pages: CommissiononPersonswithDisabilities/2018-04-11.pdf, 10
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CommissiononPersonswithDisabilities | 2018-04-11 | 10 | ITEM 2-A COMMISSION ON DISABILITY MEETING MINUTES OF Wednesday, April 11, 2018 6:30 p.m. you have anything to do with Alameda Municipal Power that is not like a downed power line, you can put that down. AC Transit, paratransit, anything to do with Alameda Point, the animal shelter, Boards and Commission information, bus shelters, cable TV, city council, city manager, or code enforcement if you think there's something wrong with something someone is building. Laurie Kozisek: If you want to get your curb painted blue for an accessible space, election information, disaster preparedness, fire prevention, all kinds of graffiti, illegal dumping, lagoon problems, library, parking enforcement. Then we get down to your pedestrian or bicycle issues and a popular one is pothole repair, Public Works complements, recreation and park requests so if you have a tripping hazard in the park you would put it there or trees getting in the way so you have access issues. And then sidewalks is a very popular one if you have any sidewalk issues. Laurie Kozisek: And if you have any problems with signs or street sweeping or a streetlight out. If you have suggestions for traffic calming. Anyway, there's all kinds of things you can click on here. So you'd click on one and then you'd put a little description on it and then you'd go to the bottom here and click: Report your issue. I'm not going do that now. And then you would get an automatic response saying: Yes we got your request and it's put into our queue. And then we have a program called Lucity, that's just internal to us, that takes all of our requests and routes them to the correct person who gets a notification saying: "Here's something in our inbox you need to work on this". And then you have to assign it to somebody and follow it through and it keeps reminding you until you get it done. Laurie Kozisek: Great way to make the city more accessible is to let us know where there are issues. I put in a SeeClickFix for the door here. We had not gotten a button on it, but I have requested it. And just have at it, if you're not sure what to do, if you're not comfortable with this computer interface, then what you do is you call up the public works main number 510-747-7900, and ask to do it over the phone. We'll be happy to have someone upload it for you. Laurie Kozisek: What I see when I sign up as an official is a whole ticker tape of things that are going on, and what their status is, who they've been assigned to, what their number is. And then I can look up the whole dialogue. Say, when somebody writes in and says, "Every time I get out of my car, I step into a big puddle." Or, "My wallet falls into the puddle, do something about it." And so I will send messages to, say the inspector, to go look at it and take some pictures, and they'll upload some pictures, and we'll maybe talk with another engineer about what we can do about it. And we'll come to a conclusion, we'll talk back and forth with the person who made the request by email, and we'll try and get it resolved that way. So you can see a whole list of things going on for each item. So I've got a different way of looking at it here. That's really all I have on SeeClickFix. Do you have any questions? Jenn Barrett: My sister and I use it, and we think it's really easy and accessible, so I think it's a great program. Laurie Kozisek: Good. Jennifer Roloff: I have a question. For traffic issues around the school's pick up and drop off that 04/11/18 Page 10 of 18 | CommissiononPersonswithDisabilities/2018-04-11.pdf |