under the guidance of kirsten southey, and with the assistance of civic edge consulting, the seawall team has been executing on the strategy to engage san francisco, all of san francisco to educate, inform, and begin to seek feedback as we advance the program toward decisions. engagement has taken many forms, such as attending a neighborhood community meeting in the sunset, a family night at the california academy of sciences, twitter chats with b.a.r.t. and muni, seawall walking tours, and even a meet the engineer happy hour, which i encourage you to come to the next one of those. we've also been rolling up our sleeves at seawall program community meetings. meeting two was held had he exploratorium last september while we focused on what is out there and what is at risk. meeting three was held a few weeks ago at spur and focused on the planning framework and balancing priorities and tradeoffs. both of these meetings featured a group activity called the game of hazards which was developed by the team. it's not an interactive mapping activity designed to foster community discussion an