proudly, we all stood in celebrating the good work of then supervisor and then assembly member tom amiano and darren newsome in the birth of healthy san francisco and healthy san francisco was born out of the principle that there should be access to healthcare, no matter of your income, and that access shall not ever be impeded and this is on the wave of national thinking about healthcare reform. but there is no reform in healthcare if it is misplaced or misguided especially in its land use strategy and from time to time over the last few decades when we have considered in big swaths tracts of land about redeveloping certain areas of the city, great mistakes have been made and i don't see a master plan as it sort of assigns what is the future of san francisco's healthcare epicenter. my district, district five, is essentially ground zero for the high majority of healthcare in san francisco. we have ucsf, we have kaiser, ucsf mount zion, pacific presbyterian and soon to be, we'll border on cpmc most likely. i think a healthcare master plan in the past would have been extremely informative a