09 August 2021

Park Branh Library's Reopening Plans

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by Richard Ivanhoe, HANC Board

The Park Branch Library closed in March, 2020 when the shelter-in-place order was issued.  With the Library’s Community Room no longer available, HANC canceled our March and April 2020 meetings.  Our meetings resumed, but online, in May, 2020.

Library services were also available online only until August, 2020, when “SFPL to Go” pick-up service began at the Main Library and the Excelsior Branch.  Park Branch added this service in February, 2021, with pick-up available 10 am to 5:30 pm, Tuesday through Saturday.

Acting Branch Manager Davey Reed has announced that Park Brach reopened for full in-person library service on August 3.  Open hours remain 10 am to 5:30 pm, Tuesday through Saturday.  The library system and branches are moving toward 7 day service depending on staffing.

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09 August 2021

Community Ownership of Land Creating Forever Homes

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by Bruce Wolfe, HANC Board

Did you know that SF has a community land trust (CLT) that creates forever homes for low-to-moderate income residents and workers? It’s called San Francisco Community Land Trust (https://SFCLT.org). But, what is a CLT? SFCLT explains it:

A Community Land Trust is a membership-based, nonprofit organization whose mission is to create permanently affordable, resident-owned housing for low- and moderate-income people. Resident ownership of multi-family properties through the Community Land Trust model is one means of stabilizing affordable housing, in perpetuity, for low-income and working class residents. (https://www.sfclt.org/our-approach1#how)

And, how does a CLT provide affordable housing in perpetuity and take it off the speculative market permanently? The California CLT Network describes it this way: (https://www.cacltnetwork.org/california-clt-definition/)

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09 August 2021

Next Year's Budget

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by Supervisor Dean Preston

The Board of Supervisors voted in next year’s budget last month. There’s no such thing as a perfect budget, but with a surplus (thanks Props C and I) and reserves (thanks fed relief), we got critical help to renters, working people, unhoused folks and communities of color.

The Good:

Public Bank - San Francisco is leading the way to establish the first municipal bank in the nation. This is a critical investment in the future of our city and we will carry it to the finish line.

Rent relief - We won an additional $32 million for local rent relief efforts, ensuring that approximately 3,500 households who would otherwise be shut out will receive the relief needed to prevent eviction.

Right to Counsel - This year for the first time the budget fully funds a right to an attorney if you face eviction, as promised by our 2018 ballot measure we passed with DSA. It will have a massive impact on preventing post-pandemic displacement.

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06 July 2021

Haight Street Storefronts Begin Filling In

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By Christin Evans, HANC Board

Before the pandemic started Haight Street was already at a record high 21 storefront vacancies.  Rising costs including skyrocketing rents, payroll and other costs coincided with 4 years of disruptive street construction making it a tough go for many shopkeepers.  Notable closures in that time included the 40 year old Haight Ashbury Music Center, Carlos’ Shoe Repair, and Kids Only. 

So when the pandemic forced doors closed and the plywood went up, there was a period when it looked like many more Haight businesses wouldn’t survive.  By March 2021, a year from the first shelter-in-place order, there were 32 storefront vacancies (about a fifth of the storefronts between Stanyan and Central).  Many of the pandemic closures were clothing stores such as Haight Ashbury T-Shirts, Static and Crossroads Trading Company, which struggled to meet rent obligations with a significant drop in sales. 

But as local retail is inching out of its pandemic funk, and restaurants and bars are expanding service, vacant storefronts are beginning to fill in.  Here are some notable new businesses:

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06 July 2021

Non-Profit Seeks New Home

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In April 2020, after the Bay Area was officially in lockdown in response to the pandemic, Food Runners San Francisco found a temporary home at 1525 Waller Street (where the weekly food pantry operates) to cook, pack, and store meals for distribution to those in need throughout the City. Presently, staff and volunteers are preparing between 12,000-15,000 meals each week. The non-profit organization created in 1987 aims to alleviate hunger by using excess food that otherwise would be discarded and in doing so helps prevent waste and sustains the community-at-large. 

Because occupation and use of the Waller Street space was planned as short-term only, the operation needs to relocate in September 2021. According to Food Runners staff, its new location needs: a catering or restaurant kitchen; equipment (e.g., large cold storage, flat top, grill, ovens, burners, ice machine, dishwasher); area(s) for food packing; office space; and parking (a minimum of six (6) vehicle spaces and area for food delivery drivers and trucks). 

Any neighbors or friends who know of a space for lease that meets these criteria should contact Ashlee Thompson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. .

06 July 2021

Help Save City College - Local Classes at John Adams

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Enrollment at City College of San Francisco dropped from approximately 39,000 in Fall, 2019 to approximately 27,000 in Fall, 2020.  City College faces its next accreditation review in 2023.

HANC has been concerned about cuts in available classes and about cuts in faculty.  HANC is also concerned about the change in focus at CCSF from being a community college for all segments of San Francisco’s population to becoming a junior college, directed at those planning to transfer to four-year colleges and universities.

The main argument in support of these damaging changes is that belt-tightening is necessary to ensure City College’s fiscal survival.  Regardless of whether you agree with this argument, one of the best ways to increase City College’s income is to increase enrollment.

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06 July 2021

June Celebrations and Ongoing Struggles

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By David Woo, HANC Board

In June we have celebrated both Pride month and Juneteenth. While participating in or celebrating these events, we must connect them to ongoing struggles.

Pride Month

Pride month seeks to honor the LGBTQ+ community and the struggles for justice within the queer community. While Pride Month has been folded into the corporate mainstream divorcing it from the radical roots of the queer liberation movement - with Bank of America and SFPD floats at the SF Pride Parade - some of the current struggles for the queer community are more visible when viewed along class lines. A disproportionate number of homeless residents in San Francisco identify as LGBTQ+ (27% versus 12% citywide), and that is especially true for homeless youth (46% of homeless youth identified as LGBTQ+)*. With a historical presence of homeless youth in the Haight, it’s important to remember that being pro-LGBTQ ultimately means supporting and fighting for the rights, well-being, and dignity of our houseless neighbors.

Juneteenth

Juneteenth commemorates the day on June 19th, 1865 when Union troops entered Galveston, Texas and announced that slavery had ended. It recently became a federal holiday. The historical and ongoing displacement of the Black community in San Francisco serves as a reminder of how the struggle for justice for the Black community is ongoing. For past and current administrations in San Francisco, the city is being built for new wealthy and disproportionately white populations. While San Francisco is only 5-6% (or less) African American, African American’s make up 37% of the homeless population in the city (and 24% of homeless youth).

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*Data is from the 2019 SF Homeless Point in Time Count.

06 June 2021

Neighbors, Allies, and the Future of the CAMP Site at 730 Stanyan

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By Lisa Awbrey, HANC President

In the Spring of 2020, during an unprecedented chain of events relating to the COVID-19 shut down and Shelter In Place orders, bold action by San Francisco’s leaders and electeds, neighbors and residents was required. On April 14, 2020, the Board of Supervisors passed unanimous emergency legislation mandating (by an 11-0 vote) that by April 26, the city obtain 8,250 hotel rooms, with 7,000 earmarked for unhoused folks living on the streets and in congregate shelters. But the emergency legislation was never put into effect by the Mayor who quietly refused to fund it. 

On a national level, the CDC (along with global and local level UCSF physicians) continued to caution against the health dangers of congregate living settings (like indoor shelters). UCSF doctors also warned against moving too slowly in obtaining hotel rooms for the City’s most vulnerable: our unhoused people. Medical workers and first responders staged a street demonstration (dubbed a “die in”) in front of Mayor Breed’s home to underscore the crisis in an attempt to spur her to swift action. 

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  1. A Win: UCSF Tightens New Hospital
  2. June 10th at HANC: Status Update on 730 Stanyan
  3. Alternatives to Policing Discussed at HANC's May Meeting
  4. HANC Continues to Advocate for an Interim Use for 730 Stanyan
  5. April Meeting Recap - Joe Eskenazi on City Corruption
  6. April Meeting Recap - Tenant Protections

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