City Council - meeting_joint_regular

Wednesday, May 13, 2026
Transcript
Video
Agenda

About this meeting

Government Body
City Council
Meeting Type
City Council
Location
San Jose, CA
Meeting Date
May 13, 2026

Transcript

188 sections (from 207 segments)

0:090

Alright. It's 02:00, so we're going to call today's meeting with the rules and open government committee to order and start with roll call.

0:141

Candelas?

0:161

Duan Foley? Here. Kami? Here. Cohen?

0:201

We have a call.

0:21 – 0:390

Alright. We're going oh, Duan's here. Duan's coming down the stairs. First thing is to review the agenda for next week's council meeting, May 19. It's scheduled for 09:30 closed session, 01:30 regular session, evening session cancellation, and the agenda starts on page five.

0:44 – 1:260

And It's not working. That's fine. Continues on Page six, seven, eight, nine, ten and ends on Page 11. Section three, we have our citywide customer experience transformation update. And Section five item is deferred. Section six, our San Jose Clean Energy Programs Roadmap Status Report. And land use item 10.2, environmental review policy. Do we have any public comment?

1:261

No public comment.

1:283

Move approval. Second.

1:310

Alright. I don't see any hands, so let's vote.

1:384

Okay. All

1:40 – 1:590

in favor say aye. Aye. Opposed? Abstentions? Alright. Motion carries. Five zero. Now we're on to we don't have a meeting to review for the week after. Happy Memorial Day. Consent calendar has six items. Do you have any public comment and consent?

1:591

Ms. Rain, please go ahead and make your way to the podium. Okay. Alright. Back to the committee.

2:111

Verbal vote, please. Yes.

2:19 – 2:400

Motion carries five zero. We're on to item c one, the ministerial approval memo, Tordios, Campos, Cohen, and Kameh. I think we already had a presentation last week. We have our early consideration form, so I'll turn it over to Lee to review early consideration form. I know that Chris is here as well if he wants to weigh in.

2:40 – 2:525

Sure. The administration has deemed this a yellow light. I will ask Chris and his team to come in the box in case the Rules Committee has any detailed questions about the analysis and why it's a yellow.

2:540

Okay. Do we have any public comment?

2:571

Yes. Allison, please go ahead and make your way to the podium.

3:12 – 3:466

Good afternoon. Allison Singulani, director of policy with SV at Home speaking in support of the memo from council members Tordios, Campos, Cohen, and Kameh the expansion of ministerial approval processes citywide for housing development applications that qualify for CEQA exemption under AB one thirty. We agree with the memo authors that the eligibility standards established under a b one thirty are carefully crafted. These projects must meet clear requirements related to location, environmental protections, and consistency with local planning goals. Larger developments must also comply with strong prevailing wage and skilled workforce standards.

3:46 – 4:276

These are exactly the kind of infill housing developments San Jose should be encouraging, projects in existing communities near jobs, transit, and services where new housing can have the greatest benefit and lowest environmental impact. Expanding the ministerial process the city already uses is also a practical governance strategy. It can help move eligible housing projects into construction more quickly while allowing planning staff to focus their time and expertise on more complex applications and long range planning efforts that require deeper analysis and public processes. At a time when San Jose faces both a severe housing shortage and constrained public resources, this is a thoughtful and effective way to streamline housing production, improve administrative efficiency, and advance the city's housing goals.

4:271

Thank you. Back to the committee.

4:32 – 4:590

Okay. Thank you. Let me ask a question first on this one. Chris, I see obviously a recommendation of deferring this to next year's budget cycle or making a later date. Can you talk a little bit about the impacts of this and how it would impact other things in your workload and whether some kind of longer timeline than September, but maybe not deferring a whole year could possibly be worked in?

4:59 – 5:397

Yeah, happily. So Chris Burton, Director of Planning, Building, Code Enforcement. As we recently reported out to the community and economic development committee, our current citywide work plan, which includes work that's related to this item but not the same as this item, is is somewhat packed. So we have a significant body of work that's currently underway related to requirements from the state in addition to other council priorities. And so by sort of our tracking mechanisms, we're sitting at about a 130% of capacity for the next fiscal year and then at roughly 100% going into the following fiscal year beyond that.

5:39 – 6:237

And so the challenge is how do we continue to balance all of these work priority items. Obviously, the largest body of work we see over the next twenty four months is ultimately the four year review that includes, again, some related items to this, but not specifically this work item. We will be, through this budget process, releasing an MBA that talks about sort of citywide planning a little bit more broadly and discusses sort of where that entire work plan is and kind of what the opportunities for tradeoffs are right now. I think there are potentially some tradeoffs, but they're challenging ones. When you think about the types of work that we would have to put off, it's like the work related to I mean, we're already proposing deferring some of the work related to the smoke and vape shops just because we're packed.

6:24 – 6:587

The other impact, if we don't just defer items, is that everything starts to spread out. Now, the reason we've stacked our work plan sort of in somewhat the way we have is that we've created a pathway to compliance with our next housing element in 2031. So that's the four year review, the environmental clearance associated with that, then the next housing element. If we weren't to get all that work done in time, then ultimately we create sort of additional liability with builders remedy throughout the city. So there's there's a sort of a defensive strategy in some of this, but there's also a lot of other work coming.

6:58 – 7:127

I think the other piece that has taken up a significant amount of capacity in this last year has obviously been the work related to SB 79. So, you know, I think there's just a lot in there and not many good trade offs as we see it right now.

7:130

Okay. Thank you for that explanation. I'll turn to vice mayor Foley next.

7:20 – 7:488

Thank you, chair. And and thank you, Chris. Actually, was my question. What what's the trade off? What do the the workload analysis is recommending looking at next year's budget cycle to see potentially, I guess, if you could hire more staff to handle the workload. Is that the number one thing standing in the way of the that's the trade off?

7:487

Yeah. That's the trade off right now is we'd we'd have to stop doing something else to expand the scope that we're already doing on ministerial.

7:55 – 8:318

Yeah. Thank you. I I've heard this report a few times in CED, and we've heard it regularly that your department, your workload is huge particularly with all the legislative requirements and we never know what more requirements are coming forth for development. So I'm while we don't usually receive yellow workload analysis, I have to be respectful of that when it actually comes in. So I would move that we defer this to budget cycle 2728, I guess.

8:319

Second. Alright.

8:350

We have a motion in a second. I know that I think council member Turdeos wanted to say something. I I think normally since go ahead. Come on down and make make two minutes of comment.

8:58 – 9:439

Well, thank you, Rules Committee members members, and also thank you planning staff for the workload analysis. I will just say that this is obviously a topic that is of significant interest to the council, you know, in addition to the four signers on this memo. I know recently, Mayor Mahan, council members, Candelis and Casey have also spoken in favor of investing more in ministerial approvals. And I think that given how much priority this has been shown from members of the development community, members of council, housing advocates like we saw today, that it would make sense to get this in front of the full council for a full discussion in terms of how this stacks up against some of the other priorities on the existing PBCE work plan. I know that I can point to things in the PBCE plan, but I think this would have a more immediate impact in terms of addressing some of our housing and economic development goals.

9:44 – 10:339

And I think if we look at what has been happening in some of our peer cities, I have frankly some questions that I would love the opportunity to suss out further about some of the projected work for accomplishing this item. Notably Mountain View in January of this year, late January, moved forward with staff direction around a ministerial approval process for AB 130 compliant projects, and they were able to complete that work in under four months. It's coming back to council at the end of this month for adoption. So given that, I think that it would make sense to be able to probe a little bit some of the estimated work that is slated for this item here in San Jose. Obviously, PBCE here has different constraints in terms of their capacity, but I think allowing the council the opportunity to dig into that a little bit more thoroughly would be productive.

10:33 – 11:099

And also to see how this fits in against other priorities on the PBCE work plan, looking at some of the elements of that work plan. We don't necessarily see this as competing with existing items so much as complementing or even superseding existing items. If you look at things like the downtown ministerial ordinance, which is still not scheduled to complete, be complete for another six months or more, I think this program would accomplish similar goals, but in a broader manner and potentially making a little bit more efficient use of city staff's limited time. And at the same time, we can see that in Mountain View, they were starting from a much worse baseline. They did not have a local ministerial program to build off of.

11:10 – 11:529

We do both for our affordable housing programs, but also for our growth areas in North San Jose as well as our existing urban village and specific plan ministerial process. So I think the questions that I have open about the workload analysis and the fact that we're already starting so much further ahead than other cities like Mountain View, combined with the fact that I think this is a valid policy that council has shown interest in, that there are real reasons to believe could have even more impact in terms of addressing our housing needs and our economic development goals than some existing elements of the work plan, think I it would make sense for the full council to have the option to deliberate on this and see if there are any things in the work plan that should be pushed back, work streams that should be merged together like this proposed work and the downtown ministerial work or other items on the work plan. So I humbly request that opportunity.

11:53 – 12:110

Let me I know Chris pulled your microphone over. I think you want to respond to that. But I'll just ask in context to that. I mean, obviously, we've been throwing a lot on your plate, it's not your fault. There's a lot happening, and it's a very important area of the city, A lot of important things that are happening.

12:13 – 12:500

What would be the mechanism going forward for us as a council to sort of evaluate that entire package of work and what things are the right priorities and which ones would have the most impact? Because it seems like we have a lot of things we want you to accomplish. They may all be important and good things. In some sense, and this is one of those cases where there's work upfront to make it happen, but presumably it could save work later by having it in place, right? Is there some kind of holistic review that we or process that we can have to holistically review all those different things and decide how to prioritize them?

12:51 – 13:387

Yeah, think that's a great question and one we've wrestled with over the, I think pretty much all the years I've been with the city, is how to sort of prioritize this workload. I think the way we think of it is that we come to CD, either usually in February or April, as a lead in to the budget conversation. And so last year, you'll recall MBA number three gave us that opportunity to holistically look at all of the work items, including council referrals, and make recommendations on what we thought should be dropped, what should be deferred, and then what should be prioritized. Again, think we're using the citywide MBBA that's intended to be released to provide some of that context. And I think the intent is that that conversation occurs in the budget process because it is a question of capacity, right?

13:38 – 14:027

And so, the ability to direct and shift resources is based on what we approve annually through the budget and how we use those dollars. And so, that's the intent is that it lines up with that conversation. Certainly, we're always available to kind of continue that conversation in any way that's necessary. Obviously, we did the work going into CD. So, if that's the conversation that needs to be aired at council, we're happy to kind of bring that forward.

14:03 – 14:330

Yes, I guess so. It's a conversation that prioritization is happening at CED then. And I know in the past, we had that imperfect process of prioritization where we looked at the entire list of 130 referrals or whatever it was, and we said we can only handle 50 of them. Which of the 50 we should do? We don't really do that as a council anymore. And while the process was a bit unsatisfying, we don't really have a replacement process for that. So I guess I'm just curious, but I'll turn to Councilmember Kandelis.

14:34 – 14:592

No, thank you. That was actually along the questions that I have. Chris, in August or September, I believe PBC is coming your department is coming to the council for like weighing a few workload items. Can you, can this somehow be included as part of that conversation on reprioritization prioritization conversation in September?

14:59 – 15:257

So the body of work in August be the follow-up on the four year review. So the task force recommendations, which really sort of sets the largest body of work going into the next sort of probably two fiscal years. I think there's definitely a way to sort of reference how this sits within that sort of overall body of work. I don't know that that, I mean I think there's going to be a fair amount of discussion that needs be had No.

15:25 – 15:472

No. No. You, Chris. And the reason why I say that is, you know, obviously, I think the overall recommendation is to there there's a there's a substantial investment that needs to happen based on based on the workload proposed. And and, you know, I I did see some some impacts to community engagement and robust, staff analysis that that even even under a ministerial approach needs to happen.

15:48 – 16:162

And so that that is a significant concern for me. But but I think to tee up the conversation in August for us to have that as a council for the following year, whether it's January, February, March, where we have this this conversation or or the study session, I think I think is is a good is a good starting point rather than, you know, kicking it off completely by nearly a year. That's just my recommendation. Obviously, I seconded the motion and

16:16 – 16:445

If I can just jump in. I mean, I think, you know, the council always has discretion. What we've tried to build in with the council focus areas and bringing those back to council and back to committees is, you know, that learning opportunity and what is working and what is not. So I also think, you know, the I think the the manager's budget addendum for for building more housing is at is out now. And there is, you know, work that overlaps with this direction here.

16:44 – 17:305

I certainly think those are also a chance where, you know, if the Rules Committee wants to defer this into next year's budget process, which seems appropriate, but there's also check ins at committee and council around those focus areas, is our problem statements and our work around that really working? And if it isn't, or if there's opportunities, you know, to broaden this work, you know, that's already happening around in ministerial processes and kind of the growth areas to more of a citywide approach and a timeline that's, you know, not of aggression, you know, not as aggressive as it is here, I think those are also opportunities where the council can give further direction, based off of staff analysis. So I don't necessarily think we have to wait until, say, priority setting next year to see what is working and what isn't and make changes in some of that prioritization.

17:30 – 17:492

No, that's that's fair. And I appreciate that. And obviously, have a focus area that's intended to do, you know, the goal of of the council members memo to rules is is to build more housing. And so I I I look forward to that, and I and I appreciate that recommendation, Leland. Thanks. Thank

17:58 – 18:4011

Thank you so much. Just, following up on what you just said, I am I'm wondering how we can overlap what's already, being worked upon, which is the downtown ministerial and how perhaps it could be folded in. I I do see that it's problematic that 90% of PBC's time is spent on those mandatory things and we only get 10%. Every year it gets worse. And so I think that at some point you've squeezed so much that there's nothing left to do the things that you know council has directed or or that we've priority prioritized.

18:4011

So I'm wondering in terms of how we would be able to bring forth some of the things that sort of overlap a little bit as you mentioned, Lee.

18:54 – 19:197

Yeah. So I just wanna sort of contextualize the work and council member Patrios is absolutely correct. We're starting from a great point. The city's already made huge strides in in sort of how do we adopt a ministerial process, that allows us to advance housing development, and it's absolutely something that's been a core part of our current housing element, and there's more work to be done. The next focus area was the downtown.

19:19 – 19:597

We think there's an opportunity there to really drive near term development. But to give you a sort of a contextual sort of idea of the work is while we have the ordinance in place, do have to go through and do analysis on what the potential impacts look like. So right now, our downtown is approximately you may know better than I do, but it's somewhere between three and four square miles, right, reasonably. When you think about what this would apply to, the biggest area to think about is ultimately we think all of the SB 79 eligible areas, so the half mile radius around the 54 stations, are largely AB 130 eligible. So there's over 36,000 parcels in that area.

19:597

It probably represents something close to 50 square miles. So that's the kind of order of magnitude by which you're increasing the volume of analysis and work that needs to be done.

20:0911

Thank you.

20:120

Vice mayor Foley.

20:15 – 20:548

Thank you. As I finish out my year as chair of CED, we will be we just submitted the work plan for the next six months and included that was PBC coming to, our committee in October. That usually you're that's when you provide an update as to what you're working on, what the trade offs are and the count the CED committee usually has a robust discussion around that. We can cross reference that to the full council so then council can have a discussion around it in late October, early November.

20:570

So that's an amendment to your motion?

21:008

Sure. That's an amendment. Yes. Because I moved it to the budget cycle. So we will include it in a cross reference to our October CED meeting.

21:110

And that's okay with the seconder?

21:1312

He's over here.

21:13 – 21:500

Oh, I don't know who seconded it. Okay. That sounds like a good compromise and that we have a chance and we should put it on our calendars to maybe attend that CED meeting and give our input at that time. And but I appreciate that compromise. It gives us a chance to have this conversation sooner than next spring about how to prioritize these different things that are happening. All right. So, let's vote. All right. The motion carries, five-zero. Shouldn't have said abstain before. Now we have the option in there. Shouldn't have that. All right. Motion carries, five-zero. Thank you so much.

21:50 – 22:090

And thanks, Anthony. We are on to our second item, which is a memo with Candelas, Ortiz, myself, and Casey regarding remote public participation at meetings. So I'll let councilmember Candelas kick us off.

22:09 – 23:042

Yeah. Thank you, Chair. You know, I just wanted to thank my coauthors on this memorandum to see how we can accelerate the essentially the implementation of SB seven zero seven, you know, especially in time for the budget process. You know, yesterday we had our first hearing, which we know was well attended ish, but historically we've had dozens and dozens of folks from our community calling in or calling, attending in person before that actually calling in. But I think it would be helpful for accessibility for our community and just for those who work and can't necessarily take the physical time off, but also for those with, you know, physical and or differently abled abled who may not make it to city hall as easy as as those of us who, you know, can just hop in our car without without any other issues.

23:04 – 23:222

But anyways, so I I guess, Tony, I know we are coordinating with the city attorney's office to try to get this implemented. Any thoughts, comments, and or movement on this to to see when we can see this implemented and by which council meeting?

23:22 – 23:474

We can bring it back to council for approval on June 2 along with updates to policy zero thirty nine, which is the code of conduct and how we handle public speakers. So that's already drafted. Just need to write the memo. I think it's got one last attorney to look at it, but that's already drafted. So if we can bring both of those back on June 2 for implementation for the June 8 budget hearing.

23:474

Perfect. And then I guess the direction would be, is it just for the budget or would it be for all council meetings?

23:532

I believe it was the intent of the council meetings for the rest of the year.

23:584

Okay. I just wanted to make sure that was clarified for the record.

24:002

Yeah. Thank you. Yeah. With that, I'll move our memo.

24:070

Is there a second? Well, a second. I know we have 10 cards, so let's move on to public comment. Okay.

24:181

As I call your names, please go ahead and make your way to the podium. Alex, Michelle, Karen and Rachel.

24:32 – 24:5813

Good afternoon council members. Thank you council member Candelas and council member Cohen for your memo on this item. This is a long standing priority of the organization for which I work, catalyze Silicon Valley. And we know that there are so many people, as you stated, council member Candelas, who wanna participate in city council meetings. This is a a car centric city.

24:58 – 25:4213

It has traffic. You have to find parking downstairs. You have to come up and go through security. There are all kinds of barriers to participation even if they're not ill intended, but those barriers can make it very hard for members of our community, particularly those who are underrepresented to be part of this process and allowing them, as other cities do here in the South Bay, to be involved in council meetings and give that public comment remotely is a very, very valuable part of our democracy, and catalyze this fee would like to see that returned. We do not believe that going backwards and only doing it for this year I know councilmember Candelas, you were just talking with the clerk about this, but we think that this should be continued, forever going forward.

25:42 – 26:2013

This is a best practice in terms of inclusivity and accessibility, and we don't wanna continue to confuse members of this community whether this does become accessible again and then does not. So we're hoping the clerk can put in place measures to make sure that the dialogue is respectful, that there isn't xenophobic or racist or bigoted comments that come to you because we know that those are upsetting for all of us. And yet, democracy is messy and it requires protections to make sure everyone can be included. So thank you again, council member Cohen and Candelas for your memo. Love to see this and very, very supportive.

26:33 – 27:0312

Hi. I'm Karen from, District 3 and, showing up for racial justice and the REAL coalition. And, also, I want to basically say the same thing. First of all, thank council members Candelas, Ortiz, Cohen, and Casey for bringing forward this memorandum, and we fully support reinstating remote public comment as soon as possible for the budget conversations as well as ongoing. Civic engagement takes real commitment, and our city's richer for it.

27:03 – 27:3012

But coming to city hall is a luxury and a privilege. Making public comment should not be. Remote comment makes democracy more accessible, and that supports our city's commitment to equity, inclusivity, and transparency. And I'm gonna read testimony from two people that would be making their own comment if they could do it remotely. Laura Lopez, who's a parent advocate, says bring back remote access to San Jose now, please.

27:31 – 28:1212

And Per, who's a self advocate, says remote participation in civic meetings matters to me because transportation needs and the time required to attend long meetings in person. Without the ability to attend in person to listen and to speak, people with disabilities and their support networks are effectively shut out of decision making, continuing a long pattern of exclusion simply because access needs differ from the norm. Many cities have already made remote participation standard, and San Jose should do the same to ensure access isn't conditional but guaranteed. Reinstate remote participation in San Jose to prevent exclusion of people with disabilities. Thank you.

28:20 – 28:5914

My name is Michelle Coleman, a San Jose resident and a member of showing up for racial justice Santa Clara County. Remote participation is essential for robust public engagement with city policy. Requiring people to be in chambers privileges the people the voices of people who already have privilege. People like me who can easily come to City Hall in the middle of a weekday. It excludes people with weekday jobs they just can't afford to miss, people who lack robust transportation options, many people with disabilities, and caregivers of loved ones who can't be left alone.

29:00 – 29:5614

I have a statement to read from someone who, like many, could not be here in chambers today. From Kelvin Yeoh, ally slash advocate, Remote participation in civic meetings matters to me because I have work and family commitments that prevent me from attending in person. And without it, people with disabilities and their support networks are effectively shut out of shut out of decision making, continuing a long pattern of exclusion simply because access needs differ from the norm. Many cities have already made remote participation standard and San Jose should do the same to ensure access is not conditional but guaranteed. Reinstate remote participation in San Jose to prevent exclusion of people with disabilities.

29:5614

Thank you.

29:581

Calling the next set of speakers, Allison, Sandra, and Rebecca, please go ahead and make it ready to the podium.

30:05 – 30:433

Good afternoon. My name is Rachel Stratman, and I'm here with the Real Coalition as well as I'm a D Three resident. I wanna thank the council members for bringing this forward, and I'm here to state my full support both personally and upon community who cannot be here today. I wanna say that I find it important that it's actually done by the June 8 deadline to to be able to be for budget. Obviously, we know that the important discussions that are gonna be had each year over budget and the people who are gonna be most impacted by those discussions, we wanna be able to participate.

30:43 – 31:133

And that includes people from the disability community, our working families, our caregivers, and we want them all to have the opportunity to be here. And we've seen such a decline since this access was taken away. And I'd like to also share a statement by somebody who is not here today. Darcy McCain, a self advocate. She they said remote participation in civic meetings matters to me because I'm a wheelchair user, and it is very difficult to go to meetings.

31:13 – 31:353

This is very important for individuals with disabilities who need to also share our voice via Zoom. Transportation limits my availability. Many cities have already made remote participation standard, and San Jose should do the same to ensure access isn't conditional but guaranteed. I wanna thank the committee and urge you to pass this. Thank you.

31:39 – 31:5415

Good afternoon, council members. Rebecca Armandares with, Working Partnerships. I'm also here to read this on behalf of somebody who could not, be here. Lourdes Best. She's a guardian and caregiver of someone with IDD.

31:54 – 32:3215

And also, Working Partnerships is in support of, this memo. So Lourdes asked me to say that she strongly advocates for the immediate reinstatement of the comprehensive remote participation option for San Jose City Council meetings. Current in person mandates inadvertently exclude many residents. Financial burdens from transportation and high living costs, coupled with demanding work, caregiving duties, or health issues, make physical attendance challenging for a significant portion of our community. This exclusion disproportionately affects low income families, individuals with disabilities, and seniors, silencing crucial diverse voices.

32:32 – 33:0515

When segments of our populace cannot participate, our city's decisions become less representative and equitable. Many forward thinking cities have already adopted robust remote access as a standard for democratic engagement. San Jose must embrace these modern inclusive practices. Reinstating remote participation is essential for fostering true equity and enriching our governance with a broader spectrum of lived experiences. I urge the council to prioritize this vital step, ensuring that all residents can actively contribute to San Jose's future. Thank you.

33:11 – 33:426

Good afternoon. Allison Singulani, director of policy with SV at home and d five resident. Speaking in support of the memo from council members Candelis, Ortiz, Cohen, and Casey recommending full council consideration of the reinstatement of remote public participation for city council meetings in time for the June budget deliberations. I'm very happy to hear the update from the city clerk, that we can do this on this timeline. San Jose is one of the most diverse cities in the country and nearly half our residents are low income households.

33:42 – 34:176

Many of the people most impacted by council decisions face real barriers to attending long in person meetings, especially the budget hearings that we know can last late into the night. Parents working multiple jobs may not be able to leave work earlier, secure childcare. Seniors and residents with disabilities may face transportation or mobility challenges. Workers with long commutes, caregivers, students, and residents without reliable transportation are often effectively excluded from participating in person. Remote public participation when we have had it in the past helped expand access to local democracy.

34:18 – 34:426

It allowed more residents, especially those historically underrepresented in civic processes to share their experiences directly with council. For many people, calling in remotely is not a convenience. It's the only realistic way they can participate. Budget decisions shape whether families can afford housing, access services, and remain stable in our community. The residents most affected by those decisions deserve a meaningful opportunity to be heard.

34:43 – 35:126

We urge the rules committee to bring to council this recommendation to reinstate remote public participation in time for the June budget deliberations and to support a more accessible, inclusive, and representative public process. I'll also read a statement from Graciela Franco, direct service coordinator at San Andreas Regional Center, who was not able to attend in person. Remote access is essential because it helps those with intellectual and developmental disabilities integrate into the community, and it provides them motivation to want to further develop their independent

35:131

Thank you. That's your time. Calling the next set of speakers as well, Gianella, miss Rain in Jordan.

35:24 – 36:0216

Good afternoon. My name is Sandra Asher, longtime resident of D Ten, member of the Real Coalition, and board member at Parents Helping Parents. I'm here to express my support for the memo by council members Candelas, Ortiz, Cohen, and Casey to return remote participation commencing with the June 8 budget hearings. As a disabled resident, sitting and standing for the extended periods required in order to give public comment is frequently a barrier to participation and access needs. As the self proclaimed capital of Silicon Valley, it should be a no brainer that we are using technology to increase community participation in our government.

36:03 – 36:4716

Furthermore, allowing remote participation aligns with the city's 2023 disability inclusion equity pledge, which commits the city to disability inclusion as a human right. And now as others have done, I would like to read statements by others who could not be here today in person. The first is Penny Hunter, parent of a son with disabilities. Remote participation in city civic meetings matters to me because it will allow those that are unable to attend because of their disabilities to have an option to voice their concerns. And Kate Weber, parent advocate, says, dear city council of San Jose, hello, and I want to advocate to bring remote access back to San Jose city council meetings.

36:47 – 37:0416

Removing remote access disproportionately affects particular groups. May I suggest you could use a remote access vetting process where the remote access would be granted based on a person demonstrating they belong to the affected group, special needs, the elderly, working parents, etcetera. Thank you for your time.

37:10 – 38:0317

Hello. My name is Janela Ardonias, and I'm here with SBCN, co convener of The Real Coalition, and I'm also a d one resident. I want to thank council member Candelas, Ortiz, Cohen, and Casey for bringing this memo forward, and we are fully in support of reinstating remote public participation to council by June 8 in time for the June budget deliberations. The removal of remote participation has made it challenging and nearly impossible for people with disabilities, working families, and caregivers, immunocompromised individuals, and anyone who isn't consistently able to attend in person to weigh in on the important decisions being made by this council, leaving out a significant portion of our community from being able to participate in our democratic process. The budget process requires robust engagement and input from the communities that will be most impacted by the critical decisions that are going to be made and in need of equitable investments.

38:0417

We have read testimonials from members of the community today who couldn't be here with us, and they deserve the opportunity to be heard now and forever. Thank you.

38:17 – 38:5018

Hello. How are you? How are you guys doing today? Miss Raheem Mendoza. I live in D 7. I work in D 5, and I live in the city of San Jose. I'm so glad that this item is coming up because so many people has been disenfranchised of public comment the city of San Jose since the public comment went away. I remember when I first started advocating and and and speaking here in the city council, I started doing it over Zoom in 2021. And then all of a sudden, it went away. I think that's a shame because they're taking our voices away.

38:50 – 39:3418

So many of our communities are afraid as you as you can tell. And as you can see, so many people do not come here to give public comment. And we need to make it possible for the immigrants communities that they're being attacked right now as well, okay, and for the working families. Because remember, we're trying to be active civically in our city, but with barriers, it's impossible to do that. So I hope this goes forward, and and I hope it stays for the long term because we need it. And with immigration purposes, more news are coming up in the next couple of year in in the next couple of days. So let's keep our our ears open and our eyes open as well. Okay? Thank you, guys.

39:37 – 40:0519

Jordan Moldow, District 3 resident and also chair of the Bicycle Pedestrian Advisory Committee speaking on behalf of myself. Needless to say, I agree with everything that's been said so far, so I'll try and make some slightly different points. I'd like to see the memo be supported and adopted. I'd like to see it move forward today given that we know that this is already in the work plan because it's due by July 1. I'd like to see this move forward to council faster rather than slower.

40:06 – 40:3119

This benefits yourself as well. Do you wanna be the council member who gets sick and misses an important budget vote or comes in and gets their colleagues or their staff sick? If you have Zoom comments, you can participate remotely with Just Cause. So this is in your benefit to to adopt this. I'd also like to address the standing committees and the advisory committees.

40:31 – 41:3819

SB seven zero seven only requires Zoom for the council itself, but I'd like to see the memo broadened to include the advisory committees and the standing committees so that they can participate remotely. Some people mentioned the cost of coming into council in terms of time and money rather than, you know, trying to save on expenses by getting rid of taxes that fund our roads. We can make it so that people don't have to jump in a car in the first place and can attend remotely. Finally, I'd like to mention that advisory committees are allowed to request that they able to use the additional provisions of s b seven zero seven, and the BPAC has previously sent in a letter which should have been received by all the council offices, requesting the ability to use the additional provisions to give us additional flexibility because we want to be able to get members participating from all over the city, and the flexibility would help. And, again, if we get sick or have a work commitment

41:47 – 42:1210

Hello. I'm Gia with Housing Choices. Thank you so much for bringing this back. It's extremely important for folks with disabilities. I was the one who personally cold call all of our clients in our, Salesforce database to see their perspective on why remote participation is important for them.

42:12 – 43:0310

So the testimonies you heard is the ones that I collected from parents and folks with lived experiences of disabilities. And I've been coming to the city council quite often, so it's really glad that this is bringing more opportunities of better access for folks with disabilities to participate in their civic leadership. A lot of folks with intellectual development disabilities, maybe they don't have transportation here. So being able to participate remotely is going to really benefit them and their inclusion in the community for their voices to be heard. So I really appreciate each and every one of you city leaders on choosing to keep in mind of access for the disability folks.

43:0410

And thank you so much for city staff.

43:061

Back to the committee.

43:090

Alright. Well, thank you to everyone who came out and spoke about the importance of public comment. Let's turn to vice mayor Foley first.

43:17 – 43:388

Thank you. Thank you for the memo from my colleagues and for the community members who came to spoke on speak in person. This is a law that goes into effect as of July 1. We have to conform to this anyway. So I'm glad to actually support it going forward for the budget session.

43:38 – 44:038

I think the the hearing on the eighth is really critical that we hear from as many folks as possible. So just a follow-up question for you, Tony, a couple of questions actually. On Currently, you believe the memo that you have, we can implement at the June 2 council meeting. Is that your thinking?

44:034

Yes. If

44:048

Or that we'd approve it at the June 2 If you

44:054

approve it on June 2, we're ready to go immediately after.

44:09 – 44:278

On June 8. Okay. And you already stated council member Candelas that that your intent is for the rest of this fiscal year, July 1 is when we'd have to implement it. Anyway, we don't have any council meetings in July. So effectively it would be August 1.

44:27 – 44:588

I have a question for you regarding the commission standing committees and advisory committees. Many of them or some of them have expressed interest in having hybrid meetings. Is there flexibility on that? How do we will your memo address that capability? I know BPAC in particular is very interested in having hybrid meetings, but will that allow the committees themselves to make that decision or the commissions?

44:59 – 45:334

The current recommendation is to just bring it back for counsel. I am not opposed to coming back and recommending that we open it up for everybody, but we kinda thought there should be a few months to make sure we've got everything settled, sure the the technology is working. But if council wants to bring it back for boards, commissions, and committees sooner, or to give them the option typically, we've done all all of one or nothing. If if it applies to council, it applies to everybody else. So that's what we've done in the past.

45:34 – 45:474

SB seven zero seven says we only have to bring it back for city council, not city city subcommittees, not boards and commissions. So we were gonna just bring it back for council, but it's kind of up to you guys.

45:488

Okay. Well, I

45:494

I mean, traditionally, we've brought it back for everybody.

45:528

Okay. I I guess I would like to see that occur. But I guess more importantly, what you're saying is it's all or nothing.

46:034

That's what we've done in the past.

46:04 – 46:158

Okay. So the committee standing committee or advisory committee cannot make the decision currently on their own or or or ask us to make the decision for us.

46:15 – 46:514

We are bringing back changes to policy zero four probably in August. There is budget direction to reduce the number of boards and commission meetings, possibly consolidate or eliminate boards and commissions and committees. And we can add that to zero four. We can add a provision into zero four that would give them the flexibility to go virtual, and then it would be their choice. Or we could put that in the staff memo as a as an option instead of having it in policy zero thirty seven. And I misspoke earlier. I said zero thirty nine, but zero thirty seven.

46:52 – 47:088

Okay. So I guess that is that decision doesn't need to be made at the moment, but we, if we're concerned about it, we can bring it up either as a memo on June 2 or wait till August till

47:084

Right.

47:098

Your memo about consolidating commissions and maybe eliminating and changing the amount of meetings, that sort of thing, that might be the time to

47:20 – 47:434

Yeah, we could easily add that flexibility into zero four. Okay. So those who feel they can handle it because, again, I mean, I have a lot of staff you could see that sit with me. That's how we're able to handle it. For some committees and commissions, it just might be too much work for their staffing levels. So I think it's better to give them the flexibility than to force them.

47:43 – 48:198

I understand, but there are commissions like the Planning Commission that would be really critical and BPAC wants it. I know they would vote yes. HCDC probably should have I mean, there's critical forward facing committees that have a lot of attention that well, I don't need to continue to debate this. I could debate this much, much longer. So I'll just wait for the discussion on June 2 and see if it's appropriate to wait until August or to address it at that time. Okay. Thank you.

48:220

Council Member Dewan.

48:24 – 48:4720

Thank you, chair. Well, I think it's we we can't avoid it because SB seven zero seven in July, we're gonna have to implement it anyway. So I would like to ask for a friendly amendment to adopt this all the way through until July 1 because we're going to activate it anyway.

48:490

Think that's in the motion.

48:502

Yeah, that's in the motion.

48:520

Okay. Basically for the three, well, four council meetings in June.

48:567

Correct.

48:5620

Yeah, just only in June, but what about in August and then September?

49:000

Well, by law, we have to do it.

49:012

Well, we have to by law by July 1.

49:0320

By July 1. But I thought it was 07/01/2027.

49:060

No, 2026.

49:0820

2026? Yeah.

49:104

There might be, I think I was just told there may be a typo in the memo, but SB seven zero seven goes into effect 07/01/2026.

49:1920

Okay. So thank you because there is a typo in here, is it 2027?

49:242

That's our best.

49:259

Thank you

49:2520

very much.

49:260

Thank you.

49:262

Thank you. It this Okay.

49:310

Council Member Khamenei.

49:34 – 49:5711

Thank you so much. Civic engagement and access is is really important. So, I thank you for for bringing this forward. My understanding, Tony, was that we were going to have a new system in place. Is it going so my question is if it gets implemented for the in time for June budget.

49:574

It won't.

49:5811

No. No.

49:593

But I mean

49:5911

what we will have is not the new system that we are anticipating having in the future.

50:0711

So you'll have something

50:09 – 50:524

It'll be the the same thing that we did before. So we've already done this. People will sign up onto Zoom. They'll raise their hands. We'll give them permission to speak, and then we remove their permission to speak. They can also phone in to Zoom. So if they don't have a computer or prefer to do it by phone, but it'll be the same system that we used during COVID. The new system, the the new software that we're trying to get before the end of June, at least get an agreement with it, is more robust, more exciting, makes things a lot simpler for staff, makes things better for the the community. But right now, we have it the way we've had it before. And we've we've been testing it.

50:52 – 51:114

We've actually been running Wordly through Zoom. So we have the interpretation on Zoom for people people who speak on Zoom. The interpretation will be heard or will be seen on the captions unless you have your headset, and then you can hear it on your headset. So we all of that's running, but it's it's just through Zoom like we had before.

51:1211

Okay. But we will have something different later on.

51:164

Hope to. We have to we have a lot of we I think we have three more three more levels of approvals to get through, but we're working

51:23 – 51:4811

Okay. Yeah. Okay. You know, I I know that you're bringing different things forward to us. Do you think that the provisions that you've made for what's coming back in June would take care of some of the sort of problems that that we were experiencing not from local community but from the outside?

51:50 – 52:104

The attorney's office, I'll name drop Neelam. Neelam and I have been working on a script to handle that. We're we're not gonna be able to eliminate it entirely. There there are suggestions on where you could have a five second delay and everything, but you still need to have staff who monitors the five second delay and hears it. And I just I don't have that capability.

52:10 – 52:424

So unless another department has that capability to have somebody else screening it. I don't have that right now. What we do have is before everybody's it it'll be it's in the policy zero thirty seven that's coming back, but we also have our own separate script. So giving the warning every time we call public speakers. So, you know, if I have five speaker cards for an item, I'm gonna say this is a reminder to stay on topic, to follow the code of conduct, to keep things civil and not disruptive.

52:43 – 53:174

And we'll say that before every every speaker, so that's, like, their first warning. So that reduces how many warnings we have to give later because normally it's you know? But we're gonna do our best. My suggestion is also to have the city clerk handling that and not the mayor because I'm not exciting to make angry. You guys are very exciting to make angry. I'm very boring. Thank you. So I think if I'm the one that says you need to stay on topic, it becomes less incentive Thank for

53:1811

you. Thank you.

53:19 – 53:370

I appreciate that last comment. That's a good idea to have you as the impartial clerk making those calls. I was gonna ask the same question. So the new tech it's possible that the new system could be in place in August if things go well or not. There's testing to happen before

53:37 – 54:084

it I don't goes think it would be ready by August 11. Our first meeting of the year is actually August 11. I don't think it would be in place. The the the new the new thing we and we just found out about it. I mean, s p seven zero seven was passed in, like, November. So we did not have a lot of time to go out there and find robust solutions. So we were a little like, I didn't find this until, like, a month ago. And other cities have found it too. They're the only they're it's like the only public comment software. It's very exciting.

54:09 – 54:274

We're hoping to get an agreement before the end of the fiscal year so we can use our current year budget. But it'll take time to implement because we're not the only city that wants them. And they're like literally the only person who does this right now because SB seven zero seven came on so suddenly.

54:27 – 54:430

Yeah, okay. Concern The I had was more on the technical side and being able to do some of the things we had talked about before as far as figuring out where people are from, but also identifying abusers and trying to pull and automatically block. Do any of these technologies do any of that yet or not?

54:454

Not I I know I didn't ask that about public input. That's the I I don't think I'm supposed

54:507

to share the room.

54:51 – 55:334

I didn't I didn't ask that software vendor who I actually just talked with at 01:00 about that particular thing. With Zoom, I can only geolocate to the country, not to the state. We can run get a report so we can see sort of who the bad actors are, but I can't I we have just rules in place. But I typically recognize some of the bad actors, and I'm prepared immediately to mute after a warning. So we do kind of pay attention. But there there still is not a geolocation to California even, which is what I would love to have, if we can at least limit it to the state.

55:34 – 55:550

Okay. I appreciate that. And as somebody who availed themselves of remote participation before I was on council, I know the value of being able to call in. Unfortunately, we also I mean, the reason we went away from it as a counsel was because of abuses that began to happen as people became more comfortable being hateful. And and it's it's an unfortunate truth of our current time.

55:55 – 56:490

And as somebody who has recently been a target of antisemitic attacks, I'm cognizant of and I was very aware of the kinds of attacks that were coming in that were targeting that very thing as on this council regularly and from people around the country who were not local and not interested in our governance but interested in stirring things up. So I just want to make it clear that, you know, we certainly value the input of the residents of our city and always have, but also need to have a well functioning and comfortable environment for staff, public, and members of this council going forward. So there are concerns with bringing this back that, you know, that I'm still worried about. So I'm expressing that as we move this forward. Also, just want to comment on the remote participation for committees and council in general, not from the public side but from the members of the committee.

56:49 – 57:340

I still feel like there is an important value in face to face interaction. We learned quite heavily during COVID, I believe, that collegiality and relationships that we had on a council were not as positive during the time in which we were all in our own places remotely participating in meetings. So I want to encourage committees and counsel and everybody else to be in person when possible because I think the value of being in person for the people who are on the deliberating body is still very high. So that I just wanted to make that point as well as we move into this new flexibility that we might offer. So having said that, though, I think it's important we're bringing this back after the end of the fiscal year and bringing it back for the budget process makes sense this year.

57:340

So let's vote. Alright. Motion carries five zero, and we're on to open forum.

57:421

Jordan?

57:52 – 58:2719

Jordan Muldau, District 3. I was watching on YouTube some of the discussion yesterday at the budget hearing. I think I heard mention, and I think it was from council member Condellis talking about cap and invest, formerly cap and trade, hopefully trying to be able to pull some dollars there for environmental projects. I just wanna bring to the council's attention that CARB is currently looking into changes to the cap and invest program. I think they were scheduled to remove credits out of the system.

58:28 – 59:2119

So, you know, amounts of emissions that you're allowed to do would decrease slowly over time. Apparently, they're thinking of a different system where they might introduce more credits and make them available to polluting companies to basically get their money back to invest in, you know, their own projects, and also adding more credits to the pool would decrease the price and decrease the amount of funds available. So I just wanna bring that to council's attention. I don't fully understand it myself, but that's my best understanding of it. But folks who care about that money being available and, you know, the economics around cap and invest, I hope you might speak to the lawmakers or speak to the CARB themselves about that issue so that that pot of funding remains available and robust.

59:224

you. Alex?

59:29 – 1:00:1313

Just wanted to check-in with the rules committee as you continue to create priorities for the council. I just wanted to share something that's troubling me that all of you are aware of, which is as a city, we are still way, way, way behind on building the amount of housing we need to reach our goals for this city in the next RINA cycle. And whereas all that language sounds a little bureaucratic, the consequences for our community are very, very, very real. We are continuing continuing to be displaced in our community where people cannot afford to live here. The next generation will not be making San Jose its home if they cannot afford it, and one of the greatest barometers of affordability is the amount of housing we build.

1:00:14 – 1:00:4513

As many of you also know, Silicon Valley is one of the most, if not the most unequal place in the country. And again, housing is contributing that. So as you decide what to prioritize as the rules committee, you vote on the council, Please, please, please continue to prioritize housing. It is one of the number one issues in our community, and it it threatens the very fabric of San Jose and Silicon Valley. So please treat it with the urgency that so many of us here in the community feel around it. Thank you.

1:00:451

Back to the community.

1:00:470

Okay. Thank you. We are adjourned at 03:00.

This transcript was automatically generated from the official public meeting video and is presented unedited. It reflects remarks made on the public record by elected officials, staff, and public commenters. Transcript accuracy may vary; view the original recording for reference.