Dropped by Green Twig Salon during a visit to Noe Valley to meet with merchants and neighbors.
Nearly 300,000 Americans have lost their lives to COVID-19. As COVID-19 surges to new record highs in California and throughout the country, San Francisco is experiencing a more significant and rapid rise in cases and hospitalizations than we’ve seen since the start of the pandemic. COVID-19 cases have quadrupled during the last month in San Francisco, and the City is currently averaging 142 new COVID-19 positive cases per day compared to the 34 per day that it averaged in late October. The City currently has approximately 900 COVID-19 cases diagnosed per week and hospitalizations have tripled over the last month.
To prevent our hospital system from being overwhelmed and save lives, the City has joined Bay Area counties to opt into the State's regional Stay at Home order, which you can read more about below. With the holiday season upon us, we can keep our families and our communities safe by staying home and avoiding in-person gatherings this holiday season. We owe it to our neighbors, our small businesses and ourselves to follow common-sense public health protocols and keep wearing our masks until COVID-19 is finally in the rearview mirror.
I hope our hard work will pay off and soon enough we'll get to see each other in person again. In the meantime, continue reading for updates from my office about our legislation to address homelessness, fight climate change, expand health care for airport workers, and more. |
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My office in City Hall remains closed to the public while we continue to shelter in place and work remotely. The best way to stay in touch with us is by email. We are checking our email and voicemail every day. Please don’t hesitate to reach out via email, at mandelmanstaff@sfgov.org.
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Have questions or concerns for the District 8 Office? We are resuming Office Hours to provide D8 residents with one-on-one (virtual) meetings as we continue to shelter in place. Our next Virtual Office Hours will be Saturday January 9th from 11am to 1pm. Email mandelmanstaff@sfgov.org to request a 10 minute appointment. Appointments are on a first come first served basis.
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Every second and fourth Friday at 2pm my office hosts an informal Zoomside Chat, where constituents can get the latest updates and ask questions of us and our special guest. For more information, please visit my Facebook page or email erin.mundy@sfgov.org. Due to the holidays, our final Zoomside Chat of 2020 will be on Friday December 11th with special guest, Former District 8 Supervisor and State Senator Mark Leno!
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As COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations continue to rapidly rise in San Francisco, the City has opted into the State's regional Stay at Home order announced by Governor Newsom on December 3rd.
The following activities will be required to suspend operations until further notice:
- Personal services. Establishments offering personal care services including hair and nail salons, barbers, tattoo, piercing, estheticians and massage must cease operations, including both indoor and outdoor operations.
- Outdoor dining. Restaurants and any other establishments offering meal service, may only operate for delivery or take-out. Eating and drinking on the premises is prohibited.
- Outdoor museums, aquariums, and zoos. Outdoor installations or exhibits associated with museums, aquariums, or zoos may not allow entrance to visitors. Outdoor botanical gardens and historic sites may remain open.
- Indoor gyms. Limited 1:1 personal training within gyms and fitness centers that was allowed under the previous health order must cease, but may take place outdoors (see below).
- Drive-in gatherings. Drive in theaters and other performances delivered in a drive in context must cease.
- Outdoor playgrounds. Public playgrounds including climbing structures and walls, slides swings, sand pits, etc. must close.
- Outdoor family entertainment centers. Outdoor family entertainment centers including skate parks, roller and ice skating rinks, batting cages, go kart racing and miniature golf must close.
- Open-air bus and boat operators. Operators of open-air busses offering sight seeing and other tour services and open-air boat excursions, including leisure and fishing expeditions, must cease operations.
The following activities will be required to restrict their operations:
- Low Contact Retail. Service oriented retail such as dog groomers, electronics repair services and shoe repair services can operate in a curbside drop off context only.
- Retail. All retail establishments such as shopping centers, hardware stores, convenience stores, equipment rental, and specialty shops, and including standalone grocery stores, must reduce capacity to 20% (down from 25% and 50% in the case of grocery stores) and implement a metering system (see below).
The following activities will be required to proceed with modifications in place:
- Hotels and lodging. Hotels may only accept reservations from essential workers traveling for work purposes or to support critical infrastructure including accommodations for isolation and quarantine purposes. If an individual who is not traveling for essential purposes makes a reservation, it must be at least for the number of days required for quarantine. The persons identified in the reservation must quarantine in the hotel or lodging facility for the entirety of the time required.
- Small gatherings. Small outdoor gatherings, must limit themselves to members of 1 household with a maximum number of 12 people (down from up to three households or no more than 25 people). Face coverings must remain on at all times and no eating or drinking is allowed.
- Outdoor gyms. Outdoor gym or fitness center activities as well as outdoor fitness in-person group classes (such as boot camps, dance, yoga, tai-chi, etc.) are limited to groups of 12 people, including personnel, and must maintain strict distance and face covering requirements. Running groups are prohibited.
- Youth sports. Youth sports activities affiliated with a childcare program, Out of School Time program, or other organized and supervised youth sports program may continue operating outdoors only without competitions or spectators and with strict social distancing and face covering requirements in place.
- Indoor activities open to public. Any establishment allowing members of the public to access indoor areas, including shopping centers, grocery stores, corner stores, financial services, hardware stores, pharmacies, etc. must establish a metering system to monitor capacity thresholds and ensure capacity does not exceed limits. In effect, a business will need to assign a specific staff person to monitor the number of people in the establishment and ensure that the 20% capacity threshold is maintained at all times. This system must be in place as soon as possible and no later than Sunday, December 6th at 10 p.m. when the amended order becomes operative. Additionally, special hours should be instituted for seniors and others with chronic conditions or compromised immune systems.
- Adult Recreation. No/low contact adult recreational activities such as golf, tennis, pickle ball, and bocce ball may continue outdoors but must be limited to participants within the same household.
Additional information about which businesses and activities can operate in San Francisco and what modifications are required at this time is available at sf.gov/step-by-step/reopening-san-francisco.
You can monitor our progress on key indicators here, and keep up with all reopening updates here . Read on for a full list of paused reopening activities.
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WHAT WE'VE BEEN WORKING ON
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INTRODUCING LEGISLATION TO PROVIDE A PLACE FOR ALL: On Tuesday October 20th, I introduced legislation with Supervisor Sandra Lee Fewer to require the Department of Homelessness and Supportive Housing to open a citywide network of temporary safe sleeping sites, with enough capacity to ensure that on any given night, any unhoused person who is unable to access a shelter bed, housing unit, or hotel room can at least be offered an overnight stay at such a site.
I believe it is unfair and wrong to leave unhoused people to figure out a place to sleep on our sidewalks, and it is unfair and wrong to ask neighborhoods to provide their sidewalks, medians and plazas as shelters of last resort. But if we do not want unhoused people camping overnight in those places, our humanity and in fact our laws require that we find safe places where they can be. Safe sleeping sites are a tested and proven model that can be cost-effective and scalable. And they are a preferred option of unhoused people.
Back in April the Board of Supervisors passed a resolution I authored urging the City to create safe sleeping sites. And since then, the City has piloted and proven the concept. Since the creation of the Fulton Street Safe Sleeping Village in May, the City has opened eight total safe sleeping sites, seven of which are still active, and which currently provide shelter to over 250 people who would otherwise be sleeping on the street.
Let me be clear: safe sleeping sites are not a solution to homelessness. The solution to homelessness is a home, and San Francisco should continue to create as much permanent supportive housing as quickly as we can. But safe sleeping sites do offer a strategy to ensure that all unhoused people at least have a safe place to spend the night, and that no one has to camp on our streets, I look forward to holding a hearing on my legislation later this winter, and hope to see it passed in early 2021. If you would like to know how you can support this legislation please contact Erin Mundy at erin.mundy@sfgov.org.
ENSURING FAMILY HEALTH CARE FOR LOW WAGE WORKERS AT SFO: The Healthy Airport ordinance, which I co-authored with Supervisor Shamann Walton, passed unanimously at the Board of Supervisors on November 10th. The Healthy Airport ordinance requires that San Francisco International Airport (SFO) employers provide expanded health benefits for thousands of underinsured and uninsured private sector Airport Service Employees. This vote follows years of organizing – including picket lines, non-violent civil disobedience, and a vote to strike when released – by SFO workers represented by SEIU-United Service Workers West (SEIU-USWW), Teamsters Local 856 and Local 2785, and UNITE HERE Local 2.
For far too many workers – the majority of whom are low wage and people of color, and many of whom live below the Bay Area poverty line – sky-rocketing co-pays and deductibles mean workers regularly forego necessary or urgent medical visits because they can't afford to take on thousands of dollars in debt. And for thousands of these workers, the high price of family health care is simply out of reach. This health care crisis not only threatens the safety of SFO, but also threatens to further widen the gap between the richest and the poorest in our economy.
This legislation will expand covered employees’ access to family health insurance benefits in order to protect those employees and their families, the community and the traveling public from the spread of COVID-19, and restore public confidence in the safety of air travel to and from San Francisco. Thank you to the SFO workers for never giving up the fight and for the opportunity to work together to win the health care you and your families deserve.
BUILDING A GREEN FUTURE: San Francisco took a major step to address the climate crisis and build a safer, healthier city for future generations. On November 17th, the Board of Supervisors passed my ordinance to require all-electric construction in new buildings that file permits starting next year. With limited exceptions, this ordinance would prohibit new buildings from including natural gas, a leading source of greenhouse gas emissions and a serious public health and safety hazard. Over the past year, I have worked with a broad coalition of community and national environmental organizations, labor, building and construction experts, and public health to bring this legislation forward.
This makes San Francisco a leader in the building electrification movement growing across California, where over 30 cities have already taken some action to limit natural gas construction, and the State is considering similar statewide building standards to phase out gas in future buildings. Since the passage of our legislation, Oakland and San Jose have passed bans on natural gas in all new construction, and Seattle just announced a natural gas ban will be introduced there in 2021. In a year when we have suffered through historic wildfires, repeated heat waves, and a record string of hazardous air quality days, building a carbon neutral future has never been more important.
EXPANDING SHARED SPACES IN DISTRICT 8: The Shared Spaces program allows local businesses to safely offer outdoor dining and retail by making use of sidewalks, parking spaces, and street openings. Since June, my office has worked closely with merchant associations, business owners, neighbors, and City staff to help make the program a success for small businesses and the community, and over 200 District 8 businesses have taken advantage so far. Although Shared Spaces activities will be on pause until the current Stay at Home order is lifted on January 4th, the program has been extended until June 30. Sidewalk permits will renew automatically, and businesses must renew parking lane permits by the end of the year.
The Valencia Corridor Merchants Association opens three blocks of Valencia to Mission merchants, from 16th Street to 17th Street, 18th Street to 19th Street and 20th Street to 21st, Thursday through Sunday evenings. Hours are 4 to 10pm Thursdays and Fridays, 11am to 10pm on Saturdays, and 11am to 6pm on Sundays.
The Castro Merchants Association has operated a weekend opening on 18th Street from Collingwood to Hartford every Sunday from 10am to 10pm, and for two weeks before the current Stay at Home order went into effect the Merchants opened one block of Noe Street from Market to Beaver Street on Sundays.
See more about the Shared Spaces program, including how to apply, give feedback, or report violations of public health guidelines at sf.gov/sharedspaces. See an interactive map of active Shared Spaces permits and applications here.
FUNDING THE UPPER MARKET SAFETY PROJECT: In October I worked with the Transportation Authority to secure funding for the Upper Market Safety Project, an important set of safety and streetscape investments along Market from Castro to Octavia. The project includes safer crosswalks and bike lanes and other safety improvements, and number of streetscape enhancements like new lighting, tree planting in the medians on Market, new trash cans and pit stops, and funding to extend the Rainbow Honor Walk up Market from the Castro.
San Franciscans shouldn’t have to risk their lives to get around by foot or on a bike, but too often that’s not the case. That’s especially true at many dangerous intersections along Market, like at Castro where I made sure the project would include signal improvements for pedestrians, or at Laguna and Hermann & 15th and Sanchez that will see new high-visibility crosswalks. Learn more and see what’s included here.
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Chatting with Tina at Noe Valley institution Shufat Market. Stop by for all your day-to-day market needs!
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SHOP AND DINE SMALL & LOCAL IN D8: District 8 businesses continue serving our community despite the crazy times we’re living in. I spent two recent afternoons in Noe Valley and Glen Park visiting with merchants and neighbors. In Noe Valley, I stopped by to see the team at Green Twig Salon who are keeping the neighborhood looking good, chatted with Tina at Shufat Market about voting and the importance of health care, checked in at Bernie's Coffee and Folio Books, grabbed a bite at Hi-way Burger & Fry, and ran into friends at the Town Square and Sanchez Slow Street, like Lewis Loeven of SF Fleet Week (run out of a Noe Valley garage!).
In Glen Park, I met up with Janet Tarlov of Canyon Market, who took me by Glen Park Market to meet owner Jung Lee and hear more about the challenges she and other Glen Park merchants are facing. Then we headed over to see the newest addition to the Village -- Dr. Kylie Rowe's Living Healthy Physical Therapy on Chenery, where Dr. Rowe works to heal patients in her light-filled and airy clinic. Next we popped in across the street at Perch, where Zoel is getting ready for the holidays by planning COVID-safe shopping for his customers. As the holidays approach, let's keep our small businesses alive and well by shopping and dining small & local!
MUNI SERVICE UPDATES: The J-Church will resume running above-ground train service starting December 19th, while most other rail lines, including the K, L, M, and N lines will continue to run as substitute buses while work continues to repair issues on overhead lines (more here ). The J train will end at Church and Market where passengers must transfer to above-ground bus lines down Market, and to Muni Metro trains when underground service is restored. This is part of the MTA’s J-Church Transfer Project , which I have been following closely and is intended to improve reliability on the J line. We have pushed for a number of changes to improve conditions for the small businesses located on Church Street impacted by the project, and I’m glad to see that businesses like the Pilsner Inn, Il Casaro, and Red Jade have set up Shared Spaces outdoor dining on Church Street. See more information and provide your feedback to MTA here.
Starting January 23rd a number of bus routes will be restored. The 37-Corbett will return to its regular route, including service north of Market to Buena Vista that has been temporarily discontinued. The 33-Ashbury will also resume service, with a modified route on weekends to accommodate the weekend Shared Spaces street opening on 18th Street in the Castro. I have pushed the MTA to restore service on cross-town routes and in hilly neighborhoods since service was drastically reduced at the beginning of the pandemic, and am pleased to see service will soon resume. While I also worked with MTA to ensure that the Essential Trip Card would be available to provide subsidized taxi rides to seniors and people with mobility impairments, I know that this is no substitute for transit service and am glad that the residents who rely on transit to access many parts of District 8 will soon have restored service. The 48-Quintara will continue running on a modified route as it has since August.
Note that starting December 1st, Muni fare inspectors resumed issuing citations. Please see more information about Muni discount and free fare programs here, including Free Muni for Youth, Seniors, and People with Disabilities, and Lifeline passes for riders with limited incomes and the Access passes for people experiencing homelessness.
Keep up with Muni COVID-19 updates here.
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SHARING GRATITUDE FROM DISTRICT 8: This winter surge will be hard on all of us, especially our healthcare workers. Noe Valley residents and merchants sent this community thank you card to SF General workers. It's a good reminder to share our gratitude however we can for everyone working to keep us safe and healthy this year!
IN MEMORY OF MARY ELAINE BOTTS: At the Board of Supervisors meeting this Tuesday, I requested that we adjourn the meeting in memory of Mary Botts who died on November 18th at the age of 28.
If you spent much time in the Castro over the last few years you would have seen Mary. In Jane Warner or Harvey Milk Plaza, in the bus shelters, sometimes lying on the sidewalk outside Hot Cookie, often darting out into traffic and back. Her fear and anxiety were palpable even to a casual observer. Some neighbors called her Princess Leia because of the way she would wear her hair up in buns that recalled the Star Wars character.
Mary is one of the what looks to be nearly 700 people who have died from an overdose this year, far far more than have died from COVID-19. And her passing is all the more infuriating because she didn’t have to die. I, and just about every person who encountered Mary, could see that she was struggling. Lots of folks, including my office, tried to get her help. We appealed to City departments to intervene - to come up with a plan, to get her into treatment, to do something. And I know that the City tried, in the way that the City tries. There was no shortage of City contacts with Mary: HOT, EMS, DPH, SFPD all engaged with her. But it wasn’t enough.
You see, in San Francisco in 2020, we will offer you services, repeatedly, but if you are too sick to accept help, we will leave you out there, until you die.
Mary was the victim of a broken system that allows people with severe substance use and mental health disorders to die on our streets. We still haven’t figured out how to fix this broken system and the loss of Mary’s young life is the consequence of our failure. We can and must do better.
Mary is survived by her parents Michael and Patricia, her sister Erin, her brother Max, her niece Olivia, her nephew Cade, and her grandmother Roseanne. More about Mary's life and those who she touched can be found here.
May her memory be a blessing and may it finally spur us to action to help all the other Marys on our streets.
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Castro homeless woman known for wandering into traffic is dead. Why couldn't S.F. save her?
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“I’m sad, but also angry,” Mandelman said. “This was avoidable. This is all of our failure. This is about a broken system that we still haven’t figured out how to fix.”
(SF Chronicle, December 8)
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S.F. moves to expand health care for thousands of airport workers, families
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“COVID-19 poses a new and unprecedented threat to the health of airport employees and to the city’s ability to safely and effectively operate the airport,” Mandelman said in a statement.
(SF Chronicle, November 12)
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New buildings in San Francisco must soon avoid natural gas
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“Whatever reservations people had as developers or human beings,” said Mandelman, “they are living on a planet that appears to be changing in frightening ways.”
(The Hill, November 12)
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No more natural gas in new San Francisco buildings starting next year
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Mandelman called his ordinance “an incremental but important move to help save our planet.”
“Whatever reservations people had as developers or human beings,” said Mandelman, “they are living on a planet that appears to be changing in frightening ways.”
(SF Chronicle, November 12)
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Ordinance giving airport workers expanded health coverage approved
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“For far too many airport workers — the majority of whom are low wage, and many of whom live below the Bay Area poverty line — sky-rocketing co-pays and deductibles and expensive family plans mean workers and their families regularly forego medical visits because they can’t afford to take on thousands of dollars in debt. This health care crisis not only threatens the safety of SFO, but also threatens to further widen the gap between the richest and the poorest in our economy. The Healthy Airport Ordinance will help end this race to the bottom for frontline Airport workers,” Mandelman said in a statement.
(SF Examiner, November 11)
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SF to give cannabis industry a one-year tax break
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'“There is going to be new revenue coming into the city,” Mandelman said. “I think in light of that, in light of our efforts to support small businesses, this is not a time to be imposing a new tax on small businesses,” Mandelman said.'
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Supervisors propose expanding San Francisco's Safe Sleeping Villages
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Mandelman said he would prefer if the city could find ways to afford more permanent housing for everyone.
“At the very, very least, we should be identifying safe places where people can at least spend the night rather than leaving it to them to figure out which sidewalk it's okay to be on. And rather than expecting neighbors to sort of accept having an encampment pop up outside their window," Mandelman said.
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Supervisors want to require Safe Sleeping Sites to accommodate every homeless person
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“In San Francisco, in 2020, no one should have to spend the night in a tent on a median or curled up in a doorway,” Mandelman said in a statement. “Despite investing billions of dollars in addressing homelessness over the years, we have never taken responsibility for the many thousands of unhoused people who can still not access a supportive housing unit, shelter bed, or hotel.”
He said his proposal, “A Place for All,” will “ensure that all unhoused people have a safe place to spend the night so that no one has to camp on our streets, and that no neighborhood has to offer up its sidewalks as shelter of last resort.”
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San Francisco moves to landmark historic Lyon-Martin House
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"In my view, and I hope in yours, the site is of historic value to San Francisco and the LGBTQ rights movement across the world and it should be appropriately recognized and preserved," said Mandelman during Monday's hearing. "This is the beginning of the process but a critical step for the city to weigh in on what happens to the site in the future."
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Transportation Authority approves Castro-area street safety fixes
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"You shouldn't have to risk your life to cross Castro Street, and I have heard of too many scary incidents where pedestrians were hit or nearly hit in that crosswalk," Mandelman stated to the B.A.R October 20. "That's why I secured these additional funds to make sure the Upper Market Safety project included signal improvements to the Castro and Market intersection. These additional funds will also close a funding gap and advance the larger Upper Market Safety project, which will add safer crosswalks and bike lanes, new lighting, street trees and trash cans to the neighborhood."
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BIDDING JESSICA FAREWELL AND WELCOMING DAVE
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For the past year, the District 8 Office has been lucky to work with the amazing Jessica Closson as the the SFPD D8 Public Safety Liaison. It is with much sadness that we announce Jessica is no longer with the Police Department, as she and her family have moved to Seattle. The D8 Office extends our endless gratitude to Jessica for her countless hours spent tackling the most pressing public safety issues in the district, and for her commitment and advocacy on behalf of the residents of District 8. We'll miss you, Jessica! |
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As we bid Jessica farewell, we welcome with great excitement our new SFPD D8 Public Safety Liaison David Burke! Dave has spent his career working in public service and on behalf of community initiatives, working for the last 13 years as an investigator with the San Francisco District Attorney and City Attorney’s Offices. In his new role, Dave will be working with the Police Department, the D8 Office, City partners, and community stakeholders to address public safety issues in the neighborhoods of District 8. Dave lives in Duboce Triangle with his wife and daughter. You can reach Dave at dave.burke@sfgov.org. |
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FREE PPE AVAILABLE FOR SMALL BUSINESSES. San Francisco has secured a large shipment of Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) from the California Governor’s Office of Emergency Services (CalOES) and the California Office of the Small Business Advocate (CalOSBA) to support small businesses. The shipment includes hand sanitizers, surgical masks, and face shields. The Office of Economic Workforce Development is collaborating with Community-Based Organizations (CBOs) to distribute a one-month supply of PPE to local businesses that are open and/or will reopen soon, while supplies last. To apply, visit the program's webpage here or email my officer at erin.mundy@sfgov.org.
Provide your input on the Housing Element 2020 Update. Every eight years California cities are required to update their General Plan's Housing Element. The Housing Element is San Francisco's housing plan: it expresses our collective vision for creating housing through a series of policies and implementation programs. The Planning Department recently launched San Francisco's 2022 update, which will be centered on racial and social equity to create housing policies that are inclusive, equitable and just. Your participation and input are critical to ensuring the Housing Element update reflects the values of our communities, especially those impacted by historically discriminatory programs. Share your feedback on key ideas for policy updates through the online participation platform or by calling 415-644-5891 to leave your comments in a voice message.
The California Public Utilities Commission is asking that community members be made aware of a new scam going around: people are being cold-called by would-be scammers with spoofed telephone numbers (often with the same prefix as the intended victim’s own phone) and greeted by a recording saying, “This is an apology from your electric company.” The call then offers a rebate due to overcharging, and if the intended victim stays on, a live caller joins and attempts to solicit bank information.
There is no such active rebate program currently being offered by any major utility in California, and should one ever be offered, it would likely be in the form of bill credits. The FCC investigates such scams, and the CPUC advises that Californians immediately hang up on any such calls received.
Emergency Business/Nonprofit Water Bill Assistance
If your small business or non-profit is experiencing financial hardship due to the COVID-19 pandemic, you may be eligible for a 20% reduction on your water and sewer bill. This program is available for a limited time and the deadline to submit an application is December 31, 2020. However, we may cease taking applications earlier if funds are exhausted. Once approved, you will receive a 20% discount on your SFPUC water and sewer bill for a period of six months. Apply here today.
The SFMTA is seeking community feedback about how the Muni Core Service Plan is working for Muni customers and is asking for your input to identify what is not working. To supplement the reach of Muni’s web-based survey, the MTA is using a text-based survey to reach people who might find it easier or more accessible to provide feedback by text. Smart phone capability is not required. Text YES/NO to 415-996-1854 to start the survey.
Visit SF72.org for important announcements about emergency conditions in San Francisco. Text your zipcode to 888-777 or visit alertsf.org to receive emergency alerts from AlertSF.
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To help support local businesses, the Noe Valley Merchants and Professionals Association (NVMPA) is sponsoring a fantastic raffle with prizes that range from gift cards to beverage accessories to holiday candles! The full list is available here. All you need to do is shop at one of the participating merchants (listed here) on a Tuesday in December - i.e. December 1, 8, 15, or 22 - and receive a free raffle ticket with your purchase.
Help ensure every child in San Francisco's homeless shelter system receives a holiday gift this year by supporting Urban Angels’ Sharing Hope Toy Drive. Help fill the toy requests - in just a few easy clicks. Just click on this Walmart Registry link to start your shopping. Your toys will automatically be delivered to the Urban Angels office. Wishes start at as little as $10. Even a small contribution can help make sure all of our children experience joy this holiday season.
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