| # | Name | Comments |
|---|
| 51 | Maria Blanco | |
| 52 | Anonymous | |
| 53 | Jessica Durfee | |
| 54 | Kendra Fox-Davis | |
| 55 | Anonymous | |
| 56 | Sabrina Balgamwalla | |
| 57 | Amna Arshad | |
| 58 | Gabriela Beard | As a bilingual citizen I feel privileged to be able to communicate in a different language than my own. As an interpreter, I believe every member of society deserves to be given the opportunity to express their needs, wants and ideas. It is important to speak the language of the country in which one resides, but unfortunately, that is not the case in every situation involving foreigners living in this country. Help should always be provided to those who need it so that the communcation barrier is eliminated. |
| 59 | Joannie C. Chang | I can't imagine that there's any dispute that a policy is necessary, so what's the delay? A city as diverse as San Francisco should be ashamed that a good language access policy is not already in place! |
| 60 | Dawn Lee | |
| 61 | Christopher Punongbayan | |
| 62 | Catherine Chanse | |
| 63 | Laura Valdez | |
| 64 | Miranda Jolicoeur | |
| 65 | MARI ROSE TARUC | |
| 66 | Maria del Carmen Munoz | |
| 67 | Maria del Carmen Munoz | |
| 68 | Elba Sanchez | |
| 69 | Cj Jiang | |
| 70 | Pamela Wu | I whole heartedly agree with creating a policy of providing free language assistance and placing limits on bystander interpreters. |
| 71 | Dave Yen | I strongly support the implementation of this policy and believe it will be a substantial benefit to the San Francisco community. |