my name is belal mahmood. i'm the supervisor of district five which covers the district from the tenderloin all the way to the. >> i'm also a resident of the tenderloin who hears from the seattle. yeah. for those who live in the teal it's a community. it's a community of immigrants and refugees of families and children. >> there's over 3500 children who live in the teal that's 3500 children who go home from home to school and school to home every day having to walk by street conditions of people suffering on our streets or drug dealers that are making our streets unsafe as well. that is not the community the neighborhood that these people who have come here for a better life deserve or need. and that's what our legislation here today is is to claim is that no longer with the tenderloin be used as a neighborhood for drugs or for drug dealing and that's what we are here to do when the mayor alluded to a walk we took earlier last week where we met people across the neighborhood, small business owners what you did