 Okay, so this is your redistricting web page and it's wonderful. Your staff has done a great job. So you have that big button that says submit a drop map online now. And if you click on that, it's going to take you directly to the district or tool. A district or as an online mapping software out of Tufts University and there are a lot of other jurisdictions who are utilizing their tool for their redistricting. So again, it's really important to use this specific page. There's a couple of sections at that top section. It gives you just some information on the tool. You have two ways that you can draw maps either using the community of interest drawing tool or you can do it by districts. There's also the public gallery section and you have four maps that have been submitted so far. So it gives you the date of when the maps were submitted. The name and the names come directly from the author and we'll show you when we get into the tool, how you save it, but also every map will get a unique ID number. And that's how we reference the ID number for draft plan C. And that was ID number 101 on 628. We also have a section if you scroll down a little bit more called works in progress. And you can click that button load drafts. I don't know if there's any draft plan so there is. So these are plans that members of the public have not submitted in their final form. They have them here as drafts that they are still working on. And then the final section if you scroll down a little bit more, it tells you a little more about the data that is in the mapping platform. So we work directly with district or to ensure that you have for your specific tool the city layers of it and the correct data that we have to use in California. So we'll scroll back up and would you like me to go through both the community of interest drawing tool or just the district based tool. Go ahead do the district based tool. I think we've already gone over the communities of interest. Okay, wonderful. So we'll click on the purple button and it says Santa Rosa seven city council districts built out of census blocks. And so the community of interest tool and the district based tool do look really similar. There are some notable differences, just from the imagery, you have a great out background, instead of the street layer, but you still have the city limits and then also on the left of the image. And you might be asking what are those gray sections, and those are the census blocks. So again for redistricting, we have to use the dissennial census file. And when we're talking about data we're also synonymously talking about that census geography which will be your census blocks on the top left hand corner, you have a plus and minus button which will allow you to zoom in and zoom out of the map and then that button on the bottom will orient your map pointing north. And so those are just the small stuff that you have on the left side. But on the right side of your screen is the book of your, the work that you're going to be doing. So you can see that the hand button or the pan tool has already been clicked on. So that allows you to move the map around and to also zoom in and zoom out of the map. So that will automatically be the button that you are on as you open your tool. And to the direct right of it is the brush stroke tool and we click on that. We'll see here. And again, there's a difference here from the community interest tool, you will only be able to draw a specific number of districts for the district based tool. You can, you can submit a plan that only has one district or less than seven, but you can only draw seven districts so that is a difference from the community tool. You do have the ability to change your, your brush stroke size, which is that the toggle button right under the blue color. As it says brush size and if you can move that to the right, you're going to be able to grab a large portion of census box, or if you toggle that to the left, you can do one by one or have a smaller amount of census box that you'll draw. You also have the ability to lock already drawn districts. So if you have that's that space right there. And so if you have districts that you've drawn, and you are really happy with how it looks, then you won't be able to make those changes. The final two buttons and we'll come back to this brush stroke size is the erase tool directly to the right up at the top. This here is similar to the community of interest tool. So it allows you to erase and like the brush stroke tool, you can make it a huge eraser, or do you one by one. And the final button on the right and then we'll get back to the brush stroke tool is your, your search tool. So if you, if you zoom in a little bit on your map, it will allow you to have information by census blocks so give you the total count of the census block ethnic breakdown for that inspection tool. So those are all the buttons that you have but if we can go back and click on the that brush stroke tool, and you can pick a color now. If you want to start drawing a district. You can click any area of your map and start clicking away. So you can create a district by moving your map and clicking one by one, or if you click an area and then drag your, your tool then you'll be able to pick up a large portion. So what you're going to see simultaneously what's happening on the right side of your screen is there's going to be a bar that is moving to the right. This is going to give you in real time, the amount of total count that you have in a particular district. If you want to change the color, then you go back to the just go back to the brush stroke. You have a really wonderful staff member who is familiar with district or it's great. You can go ahead and draw another color and then you can go ahead and draw another district. So if you don't have that lock already drawn districts, you can go, you can move your yellow district into the blue one. So if we want to take up portions, so we're able to do that. But again, if you're really happy with what your district look like, you're going to want to click on that lock already drawn districts button. So the numbers that are important here is if we go to the bottom right of the screen, we see the ideal. So that is, if you had districts of exactly perfect size, the ideal size of a district would be 25,502.14 people. So that that's also what the line represents in that middle of that box. So we can see that we have the blue district and the yellow district are above that ideal population. And it also gives us the unassigned population. So if a member of the public is interested in submitting a full district plan, you're going to want to try to get that as close to zero. So there is something called highlight unassigned units at that bottom left. And if you click on that, it's going to highlight all of the areas that are not currently in a district. And you can click that off as you're going your plan. It also gives you the max population deviation. So as I noted, it doesn't give you the total population deviation, but it will give you the max deviation of your district. So currently on the 80.5 is representing your yellow districts. So we do have a lot of members of the public who do do their deviation. That's under 10%. But again, if the council would like, we can take the public submissions down, put them in our internal software and then have an Atlas produced for you. So yeah, you can continue to make a district. And again, this is just a demo myself and the staff member who's using this tool. This is not a plan that we're submitting. This is purely for example purposes. So we can go to the tab that says data layers, which is right to the right of that population. And there's a, we can see right now we have the thing clicked on called show painted districts. So that allows us to see the districts that we just drew. If you'd like, you can also click on the one directly beneath that called show numbering from peanut districts. If you want to number your districts. You also have boundaries for your current district. So if you'd like to kind of see where you are in reference to your current boundaries, you can click on that, and they will appear. And again, you can click on and off on all of these. And then the final one, if you click on population by race, you will have some more information that shows up so you can click on show population, and then go to variable to the right of where it says and then go a little bit to the top under show population. There is a tab directly. Yes. And here if you click on any one of those, it's going to show you the total population of just your area or by a specific ethnic group. Again, if we are creating a district based on race that would be under come from your legal counsel to direct us to do so. But if we were directed to do so, we would be utilizing the citizen voting age population data set so we can click off the show population. And then we'll go to the bottom and click show citizen voting age population. And this also gives us that the seatbelt says really similar to what we just did but now we can look at the total see that and we have a couple of different groups and and areas that we do on our specific data tables. The final time is the evaluation tab which if we go back up to where it says data layers and if we click on evaluation tab, we can click on population by race. And this will show us a comparison of your districts based on different groups. So here for compare on you can change that to again we have a time to white population Hispanic Asian black Asian American Islander and native Hawaiian, and you can compare those different groups per district. It'll give you the percentage in the table below. Similar to your time for data layers it also gives you the same amount of information for your citizen voting age population by race as well. So those are all the tabs and the, if we go up to the top above the colors where it says save. So we're going to click on that button so once you're done or you're done with your session and you want to save it as a draft will click on that blue button. And we won't be adding it to our district or a page right now but we'll go ahead and click on that same button. And up will pop a window. So here is where you will save your map. And when you do save it on the bottom where it says shared a gallery we won't be clicking that now again because it's a demo. So you can click on that and it will automatically appear in the homepage that we viewed at the beginning of this demo above where it says shared a gallery. There's that box that allows you to add a just right above shared a gallery right there. That's the space where you can name your map so it gives you the ability to name it. If you realize another difference between the district or tool and the community of interest tool is that you don't have the ability on the map to add any additional text. So if a member of the public would like to give additional information on their map that they submitted, we urge you to send an email to attend one of these meetings to uplift your map and let us know the basis behind your plan. But again you do have that ability to name it. If you don't want to share it directly to the gallery you can click on right below share now you can click on work in progress. And we'll click on that. And now the button on the bottom says save as drafts and I can save it as a draft directly to the gallery. You do have a ability up at the top of this window where it says copy to clipboard. You can copy your specific URL to your map on the web and be able to look at it there. But again the best way to ensure that the council and the public can view the map that you have worked so hard on to review is to share it directly to the gallery. And we'll exit out of this window and we have one last button and then we'll be we'll be done at the very top right. There's three lines. And if we click on that. You also have the ability to print your map as a PDF, or if you have another mapping software that you would like to look at this plan in. You can download it as a CSB, a Geo JSON or a shape file. And then you can add it to your software such as Mapditute or Esri to look at it more in detail in that way. And that's that's all the buttons and functionality for district or it is a pretty user friendly tool. And again, we already have four plans and we're still accepting them for the council to look at and that's the district or demo.