This page provides tools and resources to support SFPUC contractors (firms) in successfully meeting their Social Impact Partnership (SIP) reporting requirements. BEGIN REPORTING Firms are expected to complete bi-annual reporting. The fiscal year is divided into two reporting periods. Q1/Q2: July 1-December 31; Q3/Q4: January 1-June 30. Reporting Resources How to submit a SIP Annual Workplan (video) How to submit a SIP Biannual Report (video) SIP Annual Workplan Template Documentation Compliance Guide Sample Acknowledgement Letter from Non-profit or Public School Volunteer Timesheet Template
The Ohlone people of the California Central Coast and the San Francisco Bay Area spoke eight different languages at the time of Spanish contact: Karkin, Chochenyo, Tamien, Mutsun, Chalon, Rumsien, Awaswas, and Ramaytush. Ramaytush (pronounced rah-MY-toosh) was the language of those who lived on the San Francisco Peninsula. Smaller groups of these people made up of families related by marriage may have spoken different dialects of Ramaytush but would have been able to understand their neighbors. Groups who spoke Ramaytush included: the Ssalson of the San Andreas Valley the Lamchin of San Carlos
Ohlone life meant working together and helping one other. And just like today, Ohlone people had time for singing and dancing, laughing and playing. They had favorite games like stick dice, the hand game, hoop-and-pole, and juggling. Children played cat’s cradle using their fingers and toes to make string shapes with names like stars, making daylight come, house, and deer. They also competed in marathon-like races and in team sports. Shinny is an Ohlone game similar to field hockey. Just as we go to football and baseball games today, people sometimes traveled from distant villages to watch