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Joshua Sabatini

Board wants in on town hall

If Mayor Gavin Newsom wants to meet regularly with supervisors in the community instead of at City Hall, his office may end up paying for it.Newsom announced last week that on Jan. 13 he would hold the first-ever "policy town hall meeting" in the Richmond district in response to the passage of Proposition I, a nonbinding policy statement that says the mayor should appear once a month at a Board of Supervisors meeting. The measure, which proponents say is modeled on the British House of Commons "question time" with the prime minister, received 56 percent voter approval on Nov. 7. Read More

Development plan takes leap forward

A $1.2 billion development plan to transform Treasure Island into a vibrant, transit-friendly community for 13,500 residents is on its way to becoming a reality after the Board of Supervisors endorsed it on Tuesday.The plan includes 6,000 housing units with 30 percent below market rate, 300 acres of parkland and 235,000 square feet of retail space.With the board’s support, the private development team leading the project will begin negotiations to acquire the island from the U.S. Navy, which used it during World War II as a base. Read More

Hill murder trial focuses on motive

Self-defense, or a deliberate choice to gun down police officers to avoid an arrest — those are the two very different scenarios a jury is faced with as it begins deliberations today in the trial of a self-acknowledged gang member who shot and killed a San Francisco police officer more than two years ago. Read More

Report: Lower shortfall expected for ’07

As Mayor Gavin Newsom gets ready to present his budget for next year by June 1, he will have to close a $64 million projected shortfall in The City’s operating budget, significantly less than was anticipated earlier this year, according to a report released Friday by the Mayor’s Budget Office.The projection marks the second consecutive year that San Francisco has faced a sizably lower shortfall than originally forecast, a fact city officials attribute to an economic turnaround. Read More

Mayor turns up heat on Prop. I

As city supervisors deliberated Thursday on a voter-backed policy to have the mayor attend monthly board meetings, Mayor Gavin Newsom announced that his counterproposal would be implemented Jan. 13, further straining relations between him and the board.The latest political spat between the Board of Supervisors and Newsom is centered around the implementation of Proposition I, a nonbinding policy statement — which was backed by 56 percent of the voters Nov. 7 — that said the mayor should appear once a month at a Board of Supervisors meeting. Read More

Supes hash out Treasure Island plan details

A major proposal to transform Treasure Island into a unique, vibrant neighborhood using "green" materials, incorporating alternative energy and centered around public transit was praised in concept Wednesday by city officials as they attempted to hash out better protections for The City. Years in the making, the proposal by a private development team would level nearly all the existing structures on the 450-acre Treasure Island and make way for the neighborhood, which would include 6,000 homes, 235,000 square feet of retail and 13,500 new residents. Read More

Sidewalk-fixing plan riles supe

Mayor Gavin Newsom’s attempt to beef up enforcement of sidewalk maintenance at the expense of property owners has come under fire by one city official.In the coming months, the Department of Public Works may force hundreds of property owners to pay for repairs to damaged sidewalks adjacent to their properties, as required by state and local laws. Repair costs range from hundreds to thousands of dollars. Read More

Supes resume assault on Conroy

The former head of The City’s emergency planning, who has consistently come under attack by the Board of Supervisors, was once again in its cross hairs Monday as they recommended to eliminate her latest position at the Office of Emergency Services and Homeland Security. Read More

North Beach piazza: For ‘people to come and rest their souls’

By the end of next year, a piazza covering a section of Vallejo Street in North Beach could replace a city block and help transform the area into an international landmark, say project advocates.The piazza, which was dreamt up by famed poet Lawrence Ferlinghetti, who also owns City Lights Bookstore, is intended to create a public gathering space replete with benches, trees and a "starving poets podium." Read More

Ryan White’s mom visits The City on World AIDS Day

Facing a community that shunned him for having AIDs, Ryan White became a prominent advocate of those suffering from the deadly disease, educating the world and inspiring compassion."Because of the misunderstood disease called AIDS my life changed overnight," said Jeanne White-Ginder, White’s mother. She was in San Francisco to participate in World AIDS Day, a day to remember those who lost their lives to the disease and to re-energize efforts to halt its spread. Read More

Hospital expansion on budget, so far, but a little behind

Construction to accommodate 780 beds at the city-operated Laguna Honda hospital is under way and on budget, while the fate of a building for another 420 beds remains uncertain.Laguna Honda Hospital serves about 1,050 long-term patients, but the existing city-operated facility is in violation of state hospital codes, which prompted the need for the rebuild. The project originally called for the construction of four buildings totaling 1,200 beds, but escalation of construction costs resulted in the project being scaled back. Read More

Fong tours communities in wake of supes’ critique

Two weeks after receiving scathing criticism from the Board of Supervisors for not being assertive or visible enough, police Chief Heather Fong has engaged in two publicized merchant walks in predominantly Asian-American communities where she has the strongest base of support.Fong was the object of criticism by board members as well as the Police Officers Association around the time the Board of Supervisors overrode Mayor Gavin Newsom’s veto of legislation requiring regular foot patrols around eight of The City’s 10 police district stations. Read More

Truck sparks SoMa crashes

A man driving a work truck Tuesday afternoon struck a car, rear-ended a Muni bus and then smashed into another car in the intersection of Fourth and Howard streets, sending two people to the hospital and causing three bus lines to be rerouted for more than an hour, police say.Driving along Fourth Street near Minna Street, the man in the truck rear-ended a car, stopped for a moment, then continued driving, only to strike the rear-end of a stationary Muni bus at 12:50 p.m., according to police Officer Jason Hui. Read More

Survey: S.F. backs tax for burying wires

San Francisco residents apparently are prepared to pay an extra few bucks a month to bury underground electrical wiring that still clutters half of The City’s streetscapes, according to the results of a recent survey.The City has run out of money to pay for undergrounding utility poles and wires that remain on 470 miles of San Francisco’s 900 miles of roadways. Read More

Support mounts for Muni youth discount

A Muni fare discount for young people is well-deserved and smart policy even if it might cost up to $15.5 million a year, advocates of the proposed discount say.Supervisor Jake McGoldrick has drafted a resolution urging Muni to implement discounted fares for those between the ages of 18 and 24. Read More
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