Public Contactor Sentenced To Two Years In Federal Prison For Bribing San Francisco Public Official

Announcement by the Justice Department – Northern District of California

Defendant Bribed Former SF DPW Director Mohammed Nuru with Money, Meals, And Gifts – Including A Tractor

SAN FRANCISCO – Alan Varela was sentenced today in federal court to 24 months in prison and ordered to pay a $127,000 fine for a seven year conspiracy to commit honest services wire fraud by bribing a San Francisco public official, announced Acting United States Attorney Stephanie M. Hinds and Federal Bureau of Investigation Special Agent in Charge Craig D. Fair. The sentence was handed down by the Honorable William H. Orrick, United States District Judge.

A federal complaint filed September 17, 2020, charged Varela, 60, of Orinda, and William Gilmartin, 61, of San Mateo, with bribery of a public official. In 1991, Varela founded ProVen Management, a Bay Area civil engineering and construction firm that engaged in large scale infrastructure projects. Varela and Gilmartin acted as the firm’s president and vice-president, respectively, during the conspiracy time period. According to the complaint, Varela and Gilmartin provided a stream of benefits to Mohammed Nuru, then the Director of San Francisco’s Department of Public Works (DPW), in exchange for favorable treatment of their business interests, including non-public inside information…(more)

Scathing report on Dept. of Building Inspection faults years of toxic leadership, broken systems

By Joe Eskenazi : missionlocal – excerpt

Second ex-DBI employee accused of taking a loan from a developer and then handling his projects — Mission Local tracks down his identity

The office of the Controller today released the seventh of nine eventual reports on city dysfunction and corruption — and, today, it was the Department of Building Inspection’s turn in the barrel.

The 56-page report tosses around terms like “nepotism,” “cronyism,” and “corruption — and that’s just on page 3. All told, the report read like a medley of the issues Mission Local has been focusing on, including the troubled projects at 555 Fulton and 2867 San Bruno, the saga of disgraced former senior inspector Bernie Curran — and the Department of Building Inspection’s disorganized electronic tracking system, which is rife with opportunities to alter or even delete files.

As the controller’s report put it today:

The department’s permitting and inspection system lacks system controls to ensure completed data is entered into the system and to prevent inappropriate after-the-fact changes to recorded inspection records…(more)

The Housing Crisis Propaganda Machine

By: Sharon Rushton : marinpost – excerpt

Big Wall Street Investment Firms, Big Real Estate, and Big Tech have generated billions in revenue from residential real estate. To capitalize on their residential endeavors, they have successfully championed a self-serving false narrative about the housing crisis. Since these powerful industries shell out millions of dollars for marketing, lobbying, and campaign contributions, they wield great influence over politicians, government agencies, the news media, and the public at large. This influence has resulted in a sea change in residential land use policy and legislation.

This article does the following:

  • Demonstrates Big Wallstreet Investment Firms’, Big Real Estate’s, and Big Tech’s appetite for residential real estate;
  • Describes the “False Housing Crisis Narrative”;
  • Reveals the millions of dollars the Big Players are spending to influence political campaigns, legislation, and the press;
  • Shows that Big Wallstreet Investment Firms’, Big Real Estate’s, and Big Tech’s lobbying efforts have resulted in land use policy and legislation that augment their investments in residential properties;
  • Presents a more effective way to address California’s housing affordability challenge…

BIG WALLSTREET INVESTMENT FIRMS’, BIG REAL ESTATE’S, & BIG TECH’S APPETITE FOR RESIDENTIAL REAL ESTATE

Big Wallstreet Investment Firms, Big Real Estate, and Big Tech have become increasingly hungry for residential properties.

Rented homes have been a hot trade since investors made lucrative bets on foreclosed houses during the 2008-9 Great Recession. During the COVID-19 crisis, rents collected from commercial real-estate assets such as malls and offices took a hit, whereas most private residential tenants continued to pay up, according to the Wall Street Journal article entitled; “Property Investors Bed Down in the Family Home[1](more)

Judge blocks—for now—massive UC expansion in Parnassus Heights

By Tim Redmond : 48hils  – excerpt

Temporary order saves historic murals and could force the school to negotiate with the neighborhood that its development project will impact.

An Alameda County judge has blocked the University of California from moving forward on its massive planned demolition and construction on Parnassus Heights.

Judge Frank Roesch approved Friday a temporary restraining order barring the school from any action that would threaten the historic Zackheim murals at Toland Hall….

Since that’s the main area that UC has been preparing for construction, the order in effect slows down a project that violates the school’s longtime legal promises to the neighborhood.

In 1976, UC made a binding promise to limit its footprint on Parnassus Heights—in the middle of a dense residential neighborhood—to 3.55 million gross square feet… (more)

Mayor London Breed’s $23K ethics fine is ratified — and everyone comes out looking bad

By Joe Eskenazi : 48hills – excerpt

Ethics Commission staff refuses to answer key questions, even to commissioners: Was mayor interviewed? Did it obtain key receipts for Nuru gifts? What was the true source of illegal donations?

y a 4-0 vote, the San Francisco Ethics Commission today approved a stipulated agreement with Mayor London Breed, fining her nearly $23,000 for a series of legal and ethical missteps.

This is not an insignificant amount of money. And this is the first instance of the Ethics Commission dinging a sitting mayor — despite a healthy selection of ethically challenged (and extremely ding-able) prior San Francisco mayors. But if the purpose of today’s proceedings, and the Ethics Commission writ large, is to give San Franciscans confidence that our elected leaders are adhering to the law or face consequences —  well, that didn’t happen...(more)

Go big or go home: S.F. supervisor juices housing legislation to allow fourplexes on every single-family lot

By Heather Knight : sfchronicle – excerpt (via email)

Early this year, the real f-word in San Francisco was fourplex. The notion of allowing single-family homes to be converted to four units — already being explored by Sacramento, Berkeley, South San Francisco and other cities — made some politicians and their NIMBY supporters blow their tops.

A tame proposal from Supervisor Rafael Mandelman, announced here in January, to allow fourplexes on corner lots and within a half mile of major transit stops garnered little support. Opponents of development falsely claimed it would ruin their charming neighborhoods, while supporters said it didn’t go far enough.

Mandelman could either scrap the idea or go bigger. Thankfully, he’s opted for the latter.

On Tuesday, he’ll introduce legislation allowing fourplexes on any single-family home lot in San Francisco regardless of whether it’s on a corner or near transit. And the most encouraging sign? Two fellow supervisors are working on their own pieces of fourplex legislation they plan to introduce this fall.

There’s no more time for whining about building more homes on your block. Climate change is slapping us in the face, and we need more people living near their jobs and near transit to reduce vehicle emissions. Plus, as inland California bakes — it reached 113 degrees in Sacramento this month! — we need to make room for more people near the temperate coast.

Add to that the city’s homelessness catastrophe and the obvious need to end exclusionary zoning so more low-income people and people of color can live in all neighborhoods, and it’s clear fourplexes need to be part of the solution to our housing crisis. Now comes the tricky part of figuring out how to make them affordable to build in a city where it can cost $800,000 or more to construct one unit of housing.

And it’s just not the Board of Supervisors thinking about fourplexes. A pro-housing group in San Francisco is preparing a fourplex-related ballot measure and an effort to allow them throughout the state is winding its way through the legislature.

Suddenly, fourplexes are cool. And the likelihood they’ll someday be allowed in San Francisco’s residential neighborhoods seems higher than it did just months ago.

“We’re going to have to make much bigger moves than this to address our housing shortage, but this is a meaningful step,” Mandelman said.

Meaningful, yes. But despite the outsize negative reaction they inspire in people who want San Francisco preserved like some kind of museum exhibit, fourplexes are just a tiny piece of the city’s giant housing puzzle.

What is motivating some to claim that density is the only solution to global warming while many reach the opposite conclusion? How does cutting trees and paving over backyards save the planet?

Breed appointment triggers progressive jockeying at City Hall

By Michael Barba : sfexaminer – excerpt

‘The question is do they run against each other? Does that split up the field?’

Ever since Mayor London Breed nominated Dennis Herrera to lead the San Francisco Public Utilities Commission, City Hall insiders have speculated on how the political dominoes will fall.

If all goes as planned for Herrera, Assemblyman David Chiu is widely rumored to be next in line for Herrera’s spot as city attorney. But what does that mean for Chiu’s job in the state legislature?

While nothing is certain this early on, the biggest names possibly considering a run for assembly are District 6 Supervisor Matt Haney and David Campos, vice chair of the California Democratic Party and chief of staff to District Attorney Chesa Boudin…(more)

Two bills in the California Senate are making housing advocates upset

By Jennifer Howland : abc10 – excerpt (includes video)

Senate Bill 9 and Senate Bill 10 would allow for more units on single-family properties...(more)

Senate Bill 9 would:
1. Preempt local zoning
2. Up to 8 units on a single family lot
3. Developers not required to pay for
    infrastructure improvements
Senate Bill 10 would:
1. Allow cities and counties to approve
    up to 14 units on a single family lots
2. Don’t have to notify neighbors
Governor Newsom signed 60 housing bills in 4 years
that lack affordable requirements, reduce CEQA
environmental protections, increase density, and

encroach upon our homes, streets, and lifestyles.

We can see the sad results now. Sacramento’s solution is
to pass more restrictive developer bills that reduce public 
input, housing options, and the power of ballot initiatives.
They do nothing to solve our problems with EDD, water,
power, infrastructure, homelessness and crime.
Call and demand they Vote NO on SB9 and SSB10.

(Or find your CA State Rep HERE).

2.  Call your state representatives offices:
Senator Wiener: (916) 651-4011
Assemblymember Ting: (916) 319-2019
Assemblymember Chiu: (916) 319-2017

Inflated RHNA Numbers Lead to Ruin

Presented by Art Kiesel, former Mayor, Foster City
RHNA – Regional Housing Needs Assessment/Allocations.
The Department of Housing and Community Development (HCD) calculates  new housing needs by region and then assigns the local Council  of Governments (MTC/ABAG) to determine the allocations for each city. But what if the numbers are wrong and the cities can’t meet the allocations?

New documents that describe the growing number of threats the state is using to override the constitutional jurisdiction of local government. Share them with your city and county councils.

Forward the docs below to your City Council or neighborhood association. Use public open time during a CC meeting to distribute and talk about your concerns re: top-down mandates.  Write about them in a Letter to the Editor of your local paper. Circulate them along with the video of the RHNA Town Hall.

What about Water?

What about Water? (video)
Presented by Rick Johnson, retired Sr. Mgr, SF Water Department.
The legislators who push for more housing are ignoring the forecasts and consequences of drought. By 2050 California expects a population increase of 10 million people (25%) and increased occurrences of drought. Conversion of farm land to urban use and lack of water will result in decreased food supplies and increased prices. (note https://sfwater.org/ moved to sfpuc.org