle these issues head on. >> the spirit of san francisco is alive and well in just two days in office our mayor has instilled upon us the power of positivity. >> my dad would often say nothing is done well without enthusiasm. i couldn't be more excited and enthusiastic about the future of san francisco. >> let's get to work. thank you.
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>> i'm standing in pauley comes in. chief, would you come over here to san stand and when dean is ready you can stand to your side. >> while dean appropriately thanks his family i want to open it up for a few questions. charles will lead us but i do just want to show the city and county of san francisco that we are ready and prepared. the public safety is our number one priority. the earthquake hit this morning. mary ellen and i were on the phone within 100 and 20s she texted me and said did you feel that? and she immediately got her team going and coordinated across departments to make sure that everything was safe and sound and it was. and we immediately started
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talking about all the tabletop exercises that have been going on continue to go on at fleet week. they had an exercise and so i just want to tell the people of san francisco that this crew behind me is prepared and we will continue to be prepared. we will not stop. we have more work to do. we can always be more prepared. things are coming out as fast and furiously as we see down in los angeles. there is no such thing as being to prepared. and so once again our hearts go out to our neighbors. for our brothers and sisters in the fe department down there, 30 members down there now we're thinking about you and we continue to stay in touch with officials to see how we can be helpful with that. >> so we've got a moment for a couple of questions. members of the media folks want
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to raise their hands and walk on your first question. hi, nice to be with kqed. you just said there's 30 members who have gone down to l.a. are more potentially going down and how long are you expecting they'll be there? i'll let you answer that question. >> thank you, mary. and thank you for the question . i was actually just got off a call right before this press conference with my colleagues in l.a. from the department of emergency management. >> there they are. they have been working nonstop since before the fire started and they're tired and they are in the process of requesting additional assistance. they know that we are ready to go. not only my department but i'm coordinating management leads from other departments to go down to help. well, you have to understand is that there is a process by which they county and the city must request the assistance. the worst thing is to arrive uninvited before they're ready.
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so that is in process and i fully expect that we will get those mutual aid requests within the coming days. the fire chiefs can speak more to this. this is an active response. the fires are still burning. they're not in recovery yet. some of the things that they are just getting up they've had some shelters up or they're getting assistance centers. centers up. there will be weeks, months and years of recovery and assistance that l.a. will need. we are there to be partners. we happen to have a really very close relationship with l.a. and inrgy speak on a regular basis every week, every friday. so we're getting ready to go and we'll mayor's office will be able to share that information once more resources go down. i also just want to thank the fire department. the most important thing right now is firefighting capability and the fire department is providing the need, the fulfilling the requests that are cominghrough.
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>> so the question is to tong remaining with the department once this transition is complete and if so, in what position? >> we have a transition plan in place and on january 21st the transition will be complete and they're going to spend the next 11 days transitioning. and i just want to once again thank you for your service to the city and county of san francisco. appreciate you. sorry. yes, sir. hold on, sir. le m the phone to figure out how we're managing our resources with sending people to to south l.a. and how we're making sure that we're still safe during standard. those we're going down south are working on an overtime basis or how is that being managed to make sure we still detect and the cisco and resources? >> i've been assured by everybody up here that we are well resourced that we are
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committed to public safety here in san francisco first and foremost and any additional resources that we can provide down south we will. but we are at full staff and doing well here in san francisco. >> last one right, carol and and also maybe a better sense of and understand that the requests haven't come in yet but a better sense of what those requests might include in terms of ways that san francisco will be of assistance go for the very first thing i want to share on behalf of unofficially on the behalf of the county of los angeles is to that cash assistance is the only assistance they need from the public right now. they have been inundated with material goods and it is frankly it isn't super helpful because then the fire department has to deal with those. so from the public please go to county of los angeles. they have ways in which people
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can make donations for the city fire right now as the most important weather conditions are going to be bad going into next week is my understanding. so they'll be continuing to need fire. what the kind of assistance that they'll need moving forward is what any disaster does. so the emergency management so that is management skills from across all disciplines to help coordinate the response the assistance to community debris removal is going to be a massive next step and that's something i'm hoping that will be able to send some of our public works management teams down to assist with. and beyond that we're going to hear from l.a. and they will tell us what they need and we will provide as we able. let me just reiterate that the support factor i was doing you and i have this in common i was
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in new york city on september 11th, 2001 and was part of the recovery efforts through a foundation. and then what we saw in the north bay fires as well weamt, t park, now oracle park. people need support through cash and we will share links at our web site on on city websites in the in the coming days. that is really the only thing that can be helpful at this time for our first responders andñ for those that have lost everything. i want to once again thank fire chief tang and congratulate our incoming fire chief dean crisp . and it's a great day in terms of knowing that we have strong leadership in the new fire chief here in san francisco. congratulations to you and to your family and thank you and i look forward to working closely with you.
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thank you, sir. >> thank you francisco. >> city and county of san francisco korean-erhe and prese america we work with job seeker to make sure they're trained and able to enter the workforce by i work with the number of partners able to then recruit our residents from training and get a solidified trained up
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workforce the hospitality initiative started in 2012, we saw a need for culinary workers within san francisco is everything from hotels gift services to culinary training to also to security services as well as are jailer training is under the hospitality initiative umbrella and um, the goal so really try to make sure we have various training tracks for folks to answer within the industry and our program is about a tense week program about job readiness, you know, included with our kitchen work we teach life skills. >> to assess the program not only what my helped my life
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build. >> i come from a hardship to starting to connect again to changes, you know, and this is a second chance. >> why not to mess up on that and the program has supported me in that you a oewd is amazing; right? one of the things we focus on more on for our workforce development how to help more trained workers would our industry want to help raise the awareness of those organizations so our members know hey this is a place we could go and find a cook find a things to. >> my sidewalks previously i did 10 years in federal penitentiary i was released into prison and that's how i got introduced with that so to chat they said apprenticeship they taught me to leave the program
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and i found multiple jobs and owe that to everything i learned here in. >> no wrong donor i feel your department has done is great job throughout the workforce developmen>> l is the largest holiday projection mapping festival. and something this we kicked off around 4 years ago as you know, downtown sf partnership envision how people use downtown san francisco. >> there are 18 projectors for this. 14, 30,000 and 4, 20,000
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projectors at different areas. >> we select the building through an interesting process that take in account several factors. things like architectural. the ferry building are a fantastic fit for that. [♪music♪] ♪♪ ♪♪ >> it is fusion of digital art and dance theatre. which is a tech nobodying my studio specializes in creating
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dance theatre that interacts with visual animation and digital effects >> the flag performances in the piece a lot of video projection mapping does not have anything live. no human performers or nothing like that. i like bringing that human element in it and bringing real performance in the digital space temperature gives it more life and more and the audience connects in a different emotional way. [♪music♪] [applause] [♪music♪]■ >> is a you can see huge future. made of art official material
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react to the natural light. which means a day when the sun come in, it creates a lot of combination of different court reporters and light, like a living sculptor. and at night we can show it with additional light, which create so many different ambience the idea was to dream. [♪music♪] >> this is our fourth year kwa let's glow sf we have been involved since inception in 21 and will moving forward. we are see it grow every year with audience daens and artist participation. different level and quality of artists we having access to participate grown every year and the number of locations has grown as well as the footprint well is more to come downtown this is something imperial coming to see and to participate
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in it it is a health and he fun friends and family activity. we love to see it going for many years to come. [♪music♪] >> the wild type is cultivated sea food company, meaning we create directly from the cells, fish and other sea food animals. there is so much around conservation of salmon. there used to be so many salmon and now all most done. none. we care abofood product that is nutritious, that is free of all contaminants that are unfortunately found in alsea food today.
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so, where we where right now is in what we call the fishery, so right behind us is a sushi bar. this used to be a brewery we did miner upgrades so soon we will be able to serve diners here so they can try wild salmon. right over there shoulders they are able to see where it came from. if you are one of the people that likes having super fresh sea food, this is about as fresh as it gets. we want guests to interact with the people who create it, get to know them and be part of this movement is of creating sea food for 21st century and beyond. aculous way. i'm living proof that treatment works. >> every day i use was a form of suicide. i just didn't die.
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the methadone program saved my life. i love my life. my recovery is the best thing that ever happened to me. if you want your life back, methadone works. you are to let it work. i'm living proof. >> conduct a field shelter exercise where we open up a number of tents that animal control has they have supplies and equipment and staff and volunteers. we simulate the need for cape ability after a disaster or earthquake. >> animal care and control is
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your city's animal shelter. we care for approximately 10,000 animals a year. we are opinion for san francisco's animal in thes upon effect of an emergency. we got our tents and practicing how to deal with that. >> this is the shelter is overwhelmed with animals after a disaster this shelter is full regularly. if we torch have an event that would cause a number of animals to escape or injured or stray or separate friday their people that's where we would respond. >> pets are part of the family and need to make sure they are taken care of like people with the supplies and equip we are able to provide shelter for pets in addition to the existing shelter. >> we have formulated a plan so this in the event of a disaster
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we are hear ready to help and support the city. >> we are able to use the muni bus to transport the people. animals and other equip if the shelter. >> encourage people there is an evacuation order to take your pet with you. >> very first thing everyone should do is microchip the pet. and pack a bag >> shelter cert not a place where you want your animal to end up unless the last resort and like to keep most out of the shelter when we can. >> take care of your people and your friend and family. pets need to be taken
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