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tv   Mayors Press Availability  SFGTV  May 8, 2024 12:30pm-1:31pm PDT

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>> and that's it with this episode. you've been watching san francisco rising for sfgov tv i'm chris manners. thanks so much for watching. >> good morning everyone! and welcome to china basin park. [applause] my name is jack bear and for the last 30 years i had the honor of working for the san francisco giants and for a great many of those years, i had the distinct pleasure working with many of you on all of this. we are still putting a few finishing touches on the park, some
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light, way finding signs, picnic benches and will reinduce the messages engraved in tiles and part of the park. more later, but not today. we removed the construction fencing surrounding the park just a few weeks ago. on the morning of giant opening day and what seemed like just minutes the park was full of people, exploring this corner of the waterfront. by all accounts, they liked it. we have a great lawn overlooking the bay. we have something that the neighborhoods of north beach and south beach do not have, a beach. [laughter] there is a gathering grove, a storm water garden, food trucks, and willie mccuvy returned perched gracefully on the shoreline of the china basin
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channel or some refer to it mccovey cove. joining us today is the daughter, allison. today is about expressing our appreciation and gratitude to all who made this possible. this park did not happen overnight. we started planning for this day more then 15 years ago. it has been a long journey since our very first workshop at the port. throughout, it has been a very collaborative process, with active participation from virtually all possible stakeholders. before continuing with the program, i wanted to acknowledge someone who's unfortunately is no long er with us. i are can't help but remember corrine
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woods and the extraordinary force she was. i like to think corrine is beaming with pride from above. she is represented today by her husband peter schneider. thanks for being here peter. this is a long program but it will be snappy. next to say a few words is the executive director of the port of san francisco, elaine forbes. [applause] she is our landlord, a kind and thoughtful leader and good friend. elaine. [applause] >> thank you jack. i will keep it snappy. i'm really really delighted to be here today and representing the port commission vice president gale gilman and commissioner harrington are here as chief operating officer michael martin and representing the leadership
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team. sl no prouder day we can welcome an exceptional place that brings people to the shoreline and unparalleled beauty of the san francisco bay. this is a day port mission comes to life after 15 years of work. congratulation. this park was built with private money. the park was built with very complicated land use deal. very state of the art infrastructure and it took 15 years to get here, and are there are many of here in the process that 15 years of work and we can't how beautiful it is. i want to recognize former port director, monique moyer, i believe she is here today for her visioning early on in the project. thank you so much monique, you are such a inspiration. [applause] i have to name port employees because they worked so hard. [calling out names]
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people no longer with us-thousands of hours of work. we thank you so much. [applause] also, among us is city staff and city partners who had to be here at the table to make this thing work and did incredible work, including the city attorney office. fire chief. carla short. [indiscernible] remember. sarah phillips here from workforce economic development. these partners made this work happen and our private partners, we could not hope for better partners in the san francisco giants who are our home team, who care about san francisco and are totally dedicated to this place, and to tischman-[indiscernible] what a successful collaboration. finally to the community. i remember when corrine woods
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demanded this park be built in phase 1 and i was someone who said, never, not that financially makes no sense, please fight with her on that and she was right and the right decision to deliver it the park. thank you corrine and thank you to the community. it is my pleasure to introduce our next speaker who emphasized the importance keeping this work going during covid. imagine this was built post-pandemic, the first project to rise from the ashes that. she kept this work going, demanded our city departments work together. she marshaled resources for this. she is insuring our waterfront is safe, clean and viberant to welcome all san francisco residents and visitors. brave and visionary mayor, mayor london breed. [applause] >> i just realized there was a step behind me. first of all, it is so great to be at the new china basin park!
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[applause] and let me just say, because we got to take this back not just 15 years, but over 25 years ago and maybe even further. how many of you remember when this was just railroad tracks? a golf shooting range and a espre outlet? in fact, kelly mission rock, the mission rock restaurant used to be the place we used to party when i first turned 21. so, that just shows you how far i go back with this area and to come here today and see what it has become over the years, because of visionary leadership of the past that looked at this area as a possible new neighborhood of san francisco. what people don't always talk about is, what san francisco has become
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as a result of mission bay and that includes, housing, the university of california san francisco and its various institutions. it includes restaurants. it includes students. it includes residents, families, a new school being built. so much has changed. this is a new neighborhood of san francisco, but it is not in isolation. it is connected by different communities and the bay trails with the new bike lanes will connect the bayview hunters point community to this neighborhood that is in close proximity where not only people live, but so many people come to this area to work at chase center, oracle park and the concerts, the games, the hotels. this is a incredible example of the diversity of a neighborhood
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that continues to transform itself and are now with a dozen parks already completed and more to come, it is rapidly becoming the hippest hottest coolest neighborhood in san francisco. [applause] so, i am excitesed to be here today. a park is always something that makes people happen and in fact, san francisco has some of the best parks and this park is a great addition, especially because right here where the cove is we hope somebody gets the ball past over to china basin park. who knows it may happen. we are hopeful and excited what this park means and what this means entirely for the city and i really want to thank the port and the port staff. i want to thank tischman spire, mission bay development and the san francisco giants. i remember on the board of supervisors
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when we first and matter fact david chui was on the board at the time and we were looking what this could be as it relates to a neighborhood with visa, with open ai coming here as well, how this could be such a diverse neighborhood and today we are living in the future by welcoming in this new park and we are so excited and happy about what this means for san francisco newest hippest coolest neighborhood. thank you all so much for being here. [applause] >> thank you mayor breed. she's always so incredible without notes. next up, larry goldspan. he returns bcdc rfx , the san francisco bay conversation development commission and been there a wlaung time. we worked together on the ball park
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project before we worked on this park, so larry, on behalf of bcdc. [applause] >> thank you jack. it is positively marvelous to be here this morning. it happens our family have been giant season ticket holders about 30 years and our seats are in view box 323 so we had a direct view of lot a since the ball park started. that view includes the bay, mucevy cove and mission rock. it also happens the state agency which i work, insures the development along the bay provide maximum feasible public access to the bay. some people may be surprised to learn the giants and our regulatory agency have been great partners as the giants creative constructive teams design, redesigned and implemented where we are today.
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the gianted an expanded bay trail and it is gorgeousmentf resilient to rising sea level in the future and it will be. and to provide different types of spaces within the park to entice and satisfy different users. as such, our working relationship only strengthened over that time and since the ball park was initial ly proposed. during yesterday game i spent a lot of time in 323 watching people walk and bike on the bay trail, picnic on this lawn, take pictures at the statute and activate this park. the space invites people to come in and will establish china basin as a great place to hang out whether waiting for friends before the game, finding a place to get lunch or just looking at the bay or ball park. in sum, this is the activating space the public deserves around the entire bay. china basin park is a winner
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and on behalf of it public who love this park and will continue to love this park, thank you so much giants for making this public space so welcoming. [applause] >> hello everyone. beside me is john doneally, design principal escape and my name is chris murphy. as the director of design and construction for the mission rock partners, it has been a true privilege being a part of this incredible journey. i joined the team early 2020 under steve minden and matt to oversee design with it team. partner with the port through the permitting process and execute on the construction. as a san franciscans it is a unique and extremely humbling experience
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to play a role developing a new waterfront neighborhood for enjoyment of the people for the great city. china basin park the cornerstone across from a world class ball park sument as a monumental public gathering space. my congratulations to our general contractor, web corp builders which brought the park from the page and into existence. of course, they had a lot of help from a wonderful group of subcontractors. our two all star lbe include taharo who placed all the architectural site concrete. [applause] and [indiscernible] who performed the mass greeting and geo form block install. [applause] also, special thank you to jensen, who brought all the gorgeous landscaping to life. [applause] list a few others, ranger,
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lify, [indiscernible] about a half dozen trades who completed the restroom behind me. i was want to give a huge shout out all to the men and women who labored to turn this park into realty. you should be forever proud of your accomplishment: [applause] i would like to highlight one unique invasion that speaks to the sustainable approach mission rock partners utilized across the entire development. the park is designed to be 10 percent lighter then the existing surface parking lot that it replaced. so, even though it has grown as much as 16 feet in elevation, when you are at the top of the great lawn behinds me you are on top of tw feet of soil, 13 feet of light way geo foam, 7 feet of concrete and 2 feet of foam
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glass aggregate made from recycled bottles. [applause] this is a truly complex mument layered engineering approach which achieves load off set and creating resiliency against future sea level rise. we are forch tunate to have a truly all star design team. i like to thank min design, [calling design team] [applause] all of these great firms worked under the direction of the wonderful team who artistic vision is a driving force for the park we are dedicated today. >> hello. today represents the culmination of decades of visionary thinkish, gritd and hard work. on behamp of the team,
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congratulations to everyone who played a role bringing this park to life. i also like to say thank you tiffman spire, san francisco giants, the port of san francisco and all who entrusted the design to scape. much of the early efforts focus on building consensus what the park needed to be and how to best serve the public giant fans, local residents and members of the new mission rock community. this unmatched site is so inspiring and offered up so many aspets. oracle park, mucevy code, san francisco sky line and bayviews. i lost my spot. [laughter] and the new mission rock neighborhood. we work carefully to sculp the land and connections to the urban experiences. at the time a performative park
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that manage storm water through the mission rock neighborhood, enhance comfort protecting the site of realty of sun and wind and anticipates the future of rising seas and climate changes. the soul of the park is the unique terrain of san francisco magnifying a landscape. the sweeping lawn with cypress trees. plant specious that shade the gathering grove chosen for special relationship to the city. the beach pavements and materials echo the gradients of coastal edge present across san francisco shoreline. design is inspired by waterfront landscape of san francisco and urban spectacle of game day splash hits. today china basin park is a multifaceted park greater then the sum of the parts. it is a collection of the spaces, diverse habitats and experience. flexible enough to accommodate both game day crowds and quite
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moments of reflection. the park serve community events and cr daily connections between neighbors and the bay. it is is a place that expresses the diversity of the city and welcoming all people to mission rock, mucovey cove and the bay. we have been so honored to lead the creation of this new public space that serve san franciscans into the next century. thank you so much. [applause] >> up next, maggie and larry. [applause] >> hello. maggie from tischman spire side of the mission rock partners team. it is really surreal to be up here now standing in front of these buildings in this amazing park. john and chris highlighted resiliency elements of the park and i wanted to talk more about something near and dear to my heart which is irrigation system here for this. when you are building a tremendous amount of new green space, you
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see all the vegetation we have among us. it is hard to do when you are in a drought ridden climate and something mission rock did, which is different and sets apart from other projb ects within san francisco and beyond is built a black water treatment plant which is no small feat. that treatment plant will serve to irrigate the entirety of this park and other open spaces within mission rock with water we recycle on site. it is another element how coming together with a public private partnership working directly with the port, the other city agencies have allowed private development to do things differently. we are excited how that can set the tone and be a example for other future project that think about design sustainability and build the project of tomorrow and excited to see that come to fruition here. i touched on the importance of
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public private partnership nature and the amount of people and faces standing out here who i have interactsed with over the process and many beyond the people here that have had a hand in this. i have been able to see late nights early mornings that all come to bring this park to be reality and incredible this perseverance paid off to get to this point today. lastly, excited this park serves as the front yard to this new neighborhood. we have residents living in the canyon who can come out bring their dogs to play in this park, bring their kids out to have picnics and really serve the transit point for them getting to and from home and the office. we also have visa coming here and you see their sign very prominent behind me who is coming to make this neighborhood their new home within the next month and then you have cat gemini who moved in their space this week and
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have a place to have lunch on the lawn, they have the ability to enter their space, have beautiful views of the park while they are working and it just serves as a landmark here in the southern waterfront and we are excited what it does for this great neighborhood, so we are incredibly happy to be here. there is so many people to thank in the process and wouldn't have been done without all the contributions of people thin crowd and well beyaunds. with that, thank you all and i'll turn it over to larry to say a few words. [applause] >> thanks maggie. hello everyone. wow. i was actually as i was standing here listening to maggie, i was looking out and i was looking out--it was a major wow, because as i was looking out in the few minutes that maggie was speaking, there was a jogger
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jogging on the bay trail, there was somebody walking a dog and somebody taking a picture with willie mccovey in the background and ball park. it today crystalizes what so many worked on in a incredibly collaborative way for a long long time, as jack said, 15 years. i will start by just asking, we call them the mission rockers. everybody's in the giant family that worked on mission rock, because as jack alluded them to stand up and take a collective giants bow, because amazing work, including a wonderful alumni fran well who i will call out. fran lead the projbect for years and years and years and years and now on the east coast and doing wonderful things there. so, the collaborative nature of
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what this project is and was was how it was conceived, super important to what we have today. i distinctly remember and this has been referenced, but want to highlight the decision to basically do the park first. to open the park at the front end and elaine and the mayor and all our city partners were very much on board with that. tischman spire. because what this feels like on the ground to folks that are coming as maggie said, the folks working here, people living here. we have 60 plus percent of the canyon filled. the red building. the green building will be opening later this year. we have more buildings residential and office to come. we have retail opening. to be able to have this park as an emenity for everybody in the neighborhood as when we went to
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the election in 2015 is a crucial part of being able to get off to a great start with mission rock project. i want to especially call out the mayor again for all of her leadership, and while this project has crossed several administrations in our 15 years of working on it, getting all of these buildings open and there is more ribbon cuttings to come later this year, rest with the city apparatus as it exists today and it has been nothing but incredibly supportive as tischman spire as has the port of san francisco and all the community stakeholders as well. we are really looking forward to very shortly to have in this park movie nights and fitness and music classes, and food trucks, and all of this
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activating. already-yesterday before the day game it was great hearing larry looking at the park from 323, i also was kind of seeing how people were interacting with the park before the game. tons of people were over taking instagramable moments. take a picture with willie mccovey and would say willie would be so proud of this park on the cove and just kisses and hugs to allison, willie's daughter. one more round of applause for allison who is here. stand up allison. we know her father no matter what ailment he was battling in the later years was so proud to be sitting in his perch in the broadcast level in the box looking out over mccovey cove and he would see the statute here
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fronting the beautiful park. thank you all so much. i wanted to call up a couple community partners who have been wonderful throughout this project, and we got just a couple more speakers. hang on everyone. the folks we will introduce now are, ed hatter who was the chair of the southern advisory committee. edward. are you here? yep. come on up. and alice rogers who is a south beach rinconmission bay neighborhood association. they are the folks here and make this all happen, current residents. [applause] >> good morning. i'm edward hatter, chair of southern advisory committee for the port, and i promised i was going to be brief, but i got a history that just will not stop.
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[laughter] i look out here and i see the new home of the giants but i was a kid of the old home of the giants candle stick park. i look at this park and look at the people and say giants good job, city great job. this very rarely that we are able to all come together and come out with a finished product such as this park. alright? i can't wait to get my kids from the neighborhood house down here playing in the fields and everything else and long the bay shore, but this is only the beginning. i want to make that very clear. the giants have an outstanding development team. the city has outstanding department heads. we can come together and start with china basin and at least finish at indian basin.
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with great parks, great housing, great buildings, great infrastructure. [applause] and with this work, maybe we can even take it back to candle stick. thank you. i would like to introduce alice rogers. thank you. [applause] >> good morning. mr. hatter is a difficult act to follow. speeches are long, time is short, and what i really in essence want to say is thank you mission rock team for creating this incredible addition to the public waterfront. it has been said earlier, but can't be said often enough, in a properly ordered universe it would be corrine woods standing here in my place ushering the best of class commons. it was corrine's steady advocacy and as importantly, the respect she
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garnered from the port and from the giants that got us this park now today in phase one of mission rock development as elaine said, normally public spaces bring up the rear when the cash-flow can support them, but great effort was made to have this now. it was corrine that put the heart and soul at the forefront of the neighborhood and generations who will inojoy this place will carry that forward. corrine set the keystone, but it was mission rock development team that really leaned into neighborhood engagement. throughout the entire 15 years plus of the development of this project, they included solicited the neighborhood
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input. they created interesting fun charrettes and for all of us to come and brainstorm and think what would make this place unique. appropriate to the site and an addition to the neighborhood that everybody would anticipate. hundreds of neighbors joined over the years and it is really on their behalf that i'm here to say once again, thank you so much mission rock development for creating this incredible haven. in addition to all of those neighbors who worked so hard over 15 years, we have great new neighbors now, and i like to introduce the bomed family who are new residents in the canyon to what about what it feels like to live here. [applause]
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>> hello everyone. good morning and good afternoon. we are canyon residents. we just moved here. we always wish to live in mission bay, mission rock neighborhood. we are lucky to get this project done. i want to thank everyone who contributed to get this done after hearing the challenges and the hard work. thank you. i cannot say enough about this, because we live like on the 11th floor and we are facing the giants. the view of the park, the beach. thank you for everyone who makes this landscape for us. i'm the father of three kids. we can enjoy it, play, riding
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their bikes. we are very lucky to be here. thank you everyone. [applause] >> before i introducing the last speaker, i want to acknowledge stella willie's widow who arrived. thank you for coming stella. [applause] now, my colleague and the person who's will oversee the operation of this park-- [applause] >> for the record, i'll managing the fun. there are others doing the real important work. thank you jack and thanks everyone here who has come together and celebrate all the faces that planted the seeds to make this public space possible.
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if you build it they will come and this is true for china basin park. it has open two weeks and we have seen dogs, dog parents, bikers, kids playing in the sand, we have seen our first bride and groom take photos in the park so people are making memories here and they will be the stakeholders we have to answer to when operating and managing this amazing public space. we'll build on this and bring great events and concerts and key amenities for this great urban space. may 11 we will have our first community event free to the public and open to families so nice to start a great season of programming. this concludes the speaking program so thank you everyone. that was a lot of important really great speakers. next we invite the mayor, director forbes, larry and maggie over to do our
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ceremony planting of the park, then fallowed by a ribbon cutting on the bay trail and join us for photography on the steps and complementary free ice cream in the central plaza because what is a park if not having a good cone on somewhat warm day. thank you everyone and join us over here. [applause] >> alright,b here we go! 5, 4, 3, 2, 1! [cheers and applause]
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>> i think a lot of times we get in adult lives we are afraid to follow our passions and think life can't be that easy. but i truly do believe i followed my heart this time in my journal in city government i did not know that is where my passion lied. i kept following it and ltd. to great opportunity to serve the city. [music] >> i'm katy tang the executive
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director of the office of small business. >> small business contributes to san francisco's economy. they provide the bulk of employment in the city and employing a million people in san francisco. and roughly 90% of the businesses are defined as small businesses. so, they contribute to the economy but also just the quality of life. small businesses are more then and there a place of transaction it is a community center. a play where people gather. know each other and form memories about the city. >> at the office of mall business i run a team this helps report all mall businesses in san francisco whether they are looking to stfrt a new business or expand or perhaps they are feeling with issues. our office is here as a point of information for anyone with a business that has 100 or nower
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employees. >> i was growing up i had many ideas of when i wanted to do. i wanted to being an olympic swimmer. and i wanted to men be an architect, you name it i had many ideas for what i wanted do when i grew up. and i never anticipated entering in politics. this opportunity came along wh started working for former supervisor carmen chu and she became the district 4 sunset district supervisor. that was my firstent row in politics and government in a different level. and so when i was finishing up my time working for legislative aid i thought, i will go off and do something else. may be explore opportunity outside of city government what was then approached by this
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opportunity to also serve as a district 4 supervisor. if not the traditional route that many people think of when you enter in politics. a lot know that is manage than i want to do and run for office. that was not part of my culture and upbringing with manage my parents were wondering why i wanted to go in that role this legislation and important because so many women when have it return to work after having a child feel embarrassed or don't feel comfortable asking their supervisor for will any lactation accommodations. i saw it as an opportunity you could use the position where you have tools creating legislation and pass laws and where people listen to to you help the community and pass cause catharsis important to the city and individuals. my family immigrated to the united states from taiwan.
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and they came here in pronl probably late 20's almost 30. and so, they came also in the knowing english limp barely read or write but had to quickly understand english to i can't haveigate services and find a job in america. i grew up in the san francisco sunset district i spent most of my childed hoo up until i went off to college. so when i started working in city government, i think i had mixed reactions about my involvement working government because for some of our parents generation, there is i bit of distrust in government. i think there are questions about why i was entering in this field of work. i think you know when i went in city government i thought about my parents like so many other who is have to navigate city
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services and resources english first language and help the individuals both navigate, intercept that is on an application approximate signage. it is fulfilling to mow to help people like my parent and feel like government is there to support them and not to harm them. my parents are happy that i retired early from politics and being a district 4 supervisor i could have continued on for a couple more years approximate decided to leave early. i think that over all they were able to see some of my work appear in the chinese newspaper. through that they were able to see i was able to help communities in a tangible way. >> the member of the board of supervisors. >> transportation authority. for the city and county of san francisco. congratulations. >> i think about one importance when i was worn in as district 4 supervisor. years ago, and someone actually
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came up to me during the swear nothing ceremony and said, wow, i'm traveling here from canada, and i just i could not believe i saw an asian female worn in in this role a leadership role this meant so much that someone would say that and felt they were inspired by the scene. so -- i hope that as more people see people that look like them and more women coming in positions of leadership than i feel they can doing the same. person this inpyred me is carmen chu who is our city add administrator but also was district 4 supervisor when i worked with her as a legislative aid. at this point, i too, was skeptical of going in politics. i saw someone who had herself never seen herself in politics. got thrown into it and put her
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heart and soul and dedication to serve people. and it gave me the confidence to pursue that same job and i honestly would not have either chosen or accepted or considered serving on the board of supervisors were not for carmen. >> if you want to make your business accessible. >> in my role in city government where i have seen the most challenge is people who don't know you and you are here to serve and help them that they classify you as our city government and here to hurt you. so, people will talk to you and -- and just you know treat you disrespectfully. and sometimes i noticed that they might do more to me as a female compared to my male colleagues. but you know i try to be empathetic. one of the most significant barriers to female empowerment we feel like we have to be 100%
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meeting all of the qualifications before we think that we are qualified to do a job. if we look at a job description or an opportunity to come your way well is self doubt about whether you can fulfill the obligations of that role. i think that the confidence is huge and sometimes i think we make up for it by trying to gain more experience. more and more and more in whatever we can put under our belts we'll feel better. that may not be the case. we might be qualified with when we have already accomplished. i started rock climbing indoors a couple years ago as an activity to try to spends time with my husband and also to try something new and i finds that rock climbing there are so many parallels to life.
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you know when i'm on the wall i'm concentrating and trying to make it to the next piece without falling. there are daying you think i'm not making progress. you come back and wow, i hit another level. and so i feel like in our daily lives and w we think we are not making enough of i change in the city. and sometimes we have to take out time to reflect every day as long as you try and give it your all and you look back you will have made a significant contribution there is no limit to where you go in terms of rock climbing. i want to reminds myself of that in terms of daily life. >> follow what it is you are interested in, what makes you feel excited about wake up every day. you never know and be open to all the possibilities and
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opportunity. [music] >> >> >> >> >> my name is bal. born and raised in san francisco. cable car equipment, technically i'm a transit operator of 135 and work at the cable car (indiscernible) and been here for 22 years now. i grew up around here when i was a little can i. my mom used to hang in china town with her
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friends and i would get bored and they would shove me out of the door, go play and find something to do. i ended up wandering down here when i was a kid and found these things. ♪ [ music ] ♪ ♪ >> fascinated by them and i wanted to be a cable car equipment from the time i was a little kid. i started with the emergency at the end of 1988 and drove a bus for a year and a half and i got lucky with my timing and got here at cable car and at that time, it really took about an average five to maybe seven years on a bus before you could build up your seniority to come over here. basically, this is the 1890s verse ever a bus. this is your basic public transportation and at the time
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at its height, 1893, there were 20 different routes ask this powerhouse, there -- and this powerhouse, there were 15 of them through out the entire city. >> i work at the cable car division and bunch with muni for 25 years and working with cable cars for 23 years. this is called the bar because these things are horses and work hard so they have to have a place to sleep at night. joking. this is called a barn because everything takes place here and the powerhouse is -- that's downstairs so that's the heart and soul of the system and this is where the cable cars sleep or sleep at night so you can put a title there saying the barn. since 1873 and back in the day it was driven by a team and now it's electric but it has a good function as being called the barn. yeah.
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>> i am the superintendent of cable car vehicle maintenance. and we are on the first and a half floor of the cable car barn where you can see the cables are moving at nine and a half miles an hour and that's causing the little extra noise we're hearing now. we have 28 power cars and 12 california cars for a total of 40 revenue cars. then with have two in storage. there's four gear boxes. it's gears of the motor. they weigh close to 20 tons and they had to do a special system to get them out of here because when they put them in here, the barn was opened up. we did the whole barn that year so it's difficult for a first of time project, we changed it one at a time and now they are all brand-new. engineer's room have the four monitors that play the speed and she monitors them and in case of an emergency, she can shutdown all four cars if she needs to.
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that sound you heard there, that's a gentleman building, rebuilding a cable. the cable weighs four hundred pounds each and they lost three days before we have to rebuild them. the cable car grips, the bottom point is underground with the cable. it's a giant buy strip and closes around the kab and they pull it back. the cable car weighs 2,500 people without people so it's heavy, emergency pulling it offer the hill. if it comes offer the hill, it could be one wire but if it unravels, it turns into a ball and they cannot let go of it because it opens that wide and it's a billion pushing the grip which is pushing the whole cable car and there's no way to let go so they have to have the code 900 to shutdown in emergencies and the wood brakes last two days and wear out. a lot of
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maintenance. ♪ [ music ] ♪ ♪ >> rail was considered to be the old thing. rubber tires, cars, buses, that's new. there were definitely faster and cheaper, there's no question about that. here at san francisco, we went through the same thing. the mayor decided we don't need cable cars (indiscernible), blah, blah. we can replace them
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with buses. they are faster and cheaper and more economical and he was right if you look at the dollars and cents part. he was right. >> back in 1947 when they voted that, i'm surprised base of the technology and the chronicle paper says cable cars out. that was the headline. that was the demise of the cable cars. >> (indiscernible) came along and said, stop. no. no, no, no. she was the first one to say we're going to fight city hall. she got her friends together and they started from a group called the save the cable car community, 1947 and managed to get it on the ballot. are we going to keep the cable cars or not? head turned nationwide and worldwide and city hall was completely unprepared for the amount of backlash they got. this is just a bunch -- the city came out and said basically, 3-1, if i'm not mistaken, we want our cars and phil and her
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group managed to save what we have. and literately if it wasn't for them, there would be no cable cars. people saw something back then that we see today that you can't get rid of a beautiful and it wasn't a historical monument at the time and now it is, and it was part of san francisco. yeah, we had freight back then. we don't have that anymore. this is the number one tourist attraction in san francisco. it's historic and the only national moving monument in the world. >> the city of san francisco did keep the cable car so it's a fascinating feel of having something that is so historic going up and down these hills of san francisco. and obviously, everyone knows san francisco is famous for their hills. [laughter] and who would know and who would guess that they were trying to get rid of it, which i guess was a crazy idea at the time because they felt automobiles were taking the place of the cable cars and getting rid of the
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cable car was the best thing for the city and county of san francisco, but thank god it didn't. >> how soon has the city changed? the diverse of cable cars -- when i first came to cable car, sandy barn was the first cable car. we have three or four being a grip person. fwriping cable cars is the most toughest and challenging job in the entire city. >> i want to thank our women who operate our cable cars because they are a crucial space of the city to the world. we have wonderful women -- come on forward, yes. [cheers and applause] these ladies, these ladies, this is what it's about. continuing to empower women. >> my name is willa johnson is and i've been at cable car for
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13 years. i came to san francisco when i was five years old. and that is the first time i rode a cable car and i went to see a christmas tree and we rode the cable car with the christmas worker and that was the first time i rode the cable car and didn't ride again until i worked here. i was in the medical field for a while and i wanted a change. some people don't do that but i started with the mta of september of 1999 and came over to cable car in 2008. it was a general sign up and that's when you can go to different divisions and i signed up as a conductor and came over here and been here since. there were a few ladies that were over at woods that wanted to come over here and we had decided we wanted to leave woods and come
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to a different division and cable car was it. i do know there has been only four women that work the cable car in the 150 years and i am the second person to represent the cable car and i also know that during the 19, i think 60s and women were not even allowed to ride on the side of a cable car so it's exciting to know you can go from not riding on the side board of a cable car to actually grip and driving the cable car and it opened the door for a lot of people to have the opportunity to do what they inspire to do. >> i have some people say i wouldn't make it as a conductor at woods and i came and made it as i conductor and the best thing i did was to come to this division. it's a good division.
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and i like ripping cable cars. i do. >> i think she just tapped into the general feeling that san francisco tend to have of, this is ours, it's special, it's unique. economically and you know, a rationale sense, does it make sense? not really. but from here, if you think from here, no, we don't need this but if you think from here, yeah. and it turns out she was right. so.... and i'm grateful to her. very grateful. [laughter] >> three, two, one. [multiple voices] [cheers and applause] >> did i -- i did that on purpose so i wouldn't.
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♪ [ music ] ♪ >> come shop dine and play. taraval street is open for business. >> i am a coowner at 19th. this establishment came about when me and my brother andy, coowner, we decided that it time for us to take a step up in the barber industry, and open up a space of our own. ory business is a community that shows their true artistic side of the barber industry. we are involved in teraival
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bingo so stop by, get a hair cut and when you do you get the barber sticker made just for us. i say in three words we are community, arts and here to help any way possible we can, so come by, visit at barber lounge, 907 taraval in the sunset. you can find us on instagram. >> time for teraival bingo supporting small business, anyone can participate. it is easy, collect stickers on a bingo gameboard and enter a raffle event.
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