Dont have this access theyll have to go to Treasure Island that deadhead costs 20 minutes thats thousands of dollars. Okay. It is the same with amtrak and we didnt get a cost from them. And then the timeframe or the target for youre next steps and phillip can talk to that. Okay. So as far as timelines 95 percent we should have that ready in the next month or so mou with tjpa weve been talking with ac transit i think discussions are still going on in terms of agreeing it the mou costs and the big item is finalizing the caltrain lease theres discussions about what the lease rate ought to be i think those issues are ongoing with caltrain. Does ac transit have money. So, yeah in the presentation i mentioned weve done some calculations and deadhead costs well save up to 49 buses that will save the bs f. I dont hear youll commit to that financial obligation. Yes. You anticipate both the second and third items being done within this year. It will have to be done before we stack this to the bo
Schedule. Yes. Thank you Vice President and lastly i represented the commission in the voting on the metal of valor and participated in the Commission Role that will be brought to us chief i dont know if you know what that comes here for final approval. Ill found out and ask for them. Okay. This sound great any further on this matter. Sergeant call the next item. Commission announcement and items considered for identification and possible action at further meetings. I have one the csi team august 5th is the time were longing to schedule them before they go back to school before their final presentation so sergeant if we can hold august 6th i think is a wednesday whatever wednesday in august item we scheduled and were working with our partners in the community is the update i dont know from the department is ready but well do that at some point in august the update on the d go 6. 09 commissioner hwang no items to put on the agenda. Commissioner to remind the public the commission will m
Staying alive, i said thats right. It feels like were on the sun. Were on the edge of the sun, thats correct. Theres no typos in here folks, the city is hot today. Any time theres a nine, people in the city are like oh, my god. 90s to 100. Livermore around 115. Heat warning is out, spare the air. High fire danger today and tomorrow. Well be flirting with all time record highs for some. Amount of smoke coming down from the north. People up in lake head, i cant see, its all that smoke. 80s, 90s hot by the coast, hot by the bay and too hot inland. Oakland, 70s, San Francisco, 70s, 71, 73, 74, so were starting off very, very warm. There might be a little bit of fog for a few. It looks like theres some around point reyes. Yesterday there was more. If it increases, it will impact the immediate coast because most locations are clear. Very warm already. East bay temperatures, 60s and 70s. Moraga 72 Concord Pavilion 72 brentwood 72. Today, 90s, 90s, and a lot of one hundreds. There you go, sal,
Preservation. So were here today trying to think a little bit about the Cultural Heritage of the American South especially after and during the american civil war. You know, its been in the news quite a bit lately, and so i think its a topic that folks are interested in Historic Preservation like yourselves have got to figure out. And we have a really fun opportunity, i would say, to try to make sense of all of this. So in order to do that i think we should go and think a little bit about not just where these monuments came from but the war out of which they came. At the beginning of the american civil war, United States soldiers seemed to take a great deal of care to leave private property, really all kinds of property alone. They really very strictly held to attacking military targets only. And this seemed to be of great importance to political leaders because they thought that the war would be short, and they needed a really quick integration of the American South back into the nati
His class is about an hour. So this is as you guys know the university of georgia at the brand new digital humanities lab. Im scott nesbit and this class is intro to Historic Preservation. So were here today trying to think a little bit about the Cultural Heritage of the American South especially after and during the american civil war. You know, its been in the news quite a bit lately, and so i think its a topic that folks are interested in Historic Preservation like yourselves have got to figure out. And we have a really fun opportunity, i would say, to try to make sense of all of this. So in order to do that i think we should go and think a little bit about not just where these monuments came from but the war out of which they came. At the beginning of the american civil war, United States soldiers seemed to take a great deal of care to leave private property, really all kinds of property alone. They really very strictly held to attacking military targets only. And this seemed to be