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Mayor’s budget to include pay raises for officials

Mayor Ed Lee
Details of Mayor Ed Lee’s city budget proposal will remain unknown until next Friday — but it apparently includes pay raises for elected officials.Members of the Board of Supervisors, the mayor and other high-ranking elected officials are receiving pay hikes next fiscal year.The 11 supervisors will receive a 2.9 percent cost-of-living adjustment, bringing their salary to $105,723 apiece. Read More

Cyclist will face charges in connection with hitting pedestrian

A bicyclist will be charged this week in connection with the collision that killed a 71-year-old pedestrian in a Castro district crosswalk last month, though whether he will face misdemeanor or felony charges is yet to be determined. On March 29, Chris Bucchere, 35, collided with Sutchi Hui, who died days later at San Francisco General Hospital. Read More

DA and pot clubs set to team up, hash out rules

Eager to back up District Attorney George Gascón’s recent public support for medical marijuana, prosecutors from his office plan to meet soon with San Francisco medical marijuana providers to flesh out a set of rules agreeable to both sides. Read More

Ross Mirkarimi speaks about domestic violence incident

Suspended San Francisco Sheriff Ross Mirkarimi
Suspended San Francisco Sheriff Ross Mirkarimi has for the first time detailed his version of the events that led to the high-profile domestic violence incident involving his wife — including how she sustained a sizable bruise on her arm. Read More

Cash-strapped San Francisco giving officials big raises

Seven San Francisco officials are earning a combined $318,000 more a year since voters approved a 2006 ballot measure tying their wages to those of elected officials in five neighboring counties.Now, under a readjustment calculation required every five years, four of those officials could receive additional pay raises: District Attorney George Gascón, $13,375; Public Defender Jeff Adachi, $8,333; Mayor Ed Lee, $7,751; and City Attorney Dennis Herrera, $3,729. Read More

Lee picks might give him an edge

Mayor Ed Lee may soon find himself once again wielding his appointment power and impacting San Francisco’s elected offices.  In November, Lee first appointed District 5 Supervisor Christina Olague after former Supervisor Ross Mirkarimi won as sheriff. Lee then appointed Vicki Hennessy to sheriff after suspending on official misconduct charges Mirkarimi, who is fighting to prevent his permanent ouster. Read More

SF District Attorney George Gascón says he supports medical marijuana

San Francisco District Attorney George Gascón disagrees with a legal brief in which his office argued that marijuana sales are illegal, and he said Wednesday that prosecuting marijuana cases will not be a priority for his administration. The brief, filed this month in the case of a woman arrested on suspicion of possessing and attempting to sell cannabis products, argued that any sale of marijuana is illegal under state law. Read More

Mirkarimi sentenced to probation, counseling in domestic violence case

Ross Mirkarimi
Sheriff Ross Mirkarimi said he was “ashamed and deeply sorry” and vowed to become “a better public servant,” after a judge sentenced him Monday for his role in a domestic violence incident against his wife. Read More

Abuse foes say San Francisco sheriff avoiding responsibility

Victim advocacy groups are furious about the lack of remorse they perceive coming from Sheriff Ross Mirkarimi, despite his guilty plea earlier this week in a high-profile domestic violence case.They gathered on the steps of City Hall on Thursday to say Mirkarimi isn’t taking responsibility for his actions, based on published comments suggesting that the plea arose from his case becoming too expensive and burdening his family — not necessarily any real guilt. Read More

DUI convictions at risk following SFPD revelations

Jeff Adachi and George Gascón
San Francisco police have suspended their use of devices that measure suspected drunken drivers’ blood-alcohol level in the field after it was revealed they haven’t been properly testing their accuracy, possibly for years.At a joint news conference Monday, Public Defender Jeff Adachi and District Attorney George Gascón said they are investigating police testing of Preliminary Alcohol Screening devices, which manufacturers recommend on a regular basis. Read More
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