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Melissa Griffin

Colleges free to spend under Brown’s budget

Gov. Jerry Brown
During his campaign to persuade voters to pass the Proposition 30 tax increase last fall, Gov. Jerry Brown was given the run of college and university campuses all over the state for voter registration drives, rallies and get-out-the-vote efforts. Young voters, lured by promises of no tuition hikes, turned out in big numbers to support the proposition, and now he’s repaying the favor. Read More

High prices in San Francisco put USPS in bind

Those of us with families in other cities know what it’s like to try to defend the cost of living in San Francisco. My parents live in Alabama, and years ago, I stopped telling them what I pay for an apartment here. And I’ll bet the U.S. Postal Service wishes it had the option of keeping quiet about its San Francisco expenses right about now. Read More

TV land finding real estate in San Francisco for new Fox series 'Gang Related'

One of my family members  brought an Entertainment Weekly story to my attention: Fox is planning a drama for next season called “Gang Related” about “a gang member who is sent in to infiltrate the San Francisco Police Department.” Police Chief Greg Suhr confirmed that we do, in fact, have a gang task force, but he has not been contacted by anyone from the show. Read More

San Francisco gun control proposals targeting ammo sure to be target of lawsuits

A committee of the Board of Supervisors will consider two gun-control measures today that were proposed by Mayor Ed Lee and Supervisor Malia Cohen. Both have been approved and endorsed by the Police Department and are sure to pass at the full board. Read More

Environmental law has the potential to derail projects

The term “CEQA reform” is one heard a lot these days, with Gov. Jerry Brown referring to it in his State of the State address and groups already lining up to prevent changes to the law. But what is CEQA? And does it need to be reformed? Read More

Nobody wants to see Wal-Mart in San Francisco — except Fresh & Easy

At a dinner party Tuesday night, some friends and I were discussing the possibility of a Wal-Mart store in San Francisco. “I don’t see what the big deal is,” said an Orinda resident. “We like our Wal-Marts out in the East Bay.” A native San Franciscan responded: “Yeah, we like them out there too.” For many San Franciscans, the prospect of a Wal-Mart in our fair city is unthinkable, and yet as Tesco — the parent company of the Fresh & Easy grocery chain — looks to sell off its stores, Wal-Mart may attempt to fill the void. Read More

Domestic violence spurs San Francisco spat

Domestic violence is a subject on the minds of our government officials lately, with the U.S. Senate finally re-authorizing the Violence Against Women Act on Tuesday. In arguing in favor of the act, Sen. Dianne Feinstein said, “In my days as the mayor of San Francisco, many of the most difficult calls for The City’s law enforcement officers were those of domestic abuse. It was a big problem then, and it remains a big problem today.” District Attorney George Gascón agrees. Read More

Pension fixes are false hope of real reform

At the Jan. 24 meeting of the state Senate Budget Committee, Sen. Bill Emmerson, R-Redlands, began by pointing out, “The governor has identified $180 billion of unfunded retirement liabilities, and the pension changes that we made last year did nothing to address these pension liabilities.” Read More

Harvey Milk-SFO renaming inspires letter-writers

San Francisco International Airport activity is at a record high — a recent report says more than 44 million people traveled through the hub last year. As a supervisor in 1977, Harvey Milk objected to SFO expansion, so he might not be pleased with this frenetic pace. Still, Supervisor David Campos has proposed renaming the airport after Milk, and folks have been writing to the Board of Supervisors to voice their opinion. It’s not a scientific study or a poll, but the letters have been against the idea of Harvey Milk San Francisco International Airport. Here is a sampling: Read More

Proposed shift of Prop. 39 energy efficiency funds thwarts the will of California voters

Tom Steyer
Raise your hand if you thought that half the proceeds from Proposition 39 would go to schools and nothing else. And that the money would be distributed on a per-student basis, not based on energy savings. I doubt many hands went up, but at a recent state Senate budget committee hearing we learned that this is precisely how the Brown administration proposes to spend the tax dollars that were meant to help fight global warming. Read More

Supervisors call payment plan to BART a ripoff

bart, san francisco
On the little macaroni noodle that passes for a political spectrum in San Francisco, supervisors Mark Farrell and David Campos are on opposite ends. So you know something is a stinker when both men turn up their noses at it, and that’s just what happened at Wednesday’s  Board of Supervisors Budget and Finance Committee meeting. Read More

Dennis Herrera could use some help in the fight against Healthy San Francisco surcharges

health care
Several years ago, I was on a panel for a community event at which the topic was Healthy San Francisco, our local mandate that forces employers to provide health care or pay The City to do it on the employer’s behalf. When it was time for questions from the audience, one person asked, “Who makes sure those restaurant surcharges are actually going to pay for employee health care?” I had to answer with the sad truth: “No one.” Read More

Fiscal prudence a smokescreen to state's tax issues

It was heartening to hear Gov. Jerry Brown talk about fiscal prudence at his State of the State speech Thursday. Lawmakers, he said, must be committed to “living within our means and not spending what we don’t have.” No standing ovation for that one. Later, he singled out higher education for protection, insisting, “Tuition increases are not the answer. I will not let the students become the default financiers of our colleges and universities.” Read More

Is ranked-choice voting headed to the Big Apple?

The race to be the next mayor of New York City could be decided by ranked-choice voting. The Big Apple is between a rock and a hard deadline. Federal election legislation passed after the fiasco of the 2000 election outlawed that city’s old lever system of voting. Now everyone must cast paper votes, which take much longer to count. Read More

Sheriff Ross Mirkarimi faces new legal fight with neighbor Ivory Madison

eliana lopez
Ivory Madison was the person who filmed Eliana Lopez tearfully describing the bruise that Ross Mirkarimi left on her arm. And Madison, a neighbor of the sheriff and his wife, Lopez, was the person who notified authorities about the abuse. But Madison never personally testified to the Ethics Commission about whether the sheriff should be removed from office. In the proceedings to determine Mirkarimi’s future as sheriff, Madison submitted a detailed, 22-page declaration. Read More
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