So white, asian, africanamerican, if you go down, you can see the different groups and thats where the wide gaps are. First, more white or caucasian staff than population in the city. So the red bar versus the blue. We have fewer africanamerican staff than we have people in the city. Its looking at that imbalance and helping to set policy about how we oversee hiring panels, what kind of oversight we do in terms of recruitment, hiring a recruiter to improve the racial diversity of our pools for applicants, all of those things were done in response to looking at that data. Next slide. And then just an overview of what our approach to data is. We use two methodologies. One is lean, coming out of industry that looks at how to improve a process. And when is resultsbased accountability thats out of public government, looking at how to improve services. And it basically says, use the data to define the problem, so collect good data, analyze the cause very deeply of why your data looks the way it is. Make changes. Measure the impact. And then make changes again and repeat and repeat and repeat. So data is meant to be part of an iterative process that says, we looked at the data. We made decisions based on the data and keep going back again and again, so the data is an ongoing endeavor. Not something we do one time it. Has to be something that you can look at in realtime in order to be useful for all of the uses. Questions . Thank you. This is interesting. I know you are giving us snapshots of Different Things going on, different data that you are collecting and analyzing, but tracking outcomes. Do you track them across the board for just about everything or do you choose strategic things to track . There are things about which we have no choice, like hep a outbreak. Other things are mandated but with choice. So we have outcomes around our valuebased payments. So part of the way the system is converting to reward quality work in medicaid and medicare is by paying people based on their outcomes. Which outcomes they pay for is somewhat mandated by the federal government and somewhat up to the institution. We have chosen some like africanameric africanamerican hypertension. We were required to do an equity measure and we chose that one. And others are based on what we see in the population. H. I. V. Is a very salient issue in San Francisco. It might not be something tracked as closely in other jurisdiction, probably to their detriment. And other things are clinicspecific. So every entity within our system is doing a slightly different look at their own data and people have some agency around having their own data and each clinic can look at what they, themselves, are doing and then when have both mandated and centrally decided measures that we use. We do have measures that are used across the department to judge quality of work. Is tracking live births in the city data that you collect . Yes. That is state mandated data that we and every other medical unit in the city send. And mortality data. Hospital admission data. Those things are on sfhip site. Very interesting. Look forward to having you back to go deeper into this. Any questions or comments . Well move open to the next speaker. I will slink away, too, because i have to go parent. Thank you for being here tonight. Next i would like to ask our public defender to join us tonight. Thank you. I think what i heard the District Attorney say is that the system is not racist. I would disagree with that. Everything was explained by other factors. And while i think thats partially true, i think that the data definitely shows that the system is not raceneutral. I dont think there could be any dispute about that. Even though our africanamerican population is 5 , 55 of our clients, public differ ender clients, and folks in the system are africanamerican men and women. If you look at categories of crime starting with traffic tickets, africanamericans are seven times as likely to be stopped for a traffic violation. Why is that, because africanamericans cant drive . More likely to be stopped for a drug offense, even though every study has shown that whites use and abuse and sell drugs more. If you look at the overdose rate, six times the rate for whites than blacks, but the statistic is the opposite when it comes to being arrested for drug offenses. James bell, who spoke earlier, did an amazing, groundbreaking study. It showed clearly that there were disparities. We sought to take that study and work with the university of pennsylvania, which offered to do a twoyear study independently. All we did was provide them with our files. And we opened our files up to them. They came up with a report first slide, please . Second slide. They gave us an economist and a scientist and a law professor for two years, who worked on the study. And we gave them 11,000 cases. When asking the question, what specifically did the disparities result in . They found that africanamericans are held in pretrial custody 62 longer than their white counterparts and on average serve 30 days longer in custody. These are folks that are charged with the same crime, same criminal history and all of the characteristics are exactly the same. So in other words, making an applestoapples comparison. Next slide, please. In terms of cases, the time to resolve a case is 14 longer if you are africanamerican. And on average, it was 90 days to process a case of a black defendant. 77 days to process a case for a white defendant. Same charges. Same criminal history. Same background. Defendants of color are convicted of more serious crimes than their white counterparts. 60 more felony charges and 10 fewer misdemeanor charges. Next slide. Defendants of color receive longer sentences than white defendants. Sentences received by blacks are 28 longer than those received by whites. Probation sentences received by latinos are 55 longer than those received by whites. Next slide. People of color receive more serious charges at the initial booking stage and the reason why this was significant, again, you ask the question, why, why do we get different out comes . For a person of color for the same offense, you will be charged with more serious charges and more charges. And thats when the Police Determine what the charges are. And they found that that disparity starts with the police charging and goes throughout the system. In other words, the District Attorneys, defense attorneys, are responding to the charge. So you might have a black defendant that will be charged with more serious charges than a White Department for this same conduct, given the same criminal history. So it has a Ripple Effect that effects subsequent charges and results in a person of color being convicted of more charges than their white counterparts. So that gives you an overview as to what the study found and we have a link to the study, which is quite comprehensive. The question is, what do we do about it . How do we address this . You will also see that theres a chart at the end of the materials that you have and i have them for the audience as well. Thats a breakdown of exactly what we do in our office. Were able to see for every teryn now how many pleas, trials, misdemeanor pleas, dismissals, diversions. And its allowed us to be able to look at exactly what our lawyers are doing. Were interested in the disparities in the way that our lawyers are representing clients. And we did find disparities we found one attorney that pled clients guilty to 30 felonies in a year. Weve had another that only had 5. So we started to look at those and say, which lawyer would you want . Somebody that fled somebody to 30 felony pleas or somebody that pled 5 . We started to look at the practices and we saw differences in outcomes because of the way that cases were being handled. So we have implicit bias training and mandatory coaches and meetings to ensure that were addressing that within our own office. You also see the stats that we published through our annual report and we have an annual report its against the law in San Francisco to use city funds to print an annual report. So i pay for this myself, but we print 5,000 of these and we have all the statistics related to every program in our office. Thats how we track our criminal justice outcomes. To answer what to do, the first thing we have to do is we have to disrupt. And, for example, you see that one of the main culprits is the bail system. When a high bail is set and you cant afford to pay, youre in jail and the only way that you get out of jail is you plead guilty and a lot of poor people do that and people of color do that. It means you are on probation. You give up your right to a jury trial and ultimately, you will be in the system. And so what weve done is we have now filed bail motions in every case. In one weekend, we filed 800 bail motions and it almost shut down the courts. Why did we do that . Court were unconstitutionally setting bails that people cant afford. When a transgender activist was arrested for trumpedup charges for assault, she had a bail of 173,000, no prior record. Fortunately, our Early Release unit was able to work with the d. A. s office, provide them the information that showed she was innocent. 250 people showed up at her arraignment and the case was dismissed. Otherwise, she would have had to post bail. Even if the case was dismissed, she would have been out if she put up 17,300. That happened to a number of our clients. So we filed a lawsuit in federal court and state court and we have, i think, seven lawsuits going on right now. Again, disrupting. As a result of that lawsuit, the city attorney, and others issued statements that the bail system is unconstitutional. Today we filed an appeal in state court and just today, about two hours ago, got a decision from the court of appeal saying that the way that San Francisco courts set bail is unconstitutional. Thats a huge way that were disrupting. Were trying to work to change the law. Sb 210 is working through the legislature. Were concerned about that because we think the judges are trying to hijack it and we wouldnt have real bail reform. So were working on that. And the other thing we have to do is we have to repair. In San Francisco, tens of thousands of people have been convicted of marijuanarelated crimes. Theyre now under prop 64 entitled to relief. Who will make sure they get relief . Weve had in the Public Defenders Office a cleanslate program for 15 years. And we clear about 2,000 records a year. And we make sure that people bring expungements to court and we handle that process for them. Very important to do that. Another huge reform is fines and fees. And were about to introduce a bill that would eliminate all the fines and fees collected by San Francisco superior court. If you plead guilty to a felony, there are no less than 32 separate fines and fees that how of to pay. Everything from courtroom maintenance to building new courthouses around the state. They have all these fees and they total 2,000 to 5,000. So we have legislation now, which we hope you will support, which is being supported by the supervisors, thats would eliminate almost half of the fines and fees, including probation fees, which are 30 to 50 a month and automatically charged before a person is placed on probation. Beyond that, i think that we have to do what youre doing. You have to question. You have to study. You have to look at this. I appreciate the presentation by the elected official from minnesota, home of prince. I think that we will, you know, be in a better place to look at those issues if we start from a place of reality. And the problems in the criminal Justice System, as you know, are only a small part. We have it look at all of the factors that you are looking at, and thats why you are talking a bigpicture approach and looking at employment, youth services, family services, foster care, and only by looking at all of these things and ultimately addressing all of these things will we have true equity. Thank you. Thank you. Colleagues, are there any questions now or can we move on to the next speaker . We look forward to having you back. Next, were inviting to the podium, our elected sheriff, vicki hennessy, San FranciscoSheriffs Department. Good evening. I apologize, because i didnt get a chance to email our presentation. I put it on the overhead. There it is. Okay. Thank you. Im here to answer the questions you asked us to answer. The question was why do you collect data. It looked pretty good. [laughter] can we get this on the overhead . Its not working . I am here to answer the questions you asked us to answer. First of all, i want to thank you for having me here and i want to thank james bell and toni carter for their presentations. I jotted down a number of things that im thinking about as well that could help me in operating the jails. As sheriff, one of my Main Responsibilities is managing the county jails. Now im not necessarily the person that puts people in jail, but when people get there, through arrests and stay in my jails, its something that im concerned about and i want it ensure that were doing what we can to help with the Racial Equity issue. What do we do . Why do we collect data . To better understand who is in custody or sentenced in one of our outofcustody, alternative programs. 85 of the people are pretrial. 15 or less, sentenced to county jail. Most of the people are out on pretrial alternatives. We collect name, age, address, booking number, case number, sf number. We have our own jail Management System that somewhat interacts with court Management System and somewhat interacts with the other systems in criminal justice and i will echo what Christine Deberry said. One of the things that i hope will come out of this is that we will gather, identify first, and gather excellent data, so we can make good decisions, and were not there. And i think that was said by a number of the other people before me. Were not there. Im hopeful that the Justice System will be able to come up and get together and there will be more investment in it, so we can get the data we need. And one of the things that im doing in my budget is my jail Management System that collects all this data and more, but also interfaces with other systems, but not as much as we would like. We dont get regular reports that we would like. Its very, very complicated to get a report out of the system. Im asking in my budget for a new system, which will be a lot more flexible and well be able to do a lot that we cant do now. So what for what purpose does the Sheriffs Department use the data . Well, on the big in the big picture, we share the data to better understand and evaluate who is in our custody or in our programs. Last year actually, it was in 2016, we were very involved in the reenvisioning the jail with Many Community members at that and working on that and we were very frustrated at that time by the inability to capture data that we needed for that. We do this and we work with our criminal justice partners as much as possible, so for the reports that the d. A. Talked about and james bell talked about, much of that came from our jail Management System. How does the Sheriffs Department use the data to advance equity . In one way, we use it to identify the different the Racial Disparities at the difference Decision Making point in our jail. One of the things were doing is doing research to gather data to inform future policy decisions about what we learn through our Research Project that involves who gets out on alternative sentencing and who does not. As well as working with the pretrial diversion project, identify wooing gets out on pretrial and who doesnt and why not. And so those are things going on right now. The new pretrial system, Risk Assessment tool, has been going on since may, 2016. And its shown a lot of improvement, but we still dont know how much. And over sustained time, so well look at that as well. So on the next page, i gave you the data collected. Were one of the few agencies, where we do collect race and ethnicity and in a robust fashion. We have it so many of the departments depend upon us and come to us to pull our data, for example, the Police Department asked us to provide data to them for a report they were doing and asked us to provide that because we had that about people who had been arrested. And so, as you can see, theres robust race and ethnicity data. So thats pretty much what i came here to tell you tonight, but if you have questions, im happy to answer them. Thank you, sheriff hennessy. Its although you didnt present something to us before, what you brought today is very helpful, i think, for us as well as for the people that are here with us at the hearing about these key questions that were presented to you. And this this hearing, this particular hearing, is partially in response to a request that former mayor lee gave to us before he passed away untimely and left us. As a commission, as an agency, weve been looking at the question of disparity on many levels, including and specifically racial levels and he asked us to begin this review of Racial Disparities in that sense and we do have from the Mayors Office a representative. So thank you for that and thank you for putting that together. Okay. Any questions or comments right now for the sheriff . Look forward to having you back to go more deeply into thank you very much for the work youre doing. Thank you for being here tonight. Next we can go to the San Francisco unified School District. Thank you so much. And the superintendent is also with us tonight. Good evening, commissioners, and good evening, members of the audience. Thanks for giving us this opportunity to present our data practices and our data use. So i will begin with the first slide. I