Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutCorrespondence - Non-Agenda Araiza, Fatima From:Craig A Durfey <cadurfey@gmail.com> Sent:Friday, April 26, To:!City Clerk; ALPost555.MidwayCity@gmail.com Subject:Fwd: Florida children under 14 from having social media accounts/, more than 200 organizations sent a letter urging Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., vote on the Kids Online Safety Act, Attention: This email originated from outside of City of Santa Ana. Use caution when opening attachments or links. ---------- Forwarded message --------- From: Craig A Durfey < Date: Fri, Apr 26, 2024 at 6:26 PM Subject: Fwd: Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis signs bill that bans children under 14 from having social media accounts/, more than 200 organizations sent a letter urging Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., vote on the Kids Online Safety Act, To: <johnfogarty@iusd.org>, Craig A Durfey < , <terrywalker@iusd.org>, <jeffkim@iusd.org>, <laurenbrooks@iusd.org>, <paulbokota@iusd.org>, <cyrilyu@iusd.org> ---------- Forwarded message --------- From: Craig A Durfey < Date: Fri, Apr 26, 2024 at 9:45 AM Subject: Fwd: Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis signs bill that bans children under 14 from having social media accounts/, more than 200 organizations sent a letter urging Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., vote on the Kids Online Safety Act, To: Craig A Durfey <cadurfey@gmail.com>, Garrett Gales <ggales@cityofirvine.org>, <Rgramer@cityofirvine.org>, <jaguirre@cityofirvine.org>, <dchambers@cityofirvine.org>, <mrakic@cityofirvine.org>, TGOODBRAND@CITYOFIRVINE.ORG <communications@cde.ca.gov>, Whill@Cityofirvine.org <Whill@cityofirvine.org>, <manderson@cityofirvine.org>, <tpetropulos@cityofirvine.org>, link sends e-mail <mkent@cityofirvine.org>, <nsmiley@cityofirvine.org>, <cvega@ci.irvine.ca.us>, <clerk@cityofirvine.org>, <cm@cityofirvine.org>, <farrahkhan@cityofirvine.org>, <larryagran@cityofirvine.org>, <mikecarroll@cityofirvine.org>, <tammykim@cityofirvine.org>, <kathleentreseder@cityofirvine.org> ---------- Forwarded message --------- From: Craig A Durfey < Date: Fri, Apr 26, 2024 at 8:13 AM Subject: Fwd: Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis signs bill that bans children under 14 from having social media accounts/, more than 200 organizations sent a letter urging Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., vote on the Kids Online Safety Act, To: <Rigo.Rodriguez@sausd.us>, Craig A Durfey < <hector.bustos@sausd.us>, <Alfonso.Alvarez@sausd.us>, <Carolyn.Torres@sausd.us>, <rosie.rosales@sausd.us>, <jerry.almendarez@sausd.us>, <karina.quiroz@sausd.us>, <adriana.olson@sausd.us> ---------- Forwarded message --------- From: Craig A Durfey < Date: Fri, Apr 26, 2024 at 7:53 AM Subject: Fwd: Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis signs bill that bans children under 14 from having social media accounts/, more than 200 organizations sent a letter urging Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., vote on the Kids Online Safety Act, To: Craig A Durfey < , CITY COUNCIL <city.council@surfcity-hb.org>, Estanislau, Robin <Robin.Estanislau@surfcity-hb.org>, <city.manager@surfcity-hb.org>, <CityClerkCSR@westminster- ca.gov>, <ccnguyen@westminster-ca.gov>, <kho@westminster-ca.gov>, <APhanWest@westminster-ca.gov>, <cmanzo@westminster-ca.gov>, <NNguyen@westminster-ca.gov> ---------- Forwarded message --------- From: Craig A Durfey < Date: Tue, Apr 23, 2024 at 10:23 PM Subject: Fwd: Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis signs bill that bans children under 14 from having social media accounts/, more than 200 organizations sent a letter urging Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., vote on the Kids Online Safety Act, To: Craig A Durfey < , <perez_monte@lacoe.edu>, <montano_theresa@lacoe.edu>, <forrester_betty@lacoe.edu>, <foggy-paxton_andrea@lacoe.edu>, <cross_james@lacoe.edu>, <johnson_stanley@lacoe.edu>, <chan_yvonne@lacoe.edu> ---------- Forwarded message --------- From: < Date: Tue, Apr 23, 2024 at 9:48 PM Subject: Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis signs bill that bans children under 14 from having social media accounts/, more than 200 organizations sent a letter urging Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., vote on the Kids Online Safety Act, To: < , <hauwie.tie@asm.ca.gov>, <David.Ochoa@sen.ca.gov>, <ADAM.BOMAN@asm.ca.gov>, <REPLOUCORREA@mail.house.gov>, <response@ocgov.com>, <Assemblymember.Davies@assembly.ca.gov>, <kim.vandermeulen@mail.house.gov>, <SENATOR.GONZALEZ@senate.ca.gov>, <assemblymember.quirk-silva@assembly.ca.gov>, <Christopher.Aguilera@asm.ca.gov>, Teresa Pomeroy <teresap@ggcity.org>, GGEA President <president@ggea.org>, "KCALKCBSDESK@CBS.COM" <KCALKCBSDESK@cbs.com>, Walter Muneton <walter.muneton@ggusd.us>, Dina Nguyen <dina.nguyen@ggusd.us>, <publiccomment@anaheim.net>, <tbass@anaheim.net>, Gabriela Mafi <gmafi@ggusd.us>, KTLA Desk <ktla@ktla.com>, Teri Rocco <teri.rocco@ggusd.us>, "FOX11NEWS@FOXTV.COM" <fox11news@foxtv.com>, "TIPS@NBCUNI.COM" <TIPS@nbcuni.com>, <senator.nguyen@senate.ca.gov>, <assemblymember.rendon@assembly.ca.gov>, <SEDN.committee@senate.ca.gov>, Public Records Request <cityclerk@ggcity.org>, <Superintendent@cde.ca.gov>, <senator.umberg@senate.ca.gov>, <pr@abc7.com>, 2 <SHEA.Committee@senate.ca.gov>, <Ddbarnes@ocsd.org>, <FourthDistrict@bos.lacounty.gov>, <Senator.Allen@senate.ca.gov>, <sbe@cde.ca.gov>, Maureen Blackmun <maureen.ggna@gmail.com>, <ocbe@ocde.us>, Supervisor Andrew Do <Andrew.Do@ocgov.com>, <SHELLYHOLMAN60@yahoo.com>, <patty.rodgers@asm.ca.gov>, Jim Tortolano <orangecountytribune@gmail.com>, <Tanya.Lieberman@asm.ca.gov>, <lara.flynn@asm.ca.gov>, <FirstDistrict@bos.lacounty.gov>, <lauren.robinson@asm.ca.gov>, <Marguerite.Ries@asm.ca.gov>, <Aimee.Anspach@asm.ca.gov>, <julia.kingsley@asm.ca.gov>, <kristene.mapile@asm.ca.gov>, Nick Dibs < 04-23-2024 (P.R.D.D.C.) PARENTS FOR THE RIGHTS OF DEVELOPMENTALLY DISABLED CHILDREN CRAIG A. DURFEY FOUNDER OF P.R.D.D.C. P.O.BOX 937 GARDEN GROVE, CA 92842 SOCIALEMOTIONALPAWS.COM FACEBOOK: CRAIG DURFEY U.S. HOUSE OF CONGRESS H2404 - HONORING CRAIG DURFEY FOR HIS FIGHT AGAINST AUTISM ... Ms. LORETTA SANCHEZ of California. https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/CREC-2003-03-27/pdf/CREC-2003-03-27.pdf new website socialemotionalpaws.org To whom it may concern. 3 Recently book published title The Anxious Generation How the Great Rewiring of Childhood is Causing an Epidemic of Mental Illness. By Jonathan Haidt. Screen time is the amount of time spent using a device with a screen such as a smartphone, computer, television, or video game console. The concept is under significant research with related concepts in digital media use and mental health. Studies show that screen time directly impacts child development, and mental and physical health. The positive or negative health effects of screen time are influenced by levels and content of exposure. To prevent harmful exposure to screen time, some government. how does screen time affect your health - Search (bing.com) as well CA SCR 73 Blue light 2019 causing mental Illness, sleep deprivation, myopia. The State of California has yet recognized the harm below represents In December, more than 200 organizations sent a letter urging Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., to schedule a vote on the Kids Online Safety Act, or KOSA, which seeks to create liability, or a “duty of care,” for apps and online platforms that recommend content to minors that can negatively affect their mental health. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis signs bill that bans children under 14 from having social media accounts. March 25, 2024, 12:18 PM PDT By Kalhan Rosenblatt Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis signed a bill on Monday that will prohibit children younger than 14 from joining social media in the state. Those who are 14 or 15 will need a parent’s consent before they join a platform. The bill, HB3, also directs social media companies to delete the existing accounts of those who are under 14. Companies that fail to do so could be sued on behalf of the child who creates an account on the platform. The minor could be awarded up to $10,000 in damages, according to the bill. Companies found to be in violation of the law would also be liable for up to $50,000 per violation, as well as attorney’s fees and court costs. “Ultimately, \[we’re\] trying to help parents navigate this very difficult terrain that we have now with raising kids, and so I appreciate the work that’s been put in,” DeSantis said in remarks during the bill-signing ceremony. 4 DeSantis previously vetoed a more restrictive version of the bill that would have banned social media accounts for kids under 16. That bill also required Florida residents to submit an ID or other identifying materials in order to join social media. HB3, which is slated to take effect in January 2025, comes as efforts to regulate social media continue to ramp up across the U.S. amid concerns from some parents that the platforms don’t do enough to keep their kids safe online. In December, more than 200 organizations sent a letter urging Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., to schedule a vote on the Kids Online Safety Act, or KOSA, which seeks to create liability, or a “duty of care,” for apps and online platforms that recommend content to minors that can negatively affect their mental health. In January, lawmakers grilled CEOs from TikTok, X and Meta about online child safety. The tech executives reaffirmed their commitment to child safety, and pointed to various tools they offer as examples of how they are proactive about preventing exploitation online. Florida House Speaker Paul Renner and other advocates of the new law argue that social media use can harm children’s mental health and can lead to sexual predators communicating with minors. "None of us can afford to be on the sidelines when it comes to social media," Renner said in remarks made at the bill signing. Several states that have enacted similar laws to limit teen social media — including Ohio and Arkansas — have been challenged by Net Choice LLC, a coalition of social media platforms whose members include Meta, Google and X, among others. TECH NEWS Meta is putting AI front and center in its apps, and some users are annoyed. Florida’s law is also expected to face legal challenges over claims that it violates the First Amendment. 5 “We’re disappointed to see Gov. DeSantis sign onto this route,” Carl Szabo, vice president and general counsel for Net Choice, said in an email statement, calling the law "unconstitutional." “There are better ways to keep Floridians, their families and their data safe and secure online without violating their freedoms.” Both DeSantis and Renner alluded in their remarks to the potential legal hurdles ahead. "You will not find a line in this bill that addresses good speech or bad speech because that would violate the First Amendment," Renner said. "We've not addressed that at all. What we have addressed is the addictive features that are at the heart of why children stay on these platforms for hours and hours on end." He specifically called out Net Choice, saying, “We’re going to beat them, and we’re never ever going to stop.” DeSantis argued the bill is constitutionally sound. “Any time I see a bill, if I don’t think it’s constitutional, I veto it,” he said. He described the bill as "a fair application of the law and Constitution.” And: I Changed My Mind About Kids and Phones. I Hope Everyone Else Does, Too. On the issue of kids, smartphones, and social media, a vibe shift is happening, and it’s happening on the left, right, and in the center. Here’s a survey of recent anti-phone discourse on the topic in politics and culture in recent weeks and months: The TikTok “ban” (don’t call it that) garnered bipartisan support in the House, and Gov. Ron DeSantis signed a bill making it illegal for people under 14 to have social media accounts in Florida. “People are so unwilling to blame iPhones as one of the main culprits in a variety of social ills but graphs like \[these\] are revealing. It’s obviously the phones,” zillennial writer Magdalene Taylor tweeted, semi-virally, attaching that infamous “teens today aren’t hanging out” graph. Hosts of two podcasts enjoyed by Very Online left-ish millennials, TrueAnon and Time to Say Goodbye, devoted episodes to making freewheeling arguments against the use of social media by kids. (Tyler Austin Harper, a professor at Bates who has written for Slate, even suggested on the latter show that smartphones should be made illegal for use by people under 18. Tyler! A take!) A trend piece in the Daily Beast uncovered interviewees from Gen Z who said that when they had kids, they certainly wouldn’t be letting them 6 be “raised by” iPads. “Get offline. It is not alcohol, it is not porn, it is not weed, it is not blah blah, it is being online. Get offline,” wrote a Reddit user on Not so long ago, the default position, if one were an internet-savvy older person beginning to feel queasy when noticing groups of kids bent over their phones, was to say to oneself, “Well, that’s life; once, Socrates feared print’s effect on memory, and now, I fear this.” One definitely didn’t say out loud, online, “The kids shouldn’t have phones,” unless one were writing for the Atlantic. A weary “it has always been thus” pose toward the topic was in order—television, Walkmans, rock music, the youths are always up to something the adults think is stupid. Some of the resistance to wagging a finger at kids and phones was a totally fair allergy to generational analysis; another part of it was probably self-defense. “Some of us really don’t like our screen time habits criticized,” Taylor wrote in a follow-up Substack analyzing the replies to her recent “it’s the phones” provocation on X. “Others may think they appear smarter by highlighting other issues, that they can see above the fray and observe the macro trends that are really shaping our lives, not that stupid anti-phone rhetoric we hear from the Boomers.” It’s not the phones; it’s the lack of third spaces, the omnipresent car culture, the inequality. That defensive pose? I know it well, because I was adept at it—in 2019 I described concern over teens and social media as “alarmist.” Things are different in 2024. Yes, we have new data on the shape of the mental-health crisis among teens, and especially teenage girls, and how it’s worsened since phones got front-facing cameras and platforms became dominant. But the biggest shift doesn’t come from looking at new data; it’s from experience. More and more people have a boomer relative who was radicalized on Facebook, a grandma who won’t look up from her phone during family visits, or a Gen X partner adept at the art of phubbing. We, who are supposed to enjoy grown-adult levels of impulse control, have had trouble sleeping due to doomscrolling, spent Zoom meetings looking at Instagram, or gotten into weird fights with strangers on Reddit that derailed us emotionally for far too long. We, ourselves, with our developed brains, have felt like flies on sticky paper when it comes to social media; of course, children, still forming their selves and navigating the pitfalls of pre-adulthood, may be affected by it too. “Kids probably shouldn’t have smartphones” has lost its generational sting. It has come to look more and more like common sense. Into this apparently promising moment comes social psychologist Jonathan Haidt’s new book, The Anxious Generation: How the Great Rewiring of Childhood Caused an Epidemic of Mental Illness. Its compact thesis: 7 We’ve overprotected kids IRL and under protected them online. In the book’s first chapters, Haidt rearticulates a very familiar set of arguments about American kids’ lack of physical freedom. Playgrounds used to be more dangerous! Kids used to roam the woods! Why is everyone always at scheduled activities run by adults?! The kids never get a bruise or bump, and how will they learn to self-regulate this way? None of this will be new to anyone who’s kept up with popular parenting books in the past few decades. Haidt’s innovation lies in connecting this now-well-articulated picture of overprotected childhood with what happens when those same kids get on phones. The Anxious Generation, he hopes, will be part of a larger collective movement, one he is actively trying to incite by publishing a companion website full of evidence, discussion guides, and sample petitions, and funding billboards and public art in major cities. On his Substack, he wrote recently: “By the end of 2025, we will roll back the phone-based childhood.” "President John F. Kennedy said technology ‘has no conscience of its own. Whether it will become a force for good or ill depends on man.’ Yet swayed by digital-age myths, we are providing our children with remarkably little guidance on their use of technology. Request letter of support since it takes a village to save a child. Quotations by John F. Kennedy, “Children are the world's most valuable resource and its best hope for the future. Thank You Craig A Durfey 8 Araiza, Fatima From:Craig A Durfey <cadurfey@gmail.com> Sent:Friday, April 26, To:Craig A Durfey; !City Clerk; pcoleman@cityoforange.org; cminfo@cityoforange.org; abarrios@cityoforange.org; jdumitru@cityoforange.org; ktavoularis@cityoforange.org; dbilodeau@cityoforange.org; anagutierrez@cityoforange.org; jgyllenhammer@cityoforange.org Subject:Fwd: Press Release Screentime will CA State enact awareness and SCR 73 Blue light 2019 with article called I Changed My Mind About Kids and Phones. I Hope Everyone Else Does, Too. Attention: This email originated from outside of City of Santa Ana. Use caution when opening attachments or links. ---------- Forwarded message --------- From: Craig A Durfey < Date: Fri, Apr 26, 2024 at 10:06 AM Subject: Fwd: Press Release Screentime will CA State enact awareness and SCR 73 Blue light 2019 with article called I Changed My Mind About Kids and Phones. I Hope Everyone Else Does, Too. To: <terrywalker@iusd.org>, <johnfogarty@iusd.org>, <cyrilyu@iusd.org>, <paulbokota@iusd.org>, Craig A Durfey <cadurfey@gmail.com>, <laurenbrooks@iusd.org>, <jeffkim@iusd.org>, <katiemcewen@iusd.org> ---------- Forwarded message --------- From: Craig A Durfey < Date: Fri, Apr 26, 2024 at 9:04 AM Subject: Fwd: Press Release Screentime will CA State enact awareness and SCR 73 Blue light 2019 with article called I Changed My Mind About Kids and Phones. I Hope Everyone Else Does, Too. To: <farrahkhan@cityofirvine.org>, Craig A Durfey <cadurfey@gmail.com>, <larryagran@cityofirvine.org>, <mikecarroll@cityofirvine.org>, <tammykim@cityofirvine.org>, <kathleentreseder@cityofirvine.org>, <clerk@cityofirvine.org>, <cm@cityofirvine.org>, link sends e-mail <mkent@cityofirvine.org>, TGOODBRAND@CITYOFIRVINE.ORG <communications@cde.ca.gov>, Whill@Cityofirvine.org <Whill@cityofirvine.org>, <nsmiley@cityofirvine.org>, <cvega@ci.irvine.ca.us>, <tpetropulos@cityofirvine.org>, <manderson@cityofirvine.org>, Garrett Gales <ggales@cityofirvine.org>, <Rgramer@cityofirvine.org>, <jaguirre@cityofirvine.org>, <dchambers@cityofirvine.org>, <mrakic@cityofirvine.org> ---------- Forwarded message --------- From: Craig A Durfey < Date: Fri, Apr 26, 2024 at 8:05 AM Subject: Fwd: Press Release Screentime will CA State enact awareness and SCR 73 Blue light 2019 with article called I Changed My Mind About Kids and Phones. I Hope Everyone Else Does, Too. To: <rosie.rosales@sausd.us>, <jerry.almendarez@sausd.us>, <karina.quiroz@sausd.us>, 1 <adriana.olson@sausd.us>, <Carolyn.Torres@sausd.us>, <Alfonso.Alvarez@sausd.us>, <hector.bustos@sausd.us>, <katelyn.brazeraceves@sausd.us>, <Rigo.Rodriguez@sausd.us>, Craig A Durfey <cadurfey@gmail.com> ---------- Forwarded message --------- From: Craig A Durfey < Date: Thu, Apr 25, 2024 at 12:40 PM Subject: Fwd: Press Release Screentime will CA State enact awareness and SCR 73 Blue light 2019 with article called I Changed My Mind About Kids and Phones. I Hope Everyone Else Does, Too. To: Estanislau, Robin <Robin.Estanislau@surfcity-hb.org>, <Media@surfcity-hb.org>, Craig A Durfey < , CITY COUNCIL <city.council@surfcity-hb.org> ---------- Forwarded message --------- From: Craig A Durfey < Date: Wed, Apr 24, 2024 at 7:11 PM Subject: Fwd: Press Release Screentime will CA State enact awareness and SCR 73 Blue light 2019 with article called I Changed My Mind About Kids and Phones. I Hope Everyone Else Does, Too. To: <ccnguyen@westminster-ca.gov>, <kho@westminster-ca.gov>, <CityClerkCSR@westminster-ca.gov>, <APhanWest@westminster-ca.gov>, <cmanzo@westminster-ca.gov>, <NNguyen@westminster-ca.gov>, Craig A Durfey < ---------- Forwarded message --------- From: Craig A Durfey < Date: Wed, Apr 24, 2024 at 10:14 AM Subject: Fwd: Press Release Screentime will CA State enact awareness and SCR 73 Blue light 2019 with article called I Changed My Mind About Kids and Phones. I Hope Everyone Else Does, Too. To: Lumbard, Austin <ALumbard@tustinca.org>, <rgallagher@tustinca.org>, <lclark@tustinca.org>, <Rgomez@tustinca.org>, <rschnell@tustinca.org>, Craig A Durfey < ---------- Forwarded message --------- From: Craig A Durfey < Date: Tue, Apr 23, 2024 at 10:20 PM Subject: Fwd: Press Release Screentime will CA State enact awareness and SCR 73 Blue light 2019 with article called I Changed My Mind About Kids and Phones. I Hope Everyone Else Does, Too. To: <chan_yvonne@lacoe.edu>, Craig A Durfey < , <johnson_stanley@lacoe.edu>, <cross_james@lacoe.edu>, <foggy-paxton_andrea@lacoe.edu>, <forrester_betty@lacoe.edu>, <montano_theresa@lacoe.edu>, <perez_monte@lacoe.edu> 2 ---------- Forwarded message --------- From: Craig A Durfey < Date: Tue, Apr 23, 2024 at 10:12 PM Subject: Fwd: Press Release Screentime will CA State enact awareness and SCR 73 Blue light 2019 with article called I Changed My Mind About Kids and Phones. I Hope Everyone Else Does, Too. To: <Kathryn@bos.lacounty.gov>, Craig A Durfey < , <ThirdDistrict@bos.lacounty.gov>, <HollyJMitchell@bos.lacounty.gov> ---------- Forwarded message --------- From: Craig A Durfey < Date: Tue, Apr 23, 2024 at 9:36 PM Subject: Fwd: Press Release Screentime will CA State enact awareness and SCR 73 Blue light 2019 with article called I Changed My Mind About Kids and Phones. I Hope Everyone Else Does, Too. To: <District1community@sdcounty.ca.gov>, <joel.anderson@sdcounty.ca.gov>, <Terra.Lawson- Remer@sdcounty.ca.gov>, <Monica.MontgomerySteppe@sdcounty.ca.gov>, <jim.desmond@sdcounty.ca.gov>, Craig A Durfey < ---------- Forwarded message --------- From: < Date: Tue, Apr 23, 2024 at 9:27 PM Subject: Press Release Screentime will CA State enact awareness and SCR 73 Blue light 2019 with article called I Changed My Mind About Kids and Phones. I Hope Everyone Else Does, Too. To: < gov>, <REPLOUCORREA@mail.house.gov>, <Assemblymember.Davies@assembly.ca.gov>, <kim.vandermeulen@mail.house.gov>, <SENATOR.GONZALEZ@senate.ca.gov>, <response@ocgov.com>, <assemblymember.quirk- silva@assembly.ca.gov>, Jim Tortolano <orangecountytribune@gmail.com>, <Christopher.Aguilera@asm.ca.gov>, Teresa Pomeroy <teresap@ggcity.org>, GGEA President <president@ggea.org>, "KCALKCBSDESK@CBS.COM" <KCALKCBSDESK@cbs.com>, Walter Muneton <walter.muneton@ggusd.us>, Dina Nguyen <dina.nguyen@ggusd.us>, <publiccomment@anaheim.net>, <tbass@anaheim.net>, Gabriela Mafi <gmafi@ggusd.us>, KTLA Desk <ktla@ktla.com>, Teri Rocco <teri.rocco@ggusd.us>, "FOX11NEWS@FOXTV.COM" <fox11news@foxtv.com>, "TIPS@NBCUNI.COM" <TIPS@nbcuni.com>, <senator.nguyen@senate.ca.gov>, <assemblymember.rendon@assembly.ca.gov>, <SEDN.committee@senate.ca.gov>, Public Records Request <cityclerk@ggcity.org>, <Superintendent@cde.ca.gov>, <senator.umberg@senate.ca.gov>, <pr@abc7.com>, <SHEA.Committee@senate.ca.gov>, <Ddbarnes@ocsd.org>, <FourthDistrict@bos.lacounty.gov>, <Senator.Allen@senate.ca.gov>, <sbe@cde.ca.gov>, Maureen Blackmun <maureen.ggna@gmail.com>, <ocbe@ocde.us>, Supervisor Andrew Do <Andrew.Do@ocgov.com>, <SHELLYHOLMAN60@yahoo.com>, <patty.rodgers@asm.ca.gov>, <Tanya.Lieberman@asm.ca.gov>, <lara.flynn@asm.ca.gov>, <FirstDistrict@bos.lacounty.gov>, <lauren.robinson@asm.ca.gov>, <Marguerite.Ries@asm.ca.gov>, <Aimee.Anspach@asm.ca.gov>, <julia.kingsley@asm.ca.gov>, <kristene.mapile@asm.ca.gov>, Nick Dibs <nickdibs1@gmail.com>, Supervisor Doug Chaffee <Fourth.District@ocgov.info>, communityrelations <communityrelations@ggcity.org>, <comments@buenapark.com>, <communications@cde.ca.gov>, <eric.levitt@cityoffullerton.com>, <lucindaw@cityoffullerton.com>, <fred.jung@cityoffullerton.com>, <shana.charles@cityoffullerton.com>, <bwwhitaker@live.com>, <ahmad.zahra@cityoffullerton.com> 3 04-23-24 PRESS RELEASE. (P.R.D.D.C.) PARENTS FOR THE RIGHTS OF DEVELOPMENTALLY DISABLED CHILDREN CRAIG A. DURFEY FOUNDER OF P.R.D.D.C. SOCIALEMOTIONALPAWS.COM FACEBOOK: CRAIG DURFEY U.S. HOUSE OF CONGRESS H2404 - HONORING CRAIG DURFEY FOR HIS FIGHT AGAINST AUTISM ... Ms. LORETTA SANCHEZ of California. https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/CREC-2003-03-27/pdf/CREC-2003-03-27.pdf new website socialemotionalpaws.org To Whom it may concern. Important to note the growing epidemic number of children impacted with social media, our State has yet addressed this crisis because they haven’t awoken to what is known medically or schools. CA State enacted SB 224 year 2021-2022 to teach (b) For the foregoing reasons, it is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this measure to ensure that all California pupils in grades 1 to 12, inclusive, have the opportunity to benefit from a comprehensive mental health education grade Mental Health https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/billNavClient.xhtml?bill_id=202120220SB224 AB-638 Mental Health Services Act: early intervention and prevention programs.(2021-2022) https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/billNavClient.xhtml?bill_id=202120220SB224 . 4 SCR 73, Pan. Blue Light Awareness Day. This measure would designate October 10 of each year as Blue Light Awareness Day in California. WHEREAS, There are over 80 million electronic devices with digital screens in the State of California; and WHEREAS, Screen time viewing with electronic devices exceeds over nine hours per day; and WHEREAS, The increased usage of, and access to, digital devices by young children and adolescents is an acute area of concern, as ophthalmologists, optometrists, and medical researchers continue to learn more about the short-term effects of increasing and cumulative exposure to artificial blue light on the developing human eye and mental health at a young age, along with long-term potential cumulative effects on adult eye health and mental development; and WHEREAS, The scientific community and recent studies have identified growing concerns over potential long- term eye and health impacts for all age groups from digital screen usage and cumulative blue light exposure emitted from digital devices; and WHEREAS, Blue light has been reported to cause visual discomfort in 65 percent of Americans; and WHEREAS, Blue light has been associated with possible harmful effects on retinal cell physiology linked to the high-energy, short wavelength in the narrow range of 415–455 nanometers; and: News story describes of the State of UT efforts with a campaign awareness about social media since CA has yet again recognized the harm from screentime. THE lack of awareness Sorley needed the State of Utah has a social media awareness campaign. Recent academic research and a report from U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy have tied social media use to declines in mental health for teens, and Cox said there is a “causal link” between the two. On the issue of kids, smartphones, and social media, a vibe shift is happening, and it’s happening on the left, right, and in the center. Here’s a survey of recent anti-phone discourse on the topic in politics and culture in 5 recent weeks and months: The TikTok “ban” (don’t call it that) garnered bipartisan support in the House, and Gov. Ron DeSantis signed a bill making it illegal for people under 14 to have social media accounts in Florida. 51925 (External Link) and other health education requirements Collaborate with your county office of education, community-based and non-profit organizations, and local health department to provide professional learning for health teachers and other educators teaching mental health education to build; This education code provides the opportunity for local Collaborate with your county office of education with various experience hopefully will review what has been published to address gaps from algorithm creating dopamine addictions from to long usages from screen time. Review health education content standards and instructional materials, if offered, to determine alignment with mental health education requirements per Ed. Code 51925 (External Link) and other health education requirements (External Link). o Collaborate with your county office of education, community-based and non-profit organizations, and local health department to provide professional learning for health teachers and other educators teaching mental health education to build; their capacity for providing skill-based mental health education that is trauma informed and affirming for students. o Evaluate your current efforts and create a plan to expand student access to mental health education in coordination with other frameworks and initiatives, including Children and Youth Behavioral Health Initiative (CYBHI) (External Link), https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/billNavClient.xhtml?bill_id=202120220SB224 6 #SaveTheKids packs Snow Canyon High: ‘Most important app for your child is you’ ST. GEORGE — “How social media is destroying our kids” was the topic presented during an event attended by more than 1,000 Thursday night, where an internet crusader offered parents a lifeline to guard children against social media’s culture of perfection, and to empower parents in the battle to save their children from social engineering. { The presentation was based on the premise that smart phones, too much screen time and social media’s negative effects are the underlying link to the epidemic rise in teen depression and anxiety, eating disorders, self-harming, thoughts of suicide and suicide itself.} https://archives.stgeorgeutah.com/news/archive/2018/09/14/cgb-savethekids-packs-snow-canyon-high-most- important-app-for-your-child-is-you/#.Xb9rXjNKhPY Utah governor unveils education campaign warning of social media. SALT LAKE CITY — Utah is launching a public information campaign “unmasking” the threat social media use may pose to teenagers, and Gov. Spencer Cox on Thursday promised more litigation against social media platforms in the future. Recent academic research and a report from U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy have tied social media use to declines in mental health for teens, and Cox said there is a “causal link” between the two. “We care about our kids in Utah, and I know that’s true across the nation. This is a huge issue that continues to grow,” the governor said while unveiling the campaign at the state Capitol on Thursday. “This is not a conservative issue, it’s not a liberal issue. It’s an American issue. It’s a parent issue.” https://socialemotionalpaws.com/blog-post-1/f/utah-governor-unveils-education-campaign-warning-of-social- media-2 AB-638 Mental Health Services Act: early intervention and prevention programs.(2021-2022) AB 638, Quirk-Silva. Mental Health Services Act: early intervention and prevention programs. Existing law, the Mental Health Services Act (MHSA), an initiative measure enacted by the voters as Proposition 63 at the November 2, 2004, statewide general election, establishes the continuously appropriated 7 Mental Health Services Fund to fund various county mental health programs and requires counties to spend those funds on mental health services, as specified. The MHSA requires counties to establish a program designed to prevent mental illnesses from becoming severe and disabling and authorizes counties to use funds designated for prevention and early intervention to broaden the provision of those community-based mental health services by adding prevention and early intervention services or activities. https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/billNavClient.xhtml?bill_id=202120220AB638 And: I Changed My Mind About Kids and Phones. I Hope Everyone Else Does, Too. On the issue of kids, smartphones, and social media, a vibe shift is happening, and it’s happening on the left, right, and in the center. Here’s a survey of recent anti-phone discourse on the topic in politics and culture in recent weeks and months: The TikTok “ban” (don’t call it that) garnered bipartisan support in the House, and Gov. Ron DeSantis signed a bill making it illegal for people under 14 to have social media accounts in Florida. “People are so unwilling to blame iPhones as one of the main culprits in a variety of social ills but graphs like \[these\] are revealing. It’s obviously the phones,” zillennial writer Magdalene Taylor tweeted, semi-virally, attaching that infamous “teens today aren’t hanging out” graph. Hosts of two podcasts enjoyed by Very Online left-ish millennials, TrueAnon and Time to Say Goodbye, devoted episodes to making freewheeling arguments against the use of social media by kids. (Tyler Austin Harper, a professor at Bates who has written for Slate, even suggested on the latter show that smartphones should be made illegal for use by people under 18. Tyler! A take!) A trend piece in the Daily Beast uncovered interviewees from Gen Z who said that when they had kids, they certainly wouldn’t be letting them be “raised by” iPads. “Get offline. It is not alcohol, it is not porn, it is not weed, it is not blah blah, it is being online. Get offline,” wrote a Reddit user on Not so long ago, the default position, if one were an internet-savvy older person beginning to feel queasy when noticing groups of kids bent over their phones, was to say to oneself, “Well, that’s life; once, Socrates feared print’s effect on memory, and now, I fear this.” One definitely didn’t say out loud, online, “The kids shouldn’t have phones,” unless one were writing for the Atlantic. A weary “it has always been thus” pose toward the topic was in order—television, Walkmans, rock music, the youths are always up to something the adults think is stupid. Some of the resistance to wagging a finger at kids and phones was a totally fair allergy to generational analysis; another part of it was probably self-defense. “Some of us really don’t like our screen time habits criticized,” Taylor wrote in a follow-up Substack analyzing the replies to her recent “it’s the phones” provocation on X. “Others may think they appear smarter by 8 highlighting other issues, that they can see above the fray and observe the macro trends that are really shaping our lives, not that stupid anti-phone rhetoric we hear from the Boomers.” It’s not the phones; it’s the lack of third spaces, the omnipresent car culture, the inequality. That defensive pose? I know it well, because I was adept at it—in 2019 I described concern over teens and social media as “alarmist.” Things are different in 2024. Yes, we have new data on the shape of the mental-health crisis among teens, and especially teenage girls, and how it’s worsened since phones got front-facing cameras and platforms became dominant. But the biggest shift doesn’t come from looking at new data; it’s from experience. More and more people have a boomer relative who was radicalized on Facebook, a grandma who won’t look up from her phone during family visits, or a Gen X partner adept at the art of phubbing. We, who are supposed to enjoy grown-adult levels of impulse control, have had trouble sleeping due to doomscrolling, spent Zoom meetings looking at Instagram, or gotten into weird fights with strangers on Reddit that derailed us emotionally for far too long. We, ourselves, with our developed brains, have felt like flies on sticky paper when it comes to social media; of course, children, still forming their selves and navigating the pitfalls of pre-adulthood, may be affected by it too. “Kids probably shouldn’t have smartphones” has lost its generational sting. It has come to look more and more like common sense. Into this apparently promising moment comes social psychologist Jonathan Haidt’s new book, The Anxious Generation: How the Great Rewiring of Childhood Caused an Epidemic of Mental Illness. Its compact thesis: We’ve overprotected kids IRL and under protected them online. In the book’s first chapters, Haidt rearticulates a very familiar set of arguments about American kids’ lack of physical freedom. Playgrounds used to be more dangerous! Kids used to roam the woods! Why is everyone always at scheduled activities run by adults? ! The kids never get a bruise or bump, and how will they learn to self-regulate this way? None of this will be new to anyone who’s kept up with popular parenting books in the past few decades. Haidt’s innovation lies in connecting this now-well-articulated picture of overprotected childhood with what happens when those same kids get on phones. The Anxious Generation, he hopes, will be part of a larger collective movement, one he is actively trying to incite by publishing a companion website full of evidence, discussion guides, and sample petitions, and funding billboards and public art in major cities. On his Substack, he wrote recently: “By the end of 2025, we will roll back the phone-based childhood.” Its critical that we all become informed about social media effects we seeing the growing news stories reporting children’s effective their behavior my website blog will take you years of research documentation what ought should been done waring the harm the toxic Esports had we accepted that Bill Gate, Steve Jobs were avoiding this modernize that Clery keenly aware the harm yet ego’s subverted to be first without verifying what was published such as CA ACR 265 K-12 education year 2019 for modern California Computer Science Education Month. 9 This measure would designate the month of September 2018 as California Computer Science Education Month. The measure would encourage schools, teachers, researchers, universities, business leaders, and policymakers to identify mechanisms for teachers to receive cutting-edge professional development to provide sustainable learning experiences in computer science education and would encourage the exposure of pupils to computer science concepts. The measure would also encourage opportunities to be provided for females and underrepresented minorities in computer science. Bill Text - ACR-265 California Computer Science Education Month. Designates the month of September 2018 as California Computer Science Education Month and encourages schools, teachers, researchers, universities, business leaders, and policymakers to identify mechanisms for teachers to receive cutting-edge professional development to provide sustainable learning experiences in computer science education. Specifically, this resolution makes the following legislative findings: 201720180ACR265_Assembly Floor Analysis (1).pdf 1) California Computer Science Education Month highlights the crucial role that computer science plays in transforming our society, and also highlights how computer science enables innovation and creates economic opportunities. 2) Computing technology is an integral part of modern culture, and is transforming how people interact with each other and the world around them.3) Computer science builds students' computational, critical thinking, and deeper learning skills, which enables them to understand and create, and not simply use, the next generation of technological tools 201720180ACR265_Senate Floor Analyses (2).pdf SUPPORT: (Verified 8/21/18) Council for a Strong America Microsoft TechNet Please not description in this bill about the risk with screentime with blue light and those support this harm. 10 Thank You Craig A. Durfey 11 Araiza, Fatima From:Beverly Bolton <beverlyb@workingwardrobes.org> Sent:Monday, May 06, 2024 9:55 AM To:eComment Cc:Bonni Pomush; Hall, Jennifer Subject:Working Wardrobes Materials for 5/7 City Council Meeting Attention: This email originated from outside of City of Santa Ana. Use caution when opening attachments or links. Hello, Please see Working Wardrobes’ presentation materials at the below link for distribution to the City Council for the meeting tomorrow. Public Affairs Presentations about Working Wardrobes.pptx We will bring hard copies to distribute at the meeting as well. Please let me know if you have trouble accessing or if another format is preferred for the online agenda packet. Thank you! Beverly Bolton Administrative Manager Direct: Main Office: 714 210-2460 ext. 783 Working Wardrobes 2000 E. McFadden Ave., Suite 100 Santa Ana, CA 92705 www.workingwardrobes.org 1 ID0EC 2 Araiza, Fatima From:Jackie Angel Investor <jcordova4@msn.com> Sent:Monday, May 06, 2024 To:Mills, Susan; eComment Cc:Ryberg, Erinn Subject:Re: Current Events at City of Santa Ana Attention: This email originated from outside of City of Santa Ana. Use caution when opening attachments or links. -Never did I ever hear back from Susan Mills office. -When I called Santa Ana Police Department to report crime I witnessed on Main Street Historical District, supervisor Corporal Tapia hung up on me after he told me his excuses of why that was. They "are understaffed and way too busy to patrol" our Main Street and parks. Deadline #AnaheimAudit Jackie Cordova City of Santa Ana County of Orange State of California From: Jackie Angel Investor < Sent: Monday, April 29, 2024 3:00:22 PM To: Mills, Susan <smills@santa-ana.org>; eComment <eComment@santa-ana.org> Subject: Current Events at City of Santa Ana Horrible treatment @CityofSantaAna. It's crazy they cancelled the Juneteenth event due to lack of support from the city. That is so sad. "The Mayor went on public record, I recorded the clip. She called Juneteenth a party, and said we don’t have $75,000 for a party. It was totally unprofessional,” said Shipp, president of Orange County Heritage Council. https://www.precinctreporter.com/oc-heritage-council-juneteenth-festival-at-risk/ There is no such thing as "Police Oversight Commission" @CityofSantaAna . Never did I hear back from anyone at City of Santa Ana regarding police abuse incident I reported. Cities’ Efforts to Hold Police Accountable Hit a Wall: Police Civilian oversight boards face resistance from those they are supposed to monitor." -New York Obsolete Obstruction https://www.nytimes.com/2024/04/21/nyregion/albany-police-civilian-oversight-board.html A long-serving San Diego police accountability board may call it quits https://gosemofiber.info/news281310/a-long-serving-san-diego-police-accountability-board-may-call-it-quits/ 1 FBI Investigates Santa Ana School District’s COVID Testing Contracts Brokered By Disgraced Anaheim Leader SUSPICIOUS COVID TESTING CONTRACTS AT SANTA ANA UNIFIED LINKED TO KEY PLAYER IN ANAHEIM CORRUPTION SCANDAL @SantaAnaUSD @CityofSantaAna #AnaheimAudit https://laist.com/news/fbi-inquiry-santa-ana-unified-covid-testing Jackie Cordova Santa Ana California 2 Good evening. Six months ago I addressed this council requesting that steps be taken to reduce or prevent the automobile accidents occurring in the Mid -City intersection of Wilshire and S. Baker Streets. To date the only action taken was to elongate and re -paint the curbs red on the south and north corners at Wilshire and S. Baker St. This was done after meeting with city engineer Ortiz who actually came out and commented that she and her assistant had parked on a weekday and witnessed the dangerous situation at this intersection. The re -painting was a good move however some people believe the laws are for everyone else but them. Two Sundays ago, there was a family who mistook the corner for a park. They bought food at the truck, set out t.v. trays and chairs sat under the tree and ate while their children played around them. Their van was parked on the red, blocking the view of anyone attempting to turn left. Maybe an occasional police presence or a sign warning they would be ticketed in both English and Spanish might help. I was also made aware that warrants had been applied for by city engineers and a machine would be placed that would count the traffic to determine the necessity of additional stop signs, a stop -light or a round -a -bout. My reason for wishing to be alerted when the engineers or investigators were coming out was to show them what their machine would not capture. It wouldn't capture all the near misses; it wouldn't capture the pedestrian foot traffic and those near misses; it wouldn't capture how the parked cars block the drivers view; it wouldn't capture the fact that drivers must pull onto the traffic lane to look for oncoming traffic so they could complete their turn; it wouldn't capture people parking their cars alongside the food truck blocking the lane causing a traffic tie-up on the East/West lane on Wilshire; it wouldn't capture people ignoring the red -painted curbs where they park to eat their food blocking visibility of drivers trying to turn left; it wouldn't capture the trash people leave after eating their food. purchased at the food truck. There is a large empty parking lot at the corner of Bristol and Wilshire that could easily accommodate the food truck and its customers, while relieving a lot of the traffic congestion on Wilshire. Petition for Safety Measures We the undersigned, residing on Baker St., North of Edinger Ave. and South of Wilshire Ave., are requesting the following two items: , 1. Speed humps due to the heavy traffic during the early morning and late afternoon hours, including those who drive beyond the speed limit, endangering residents. 2. A stoplight or 4-way stop sign at the corner of Wilshire Ave. and Baker St., where multiple accidents have occurred. Peticidn de Medidas de Seguridad Nosotros, los abajo firmantes, que residimos on Baker St., al norte de Edinger Ave. y al sur de Wilshire Ave., solicitamos Ins siguientes dos articulos: 1. Reductores do velocidad debido al traffco pesado durance has primeras horas de la maflana y a] final de la tarde, incluidos aquellos que cooduzca mAs allA del limite de velocidad, poniendo en peligro a los residentes. 2. Un semaforo o serial de alto de 4 vhas on ha esquina de Wilshire Ave. y Baker St., donde ban ocurrido multiples accidentes. Petition for Safety Measures We the undersigned, residing on Baker St., North of Edinger Ave. and South of Wilshire Ave., are requesting the following two items: 1. Speed humps due to the heavy traffic during the early morning and late afternoon hours, including those who drive beyond the speed limit, endangering residents. 2. A stoplight or 4-way stop sign at the corner of Wilshire Ave. and Baker St., where multiple accidents have occurred. Petici6n de Medidas de Seguridad Nosotros, Ins abajo firmantes, que residimos en Baker St., al norte de Edinger Ave. y al sur de Wilshire Ave., solicitamos los siguientes dos articulos: 1. Reductores de velocidad debido al trafico pesado durante has primeras horas de la mafiana y al final de la tarde, incluidos aquellos que conduzca mas ally del limite de velocidad, poniendo en peligro a los residentes. 2. Un semdforo o seiial de alto de 4 vfas en la esquina de Wilshire Ave. y Baker St., donde ban ocurrido multiples accidentes. Petition for Safety Measures We the undersigned, residing on Baker St., North of Edinger Ave, and South of Wilshire Ave., are requesting the following two items: 1. Speed humps due to the heavy traffic during the early morning and late afternoon hours, including those who drive beyond the speed limit, endangering residents. 2. A stoplight or 4-way stop sign at the corner of Wilshire Ave. and Baker St., where multiple accidents have occurred. Peticidn de Medidas de Seguridad Nosotros, los abajo firmantes, que residimos en Baker St., al norte de Edinger Ave. y al sur de Wilshire Ave., solicitamos los siguientes dos articulos: 1. Reductores de velocidad debido al trafico pesado durante ]as primeras horas de la mahana y al fmal de la tarde, incluidos aquellos que conduzca mas al1A del IJmite de velocidad, poniendo en peligro a Jos residentes. 2. Un semaforo o sefial de alto de 4 vias en la esquina de Wilshire Ave. y Baker St., donde ban ocurrido multiples accidentes. Petition for Safety Measures 9 We the undersigned, residing on Baker St., North of Edinger Ave, and South of Wilshire Ave., are requesting the following two items: 1. Speed humps due to the heavy traffic during the early morning and late afternoon hours, including those who drive beyond the speed limit, endangering residents. 2. A stoplight or 4-way stop sign at the corner of Wilshire Ave. and Baker St., where multiple accidents have occurred. Petici6n de Med►das de Seguridad Nosotros, los abajo firmantes, quo residimos on Baker St., al norte de Edinger Ave. y al sur de Wilshire Ave., solicitamos Ins siguientes dos articulos: 1. Reductores de velocidad debido al trafico pesado durante las primeras horas de la manana y al final de la tarde, incluidos aquellos que conduzca mas all& del limite de velocidad, poniendo on peligro a los residentes. 2. Un semaforo o serial de alto de 4 vias on la esquina de Wilshire Ave. y Baker St., donde han oourrido multiples accidentes. � Good evening council members. I have two major issues to discuss. First and most important, there are simply too many traffic accidents occurring at the intersection of Wilshire Ave. and S. Baker St., eventually someone is going to be seriously injured or killed opening up the city for a major lawsuit. We circulated a petition to present to the city council and not a single resident told us "no," all were excited to sign hoping something could be done about this. A neighbor installed a camera and has video he would gladly share showing all the accidents that have occurred. We would like to see either a signal light; or a round -a -bout; or 4 lighted stop signs installed . The second issue is dealing with speedsters endangering residents on S. Baker St., the residents were all on -board with having "speed -bumps" installed. I parked on both Park Ave. and S. Baker St. on different days, at the same time 7:30 to 8:00 a.m, recording traffic. S. Baker gets triple the amount of traffic than Park Ave. yet they have speed bumps and it's a struggle to get them on S. Baker St., why is that? I'm aware of the speed a driver must hit to be considered speeding, yet none of the traffic I saw on Park Ave. went over 20 mph. Another neighbor has video of the traffic on Baker including the speedsters and has offered copies if need be. Circulating the petition opened up a can of worms as many of the residents told us about other traffic problems like Mater Del parents dropping their kids off blocking residents from exiting their driveways refusing to move; On Wilshire the red curbs were extended and they worked for a while but eventually people returned to parking their cars on the red to eat their lunch purchased from the food truck parked on Wilshire, this makes turning left dangerous. I have a lot of suggestions, but with only 3 minutes to speak, I had to cut to the chase. Thank you for your time and attention Oct. 6.2023 p Oct. 2, 2023 6 14 May 26, 2022 June 2023 9 June 2023 ftlly, &- Pit a Mayo 7, 2024 Senor Alcalde Amezcua y miembros del Ayuntamiento de Santa Ana. Con todo respeto me dirijo a ustedes y quiero presentarme: Mi nombre es Pilar Aguero y soy Terapeuta de profesion, madre de tres hijos propietarios de una empresa constructora en Santa Ana. Soy una residente de esta histdrica ciudad, y orgullosa de las raices que hemos sembrado mis hijos y mis nietos. Mi trabajo y mis intereses, a menudo me Ilevan a viajar al extranjero, pero Santa Ana es mi hogar y es por este motivo que me encuentro presente aqui esta noche. Me preocupo profundamente, y trato de apoyar el cambio positivo que propicie una mejor calidad de vida, de todos los habitantes que colaboran y trabajan en Santa Ana. A las orillas de la costa sur a pocas cuadras de mi casa hay un centro comercial ubicado al sur de la calle Bristol. Esta calle, necesita una remodelacion, para que este centro commercial cumpla con la necesidad de los clientes, y active sus ingresos propiciando seguridad a ingresos multiples a nuestra ciudad. Igualmente, Santa Ana tiene otros centros comerciales que son obsoletos, por contrucciones tan antiguas de 50 a 60 anos atras. La Plaza Metropolitana de la ciudad, no es mas la misma de ayer. Ha envejecido y los espacios que antes eran ocupados y rendian ingresos a la ciudad ahora lucen desocupados y vacantes. Todo esto es debido a que ahora hacemos nuestras compras de manera diferente, ya sea por telefono, o en linea por computadora. Lo que es peor aun, es que este centro ya no es tan amigable y acogedor como to fuera en otro tiempo. Algo importante de tomar en consideracion son los acres de estacionamientos vacios. Tambien personas merodeando por las tiendas en las esquinas que no ofrecen seguridad. No hay proteccion para darle vida a un lugar que es simbolo de relaciones familiares y hermandad en Santa Ana, posiblemente, porque hay cambios en su funcionamiento. El modernismo impera y no hemos hecho por mucho tiempo renovaciones importantes y positivas en bien de la comunidad. El plan para reemplazar este hito es vital para la comunidad, y es una alternativa interesante a to que existe hoy. Como muchos de mis vecinos del sur de Santa Ana, dependemos casi a diario, de las tiendas y servicios de este centro, deseariamos it de compras, y cenar con familiares y amigos cercanos a casa. Queremos apoyar a las empresas locales en el centro, pero; para regresar necesitamos queremos sentirnos seguros a ilusionados para visitor nuestro centro. Tal como se propuso; Related Bristol hara eso y mucho mas. Creara miles de nuevos empleos, que generaran millones de ddlares con nuevos ingresos fiscales, para las numerosas mejoras y proyectos futuros, necesarios en toda nuestra ciudad, de aqui en adelante. Lo que mis me entusiasma, son las oportunidades de empleo que ofrece este proyecto. Related Bristol creara, hasta 7.500 nuevos puestos de trabajo, que son vitales para la salud y el bienestar de nuestra comunidad. En mi trabajo, me encuentro con pacientes, cuyos desafios en la vida a menudo surgen, de no tener un trabajo y una manera de mantenerse a si mismos y a sus familias. Un Proyecto como Related Bristol, creara nuevos empleos muy necesarios para nuestra ciudad. El desarrollador Related Bristol incluso se ha comprometido a contratar a muchos de los trabajadores para este proyecto los cuales seran los mismos habitantes de esta ciudad. Como propietaria de casa, madre, abuela orgullosa y empresaria en esta ciudad, los alentamos a seguir adelante ahora; y programar audiencias, para considerar todos los beneficios. Related Bristol, realizara beneficios a nuestra ciudad. Esta es una oportunidad para traer un cambio positivo unico en una generacion a Santa Ana, un lugar al que todos amamos apasionadamente. Gracias por escuchar y considerar mis comentarios. May 7, 2024 To: Santa Ana Mayor Valerie Amezcua and City Council From: Pilar Aguero-Cardosa, Santa Ana Resident in South Coast Shores Re: Related Bristol Redevelopment Proposal on South Bristol Street Hello Mayor Amezcua and members of the Santa Ana City Council. My name is Pilar Aguero, a proud resident of this historic city and a therapist by profession. I have three sons who own a construction company in Santa Ana, and my family, including my grandchildren, live here as well. My work and interests often take me abroad. But Santa Ana is my home, which is why I am here tonight. I care deeply about our city and I try and support positive change whenever and wherever possible to improve the quality of life for all people who live and work in our city. A few blocks from my home in South Coast Shores is a shopping center on south Bristol Street that needs major change. Like many shopping centers built 50 and 60 years ago, Metro Town Square is not what it once was. It is getting old and there are more and more vacancies because we shop differently today from our phones and computers. Even worse, this center is not as friendly and welcoming anymore with the acres and acres of empty parking lots and more outside elements hanging around the stores and on the street corners. This center needs a major makeover. It needs to be redeveloped and the Related Bristol plan to replace this vital community landmark is an exciting alternative to what exists today. Like many of my neighbors in south Santa Ana, we depend almost daily on the stores and services at this center. We want to shop and dine out with family and friends close to home. We want to support the local businesses at the center. But to keep coming back we want to feel safe and excited about going to the center. As proposed, Related Bristol will do that and much more. It will create thousands of new jobs, deliver millions of dollars in new tax revenues for the many improvements and projects needed all across our city and it will once again make this shopping center a destination where we will feel safe. 1 What excites me most are the employment opportunities from this project. Related Bristol will create as many as 7,500 new jobs which are vital to the health and wellbeing of our community. In my work, I meet with patients whose challenges in life often come from not having a job and a way to provide for themselves and their families. A project like Related Bristol will create much needed new employment and the Related Bristol developer has even committed to hiring many of the project's workers from right here in Santa Ana. As a homeowner, a mother, a proud grandmother and a businesswoman in this city, encourage you to move forward now and set hearings to consider all of the benefits Related Bristol will deliver to our city. This is an opportunity to bring a once -in -a -generation positive change to Santa Ana, a place we all care passionately about. Thank you for listening and considering my comments 2 U a W �W V / HOW* LU LU Q 0 J LU O Qi 0. U). . Q LU U)m Q Q LUZ H� <) c0 U~ 09 LL O O = F� O O O C L > Z 0 � � � Q �O OZaa o 0 w -0 v , +� ZXwF_ � U U as Ln2LIL � U �) o a� o �p °jWx(9 c m` Q'n@, O J U) H ° C z a _o �,,, �noo° \q N 3 Q I..L. OUNQO0 ° N y 3 1J WO F Z 7~ Z In O O/ _ Q Z) Q > < (D E: 0 C U L C U O O U O � U O E } cncn � cn C C co O cn O 3 c5 m0 + o s oN > °� NU(DC Oa a aa zo U O L° E'con Q N > o O O 0- \ o U 0> > t s C N N .E -o O 7 "� N C Cl) 4° Q Q i a U I M mX n cn m cn • • • • • • 0 ff �Gi�pD r D > D C1 3 :5� D O D W N m Omm n/ (D O D O Cn c -g.o O O nDN�D ism cn c p° z (�� n =� c z a O 0 D D W /s1\ 0 O U) OD>�D D� n o V Q Q (\ 1 N Q Q O Z r r m —1 m m O Q LT f� Q y // (D O o� N n D� p Z� n n p D Cl) 7 rr. v 0 O m 0 p 0) n`Di � �?� O Q_ 0 0 > D� r o � .Z7 b Vo # ✓.� n (D D p 00 1 Q to CT �Zvmm% 0 j cn O D m In D C a (D (T O N m n� (D D O - n z O D * m N' o o a (D con o m Q D(D Q Q p Q Q n O 7— n C ((D ((D rt Q (gyp. G. a° m, o (� O m Q' Q C Q o Q -' Q y (D r Q(D Q (n N. Q Q (D C O D Q m ti Q m O O CD Q N Q Q (D CD Q_ (D � Q o n Q O Q (i Q Q L (D rF S co 3 (D rt cn o to < p O:3 co rtcgl o' CAQ O O (D O (D O Q O Q Q a Q ,< O C� p 0 O ((DD Q � O N^ _ co C Q O Q Q Q (D cn �-� ti �• CD Cn O O' O\ II Q n y a m Q Q(D (n p C O Q �. o° O Q n N(D Q, �co C!1 Q cn cn J Q Q Uz w� �6 ry cn Q OLLJ >- = Cr) Cl)� ryw O> 131,01-6 U) 40, W a Q v a v a .(D c c o .S cl) oCl) cn > Q C N 7 . Q C c T Lo p N Y p ui • cn p O Q O O) Y— • (� C O c i O 'Q .C�_ c Q ; Z 12 O CO Q p [n O � c C c E O A p • Y E p_ i 0 0 .0 ro C E v O • C CO Q i Q O p Q .c .O O .� O C N u6 O 5 U' M ; C O Cj E � �' p c N O Oo CO (D E o o U a o ; y� E o o M° o E Y c • Z •p O > N � O Q U O of L . N D Q O N L O U 'C ��f O • m Cn m 0 w w Q U LZ U w O p Q U Y Q 0 O V Y Y I U _ 00 0o � o n D r o o � n n N > D �C Q m (n n rn 0 D O z cQ O 0 C/) � `� Q N "' O zT D 0 J Q Z 0 O ��DZ W 0 (D Z �—Cf) 0 7 0�°Q 0W D� �cn n O 1 J 9 A) co Q o -� o C O H nz;u Q O Cl) \1L �. (D � �' u) O (D T O E a7 O O O._ L. r C U U O O i- cn .0) Q j p C (D C D + 0 a) O O E O *T' OU N > U C Y +� ;� w o O p` N U v 1 O Z} u)-a Q p CCCn O O C Q CD —v- c CCC L U T 7 C 'Z C O O E U c Q rn O p p v .� O N 0 U + 0-+' + N C 0 O rn O7 O CDp E p U O Q O U L N Q 7 o Q : i i0 �_ a) O U U) .E i CZD 0 C3 O U O_ 0 0 0 s V 1 v5f U �G x �, O H P4 U ,..� a�w�z� as �Hw �W-4 w aH U ` O C } O O U 0 Q T co Q = H 6 E (D m o o> a o > C Q N C o < m 00 O O C a a o c a)T .N O Q 0 a) > O '+- '_' c E U o a) O N L O O w m O O E w U 0 O - C E O O N O x O O O O cn 'U- 0 L� w I tt 0 0 D n O D D cn 0 CD 0 r 0 C N 0 Cx� 0 C G 0 oo O 0 0 N m OA7' 0 rn ^ rt Z �J A O n O O J 7 0 D Q a Q n Q n 0 ooDa O O cQ N CD o # r, O1 1 9 �� (D(D (D 4 4 D co (D cD Q Q Q � o(OD Q 5.o n D cc n �_ Q _ Q ip D 0 D m M K O m K Z THERAPEUTIC AfUs 2215 North Broadway, Santa Ana, CA 92706 (714) 547 — 5468 www.occtac.org Vision & Mission The Orange County Children's Therapeutic Arts Center (OCCTAC) is the first and only Multidisciplinary ARTS Organization of its kind in Santa Ana & Orange County to offer unique artistic programs that combine the arts, academics, and creative therapies. OCCTAC's Vision Statement: A world where all families have equitable access to exceptional arts, educational, and therapeutic programs that empower and transform lives. Our Mission Statement: TO provide innovative arts, education, and therapy programs to low-income and special needs families that unlock potential, nurture creativity, and promote diversity, equity, and inclusion. Our Programs OCCTAC serves over 6,000 children, 500 youth and 200 adults per year by providing artistic, educational and therapeutic programs throughout the year to the Santa Ana Community and surrounding cities in Orange County. Our Programs serve a wide range, from very young children and their parents, to young adults and seniors. Our programs empower children, youth adults, and older adults, build confidence and self-esteem, and promote community and family wellness! After School Arts/ Prep Arts Academy Program (Music, Art, Dance & Technology programs for children and youth 4-18 yrs. of age) Community Wellness/Mental Health Program (Counseling, Emotional wellness education, Mental Health workshops, Support groups, etc.) Early Intervention for Older Adults Program (Education, Socialization & Therapeutic programs for older adults at -risk of isolation and mental illness) Early Start & Pre -Kinder Arts Program (Parent & Child Early Intervention Programs for children 6mos. to 4 years) Family Mentoring (Services and Support for families that have a child/youth with a disability) Learning Academy/ Tutoring Program (Academic & Homework Support for children and youth 4-16 yrs. of age) SAUSD Engage 360 Arts (After School Art Enrichment for Elementary & Middle School students in SAUSD) Therapeutic Arts Program (Music, Art & Dance therapy for children and youth with special needs) Wraparound Arts & Tutoring Program (Arts enrichment, Academic & Homework support for Foster youth and special needs children) Youth Employment Program (Work readiness program in digital art, music technology, childcare and office clerk; career & educational counseling and other supportive services for young adults ages 18 — 24yrs.) UC (. AI L .F 'S THERAPEUTICT 2215 North Broadway, Santa Ana, CA 92706 (714) 547 — 5468 www.occtac.ore OCCTAC Celebrates 24 years in the Community! Creative Arts — Creative Education — Creative Therapy Brief History: Dr. Ana Jimenez -Ham! founded OCCTAC in the year 2000, with the vision of providing access and equity programming to diverse communities of limited resources and high need. Families with special needs students were the target population at onset, but OCCTAC quickly expanded its' mission to provide services to all families in need of services. OCCTAC's Vision & Mission: Vision Statement. A world where all families have equitable access to exceptional arts, educational, and therapeutic programs that empower and transform lives. Mission Statement. Provide innovative arts, education, and therapy programs to low- income and special needs families that unlock potential, nurture creativity, and promote diversity, equity, and inclusion. OCCTAC's Growth and Accomplishment over the past 24 years: 1. Number of Participants served (from 100 participants in year 1 to over 8,000 participants per year). OCCTAC has served over 100,000 children, youth and families from low-income communities during the past 23 years. 2. Age Range of Participants served (very young children, youth adults and older adults). 3. Number of Programs offered in the community (from only 2 programs in year Ito 11 programs today!). a. After -School Arts/ Prep Arts Academy —Students 5-8yrs. from all OC. b. Therapeutic Arts program —Special needs students of all backgrounds in OC. c. Early childhood education —very young children (0-5) and parents. d. Youth Employment Program —young adults 16 — 24 years with significant barriers. e. Community Wellness & Mental Health programs - Youth & Family Counseling, emotional support and mental health programs for children, youth and adults in OC. THERAPEUTic A.RTS 2215 North Broadway, Santa Ana, CA 92706 (714) 547 — 5468 www.occtac.ore f. Wraparound Tutoring program — tutoring foster youth/ county referrals in OC. g. Family Mentoring — support for families with special needs students in OC. h. Early Interventionfor OlderAdults — preventing mental illness for older adults in OC. i. SAUSDArts program — arts enrichment for students at SAUSD school district. j. Community Parks Arts— arts enrichment at Community Centers in Santa Ana. k. Community partnerships and programs at other agencies — FaCT program (in partnership with the Children's Bureau & County SSA, Parks Community Centers, etc. ). 4. Strong Community Partners — OCCTAC has grown significantly throughout the years, thanks to our strong community partners, such as: County of Orange, Social Services & Health Care Agency, Regional Center of OC, City of Santa Ana, Santa Ana Unified School District, Multiethnic Collaborative of Community Agencies, Pepperdine University, and many morel S. Growth of OCCTAC's Operational Budget — OCCTAC started with $50,000 budget in the year 2000; and currently, OCCTAC exceeds 1.8 million. Most of our current funding goes to programs. 85-90% going to programs and 15-10% to operations. 6. OCCTAC's Building- we spend more than $100k In rent a year- so that's close to $21VIM over the past 24 years. Our immediate and most important goal is to raise money for OCCTAC's own building. We are in the process of planning a capital campaign to raise funds for our building. 7. OCCTAC's website - www.occtac.Org 600 U � Tborgdoy, 2014 . no AIR F 9` y ; rr L' w S I'vasee��a pVt1wilaour4larigeirevavehOrera Rue play. Pam-.➢AWOOUNOO otMIOI . I �A'3an±ffi7diEli.Bttir.4��klga �lefCltJ7�Y(^}lit(RrY98Rdirej%pnEi$r�/3LF.�faJ�i iiEi:'� mRNCLb*%{f4d$A9M(e14 QjvU+t1 aidpnlohg"at IA'P a C,BdFiLTtlk�t(t1fe+&M'x , q"eprRHtiFYV 4Phelpdd..L171/dd.Yti`tg ^suf+RthBT;d�jtw'€diiC➢tdf. Themlime In chmoce `A , n➢d f i ptlPd $t mus pM^ �ple W41 js #reEMH lllefi a G Wlied one rwEner v v ;i aneF�ms'm:etotcmytngiYatEun• . mHoaNHuabend eu[�✓♦YaH #,kmC r 1fPl(Rd�i'�ilRnti&"BC�aeMi. ,'. Elpq➢uahret' yoin8p➢.' Pk'$'4±PeFJnP ?D+4T0.iPiYFl.B to➢« ` 16i` Ni0. ]Imes n4iip4tdb2QeveoEberso➢sebet AHarmyb{'o c➢d del sou E;iaken,beaolSllder�ytoglassea �ALSAslFlfgurbn`d Y�d➢iiHdseys• p..k�a�cg 'FSh ik *. ildE4Atk':YI�FEhase witH dlsnbil "�f fPd•h➢VO CtdidY2ti;. esjse �`�,, LUileC$"` KC'�. i41e3 t�oz vrHem FuIE vlt Wteommnnl- 44�H 1j; d(gfYPUalso Rto- etsnYtllA9asiaF gdoonE{➢A ypnr schfpl PY'd6F0i1is B4'e k➢:�ut« rqr anmhX tpr r3. gbf%. >r3daan olSpUriunlEy{creblldien 'It. 'aHa,'sa}d."Y re RPPB-0.E5e• H.y eIX.u� WH,nPX'�lRtenESllePit(p➢Yerty. "�'tltltosiC sd tnagyg@oblems t>;gndods' hHpago 3q pyj� lHlldien,`: °t Ys S$63i�sJa�fnd�—Map eau UM *We obaditatEerWClndses.iw 1p1 W ➢tad, beneA610, trap! jhe p xT - r91YYA+Yilnsal2?831a7 4aUY Tlaaa Yinmtlad:332 . Y Yk1,mPukH E'aaTss; d 8�f {YXgY. 6fC$CE i{iE�elcl}[ogngaeHother ._. Ni R§lUdmPa' 1Maney Baea era4:Vrg�T mlvo 1+>+5h? 'h n}JaRN7 iama. ,DWd MAda VeloaPo,n - lE9Y;keHA01 $$pr~➢SdTPpt�iP[otEvra.'tfoor 112I LVGyCrcanPa tR�, about WfYdrett Yee wtEb dtsebled kids; f.,aas• 1R�WelYY}�ei V pllkh§bkE.EE'C.'Theycanbeteach- ➢tHSy $nl 4}rrg E}l,C1Y.{811t11eelilDu1712tidn6 Race XMatl'Y:044 �ROO an ttgkf meb 9Y#, , t�tlldted ➢OO)SOuvi - and etatd A*,. PHd ➢reps wtifneSY . ➢S0.ug akilr7es 98 of 79 , (6Pojb9,e8y78 - :,.*OL,mv @nn9Q 3I?t �Y9Y.T3➢tW td is xeet_mt"ek�Ro(s�w j:. S.I. SHLL NGING DE�SPIITEt: :�c y It Im When they w Yv TTa o- BRUAa Okolsre lr�a ii xi utnwr�r Y4#iY battle with Lxroo9t caul- cet` WOld;Soon bLsave[:. But, ph0NvaYxterl her twackaAer.1von - botb ur avtaom iravo linen diq''-- rus,ecl M&I Mtfi era lb beconye m- ef� frextctc:r tt €rcizik ts: hnri t, pe anxSvecl-ti taclaw rv(giid 91 art daerapya ter. mate fundilIg.dried ur), far a video "I alt�ru �IaSs, Oo to ar��%arc a�mr�1�. make tifxa l }p F r, "S I! 4r cttw aa€ ilaena,"' he tiatel taps, " tl ws Cch u r th+art." 1 ��G 7t��k,1;(i�in •-',Jnse;� �i iC� of 1€f Aws -AiWi Atxt lre-eras iott R Wlr, to rxafaa rStelahtaaie,, S5, nod Abu- 1rn2u, A wlutkedicWt,know wetsthatjoi . ing asp o ills lia o raiao ewsaiG.l hake s��:+;,a�naf�angvact' a ............ _ 4�ff4..�ll4°J.GYJIL i}}4$1�x{YyLW}Ia Aw Y�uar4 a�trGedl�sh�irile�, tll�ub+�ivtritc�; �gcplare� de (:aliPolrnia est�tc multandoalos alutrmos quo tleueri' f4hammeesivas, otrpsdlstritaghan: solichado clue, lag patlrvs titsta tx lilndoseuandgtaltetr wshrjax,afrn dereponerl4sFpritlruqueelctssizlto• horeeibedel estado.Kl CSisstritodo �anurArzario ltau~on�slrieradaest2r rxretlidat. .La tey estatrtlrequiierequelog , tklslrrtM esuolares tcatgan tii frresupuest s Sue cuarire, Los rt part<rartntcas de eduoasian del estado o el,cartuiudo Ottrtlrrsrn ats- ~i�ar'herlr aclr>linir7traeicara fruanciertt da�lartdistrdterr incanli�rmidad, p'a 0100S,My pr'tst 4ble Sue eso srrrdll uuel,I7aatri n,?tld Santa Aria, Ya quo, log Mptresoutantes def Pstrltn stdo tttrbajrtnd arduamente pam remedirar tos proar masprosupuestales. YYfIa2u�:Y5. :a�ttNul irawws.pu�.}u ..... I. raperutic arts venter Opens Multi -Media Arts The 4rangeCannty Children's Therapeutie,Arts Ocraer opened a new multi-mediaarts and'technology Job, The lab will provide students. with the opportunity to learn Com- prtter graphaa arts design -and ottAee' corrptater•relateit„lttlas, The Center as a private, non- pr4torganizatian laundli`n Santa. Ana tlm'. years rigtr l>y Ex,oc0 NO WreoturApaArnonox, Tura £xrlraalt- "whip roiationablp Zvi �h Santa Ana, Unified, TheUrstricPprtrvrderr dornaiiand&4motimesthot'anti. the Cerrter ofFexs trreraputtc pro- grams for nu bornsupto4ge,l.91. C7urpurpexselstt7edtrctttea�,ut- power and 'heal,"' remarked Dr. Jimenez, "W,e'veobservedimpnwev nre ltsirtgtudortt laelaava ax,as well as 409 wait anilpsychologicahmptove- rrauat: s. ��re Centeriallers musiczarts anti thsialtr prs�tarug,Irt�uievVorkfuid & Technology Lab lat MY tutaring,, The Center also serves adnitk and offers parertting elasscr . ltprovides seholtirships or. risks for nominal:Charges for its sef Vices. Its Fundingisfrompublicand privatesources. Cur,mntly,300chil Laren and their Families are served by thocooterc Infortuadow (7l4)54T646& Womews Fair at Kennedy Kennedy Elementary School welcomed U.S. Congresswoman Loretta 5irncher„, tat Camrnuul- tiea�TUapxtaC,Ntnrrie Strenrp'nmi1 �ourt�oraterMOatIS Re�aurc Center adtlatyof,5z ntirAnarepce stntativ rfarts�Vntrtctu"sBealthand l?ge,sourceVair. The-Falroffered! tt, f?r`ruation on a variety of services: avrlalabls:l",�rvvoartrrt rtnr}chililz�nSh• tlreX t§ratt2ttttrlty: Aft 0 $PORTWAR ONO. eAZTE'Q $0rCER r gAOVEha-PW'xy �efA O, r"EcomiawrY SERVICETM MI - trr�tgs AAw7'AAM CA Om t"A7is'r#sj9"wS":7Ed2 ml �q Qk �fitdt#M Tha tSeaxW Fully It"Ntpu ff &EtTA R�4 t.ickalt saace6mL 19. has la}e A qfy anlram% She N shy'. MUN ivei>Si'. t:~o& aunts; Q'd,lt` o-p" tfcr dqa tx;: °k€{dks,Ratg,m'.Yaad{re tas. it d not alclude t;Wdr€;n;.; is+atxi; a5seti�,"�Lerktl�.v2+i uaiel s0th ptwStcsi, did-I9.ibritit. or iii.[CI 4taF Wlylmll 1t}t said ,Eil IIXumea paurcuell wow Wwtaxrr• w..I r +�' a. N*• •=z - -+tx� nd€,ax ;3 yzlsl rM1.7tw, Ifcca. "ti=-item th su� [c{€, ` s43 r, sq pu enc ut ulid's - All stao it 2ati t BroAdvvay, Alta NOW'O die ca qs+a a a1 t- wl In, e a? m c, L Cr;aG$C" cfiildnrel. patents, Wars, dareaw"WlR'S 46t,aniafr<i the ,£f kazairlft d gbihl" as .t€51a#atxrs aaul vtdmr�€�ezx ast nsartplurid gcrault 10 ftrasaie wr SSlru I lion 'Ayr Alsatri rol ht ate.•=L dim, €iria amlavr+may ssntc p+e1 yy mIt di.obilide* in t^h #ium ,alx>aio r tf fmmr o;' •. 1Fs€ eaf ud n't aid&. arse , 300VO Mill tho Iles;t eat io!v' and %tuni E` aldl [Tiaw" jumi ii its Snt;tkc'd 'kld l liue riog< org4tiCv Atta use iw lwarr'{hi slinI tAf{ 4t, " ipt hol* lihs) in tYmwa- .i5dim)i 0 d`k%}kiwn - f[m.)SC �f�pe�m:6ting pmn 2Cttuft araund ahadtal,. gsiy lqA'. ti,'V and lfpoC hi`l wilh vd'IBgbithida ,S d fr" wa the o(Inte r 2ndpligaaq '111 hinx- m£ntalialua. iTi?S£f&c: Kld1lk f16i"a1ho5 n tiotfI:1 aN[�A�ySa�bmf Slo:rawq' "Mfo beard toiellrir A1don is f FCiY C%�3t�" l#et Et<il`„yiiN j� are ulfl trhil, i4l Imi Said eadst.17 PP SM&Md, Un dwo)aml wboarc rlu2.. {hey The 1, filer has U panyaeiur' teglt'net=7iva. 4r helm oty aru utrr.*' iei^rash 0" and atEatme diicc:doe ,- 'dautdaCY on Arai iut dat, This, t.flikhem, ina'f imAF oxloolk6aamunueYX. :. aeo4ld." - fisaruing to mad aartl env Raw ieOWW4 i$ iaxs a nod A mew ago, opidov,4_96, ,I pr£prrty. an be comet aho waft A coo,bud pinny am), ltomfir of devuln, tt'G8 iFG i7#it iumi f kimvY Ill"agnovi OPA lldi"' to t lv iejk#ir"#ns2~<et $tla9 :. (ov CU9o4c'3 -kq tjvlm'lfia'who r4v's4*io# out 2U the fdifs rufifF lap. ovy rlss£aki a t11v comb r, > '. ".a1f-onya JUA- i._ to `,lafi p i£ W dls�lr� lItteo lbuila [,!a `smota :k.i'a 51n,{7d gtoa fiff ? in bVI rygaiil$ Sih' T,Ik$f"N-a°.6ert 9lw saV€Oto t,7ai9' lod S&` xet! t3 uTici. win-w'xmhvr swax a, 9Y cvk to i"Coli8 tht NT[f's' plant Or tttt rtelr said Aw Cipcitai i fk la llp iitwpil 'Mitt iemti7 couldaliord la'ALizbolhetaid cetatr.-rr�6.,tar.el iu illmktfsts ahJ!xxaa€varu4RA. Nlhfafalf}�bu' s{!�'ineinkAry VdiaiC' Iz2toaly the e,jq'` pit i. d sJaalloep- in hrep:. .�fI+•Y €-( aurae £{al"Y' I 40ho rY f&n7lukd4hw,,"F6luktasav Oaqu eili+med Shin WInd liSq 'dbf}rfEh'F�9dSP1444.tiF' {f pi ". l'4Cldjfiilt'y 3IH'Ckltedutaquo 41V ckin t" tew:—wi d€Si£ as, ._... :.:•- iR} ti' ±C, .' f-kilu'eel :nee a9. krill W'q"kfl i-isal ai €t4xamz. v'Itrr�a' t la's>ps ,bera iiet w 'she r scks ah and as m"- - ka€odya dwatibbl, a €ummi ........, s,MF6p'}"uiy O'Vioama iF}'tf :^ik*.{ uv,akr 7f. i��-xn laisnrf• {fUt.f. tr,fr iF4 ?°kr Ya?q {a %jai'&%'**Sea :v4.�.Tt s1�. O FUR Q' yyy p A. .V m w i�o R p mot /w [+gh1 :° 0 p Q -n Fr � 38 x �° w'.g s ° ,� (7An €R`r� o S aqg, a ya,w v.9^c o o y-� �`<'w •°n� ao a.� Ci: ,o '.�'fl�v, IN 0,0 aAl °� ° M. It `� a C n W p q y y �, O c.oGb 8 'od z8c wO i'_..>�. 89w o; Ga`"oa�s w��•.-��m9If 0 y ow�'.a^H'�a.�o °� Py�7� � o. P)�n8wfy?.Rw0 ow 03 t�py gw� me o.w w. OC CHILDREWS THERAPEUTIC ARTS Gaative Arts. Creative Education. Creative Therapy Dr. Ana Jimenez-Hami Founder and Executive Director P: (714) 547-5468 ext: 307 2215 N. Broadway, Floor 01 Santa Ana, CA 92706 F: (714) 564-9690 www.occtac.org E: ana@occtac.org JOIN US FOR OUR ANNUAL Community Partners Celebration May 23, 2024, 5:30 PM - 7:30 PM THE ESTATE ON t t D 9 B flr �-rA PLEASE RSVP AT Usk 1/0.\. WWW.000TAC.ORG/CPC2024 DR SCAN THE OR CODE