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Andrea Koskey

Employer shuttles on the increase

Employees who live in San Francisco and travel outside The City using employee transportation are growing, according to San Francisco’s Planning and Urban Research Association. To determine how to incorporate those increasing number of shuttles into The City’s overall transportation plan, SPUR is holding a luncheon to discuss the topic Tuesday.  Read More

Meeting on City bike plan

Supervisor Bevan Dufty is getting the word out on The City’s Bike Plan. The District 8 supervisor is helping the San Francisco Municipal Transit Authority get the word out to merchants and residents about the changes that affect the Upper Market corridor with a meeting this week. Read More

SF Arts Commission seeks artists’ proposals for rec center

The Palega Recreation Center in Portola Valley is in need of public art. The City’s Arts Commission seems to think so. To remedy the situation, the commission has put out a request for proposals from artists to create a “durable artwork of the highest aesthetic quality.” Palega is slated for a remodel by the Recreation and Park Department and the commission hopes to include a piece of art with the community room addition to the existing recreation center, relocation of playground and reconditioning of the landscape. Read More

House of Shields making last call

Cindy Chew/The Examiner
Eva Azrilian and John Stevens sat against the wall of the dimly lit bar, sharing an after-work beer with their colleagues. The two said they had recently discovered the House of Shields in downtown, and that the ambience, music and atmosphere were some of many reasons they returned. So, they were disappointed to learn that after more than 100 years, the saloon is closing at the end of this week. “This place has a lot of history,” Stevens said. “I wish it would stay open.” Read More

Juneteenth festival kicks off at Civic Center Plaza

Juan Carlos Pometta Betancourt/Special to The Examiner
Marking the end of slavery in U.S., African-Americans in San Francisco and much of the country are taking to the streets this weekend to celebrate Juneteenth with music, food and parades. The celebration in Civic Center Plaza drew hundreds of people for festivities Saturday. Today’s celebration kicks off at 11 a.m. and will last through 7 p.m. R&B performers, gospel choirs and dancers perform between 2 and 4 p.m. Read More

Suspension vexes nightclub owner after shooting

In the 12 years Vilma Patel has owned the El Rincon night club in the Mission she hasn’t had a police-involved incident. That was until Saturday morning, when a police officer was shot and Patel’s operating license was suspended. Around 1:30 a.m., as partygoers were clearing out of the club after a night of revelry, a fight broke out between a group of women. According to the San Francisco Police Department, a veteran police officer and two training officers were making rounds near the 16th and Harrison location and responded. Read More

Parks meeting to address improvements, challenges

Have an issue, idea or praise for your neighborhood park?The Neighborhood Parks Council is meeting with Mayor Gavin Newsom, Phil Ginsberg, general manager of the Recreation and Parks Department and many park commissioners Thursday to discuss the state of city parks. Read More

Toppling trees terrify Richmond district residents

Mike Koozmin/Special to The Examiner
It has been more than a year since a woman visiting the Richmond district parked her car, walked toward a nearby house and then had a limb crush her vehicle — and though work has been done on the perennials in the area, neighbors say hazards remain. The deadly issue of falling trees has plagued the deficit-ridden Recreation and Park Department for years, but residents along a 15-block stretch of Park Presidio are calling on the agency to do more. Read More

Board looking to share appointees

The Board of Supervisors Rules Committee will meet Friday to discuss the proposed amendment to The City’s charter that would share the appointees to the Park and Recreation commission. Organizers behind the grass roots group “Take Back Our Parks” have been advocating for support of a charter amendment that would give the mayor three appointees, the board of supervisor three appointees and a shared appointee between the mayor and president of the Board of Supervisors. Currently all seven positions on the board are appointed by the mayor’s office. Read More

Safety worries prompt action at intersection

The Examiner
The complicated intersection where Great Highway and La Playa Street meet Judah Street in the Outer Sunset district could get safer for pedestrians, bicyclists and cars if efforts by local groups to address the problems are recognized. Steve Ward, a resident of the Outer Sunset and advocate for changes to the area, said the problems are several decades old, but the main concern remains safety. Read More

Trauma facility unlikely for county

Examiner file photo
Nearly 2,000 trauma patients are transported out of San Mateo County for treatment each year because there is no critical-care center, according to San Mateo county health officials, but transporting patients is more cost-effective than building a new facility.Registered nurse Jan Ogar, a clinic services manager for San Mateo County emergency services, said the county works closely with San Francisco General Hospital and Stanford Hospital to treat critical patients. Read More

Students start day right with breakfast

ASSOCIATED PRESS
In an effort to provide quality education, some schools in the Jefferson Elementary School District will begin offering students breakfast to start their day. Enrique Navas, the district superintendent of business services, said the correlation between breakfast and the ability to concentrate was one reason the district decided to create a pilot program that would allow students to buy breakfast before class. Read More

Looking for that elusive job

Courtesy photo
With few jobs and a stubbornly high unemployment rate, college students and recent graduates are finding creative ways to build résumés and stay active. Beverly Madden, spokeswoman for the College of San Mateo, said students enrolled in Peninsula community colleges are not immune to the economic downturn. She said because of the economy, more students are turning toward unpaid internships or even study-abroad programs. Read More

Pesticide incentives set

The Department of the Environment wants less overhead when it comes to other city departments using pesticides, so it’s taking steps to make using light chemicals easier. When a ban on pesticide use was passed in the 1990s, any city department planning to use harmful chemicals for weed or insect abatement on city property — including parks, medians and sidewalks — was required to post a sign three days prior to any spraying and keep the sign posted four days after the chemical was used. Read More

City coalition to discuss proposed sit-lie law

Discussions on the sit-lie ordinance keep standing around.The City’s Civil Sidewalks Coalition will discuss the proposed law again Monday afternoon.A sit/lie ordinance was first introduced following months of complaints of the abuse and intimidation from street dwellers from a group of residents and merchants in the Haight neighborhood. Read More
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