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COVID-19. Members
TWO SQUATTERS OCCUPY VACANT S.F. HOME TO PROTEST HOUSING Two homeless women staged an occupation of a vacant single-family home Friday in the Castro in a move aimed at drawing more attention to their demand that the city move more quickly to shelter homeless people during the COVID-19 pandemic. They hung banners outside with messages such as “End homelessness, reclaim San Francisco” and “Housing is a human right” and attracted protestersPROPOSITION J
Proposition J — November 2020. From the San Francisco November 2020 Nonpartisan Voter Guide. This tax measure would repeal a 2018 parcel tax to fund schools and replace it with a lower tax, and add exemptions, which proponents hope will result in voters approving itby a higher margin.
S.F. SPENT ESTIMATED $500,000 ON UNUSED RVS MEANT FOR S.F. Spent Estimated $500,000 on Unused RVs Meant for Homeless. San Francisco has spent close to $500,000 on rented recreational vehicles that were meant to house the homeless during the coronavirus pandemic but have not been used. Brian Howey / San Francisco Public Press. UPDATE 5/28/2020 9:01 p.m. Adds new details from city officials that DESPITE RECYCLING SUCCESS, S.F.’S ZERO WASTE GOAL REMAINS A recent investigation into what happens to San Francisco’s recycling brought largely positive news: 81 percent of what residents deposit into their blue bins is recycled. That rate is among the highest in the nation. But the bigger picture of waste disposal in San Francisco is not so rosy. The city is far from reaching its ultimate goal of zero waste — and officials say it may never get HUD DENIES REQUEST TO DEMOLISH PLAZA EAST In November, the Housing Authority approved a proposal by the St. Louis-based firm to tear down and rebuild Plaza East. McCormack Baron Salazar built the complex in 2001 for $43.2 million, including $20.2 million in federal funds. The company also manages the property. HUD’s denial surprised and pleased Dennis Williams, a Plaza Eastresident
MEDICAL EXAMS CANCELED FOR FEDERAL DISABILITY CLAIMS The federal agency that administers disability benefits instructed state officials nationwide on Tuesday to cancel all medical appointments they manage for people claiming disability benefits. At issue are “consultative examinations” required for the majority of disability claimants, theoretically to substantiate their claims. NINA SPARLING, AUTHOR AT SAN FRANCISCO PUBLIC PRESS 04.22.2021. |. By Nina Sparling. , Reporter. San Francisco officials have agreed to lend a private developer $2.7 million to make repairs at a public housing complex in the Western Addition. Last week, the Citywide Affordable Housing Loan Committee, part of the Mayor’s Office of Housing and Community Development, approved the loan to FOUR WAYS TO GUARD AGAINST SEA LEVEL RISE Officials at the Port of San Francisco say $5 billion in retrofits is needed along the 4-mile Embarcadero to keep some 700 acres of high-value property above the water line through 2100. 4. Restore nature. Natural habitats such as marshes, sandbars and creek beds absorb the energy of storms, mitigating risk from sea level rise. SAN FRANCISCO PUBLIC PRESS KSFP, our low-power community radio station, broadcasts on 102.5 FM from San Francisco’s Sutro Tower 12 hours a day, featuring Public Press reporting and public radio programs. Hear our original interview show “Civic,” community programming and eclectic public radio shows. Also streaming online 24/7. Learn more about KSFP. PANDEMIC LIMITED SF SHELTER OPTIONS, FRUSTRATING OUTREACH Pandemic Limited Shelter Options, Frustrating Homeless Outreach Workers. A Homeless Outreach Team worker inspects a handwashing station and finds that it needs to be refilled in the summer of 2020, at a time when coronavirus health and safety guidelines emphasized hygiene, not masks, as the best method to contain the spread ofCOVID-19. Members
TWO SQUATTERS OCCUPY VACANT S.F. HOME TO PROTEST HOUSING Two homeless women staged an occupation of a vacant single-family home Friday in the Castro in a move aimed at drawing more attention to their demand that the city move more quickly to shelter homeless people during the COVID-19 pandemic. They hung banners outside with messages such as “End homelessness, reclaim San Francisco” and “Housing is a human right” and attracted protestersPROPOSITION J
Proposition J — November 2020. From the San Francisco November 2020 Nonpartisan Voter Guide. This tax measure would repeal a 2018 parcel tax to fund schools and replace it with a lower tax, and add exemptions, which proponents hope will result in voters approving itby a higher margin.
S.F. SPENT ESTIMATED $500,000 ON UNUSED RVS MEANT FOR S.F. Spent Estimated $500,000 on Unused RVs Meant for Homeless. San Francisco has spent close to $500,000 on rented recreational vehicles that were meant to house the homeless during the coronavirus pandemic but have not been used. Brian Howey / San Francisco Public Press. UPDATE 5/28/2020 9:01 p.m. Adds new details from city officials that DESPITE RECYCLING SUCCESS, S.F.’S ZERO WASTE GOAL REMAINS A recent investigation into what happens to San Francisco’s recycling brought largely positive news: 81 percent of what residents deposit into their blue bins is recycled. That rate is among the highest in the nation. But the bigger picture of waste disposal in San Francisco is not so rosy. The city is far from reaching its ultimate goal of zero waste — and officials say it may never get HUD DENIES REQUEST TO DEMOLISH PLAZA EAST In November, the Housing Authority approved a proposal by the St. Louis-based firm to tear down and rebuild Plaza East. McCormack Baron Salazar built the complex in 2001 for $43.2 million, including $20.2 million in federal funds. The company also manages the property. HUD’s denial surprised and pleased Dennis Williams, a Plaza Eastresident
MEDICAL EXAMS CANCELED FOR FEDERAL DISABILITY CLAIMS The federal agency that administers disability benefits instructed state officials nationwide on Tuesday to cancel all medical appointments they manage for people claiming disability benefits. At issue are “consultative examinations” required for the majority of disability claimants, theoretically to substantiate their claims. NINA SPARLING, AUTHOR AT SAN FRANCISCO PUBLIC PRESS 04.22.2021. |. By Nina Sparling. , Reporter. San Francisco officials have agreed to lend a private developer $2.7 million to make repairs at a public housing complex in the Western Addition. Last week, the Citywide Affordable Housing Loan Committee, part of the Mayor’s Office of Housing and Community Development, approved the loan to FOUR WAYS TO GUARD AGAINST SEA LEVEL RISE Officials at the Port of San Francisco say $5 billion in retrofits is needed along the 4-mile Embarcadero to keep some 700 acres of high-value property above the water line through 2100. 4. Restore nature. Natural habitats such as marshes, sandbars and creek beds absorb the energy of storms, mitigating risk from sea level rise. TWO SQUATTERS OCCUPY VACANT S.F. HOME TO PROTEST HOUSING Two homeless women staged an occupation of a vacant single-family home Friday in the Castro in a move aimed at drawing more attention to their demand that the city move more quickly to shelter homeless people during the COVID-19 pandemic. They hung banners outside with messages such as “End homelessness, reclaim San Francisco” and “Housing is a human right” and attracted protesters SF TEAM OF SPECIALISTS RESPONDS TO PEOPLE IN CRISIS ON THE Members of San Francisco's Street Crisis Response Team show up to situations when someone is experiencing a mental health or substance-related crisis, as an alternative to police response, which can escalate such situations. AFTER JOURNALIST ARRESTS, STATE LEGISLATION AIMS TO 1 day ago · As the proposal makes its way through the Legislature, David Snyder, executive director of the First Amendment Coalition, discusses the context for the bill and some of the ways in which current protections for journalists fall short. IN ‘NO STRAIGHT LINES,’ WE MEET GROUNDBREAKING QUEER COMIC 18 hours ago · In the new documentary “No Straight Lines,” artists who took serious risks by outing themselves and creating comics about the experiences and lives of LGBT Americans look back on their work and its impacts. WHERE TO BUY THE NEWSPAPER The San Francisco Public Press is a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization. Donations are tax deductible to the extent allowed by law. We have received funding from national and local foundations and thousands of S.F. SPENT ESTIMATED $500,000 ON UNUSED RVS MEANT FOR S.F. Spent Estimated $500,000 on Unused RVs Meant for Homeless. San Francisco has spent close to $500,000 on rented recreational vehicles that were meant to house the homeless during the coronavirus pandemic but have not been used. Brian Howey / San Francisco Public Press. UPDATE 5/28/2020 9:01 p.m. Adds new details from city officials that CITY’S POPULAR PORTABLE TOILETS FREQUENTLY MOVED OR CLOSED Many high-traffic public toilets — some used more than 1,000 times a month — are being relocated, and Supervisor Matt Haney wants to knowwhy.
OVERDOSES HAVE KILLED MORE THAN THREE TIMES AS MANY PEOPLE While COVID-19 deaths have the potential for exponential growth due to the nature of a viral pandemic, they are dwarfed by the number of people who have died from drug overdoses in the city this year. As of Dec. 16, the San Francisco Department of Public Health reports that 172 people have died from COVID-19. The number of overdose deaths reported through the end of October stood at 570. SF WATER USE EFFICIENT, BUT STATE RESTRICTIONS WOULD BE California is back in a drought, and in many parts of the state the drought is extreme. According to the San Francisco Chronicle, urban water use today is about 16% less than it was at the beginning of the state’s last drought because of continuing conservation. San BAY AREA BLACK COMMUNITY LEADERS ENVISION EQUITABLE The coronavirus pandemic has disproportionately affected people of color throughout the Bay Area — as of late April, state health department data showed Black Californians were dying from COVID-19 at nearly twice the rate of white residents. In the Bay Area, Latino and Black residents have been testing positive at much higher rates thanother groups.
SAN FRANCISCO PUBLIC PRESS KSFP, our low-power community radio station, broadcasts on 102.5 FM from San Francisco’s Sutro Tower 12 hours a day, featuring Public Press reporting and public radio programs. Hear our original interview show “Civic,” community programming and eclectic public radio shows. Also streaming online 24/7. Learn more about KSFP. PANDEMIC LIMITED SF SHELTER OPTIONS, FRUSTRATING OUTREACH Pandemic Limited Shelter Options, Frustrating Homeless Outreach Workers. A Homeless Outreach Team worker inspects a handwashing station and finds that it needs to be refilled in the summer of 2020, at a time when coronavirus health and safety guidelines emphasized hygiene, not masks, as the best method to contain the spread ofCOVID-19. Members
TWO SQUATTERS OCCUPY VACANT S.F. HOME TO PROTEST HOUSING Two homeless women staged an occupation of a vacant single-family home Friday in the Castro in a move aimed at drawing more attention to their demand that the city move more quickly to shelter homeless people during the COVID-19 pandemic. They hung banners outside with messages such as “End homelessness, reclaim San Francisco” and “Housing is a human right” and attracted protestersPROPOSITION J
Proposition J — November 2020. From the San Francisco November 2020 Nonpartisan Voter Guide. This tax measure would repeal a 2018 parcel tax to fund schools and replace it with a lower tax, and add exemptions, which proponents hope will result in voters approving itby a higher margin.
S.F. SPENT ESTIMATED $500,000 ON UNUSED RVS MEANT FOR S.F. Spent Estimated $500,000 on Unused RVs Meant for Homeless. San Francisco has spent close to $500,000 on rented recreational vehicles that were meant to house the homeless during the coronavirus pandemic but have not been used. Brian Howey / San Francisco Public Press. UPDATE 5/28/2020 9:01 p.m. Adds new details from city officials that DESPITE RECYCLING SUCCESS, S.F.’S ZERO WASTE GOAL REMAINS A recent investigation into what happens to San Francisco’s recycling brought largely positive news: 81 percent of what residents deposit into their blue bins is recycled. That rate is among the highest in the nation. But the bigger picture of waste disposal in San Francisco is not so rosy. The city is far from reaching its ultimate goal of zero waste — and officials say it may never get HUD DENIES REQUEST TO DEMOLISH PLAZA EAST In November, the Housing Authority approved a proposal by the St. Louis-based firm to tear down and rebuild Plaza East. McCormack Baron Salazar built the complex in 2001 for $43.2 million, including $20.2 million in federal funds. The company also manages the property. HUD’s denial surprised and pleased Dennis Williams, a Plaza Eastresident
MEDICAL EXAMS CANCELED FOR FEDERAL DISABILITY CLAIMS The federal agency that administers disability benefits instructed state officials nationwide on Tuesday to cancel all medical appointments they manage for people claiming disability benefits. At issue are “consultative examinations” required for the majority of disability claimants, theoretically to substantiate their claims. NINA SPARLING, AUTHOR AT SAN FRANCISCO PUBLIC PRESS 04.22.2021. |. By Nina Sparling. , Reporter. San Francisco officials have agreed to lend a private developer $2.7 million to make repairs at a public housing complex in the Western Addition. Last week, the Citywide Affordable Housing Loan Committee, part of the Mayor’s Office of Housing and Community Development, approved the loan to FOUR WAYS TO GUARD AGAINST SEA LEVEL RISE Officials at the Port of San Francisco say $5 billion in retrofits is needed along the 4-mile Embarcadero to keep some 700 acres of high-value property above the water line through 2100. 4. Restore nature. Natural habitats such as marshes, sandbars and creek beds absorb the energy of storms, mitigating risk from sea level rise. SAN FRANCISCO PUBLIC PRESS KSFP, our low-power community radio station, broadcasts on 102.5 FM from San Francisco’s Sutro Tower 12 hours a day, featuring Public Press reporting and public radio programs. Hear our original interview show “Civic,” community programming and eclectic public radio shows. Also streaming online 24/7. Learn more about KSFP. PANDEMIC LIMITED SF SHELTER OPTIONS, FRUSTRATING OUTREACH Pandemic Limited Shelter Options, Frustrating Homeless Outreach Workers. A Homeless Outreach Team worker inspects a handwashing station and finds that it needs to be refilled in the summer of 2020, at a time when coronavirus health and safety guidelines emphasized hygiene, not masks, as the best method to contain the spread ofCOVID-19. Members
TWO SQUATTERS OCCUPY VACANT S.F. HOME TO PROTEST HOUSING Two homeless women staged an occupation of a vacant single-family home Friday in the Castro in a move aimed at drawing more attention to their demand that the city move more quickly to shelter homeless people during the COVID-19 pandemic. They hung banners outside with messages such as “End homelessness, reclaim San Francisco” and “Housing is a human right” and attracted protestersPROPOSITION J
Proposition J — November 2020. From the San Francisco November 2020 Nonpartisan Voter Guide. This tax measure would repeal a 2018 parcel tax to fund schools and replace it with a lower tax, and add exemptions, which proponents hope will result in voters approving itby a higher margin.
S.F. SPENT ESTIMATED $500,000 ON UNUSED RVS MEANT FOR S.F. Spent Estimated $500,000 on Unused RVs Meant for Homeless. San Francisco has spent close to $500,000 on rented recreational vehicles that were meant to house the homeless during the coronavirus pandemic but have not been used. Brian Howey / San Francisco Public Press. UPDATE 5/28/2020 9:01 p.m. Adds new details from city officials that DESPITE RECYCLING SUCCESS, S.F.’S ZERO WASTE GOAL REMAINS A recent investigation into what happens to San Francisco’s recycling brought largely positive news: 81 percent of what residents deposit into their blue bins is recycled. That rate is among the highest in the nation. But the bigger picture of waste disposal in San Francisco is not so rosy. The city is far from reaching its ultimate goal of zero waste — and officials say it may never get HUD DENIES REQUEST TO DEMOLISH PLAZA EAST In November, the Housing Authority approved a proposal by the St. Louis-based firm to tear down and rebuild Plaza East. McCormack Baron Salazar built the complex in 2001 for $43.2 million, including $20.2 million in federal funds. The company also manages the property. HUD’s denial surprised and pleased Dennis Williams, a Plaza Eastresident
MEDICAL EXAMS CANCELED FOR FEDERAL DISABILITY CLAIMS The federal agency that administers disability benefits instructed state officials nationwide on Tuesday to cancel all medical appointments they manage for people claiming disability benefits. At issue are “consultative examinations” required for the majority of disability claimants, theoretically to substantiate their claims. NINA SPARLING, AUTHOR AT SAN FRANCISCO PUBLIC PRESS 04.22.2021. |. By Nina Sparling. , Reporter. San Francisco officials have agreed to lend a private developer $2.7 million to make repairs at a public housing complex in the Western Addition. Last week, the Citywide Affordable Housing Loan Committee, part of the Mayor’s Office of Housing and Community Development, approved the loan to FOUR WAYS TO GUARD AGAINST SEA LEVEL RISE Officials at the Port of San Francisco say $5 billion in retrofits is needed along the 4-mile Embarcadero to keep some 700 acres of high-value property above the water line through 2100. 4. Restore nature. Natural habitats such as marshes, sandbars and creek beds absorb the energy of storms, mitigating risk from sea level rise. TWO SQUATTERS OCCUPY VACANT S.F. HOME TO PROTEST HOUSING Two homeless women staged an occupation of a vacant single-family home Friday in the Castro in a move aimed at drawing more attention to their demand that the city move more quickly to shelter homeless people during the COVID-19 pandemic. They hung banners outside with messages such as “End homelessness, reclaim San Francisco” and “Housing is a human right” and attracted protesters SF TEAM OF SPECIALISTS RESPONDS TO PEOPLE IN CRISIS ON THE Members of San Francisco's Street Crisis Response Team show up to situations when someone is experiencing a mental health or substance-related crisis, as an alternative to police response, which can escalate such situations. AFTER JOURNALIST ARRESTS, STATE LEGISLATION AIMS TO 1 day ago · As the proposal makes its way through the Legislature, David Snyder, executive director of the First Amendment Coalition, discusses the context for the bill and some of the ways in which current protections for journalists fall short. IN ‘NO STRAIGHT LINES,’ WE MEET GROUNDBREAKING QUEER COMIC 16 hours ago · In the new documentary “No Straight Lines,” artists who took serious risks by outing themselves and creating comics about the experiences and lives of LGBT Americans look back on their work and its impacts. WHERE TO BUY THE NEWSPAPER The San Francisco Public Press is a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization. Donations are tax deductible to the extent allowed by law. We have received funding from national and local foundations and thousands of S.F. SPENT ESTIMATED $500,000 ON UNUSED RVS MEANT FOR S.F. Spent Estimated $500,000 on Unused RVs Meant for Homeless. San Francisco has spent close to $500,000 on rented recreational vehicles that were meant to house the homeless during the coronavirus pandemic but have not been used. Brian Howey / San Francisco Public Press. UPDATE 5/28/2020 9:01 p.m. Adds new details from city officials that CITY’S POPULAR PORTABLE TOILETS FREQUENTLY MOVED OR CLOSED Many high-traffic public toilets — some used more than 1,000 times a month — are being relocated, and Supervisor Matt Haney wants to knowwhy.
OVERDOSES HAVE KILLED MORE THAN THREE TIMES AS MANY PEOPLE While COVID-19 deaths have the potential for exponential growth due to the nature of a viral pandemic, they are dwarfed by the number of people who have died from drug overdoses in the city this year. As of Dec. 16, the San Francisco Department of Public Health reports that 172 people have died from COVID-19. The number of overdose deaths reported through the end of October stood at 570. SF WATER USE EFFICIENT, BUT STATE RESTRICTIONS WOULD BE California is back in a drought, and in many parts of the state the drought is extreme. According to the San Francisco Chronicle, urban water use today is about 16% less than it was at the beginning of the state’s last drought because of continuing conservation. San BAY AREA BLACK COMMUNITY LEADERS ENVISION EQUITABLE The coronavirus pandemic has disproportionately affected people of color throughout the Bay Area — as of late April, state health department data showed Black Californians were dying from COVID-19 at nearly twice the rate of white residents. In the Bay Area, Latino and Black residents have been testing positive at much higher rates thanother groups.
SAN FRANCISCO PUBLIC PRESS KSFP, our low-power community radio station, broadcasts on 102.5 FM from San Francisco’s Sutro Tower 12 hours a day, featuring Public Press reporting and public radio programs. Hear our original interview show “Civic,” community programming and eclectic public radio shows. Also streaming online 24/7. Learn more about KSFP. PANDEMIC LIMITED SF SHELTER OPTIONS, FRUSTRATING OUTREACH Pandemic Limited Shelter Options, Frustrating Homeless Outreach Workers. A Homeless Outreach Team worker inspects a handwashing station and finds that it needs to be refilled in the summer of 2020, at a time when coronavirus health and safety guidelines emphasized hygiene, not masks, as the best method to contain the spread ofCOVID-19. Members
JUST FOUR S.F. HOUSEHOLDS HAVE RECEIVED RENT RELIEF FUNDS Just four San Francisco households had received state money to pay off their rent debts as of Wednesday, with 34 others approved but awaiting payment, according to state figures. California’s rent-assistance program opened two months ago, and its eviction moratorium is set tolift in barely five
CLEANING DURING COVID-19: HOW THE PANDEMIC AFFECTED Cleaning During COVID-19: How the Pandemic Affected Janitorial Work. Juan Hernandez has been working as a janitor for decades. During the pandemic, he continued cleaning at mostly empty office buildings, but had to do so with fewer staff. Janitors have been taking to the streets in San Francisco for weeks to advocate for better working HUD DENIES REQUEST TO DEMOLISH PLAZA EAST In November, the Housing Authority approved a proposal by the St. Louis-based firm to tear down and rebuild Plaza East. McCormack Baron Salazar built the complex in 2001 for $43.2 million, including $20.2 million in federal funds. The company also manages the property. HUD’s denial surprised and pleased Dennis Williams, a Plaza Eastresident
OVERDOSES HAVE KILLED MORE THAN THREE TIMES AS MANY PEOPLEAUTHOR: MELBAKER
While COVID-19 deaths have the potential for exponential growth due to the nature of a viral pandemic, they are dwarfed by the number of people who have died from drug overdoses in the city this year. As of Dec. 16, the San Francisco Department of Public Health reports that 172 people have died from COVID-19. The number of overdose deaths reported through the end of October stood at 570. DESPITE RECYCLING SUCCESS, S.F.’S ZERO WASTE GOAL REMAINS A recent investigation into what happens to San Francisco’s recycling brought largely positive news: 81 percent of what residents deposit into their blue bins is recycled. That rate is among the highest in the nation. But the bigger picture of waste disposal in San Francisco is not so rosy. The city is far from reaching its ultimate goal of zero waste — and officials say it may never get FOUR WAYS TO GUARD AGAINST SEA LEVEL RISE Officials at the Port of San Francisco say $5 billion in retrofits is needed along the 4-mile Embarcadero to keep some 700 acres of high-value property above the water line through 2100. 4. Restore nature. Natural habitats such as marshes, sandbars and creek beds absorb the energy of storms, mitigating risk from sea level rise. TOXIC METALS FOUND IN SHIPYARD NEIGHBORS, BUT SOURCE STILL Compared with generic “reference ranges,” or average heavy metal content found in the population at large, some samples were found to contain highly elevated levels of toxic elements such as manganese, barium and vanadium, or radioactive elements including uranium. All these elements are present in nearby shipyard land, Navy records show. TO STOP ASIAN HATE, INVEST IN PREVENTION, VICTIM SUPPORT To Stop Asian Hate, Invest in Prevention, Victim Support, Advocate Says. Courtesy photo. Nearly 4,000 incidents of anti-Asian attacks — including verbal and physical assaults — were reported to Stop AAPI Hate, a national tracking project launched by a SAN FRANCISCO PUBLIC PRESS KSFP, our low-power community radio station, broadcasts on 102.5 FM from San Francisco’s Sutro Tower 12 hours a day, featuring Public Press reporting and public radio programs. Hear our original interview show “Civic,” community programming and eclectic public radio shows. Also streaming online 24/7. Learn more about KSFP. PANDEMIC LIMITED SF SHELTER OPTIONS, FRUSTRATING OUTREACH Pandemic Limited Shelter Options, Frustrating Homeless Outreach Workers. A Homeless Outreach Team worker inspects a handwashing station and finds that it needs to be refilled in the summer of 2020, at a time when coronavirus health and safety guidelines emphasized hygiene, not masks, as the best method to contain the spread ofCOVID-19. Members
JUST FOUR S.F. HOUSEHOLDS HAVE RECEIVED RENT RELIEF FUNDS Just four San Francisco households had received state money to pay off their rent debts as of Wednesday, with 34 others approved but awaiting payment, according to state figures. California’s rent-assistance program opened two months ago, and its eviction moratorium is set tolift in barely five
CLEANING DURING COVID-19: HOW THE PANDEMIC AFFECTED Cleaning During COVID-19: How the Pandemic Affected Janitorial Work. Juan Hernandez has been working as a janitor for decades. During the pandemic, he continued cleaning at mostly empty office buildings, but had to do so with fewer staff. Janitors have been taking to the streets in San Francisco for weeks to advocate for better working HUD DENIES REQUEST TO DEMOLISH PLAZA EAST In November, the Housing Authority approved a proposal by the St. Louis-based firm to tear down and rebuild Plaza East. McCormack Baron Salazar built the complex in 2001 for $43.2 million, including $20.2 million in federal funds. The company also manages the property. HUD’s denial surprised and pleased Dennis Williams, a Plaza Eastresident
OVERDOSES HAVE KILLED MORE THAN THREE TIMES AS MANY PEOPLEAUTHOR: MELBAKER
While COVID-19 deaths have the potential for exponential growth due to the nature of a viral pandemic, they are dwarfed by the number of people who have died from drug overdoses in the city this year. As of Dec. 16, the San Francisco Department of Public Health reports that 172 people have died from COVID-19. The number of overdose deaths reported through the end of October stood at 570. DESPITE RECYCLING SUCCESS, S.F.’S ZERO WASTE GOAL REMAINS A recent investigation into what happens to San Francisco’s recycling brought largely positive news: 81 percent of what residents deposit into their blue bins is recycled. That rate is among the highest in the nation. But the bigger picture of waste disposal in San Francisco is not so rosy. The city is far from reaching its ultimate goal of zero waste — and officials say it may never get FOUR WAYS TO GUARD AGAINST SEA LEVEL RISE Officials at the Port of San Francisco say $5 billion in retrofits is needed along the 4-mile Embarcadero to keep some 700 acres of high-value property above the water line through 2100. 4. Restore nature. Natural habitats such as marshes, sandbars and creek beds absorb the energy of storms, mitigating risk from sea level rise. TOXIC METALS FOUND IN SHIPYARD NEIGHBORS, BUT SOURCE STILL Compared with generic “reference ranges,” or average heavy metal content found in the population at large, some samples were found to contain highly elevated levels of toxic elements such as manganese, barium and vanadium, or radioactive elements including uranium. All these elements are present in nearby shipyard land, Navy records show. TO STOP ASIAN HATE, INVEST IN PREVENTION, VICTIM SUPPORT To Stop Asian Hate, Invest in Prevention, Victim Support, Advocate Says. Courtesy photo. Nearly 4,000 incidents of anti-Asian attacks — including verbal and physical assaults — were reported to Stop AAPI Hate, a national tracking project launched by a DESPITE NEW EVICTION PROTECTIONS, DISPLACEMENT WAVE MAY 1 day ago · San Francisco supervisors have passed eviction protections that would give renters a two-month reprieve after the state’s moratorium expires June 30, but a wave of displacement could still be coming. On Tuesday, the Board of Supervisors voted unanimously to impose a local eviction moratorium for 60 days. While the move prevents evictions for nonpayment of AFTER JOURNALIST ARRESTS, STATE LEGISLATION AIMS TO 18 hours ago · As the proposal makes its way through the Legislature, David Snyder, executive director of the First Amendment Coalition, discusses the context for the bill and some of the ways in which current protections for journalists fall short. SF TEAM OF SPECIALISTS RESPONDS TO PEOPLE IN CRISIS ON THE Members of San Francisco's Street Crisis Response Team show up to situations when someone is experiencing a mental health or substance-related crisis, as an alternative to police response, which can escalate such situations. JUST FOUR S.F. HOUSEHOLDS HAVE RECEIVED RENT RELIEF FUNDS Just four San Francisco households had received state money to pay off their rent debts as of Wednesday, with 34 others approved but awaiting payment, according to state figures. California’s rent-assistance program opened two months ago, and its eviction moratorium is set tolift in barely five
TWO SQUATTERS OCCUPY VACANT S.F. HOME TO PROTEST HOUSING Two homeless women staged an occupation of a vacant single-family home Friday in the Castro in a move aimed at drawing more attention to their demand that the city move more quickly to shelter homeless people during the COVID-19 pandemic. They hung banners outside with messages such as “End homelessness, reclaim San Francisco” and “Housing is a human right” and attracted protesters OVERDOSES HAVE KILLED MORE THAN THREE TIMES AS MANY PEOPLE While COVID-19 deaths have the potential for exponential growth due to the nature of a viral pandemic, they are dwarfed by the number of people who have died from drug overdoses in the city this year. As of Dec. 16, the San Francisco Department of Public Health reports that 172 people have died from COVID-19. The number of overdose deaths reported through the end of October stood at 570. SF WATER USE EFFICIENT, BUT STATE RESTRICTIONS WOULD BE California is back in a drought, and in many parts of the state the drought is extreme. According to the San Francisco Chronicle, urban water use today is about 16% less than it was at the beginning of the state’s last drought because of continuing conservation. San MEDICAL EXAMS CANCELED FOR FEDERAL DISABILITY CLAIMS The federal agency that administers disability benefits instructed state officials nationwide on Tuesday to cancel all medical appointments they manage for people claiming disability benefits. At issue are “consultative examinations” required for the majority of disability claimants, theoretically to substantiate their claims. BAY AREA BLACK COMMUNITY LEADERS ENVISION EQUITABLE The coronavirus pandemic has disproportionately affected people of color throughout the Bay Area — as of late April, state health department data showed Black Californians were dying from COVID-19 at nearly twice the rate of white residents. In the Bay Area, Latino and Black residents have been testing positive at much higher rates thanother groups.
TO STOP ASIAN HATE, INVEST IN PREVENTION, VICTIM SUPPORT To Stop Asian Hate, Invest in Prevention, Victim Support, Advocate Says. Courtesy photo. Nearly 4,000 incidents of anti-Asian attacks — including verbal and physical assaults — were reported to Stop AAPI Hate, a national tracking project launched by a SAN FRANCISCO PUBLIC PRESS KSFP, our low-power community radio station, broadcasts on 102.5 FM from San Francisco’s Sutro Tower 12 hours a day, featuring Public Press reporting and public radio programs. Hear our original interview show “Civic,” community programming and eclectic public radio shows. Also streaming online 24/7. Learn more about KSFP. PANDEMIC LIMITED SF SHELTER OPTIONS, FRUSTRATING OUTREACH Pandemic Limited Shelter Options, Frustrating Homeless Outreach Workers. A Homeless Outreach Team worker inspects a handwashing station and finds that it needs to be refilled in the summer of 2020, at a time when coronavirus health and safety guidelines emphasized hygiene, not masks, as the best method to contain the spread ofCOVID-19. Members
PROPOSITION J
Proposition J — November 2020. From the San Francisco November 2020 Nonpartisan Voter Guide. This tax measure would repeal a 2018 parcel tax to fund schools and replace it with a lower tax, and add exemptions, which proponents hope will result in voters approving itby a higher margin.
TWO SQUATTERS OCCUPY VACANT S.F. HOME TO PROTEST HOUSING Two homeless women staged an occupation of a vacant single-family home Friday in the Castro in a move aimed at drawing more attention to their demand that the city move more quickly to shelter homeless people during the COVID-19 pandemic. They hung banners outside with messages such as “End homelessness, reclaim San Francisco” and “Housing is a human right” and attracted protesters DESPITE RECYCLING SUCCESS, S.F.’S ZERO WASTE GOAL REMAINS A recent investigation into what happens to San Francisco’s recycling brought largely positive news: 81 percent of what residents deposit into their blue bins is recycled. That rate is among the highest in the nation. But the bigger picture of waste disposal in San Francisco is not so rosy. The city is far from reaching its ultimate goal of zero waste — and officials say it may never get HUD DENIES REQUEST TO DEMOLISH PLAZA EAST In November, the Housing Authority approved a proposal by the St. Louis-based firm to tear down and rebuild Plaza East. McCormack Baron Salazar built the complex in 2001 for $43.2 million, including $20.2 million in federal funds. The company also manages the property. HUD’s denial surprised and pleased Dennis Williams, a Plaza Eastresident
SF RESUMES PARKING ENFORCEMENT, TOWING FOR VEHICLE Edward Armstrong lives on a dead-end street to avoid visits from parking enforcement — and for him, it is the road to stability. The lifelong Bayview resident sweeps the sidewalk around the RV he lives in, acts as an overnight security guard for a cannabis company andlooks out for
NINA SPARLING, AUTHOR AT SAN FRANCISCO PUBLIC PRESS 04.22.2021. |. By Nina Sparling. , Reporter. San Francisco officials have agreed to lend a private developer $2.7 million to make repairs at a public housing complex in the Western Addition. Last week, the Citywide Affordable Housing Loan Committee, part of the Mayor’s Office of Housing and Community Development, approved the loan to MEDICAL EXAMS CANCELED FOR FEDERAL DISABILITY CLAIMS The federal agency that administers disability benefits instructed state officials nationwide on Tuesday to cancel all medical appointments they manage for people claiming disability benefits. The change may delay benefits for some but open an opportunity to improveprocessing.
FOUR WAYS TO GUARD AGAINST SEA LEVEL RISE Officials at the Port of San Francisco say $5 billion in retrofits is needed along the 4-mile Embarcadero to keep some 700 acres of high-value property above the water line through 2100. 4. Restore nature. Natural habitats such as marshes, sandbars and creek beds absorb the energy of storms, mitigating risk from sea level rise. SAN FRANCISCO PUBLIC PRESS KSFP, our low-power community radio station, broadcasts on 102.5 FM from San Francisco’s Sutro Tower 12 hours a day, featuring Public Press reporting and public radio programs. Hear our original interview show “Civic,” community programming and eclectic public radio shows. Also streaming online 24/7. Learn more about KSFP. PANDEMIC LIMITED SF SHELTER OPTIONS, FRUSTRATING OUTREACH Pandemic Limited Shelter Options, Frustrating Homeless Outreach Workers. A Homeless Outreach Team worker inspects a handwashing station and finds that it needs to be refilled in the summer of 2020, at a time when coronavirus health and safety guidelines emphasized hygiene, not masks, as the best method to contain the spread ofCOVID-19. Members
PROPOSITION J
Proposition J — November 2020. From the San Francisco November 2020 Nonpartisan Voter Guide. This tax measure would repeal a 2018 parcel tax to fund schools and replace it with a lower tax, and add exemptions, which proponents hope will result in voters approving itby a higher margin.
TWO SQUATTERS OCCUPY VACANT S.F. HOME TO PROTEST HOUSING Two homeless women staged an occupation of a vacant single-family home Friday in the Castro in a move aimed at drawing more attention to their demand that the city move more quickly to shelter homeless people during the COVID-19 pandemic. They hung banners outside with messages such as “End homelessness, reclaim San Francisco” and “Housing is a human right” and attracted protesters DESPITE RECYCLING SUCCESS, S.F.’S ZERO WASTE GOAL REMAINS A recent investigation into what happens to San Francisco’s recycling brought largely positive news: 81 percent of what residents deposit into their blue bins is recycled. That rate is among the highest in the nation. But the bigger picture of waste disposal in San Francisco is not so rosy. The city is far from reaching its ultimate goal of zero waste — and officials say it may never get HUD DENIES REQUEST TO DEMOLISH PLAZA EAST In November, the Housing Authority approved a proposal by the St. Louis-based firm to tear down and rebuild Plaza East. McCormack Baron Salazar built the complex in 2001 for $43.2 million, including $20.2 million in federal funds. The company also manages the property. HUD’s denial surprised and pleased Dennis Williams, a Plaza Eastresident
SF RESUMES PARKING ENFORCEMENT, TOWING FOR VEHICLE Edward Armstrong lives on a dead-end street to avoid visits from parking enforcement — and for him, it is the road to stability. The lifelong Bayview resident sweeps the sidewalk around the RV he lives in, acts as an overnight security guard for a cannabis company andlooks out for
NINA SPARLING, AUTHOR AT SAN FRANCISCO PUBLIC PRESS 04.22.2021. |. By Nina Sparling. , Reporter. San Francisco officials have agreed to lend a private developer $2.7 million to make repairs at a public housing complex in the Western Addition. Last week, the Citywide Affordable Housing Loan Committee, part of the Mayor’s Office of Housing and Community Development, approved the loan to MEDICAL EXAMS CANCELED FOR FEDERAL DISABILITY CLAIMS The federal agency that administers disability benefits instructed state officials nationwide on Tuesday to cancel all medical appointments they manage for people claiming disability benefits. The change may delay benefits for some but open an opportunity to improveprocessing.
FOUR WAYS TO GUARD AGAINST SEA LEVEL RISE Officials at the Port of San Francisco say $5 billion in retrofits is needed along the 4-mile Embarcadero to keep some 700 acres of high-value property above the water line through 2100. 4. Restore nature. Natural habitats such as marshes, sandbars and creek beds absorb the energy of storms, mitigating risk from sea level rise. WHERE TO BUY THE NEWSPAPER The San Francisco Public Press is a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization. Donations are tax deductible to the extent allowed by law. We have received funding from national and local foundations and thousands of BART EMERGES FROM PANDEMIC SLOWDOWN In March 2020, Bay Area Rapid Transit ridership fell to just 4% of pre-pandemic levels during the initial pandemic lockdown and hovered around 10% for much of the year, a major challenge for a service that relies on the fare box for two-thirds of its operating revenue. TWO SQUATTERS OCCUPY VACANT S.F. HOME TO PROTEST HOUSING Two homeless women staged an occupation of a vacant single-family home Friday in the Castro in a move aimed at drawing more attention to their demand that the city move more quickly to shelter homeless people during the COVID-19 pandemic. They hung banners outside with messages such as “End homelessness, reclaim San Francisco” and “Housing is a human right” and attracted protesters SF WATER USE EFFICIENT, BUT STATE RESTRICTIONS WOULD BE California is back in a drought, and in many parts of the state the drought is extreme. According to the San Francisco Chronicle, urban water use today is about 16% less than it was at the beginning of the state’s last drought because of continuing conservation. San HOUSING ELUSIVE FOR RESIDENTS OF HAIGHT’S SANCTIONED San Francisco's second sanctioned tent camp, in the Haight neighborhood, shuts down on June 16. The question now is where to moveresidents.
S.F. SPENT ESTIMATED $500,000 ON UNUSED RVS MEANT FOR S.F. Spent Estimated $500,000 on Unused RVs Meant for Homeless. San Francisco has spent close to $500,000 on rented recreational vehicles that were meant to house the homeless during the coronavirus pandemic but have not been used. Brian Howey / San Francisco Public Press. UPDATE 5/28/2020 9:01 p.m. Adds new details from city officials that RETURN OF THE ROXIE: SF NONPROFIT CINEMA CAUTIOUSLY REOPENS With vaccination rates on the rise and lockdown restrictions lifting, audiences are returning to indoor venues. At the Roxie Theater, limited seating for recent screenings sold out quickly. WATER EFFICIENCY IS ENERGY EFFICIENCY, TOO, EXPERT SAYS 1 day ago · With droughts expected to continue and worsen in coming years, water managers are exploring conservation approaches. Laura Feinstein, sustainability and resilience policy director at the urban think tank SPUR, explained the difficult choice between attempting to create separate drinking and nonpotable water systems, or developing robust wastewater recycling systems on “Civic.” CITY’S POPULAR PORTABLE TOILETS FREQUENTLY MOVED OR CLOSED 20 hours ago · Many high-traffic public toilets — some used more than 1,000 times a month — are being relocated, and Supervisor Matt Haney wants to know why. BILL COULD HELP KEEP SOME RENTALS AFFORDABLE Bill Could Help Keep Some Rentals Affordable. Groups like community land trusts would get the chance to bid on residential properties before they hit the market if a new bill passes in Sacramento. The San Francisco Community Land Trust has established affordable housing in multiple buildings throughout the city, such as 2976 23rd Street,shown
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HOMELESSNESS
HOUSING ELUSIVE FOR RESIDENTS OF HAIGHT’S SANCTIONED CAMPSITE The site in an old McDonald’s parking lot at the edge of Golden Gate Park opened in May 2020 with 40 spots, becoming the city’s second sanctioned tent camp. On June 16 it shuts down. The question now is where to move site residents, many of whom have called the Haight neighborhood home for decades and don’t want to leave.*
RETURN OF THE ROXIE: SF NONPROFIT CINEMA CAUTIOUSLY REOPENS OUR RADIO STATION: LISTEN LIVE SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTERRECENT POSTS
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“CIVIC” PODCAST
BART EMERGES FROM PANDEMIC SLOWDOWN Ridership on BART is slowly returning at about 20% of pre-pandemic levels. Starting next week the transit agency will begin adding trains with a return to a near normal train schedule by August 30. “Civic” learns more about BART’s plans, ongoing budget problems, new trains, the homeless and how BART is prepared for a mass shooting like the one at a light rail yard in San Jose last month.NEWS
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ORGANIZING AROUND HONG KONG DEMOCRACY PROTESTS FROM AFAR Demonstrators in Hong Kong have been demanding more democratic freedoms, as well as an inquiry into police use of force and the release of detained protesters. As millions have taken to the streets and participated in other actions, clashes between police and protesters have turned violent. Here in the Bay Area, people from Hong Kong have been paying close attention, organizing solidarity actions and strategizing about how to stay involved from afar.*
SF WATER USE EFFICIENT, BUT STATE RESTRICTIONS WOULD BE CHALLENGING,OFFICIAL SAYS
San Francisco’s residential water use is among the lowest among large cities in California, said Steven Ritchie, assistant general manager for water for the San Francisco Public Utilities Commission. Ritchie joined “Civic” to explain how the city sources and uses its water, and why it is fighting state restrictions on the use of Tuolumne River water.*
SF RANKS HIGH ON PARKS ACCESS, BUT COMMUNITIES OF COLOR HAVE LESSSPACE
According to a ranking from the nonprofit Trust for Public Land, all San Francisco residents live within a 10-minute walk of a park, but residents of neighborhoods where most people identify as people of color have access to 56% less park space per capita than residents in neighborhoods that are predominantly white.*
JUST FOUR S.F. HOUSEHOLDS HAVE RECEIVED RENT RELIEF FUNDS Just four San Francisco households had received state money to pay off their rent debts as of Monday, with another 23 approved but awaiting payment, according to state figures. California’s rent-assistance program opened two months ago, and its eviction moratorium is set to lift in barely five weeks on June 30, allowing landlords to eject people for outstanding rent debts.*
WITH CALIFORNIA SET TO REOPEN, BACKLOGS PERSIST AT UNEMPLOYMENTAGENCY
The state’s Employment Development Department, which handles unemployment claims, is still working to resolve thousands of backlogged cases and battling fraud. Emily Hoeven, who writes the daily WhatMatters newsletter for the nonprofit newsroom CalMatters, returns to “Civic” with the latest on how the state is handlingunemployment.
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With Mayor’s Backing, Developer Asks to Demolish, Rebuild 20-Year-Old Public Housing Volunteers Patrol Chinatown for Public Safety Preventing Community Spread of COVID-19 Crucial in Return to Schools,Union Leader Says
Event Company Non Plus Ultra Accused in Lawsuit of Unemployment Fraud City College Students, Teacher Warn Cuts Would Have Equity ImpactsRADIO
OUR COMMUNITY RADIO STATION KSFP, our low-power community radio station, broadcasts on 102.5 FM from San Francisco’s Sutro Tower 12 hours a day, featuring Public Press reporting and public radio programs. Hear our original interview show “Civic,” community programming and eclectic public radio shows. Also streaming online 24/7. Learn more about KSFPPODCASTS
‘CIVIC’ PODCAST
“Civic” is a daily interview show that engages listeners with civic life by approaching San Francisco’s inner workings from the standpoint of curious stakeholders — whether they are residents, workers, visitors or otherwise connected to the city. It asks smart questions and takes an investigative approach to the stories people might wish were in the news more often. “Civic” aims to inspire and empower listeners to become involved in making sure their cityworks for them.
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► Decorative play icon links to post: In ‘The End of the Golden Gate,’ Writers Share Reflections on a San Francisco in Flux May 21 2021 | 9:00 am IN ‘THE END OF THE GOLDEN GATE,’ WRITERS SHARE REFLECTIONS ON A SAN FRANCISCO IN FLUX*
► Decorative play icon links to post: City College Trustee: Deal Preventing Layoffs Only a Short-Term FixEducation | May 20
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CITY COLLEGE TRUSTEE: DEAL PREVENTING LAYOFFS ONLY A SHORT-TERM FIX*
► Decorative play icon links to post: Frontline Dispatch: SF Paramedic Reflects on PandemicCoronavirus |
May 14 2021 | 12:11 pm FRONTLINE DISPATCH: SF PARAMEDIC REFLECTS ON PANDEMICMore Podcasts
SPECIAL REPORTS
DRIVING HOME: SURVIVING THE HOUSING CRISIS Photojournalist Yesica Prado takes us behind the scenes to tell the stories of the “vehicularly housed,” people living in cars, vans, RVs and campers. They—like many others in search of alternative shelter—are victims of a decades-long affordable housing crisis affecting the whole region.Explore project
RIDE-HAILING’S DARK DATAExplore project
DATA PRIVACY
Explore project
RENTERS VS. VERITAS
Explore project
REMAKING RENT CONTROLExplore project
HOMELESSNESS SOLUTIONS: PART 2Explore project
HOUSING SOLUTIONS
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Issue 30: Winter 2020 Ride-Hailing’s Dark Data: Secrecy cloaks rising accident reports. Issue 30: Winter 2020 Ride-Hailing’s Dark Data: Secrecy cloaks rising accident reports. Issue 29: Fall 2019 KSFP LP 102.5 FM Launches. Big Ticket Housing Planfaces S.F. Voters
Issue 29: Fall 2019 KSFP LP 102.5 FM Launches. Big Ticket Housing Planfaces S.F. Voters
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