. >> i'm kate monaco cline. i worked as the director of the friends of gate project until a few years ago a program of jail health services. i also worked in the sheriff's department as well. i want to thank you for taking on this issue. i've looked at this many years and it's exciting to see it to move to public health where i believed for a long time it belonged. i was going say more about this but we talked about a discussion in the last haith commission meeting about data. one of the things that struck me is in all the years we talked about jail overcrowding, data always comes up as a reason we're unable to move forward. i don't think that's going to happen this time and i don't want to minimize the significance of good data but in looking at this from a public health perspective we can't let the data slow us down. secondly, there's a new book that's come out written by the director of the richter's island health service and by san francisco is by no means at all -- [indiscernible] there is one commonality t