was with joyce's office, with the opposite citizens complaints, and member of the aclu and judge laurel beeler and ed linda the committee activist and i think well known to all of you. so, we started with san jose. we met for many hours with san jose. they share with us some of the changes that they went through and i think both for san jose and for oakland, the commonality in that there was some outside force, some outside interest that cause changes to occur. honestly for open it was at a consent decree. which is expensive. i think for san jose was judge kordell. they start with rewriting all the general orders all of their general orders are current, up-to-date and searchable on the san jose website. then they started with the data collection. they traded and brought officers to the table and work with them on how could they in a very quick way, gather information for every single stop weather was a pedestrian stop or traffic stop in 90 seconds or less. so they would have a way of collecting all of the data on race, reason for the stop, location, whether the was search or anything retrieved