in late november the city controller's office through the great work of pelg stevenson and of course city controller released the city-wide measurement report. the report measures the performance of every department from the mta to the academy of sciences using a variety of methods. you can see the percentage of 311 calls answered within 60 seconds or the total number of training hours the department of human resources delivered last year. the report shows the early impacts of federal affordable care act as we see healthy san francisco enrollment dropping consistently. we also see a dramatic increase in muni-related crime which could speak to the cell phone safety issues we have worked on here in san francisco. but what is most important 20 me is the report can help us evaluate how or if our investment in staff and resources are actually paying off. this is ultimately the most important thing the board of supervisors as a legislative body does, it allocates resources. the report can give us real data about how effective those allocations have been. for instance, the police response d