sfrichmondreview – excerpt

Shawna J. Mcgrew

Coalition for San Francisco Neighborhoods
Advocating for a healthy city
WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW: In new partnership with the City of San Francisco, Governor Newsom is directing California Highway Patrol and California National Guard to identify personnel and resources to assist the city in combatting fentanyl trafficking — strengthening law enforcement presence and public safety.
SAN FRANCISCO — Today Governor Gavin Newsom announced an agreement between the California Highway Patrol (CHP), California National Guard (CalGuard), San Francisco Police Department (SFPD), and the San Francisco District Attorney’s Office (SFDA) to assist the city in its ongoing efforts to address the fentanyl crisis. This agreement will lead to the formation of a new collaborative operation between all four agencies focused on dismantling fentanyl trafficking and disrupting the supply of the deadly drug in the city by holding the operators of large-scale drug trafficking operations accountable…(more)
by Annie Gaus :sfstandard – excerpt (video on twitter)
Gov. Gavin Newsom dropped by San Francisco’s Tenderloin neighborhood unannounced on Wednesday for a “private meeting” with members of his cabinet, followed by a walk around the neighborhood, according to his press office.
“They discussed the state’s ongoing efforts to tackle the fentanyl crisis, homelessness, and other critical issues,” said a spokesperson for Newsom. “Following the meeting, the Governor went for a walk and spoke with community members in the area.”…
(twitter video)
The activist, who goes by JJ Smith, said he ran into Newsom during his walk around the neighborhood and he questioned the governor on his plan to address fentanyl.
“It was awkward,” said Smith, who later posted a selfie with Newsom. “He just said he’s here to work on the fentanyl and homeless situation. He didn’t give me any concrete answers or solutions.”…(more)
by Mike Ege : sfstandard – excerpt
San Francisco Board of Supervisors President Aaron Peskin has called for a regional task force including federal, state and local law enforcement agencies to target what he describes as a “fentanyl dealing and human trafficking crisis in San Francisco.”
Peskin issued the appeal in a press release April 13. He has sent letters to House Speaker Emerita Nancy Pelosi, Gov. Gavin Newsom, as well as regional agencies such as the BART Board of Directors and the University of California Board of Regents, urging them to work with the San Francisco Police Department…
Peskin made the appeal after asking Mayor London Breed to reschedule her policy discussions appearance before the Board of Supervisors meant for April 11 to a future meeting to be held at United Nations Plaza, considered to be the epicenter of the city’s fentanyl scourge…(more)
By Josh Koehn, Kevin Trong : sfstandard – excerpt
Since the start of this year, a rotating cast of San Franciscans have been gathering for dinner and drinks while discussing the city’s most pressing problems. Rather than the typical bitchfest, this discreet group of tech entrepreneurs, nonprofit leaders, elected officials and City Hall commissioners spends less time bemoaning what’s wrong and more time noodling on solutions…
Bilal Mahmood, a startup founder and neuroscientist who finished third in a state Assembly special election last year, designed the dinner parties after the Junto Club, a 12-member group of tradesmen and artisans formed by Benjamin Franklin in 1727…
But as Mahmood and his guests discussed the state of Downtown over karaage, sashimi and wagyu at Ozumo, an upscale Japanese restaurant near the Embarcadero, one guest floated an idea that seemed to linger. Zach Klein, the venture capitalist and co-founder of Vimeo, suggested San Francisco should create a new university, or at least a vast array of college student housing, in the downtown core…
The theory goes: Vacant commercial towers in San Francisco will likely never again reach capacity, but they could be converted to student housing by public universities, which are exempt from much of the red tape that otherwise stymies development. These schools also receive substantial tax breaks, making the cost of such projects “pencil out.” Large cohorts of new, young residents would not only make use of the buildings themselves but also reinvigorate Downtown by supporting local restaurants, bars and other small businesses…(more)
They might run some construction classes as they convert the office buildings into housing since the trades are having trouble finding trained professionals in those fields. Teach some real life skills that the students may use to pay their way through college. They might even be able to avoid taking out those high interest student loans.
RELATED:
Enrollment Data Just Dropped—and So Did the Number of CA Students
By Joe Eskenazi : missionlocal – excerpt
Robert Harold “Crazy Bob” Lee died on the pavement in the wee hours last Tuesday after being stabbed while he walked through an abandoned downtown street.
He was 43, a father, and while the moments after a man’s violent, senseless death are not ideal for gleaning unvarnished opinions, the heartfelt tributes emanating from his many friends and loved ones made it clear that this was a better world with Lee in it. And he deserved far better than this.
While the police insist this was the 13th homicide this year, the medical examiner provided only 12 names. This is an area in which you’d like to have everyone on the same page and police have not answered our questions about this jarring discrepancy; they are apparently very busy working on the present case…(more)
Cold dark empty abandoned streets are a good description of San Francisco’s problem. Those streets that Bob stumbled down were bereft of traffic because of city policies that cleared them. The only eyes that captured the distress and calls for help were the heartless digital ones our society has decided to trust. What is missing from this scene is a human heart and helping hand. We are losing our humanity as we quibble over priorities and process.
By Kristi Coale : thefrisc – excerpt
After the devastating 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake, San Francisco tore down roughly six miles of elevated freeway, clearing room and sky and letting the Embarcadero, Ferry Building, and Hayes Valley flourish.
Now, some city and state officials are floating the idea of more removal: the elevated 1.5 mile Central Freeway, which runs east-west from Market Street to the confluence of Interstate 80 and Highway 101.
Until this long-shot dream comes to fruition, however, SF faces a more immediate reality. The streets and chaotic intersections that run under the Central Freeway are some of our busiest, most dangerous, and most important for crosstown travel — and they need to be fixed. Changes are coming; a safety upgrade is due to begin later this year or early 2024…(more)
We have two objects to removing the Central Freeway. Increased surface traffic through the Mission and spending money on anything other than improving MUNI.
Not only do we agree with Kirsti that 13th Street could use a little work, but, where are the funds to tear down freeway coming from since SFMTA is claiming they are broke and the businesses the state chose to support over all others are driving out as fast as they can?
How many more businesses can the city afford to kill? As the rate they are going, we will be lucky if we have any big grocery chains remaining in San Francisco.
This is a bad idea.
Tim Redmond : 48hills – excerpt
Audit shows Mayor’s Office of Housing lacks transparency—and can’t explain a huge surplus
The Mayor’s Office of Housing and Community development is sitting on roughly half a billion dollars that could be spent on immediate housing needs, a new audit shows.
And that doesn’t count another close to $200 million in annual tax money earmarked for housing that the mayor has diverted to other uses…
In a city with a notorious lack of affordable housing, we have a department, nested under the Mayor’s Office, that does not follow reporting rules, has highly-politicized decision making, and, with an apparent balance of nearly a half billion dollars, can’t even tell us how much money is committed and how much isn’t.…(more)
By Thomas P. Tunny : reubenlaw – excerpt
Housing developers in San Francisco no doubt recognize this entitlement moment of disbelief: after a grueling, years-long process of working with staff, neighbors, and policy-makers, with numerous concessions made to address the potential impacts of their proposed project, the project finally receives its entitlement from the Planning Commission (a recent study found that a multifamily housing project takes 627 days on average to obtain a building permit) when lo and behold, the Board of Appeals sends notice that the project’s site permit has been appealed; and/or the demolition permit is appealed; and/or the grading permit; and/or the tree planting permit…(more)
This comment was sent from a resident in Southern California:
I heard them discussing a bill on KCBS this morning that the governor is trying to use to build a high rise Residential in San Francisco by over-riding the Board of Supervisors. Is this the Mr. Haney bill, AB 1114, Introduced? If it is and the way KCBS was describing how the governor was planning on using it in San Francisco , it was really frightening and threatening…
My response is that California is not looking good to the rest of the country. The national press is not very sympathetic to some of the more radical ideas that target communities and single projects coming out of the state legislature. It appears the Biz Journal ran a story on this. Article attached: AB 1114- Sloat