SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Aug 15, 2014
08/14
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mr. reynolds, it seems he that is qualifications. not a lot of articulation about the reason for wanting to serve in this role, but i'm certainly open to supporting both. >> so, would you like to make a motion? >>supervisor david campos: i make a motion to move, i just want to make sure what the right phrase -- >> would you like to make a motion to wave the residency requirement. >> i would make a motion to wave the residency. >> let's make the motion to wave the residency. no objection, the motion passes. the second as to move forward the committee report to the full board. no objection? the motion passes. okay. madam clerk. item marty no. 5: city clerk: energy fisherty coordinating committee. ordinance amending the administrative code to rename the energy efficiency steering committee as the energy efficiency coordinating committee. >>supervisor norman yee: we are joined by supervisor mar whose item this is. >>supervisor eric mar: thank you. i would like to appreciate that we have give gsh guillermo rodriguez. about five 5 years ag
mr. reynolds, it seems he that is qualifications. not a lot of articulation about the reason for wanting to serve in this role, but i'm certainly open to supporting both. >> so, would you like to make a motion? >>supervisor david campos: i make a motion to move, i just want to make sure what the right phrase -- >> would you like to make a motion to wave the residency requirement. >> i would make a motion to wave the residency. >> let's make the motion to wave the...
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Aug 28, 2014
08/14
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mrs. reynolds, i was impressed by your testimony. i want to drill down if we made, you separate out categories of poverty. chronic, situational, generational. can you talk about the percentages are? do you have a breakdown of where people fit in? >> i do not. i would say our organization is more anecdotal. for example, we have a largest senior housing program funded by hud. those seniors are low income, many have extensive disabilities, mental health issues. we need to provide them a place to live. and people in chronic poverty are not able to get jobs. we help them build community. we see a fair number in situational poverty but a large number are generational. >> the success rate varies between those three categories? >> it does. success looks different. success will look like -- it is about ensuring they live with dignity. chronic and situational, that as one of the big reasons we are launching our pilot to study that a lot more and understand a lot more to look at time of war as we proceed. >> what are the incentives, if you coul
mrs. reynolds, i was impressed by your testimony. i want to drill down if we made, you separate out categories of poverty. chronic, situational, generational. can you talk about the percentages are? do you have a breakdown of where people fit in? >> i do not. i would say our organization is more anecdotal. for example, we have a largest senior housing program funded by hud. those seniors are low income, many have extensive disabilities, mental health issues. we need to provide them a...
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Aug 28, 2014
08/14
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mrs. reynolds, you just said. there are generations of poverty, and it becomes very difficult to change that dynamic. when there is ly a crisis, and we don't stay. the cries we can't do transportation, food or health care, but we can do housing. then we walk away. we go back when there is an tective service issue, and then we walk away. >> the 1% of all the entitlement, benefit spending -- less than 10% of federal spending on any of those programs goes to individuals who could in fact work. we focus on that 9%, talking about how we should do it. we need to realize that we have a population that is going to need generations of support and a whole new dynamic of what it means to be a working household and lifted out of poverty. so really, i am hoping that you might with whatever time i have eft, i am going to ms. gaines-turner. drawing on the experience of folks who are working and the decisions between caring for a sick child or paying a utility the policy makers in general assume that once you are working, your fi
mrs. reynolds, you just said. there are generations of poverty, and it becomes very difficult to change that dynamic. when there is ly a crisis, and we don't stay. the cries we can't do transportation, food or health care, but we can do housing. then we walk away. we go back when there is an tective service issue, and then we walk away. >> the 1% of all the entitlement, benefit spending -- less than 10% of federal spending on any of those programs goes to individuals who could in fact...
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Aug 28, 2014
08/14
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mrs. reynolds, i was impressed by your testimony. i want to drill down if we made, you separate out categories of poverty. chronic, situational, generational. can you talk about the percentages are? do you have a breakdown of where people fit in? >> i do not. i would say our organization is more anecdotal. for example, we have a largest senior housing program funded by hud. those seniors are low income, many have extensive disabilities, mental health issues. we need to provide them a place to live. and people in chronic poverty are not able to get jobs. we help them build community. we see a fair number in situational poverty but a large number are generational. >> the success rate varies between those three categories? >> it does. success looks different. success will look like -- it is about ensuring they live with dignity. chronic and situational, that as one of the big reasons we are launching our pilot to study that a lot more and understand a lot more to look at time of war as we proceed. >> what are the incentives, if you coul
mrs. reynolds, i was impressed by your testimony. i want to drill down if we made, you separate out categories of poverty. chronic, situational, generational. can you talk about the percentages are? do you have a breakdown of where people fit in? >> i do not. i would say our organization is more anecdotal. for example, we have a largest senior housing program funded by hud. those seniors are low income, many have extensive disabilities, mental health issues. we need to provide them a...
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Aug 10, 2014
08/14
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mr. reynolds, thank you very much. [applause] [inaudible conversations] >> thank you, professor, and i personally know that there is so much to this story, i compel you to be sure to review the book. it's so much information there. and now, as we get ready for our conversation, i'd like to introduce to you professor roger l. green. roger green is executive directyear of the dubois bunch center. the center is a think tank dedicated to advancing best practices in law and policy and community covenants that advance social and economic justice for urban communities within the united states and throughout the african diaspora. he was appointed as a distinguished lecturerred a meds gar evers college in the city university of new york in 2006, from 1981 to 2005, he served as an elected member of the new york state assembly. during his tenure, in the state legislature, green was widely acknowledged as an expert on educational reform and children and family policies. a long-standing advocate of civil and human rights, green wor
mr. reynolds, thank you very much. [applause] [inaudible conversations] >> thank you, professor, and i personally know that there is so much to this story, i compel you to be sure to review the book. it's so much information there. and now, as we get ready for our conversation, i'd like to introduce to you professor roger l. green. roger green is executive directyear of the dubois bunch center. the center is a think tank dedicated to advancing best practices in law and policy and...
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Aug 12, 2014
08/14
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reynolds of the brewer. homerun. watch the guy in the very last row at wrigley field almost goes over the wall. holds on, throw the thing back. one mrthis guy hanging on for deer life. doesn't good over the top. throws it back. he makes our play of the day. >> that's mazing. >> before we say good night we want to take moment to remember a claimed actor and comedian and robin williams. >> william made us laugh, he made us creighton night the world is warning this tragic and sudden life. tomorrow morning on fox 29 morning news and on "good day philadelphia" we'll have complete coverage. >> well talk to dr. mike about his battle with depression. that's all coming up tomorrow morning starting at 4am. >> that is it for us here at 10:00. coming up two ours of new infotainment beginning with tmz. (vo:) now at joe's, garlickin' good crab and fries for $14.99, worth every bit of garlic breath, get a taste of it this summer at joe's crab shack. >> today on "tmz" -- >> ray j had an encounter with police. cops are in big trouble. >> gets pulled over by the cops. they pull him over. he's scared. turns out, the reason they asked him out is they w
reynolds of the brewer. homerun. watch the guy in the very last row at wrigley field almost goes over the wall. holds on, throw the thing back. one mrthis guy hanging on for deer life. doesn't good over the top. throws it back. he makes our play of the day. >> that's mazing. >> before we say good night we want to take moment to remember a claimed actor and comedian and robin williams. >> william made us laugh, he made us creighton night the world is warning this tragic and...
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Aug 26, 2014
08/14
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mr. chairman, i can remember when opportunities for harm reduction were the goal. could not be achieved because technology did not allow us to get there. i remember when r.j. reynolds expand several decades and came out with the product that to my desk was a precursor to some degree of the electronics cigarette even though it operated differently. you might remember that and there became a real opportunity for individuals to use the product that tell what they were looking for without a combustible. and how quickly we have moved to a point where no harm reduction is no longer gold we can work out these things about flavors. americans. look at the pool that was available. the cycle of combustible tobacco . residents than careless befall we know we got in the right with the children attempting to do that. another job the above the statutory requirements. let's let him do it, but was not condemned where the technology has gone before we ever had an opportunity to see. in fact what effect this can have on pulling people off of combustible tobacco products. the committee, nova -- i hope the fda puts as much stock in harm reduction and now we get people off of something
mr. chairman, i can remember when opportunities for harm reduction were the goal. could not be achieved because technology did not allow us to get there. i remember when r.j. reynolds expand several decades and came out with the product that to my desk was a precursor to some degree of the electronics cigarette even though it operated differently. you might remember that and there became a real opportunity for individuals to use the product that tell what they were looking for without a...