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HomeMy WebLinkAboutCorrespondence - Non Agenda Flores, Dora From:T Sherman <nothingbutfun@gmail.com> Sent:Wednesday, To:eComment Subject:Item 29 Attention: This email originated from outside of City of Santa Ana. Use caution when opening attachments or links. Councilmembers, This past weekend I took my 6 year old grandson along with our dog to Jack Fisher Park. It was early in the morning, perhaps 6:30. Sprawled out on one of the park benches was an individual who, I am guessing, had decided to spend at least part of the evening, sleeping on the park. Seems you folks had called upon park staff to remove the metal arm rests from the middle of park benches. Had these still been in place, this person as well as others could still sleep upon a park bench, but not horizontally. Maybe your decision to remove these arm rests was to allow those who choose to sleep in our parks to be comfortable. All you are doing is enabling vagrants a reason to settle in our city. Voting in favor of Item 29 on the agenda will assist Santa Ana in keeping pace with neighboring cities regarding those who are homeless. We should do everything to provide safe and secure shelter for those interested in obtaining this. And for those who choose to shit and sleep outdoors, push these people to the nearest city with city leaders foolish enough to place the well being of those selecting not to contribute to society over those who do. Regards. Tony Sherman 1 Flores, Dora From:Cashio, Jason P <Jason.Cashio@providence.org> Sent:Wednesday, December 18, 2024 9:32 AM To:eComment Subject:12/17/2024 - Anti-Encampment Ordinance Attachments:To Whom This Concerns 12.17.2024.pdf Attention: This email originated from outside of City of Santa Ana. Use caution when opening attachments or links. Good Morning, I was unable to make it to the City Council meeting last night but I wanted to provide my comments and thoughts regarding the Anti-Encampment ordinance that was supposed to be discussed. See my attached document. Thank you for taking the time to review and consider my comments. Jason Cashio, MHA Senior Manager Practice Operations, Santa Ana th 2212 E Fourth Street, Santa Ana, CA 92705 St. Joseph Heritage Medical Group Office: 714-571-7750 Mobile: 714-274-7603 “Making Lemonade… via email” This message is intended for the sole use of the addressee, and may contain information that is privileged, confidential and exempt from disclosure under applicable law. If you are not the addressee you are hereby notified that you may not use, copy, disclose, or distribute to anyone the message or any information contained in the message. If you have received this message in error, please immediately advise the sender by reply email and delete this message. 2 December 17th, 2024 To Whom This Concerns, First thing to acknowledge is that “people” are complex and there is not one choice that determines the status of someone’s life. Is it a lifetime of experiences, circumstances, environment, choices, and thousands of other factors that culminate in a person’s life situation. As a result, there is no “One Answer” or “One Solution” that can fix the multifaceted situation of a person’s life. At Providence, our Core Values and Mission are interwoven into the very fabric of this organization. Our Core Values are Compassion, Dignity, Justice, Integrity, and Excellence. Our Core Values serve as the guiding light to our Mission as we strive to prov ide healthcare to the underserved and vulnerable. We support the proposed ordinance as an important step toward creating safe, clean, and accessible public spaces for all community members, including our patients and caregivers, while addressing the complexities of homelessness with dignity, compassion, and integrity. The City of Santa Ana has demonstrated its commitment to care by establishing a multidisciplinary program that connects individuals to critical resources such as mental health care, medical treatment, and other essential services. Additionally, the city’s homeless shelter provides a comprehensive and compassionate solution, offering beds, showers, bathrooms, meals, and even outdoor accommodations for pets. To ensure accessibility, the city also provides transportation to the shelter, lowering barriers for individuals in need. For those who choose not to utilize these resources due to personal decisions, the ordinance allows authorities to intervene in a dignified and respectful manner, ensuring these individuals receive some form of shelter and care. At the same time, it addresses the growing concerns of residents, businesses, and patients by creating a safer and cleaner environment in public spaces, allowing everyone to go about their lives without fear or discomfort. By balancing enforcement with compassionate care, this ordinance represents good first step in a holistic approach to tackling homelessness. We encourage the city to continue investing in robust social services and programs, fostering a just and inclusive community where all individuals have the opportunity to achieve health, safety, and well-being. Thank you, Jason Cashio Senior Operations Manager, Santa Ana Providence St. Joseph Heritage Medical Group Flores, Dora From:Olympia Beltran <1olympia@gmail.com> Sent:Wednesday, December To:eComment Subject:Agenda Item#29 Attention: This email originated from outside of City of Santa Ana. Use caution when opening attachments or links. I support item #29. As a lifelong resident of Santa Ana, we deserve better. Let’s make Santa Ana beautiful again! -Olympia 1 Flores, Dora From:Michael Mavrovouniotis <michaelmavrovouniotis@gmail.com> Sent:Tuesday, December 31, To:eComment Subject:CITY COUNCIL, GENERAL PUBLIC COMMENT Attention: This email originated from outside of City of Santa Ana. Use caution when opening attachments or links. Have you seen this article in the OC Register? Big A exposure will help homeless pets in Orange County https://www.ocregister.com/2024/12/06/big-a-exposure-will-help-homeless-pets-in-orange-county/ Column: Pairing animal activists and grand slams can save more lives Please read all the way through. The article cites my research, published in a scientific journal. https://jsmcah.org/index.php/jasv/article/view/85 I showed that allowing visitors in the kennel areas increases adoptions. But OC Animal Care has the fewest hours of kennel access of any large shelter in Southern California. This is bad for the animals AND bad for the taxpayer, because slower adoptions mean higher costs. Let your city know that OC Animal Care’s policies need to change. Your city, along with other OC cities, pays the shelter’s bills. Don’t let the county bureaucracy waste your money by preventing adoptions. 2 Flores, Dora From:W Gifford <wgifford813@yahoo.com> Sent:Wednesday, To:eComment Subject:City Council Public Comment, Orange County Animal Care Attention: This email originated from outside of City of Santa Ana. Use caution when opening attachments or links. OC Animal Care has not restored pre-COVID access to the shelter and the dog kennels. All other animal shelters have done that. Look at the table of kennel viewing in other SoCal shelters, showing that OCAC is near the bottom. The three lowest are: OCAC with 21 hours of kennel viewing per week; SEAACA with 20; Mission Viejo with 28. But OCAC doesn’t show all available animal. The other two allow full access. SEAACA even allows holds to be put on not-yet-available pets. (At OC non-available pets are not visible to the public, either in person or on the web.) A research paper on OCAC appeared in the journal published by the ASV (Association of Shelter Veterinarians). It shows that COVID restrictions choked adoptions, and re-opening boosts adoptions. https://jsmcah.org/index.php/jasv/article/view/85 Who is behind this? Is it County Supervisor Katrina Foley? Her district is not served by OC Animal Care, but she’s been pushing bad policies on our shelter. Maybe getting the county shelter in trouble is her way of making the municipal shelters in her district look good. Why is this Supervisor stopping the rest of the county from having a good animal shelter, like the cities in her district have? Are we not equal citizens of the county in Katrina Foley’s eyes? Shelter Walk-In Adoption Total Notes Hours OC Animal Care Daily from 2– 5 21 Appointments daily 11 am – 5 pm 714.935.6848 pm hours/week Walk-thru shelter daily 2 – 5 pm If I see a dog I like between 2 and 5, customer service told me I can usually make an appt. that same day to see the dog T – Sat: 12 pm – 4 20 The days/times listed are for walk-thru and pm hours/week adoptions; if a dog is available, I could see it then and possibly take it home (if approved by SEAACA (Downey) clinic) 562.803.3301 In-person adoptions T – Sat: 8 am – 5 pm If I had put a hold on a dog, they would call me the day before and if I answer the phone and am #1 or next on the list, I could pick the dog up during this time Mission Viejo Daily 12 – 4 pm 28 Can browse in person daily 12 – 4 pm; if I find Animal Services hours/week a dog I’m interested in, volunteers can bring the dog out (if a volunteer is available, which they usually are); if no volunteer available, they might have me fill out an app and schedule an appointment 3 Long Beach Animal W – F: 10 am – 29.5 The days/times listed are walk-in adoption Care Services 4:30 pm hours/week hours; if I like a dog, I go to the adoption 562.570.7387 Sat/Sun: 10 am – 3 canopy and go through their process, but I pm don’t have to make a future appt – if the dog is available, I can visit and take home same day Irvine Animal Care Weekdays: 12 pm 30 The days/times listed are visiting and adoption Center – 5 pm hours/week hours; 949.724.7740 (closed Tuesdays) If I like a dog, I go to the front office and fill Weekends: 11 am – out an interest form and interaction waiver and 4 pm as long as they have appts available (they said some days they are really busy), I can see usually up to two dogs and possibly take one home that day Laguna Beach Daily 11 am – 4 pm 35 The days/times listed are visiting and adoption Animal Shelter hours/week hours; If I like a dog, I fill out an app, visit the 949.497.3552 dog, and apps are screened (re: dog’s needs, children in the home, other animals in the home, need for a fence, etc.) and I’m contacted within a week or two if I’m approved for that dog. LA County Shelters M – Sat: 11 am – 5 36 The days/time listed are viewing and adoption; (x7) pm hours/week I can show up without an appointment* and 562.940.6898 walk through at any of their centers; if I like a dog, I go to the front office and I can visit if the dog is available (their site talks about “ready to go home” dogs – dogs that are fixed and have been to play group at least once for dogs over 35 pounds) *website says need appt; by phone they said no appt LA City Shelters T – F: 8 am – 5 pm 48 The days/times listed are when they are open (x6) Sat/Sun: 11 am – 5 hours/week for walk-thru and adoption without 888.452.7381 pm appointments; if I like a dog, I can see them Closed Mondays without an appt and take them home same-day, if they are available (fixed) 4 Flores, Dora From:Alex Brown <Alex9355b@outlook.com> Sent:Wednesday, To:eComment Subject:city council PUBLIC COMMENT on county ANIMAL SHELTER Attention: This email originated from outside of City of Santa Ana. Use caution when opening attachments or links. City officials don’t seem to take any interest in OC Animal Care, the county animal shelter that’s supposed to be serving the city. But the animal-loving OC residents are watching and acting. Over the holidays, the OC Register named a local advocate as one of the 125 most influential people in Orange County. https://www.ocregister.com/2024/12/22/meet-the-125-most-influential-people-in-orange-county-for-2024/ It seems that citizens are spotting the problems and pushing for solutions. Isn’t it about time elected officials took an interest? Do we, ordinary citizens, have to do this alone? 5 Flores, Dora From:Saara Tayani <saaratayani@berkeley.edu> Sent:Monday, January 20, 2025 6:47 PM To:eComment; Saara Tayani Subject:Public Comment, Time-Sensitive Attention: This email originated from outside of City of Santa Ana. Use caution when opening attachments or links. To Whom It May Concern, My name is Saara, and I am writing as a concerned advocate for darker skies and as someone sensitive to bright lights. Santa Ana holds significant personal meaning for me; it is home to some of my closest family members, my local airport, and is a city rich in history, culture, and community vibrancy. Recently, I have been following the transition to bright LED streetlights in various cities across Orange County, particularly Irvine, CA, and advocating for darker skies and thoughtful streetlight planning. Friends residing there have shared challenges with increased brightness and glare, which have disrupted their daily lives. I, too, have experienced this intense glare while driving or walking in these areas, raising concerns for Santa Ana should similar transitions occur. Cities like Nantucket, MA, and Julian, CA, have demonstrated that it is possible to modernize lighting infrastructure while remaining mindful of residents’ well-being and environmental considerations. These municipalities have limited the correlated color temperature (CCT) of streetlights to 2700 K, reducing glare and preserving the natural beauty of the night sky. I am reaching out with genuine concern and a desire to understand how Santa Ana plans to approach any future streetlight replacements or upgrades. I kindly request that the city consider prioritizing the installation of lower-temperature LED bulbs (no higher than 2700 K). Additionally, implementing dimming capabilities and shielding could help mitigate glare and light pollution, fostering a safer, more comfortable environment for all. This approach would not only support individuals like myself, who are light-sensitive, but also align Santa Ana with the growing movement toward sustainable, inclusive, and environmentally friendly lighting practices. Thank you for considering my perspective. I look forward to learning more about the city’s plans and would be happy to discuss this further. I trust that Santa Ana will take proactive measures to maintain the quality of life for its residents and the integrity of its night skies. Warmly, Saara -- Looking forward. Onwards & Upwards... 2 Sutardja Center for Entrepreneurship & Technology newsletter | website | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram New Thinking for the New Economy 3 Flores, Dora From:Michael Wauschek <michaelwauschek@yahoo.com> Sent:Tuesday, January 21, To:!City Clerk Subject:Thanks approvaled Palestines genocide Attention: This email originated from outside of City of Santa Ana. Use caution when opening attachments or links. Hello my name is Michael wauschek I am concerned citizen Thanks for approval a ceasefire for Palestine but for you mayor by your horrible reaction that we all clearly seen that you aren't going to get reelected again. Out of all of cities council meetings that I gone to your the worse it's time grow up no thanks Yahoo Mail: Search, Organize, Conquer 3