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Joshua Sabatini

Police chief launches campaign to outfit department with stun guns such as Tasers

The seemingly never-ending debate over whether to outfit San Francisco police officers with devices capable of shooting 50,000 volts of electricity through the body is recharging once again. The Police Department’s campaign, which would give stun guns to 103 officers specially trained to handle mentally ill people as part of a pilot program, is kicking into high gear, beginning with a planned Jan. 9 community meeting, Police Chief Greg Suhr said Thursday. Read More

Proposed rates for CleanPowerSF green energy program rise again

Customers who are automatically enrolled in San Francisco’s ambitious green energy program will have to pay significantly more than was expected when supervisors approved the program less than three months ago. The adjusted rates were released last week by the San Francisco Public Utilities Commission, the agency charged with implementing CleanPowerSF, a program designed to offer 100 percent renewable energy to residential consumers at an additional cost. Read More

Effort to change Muni development fees rejected

The Board of Supervisors on Tuesday declined to eliminate the nonprofit exemption for Muni’s impact fee charged on development, stalled a proposal for a seafood restaurant to open in Marina Green and allocated $2.2 million to help high school students graduate on time. Read More

F.X. Crowley supporters abandon pursuit of District 7 recount

After flirting with the idea of demanding a recount for the District 7 supervisorial election that was decided by just 132 votes, labor leader F.X. Crowley and his backers stood down on Monday, citing costs. On Friday, Department of Elections Director John Arntz provided recount proponents with the estimated cost of recounting District 7’s 31,334 ballots, which led to school board President Norman Yee’s 132-vote victory over Crowley in the nine-candidate contest. Read More

Hunters View tenants shocked by new “house rules” for housing complex

Community advocates in Hunters Point are crying foul over paternalistic new rules that public housing tenants must live by if they want to move into the new units replacing the Hunters View housing complex. The 31 pages of “house rules” (see below) regulate everything from guests, smoking and barbecues to festive decorations and shopping carts. Even after the rules were scaled back amid tenant concerns, they are still causing alarm, with move-ins scheduled to begin next month. Read More

San Francisco’s landfill contract thrown out amidst legal challenges

A lucrative garbage contract approved last year in a deal to transport San Francisco’s waste 130 miles away to a Yuba County landfill has been trashed amid three lawsuits alleging improper bidding and inadequate environmental review. Facing these legal battles, San Francisco and its garbage hauler, Recology, signed an agreement Monday to terminate the 10-year, $112 million contract, which was approved by the Board of Supervisors in a 9-2 vote. The contract termination effectively ends the lawsuits. Read More

Regulators propose rules for committees like one that encouraged Ed Lee to run for mayor

The controversy that erupted last summer over political spending encouraging Ed Lee to run for mayor has prompted the San Francisco Ethics Commission to create a new campaign finance category applicable to such groups. The commission voted unanimously Monday to call any effort supporting an undeclared person for an elected office a “draft committee.” As with independent expenditure committees, draft committees will not be subject to spending or contribution limits. Other filing requirements will be the same. Read More

SLIDESHOW: Waterfront rehab planned for Pier 70 in Dogpatch neighborhood

The future of San Francisco’s dilapidated Pier 70 is coming into focus in advance of today’s Board of Supervisors committee vote on the financial terms of a planned $58.5 million rehab of historic buildings along the central, southern waterfront. Under the deal, the Port of San Francisco would enter a 66-year lease with Orton Development to complete a $58.5 million rehabilitation of six office and industrial buildings on a 69-acre site in the Dogpatch neighborhood under what is known as the 20th Street Historic Building rehabilitation project. Read More

Labor group, F.X. Crowley supporters explore recount process in District 7 supervisorial race

Supporters of labor leader F.X. Crowley have set in motion a recount of the vote tally that made Board of Education President Norman Yee win the District 7 seat on the Board of Supervisors by 132 votes. But while Crowley supporters say the margin of victory is close enough to justify a recount, they are not so sure they will actually follow through on their request for one. That will depend on how much Department of Elections Director John Arntz says it would cost. Arntz is expected to sit down today with recount proponents to flesh out the details and costs. Read More

David Chiu asks constituents to weigh in on city spending

San Francisco Board of Supervisors President David Chiu
Board of Supervisors President David Chiu is getting creative with figuring out how to spend $100,000 in taxpayer money. Chiu and his 10 colleagues on the Board of Supervisors were each allocated $100,000 as part of this fiscal year’s $7.35 billion San Francisco city and county budget to spend as they see fit. To help figure out what to spend it on, Chiu is turning to his constituents in the District 3 he represents, which includes the North Beach and Chinatown neighborhoods. Read More

San Francisco faces retiree health costs

After starting to rein in San Francisco’s pension costs last year, city officials are rolling up their sleeves to tackle the skyrocketing cost of health care for retired government workers. Read More

Free Muni for youth one step closer to reality following supervisors’ vote

Making Muni free for low-income San Francisco youths could become a reality as soon as February after the Board of Supervisors voted Tuesday in favor of a proposed pilot program. Although the final decision lies with the San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency, the supervisors’ 7-4 approval of a resolution backing the program sent the transit directors a strong message of support before their scheduled Dec. 4 vote. Mayor Ed Lee also backs the program. Read More

Free Muni for youths expected to be approved by Board of Supervisors

The long argument over whether to allow low-income youths to ride Muni for free appears all but over. Today, the Board of Supervisors is expected to send the San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency’s board of directors a clear message of support for a pilot program to make Muni free for low-income youths. Read More

Neighbor wages campaign against proposed Marina Green restaurant

Seventy-year-old Arthur Scampa has lived on Marina Boulevard for about three decades and says he has never complained to City Hall. But he’s complaining now. Scampa and his wife, Fataneh, are fighting the Recreation and Park Department’s proposal to allow a seafood restaurant on Marina Green at the site of a building formerly owned by the U.S. Navy. “This is a major change of a public park,” Scampa said. “It’s just crazy.” Read More

Proposal would require landlords to designate non-smoking apartments

Although they often butt heads, landlords and tenant advocates have joined forces in support of a proposed new ordinance that apartment owners believe could increase the supply of smoke-free rental housing in The City. Supervisor Eric Mar, no stranger to health-conscious lawmaking, has introduced legislation that would make landlords designate their apartment units as smoking or nonsmoking and disclose this information to tenants and in advertising. Read More
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