good morning, my name is ray rudolf and i have been a resident of san francisco for 38 years and i have done my share of volunteer work along the way but in 2010 i joined the lbgt advisory committee to the human rights commission and i first thing that i asked to see was the 2003 report that they did on seniors. and i noticed that there are about 80 recommendations and none of them were acted upon and so, i put forth the idea of having a senior workforce. so, the advisory committee voted on it and for two years, i did chair that committee and we put on the city wide panels and the focus at that point was about dialogue and getting the information out there and we put on the panel at the common wealth club on maximizing the voices in the political process and we put on a panel on aging, and agism and adultment and enter generational connections and out of that task force, bill ambron joined the group in the second year, and he came up with this idea for the aging policy task force. and so, we kind of pushed this forward. we met with both supervisor campos weiner and olague at the time an