10 October 2022

Afterglow - Haight Street Lights

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By Robert Emmons, Owner of "SF Mercantile" and "Haight & Ashbury"

Afterglow: The phenomena of atmospheric light after the sun goes down, the serenity state after coming down from a psychedelic experience and metaphorically reflecting on the events and energy of the past while envisioning the creation of a better future.

Afterglow is an illuminated sculpture designed and installed by Joshua Hubert for the Haight Ashbury Merchant Association. Programmable LED fixtures will be strung overhead between the street poles above the sidewalks in a continuous synced display of colored light patterns that flow and pulse along a span of 0.45 mile length on Haight Street between Stanyan and Central.

An Estimated 840 full color RGB LED fixtures will be suspended between street poles along the length of Haight Street. Each fixture is a 120mm (4.75 in) white globe design spaced 6ft apart from each other and suspended 15ft above the sidewalk along steel Aircraft cable. The cable is tensioned with turnbuckles to take up sag and slack.

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21 August 2022

Housing Policy and November Ballot Measures

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By Calvin Welch, HANC Board

Mayor Breed, her allies in the tech and real-estate sectors of our economy (both of which are facing serious challenges in the Covid era) and their well funded "shock troops", the YIMBYs , are mounting an all out assault on long-term San Francisco pro- affordable housing policies in this Novembers election.

Counter to the prevailing "narrative" dominating the Chronicle's coverage of housing and development issues, San Franciscans have a strong record of supporting 100% truly affordable housing development for working families, the elderly and un-housed San Franciscans. In bond measures, special taxes and ordinances the people of San Francisco and their district elected Supervisors have time and again passed funding measures, density bonuses, and accelerated approvals for 100% affordable housing developments serving both low income and un-housed San Franciscans.

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21 August 2022

As City Shelter-In-Place Program Winds Down, Housing Remains Elusive for Most

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By Christin Evans, HANC Board

The pandemic emergency had its silver linings.  One was the unlocked federal funding from Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) which allowed the city to contract with 25 hotels to temporarily house over 2000 people experiencing homelessness.  The Shelter-In-Place (SIP) hotel program was scrutinized, criticized and lauded. It was a policy choice made at the height of fears that emergency rooms would be overwhelmed but it proved that when we focused our attention on the housing problem we could actually make strides in solving it.  

The emergency health order cleared the way for hotels to serve as temporary emergency shelters and over 2000 rooms were contracted and allocated in a few short months.  Skeptics and politicians who decried homelessness as a personal failing instead of a systemic failing were proven wrong – more than 95% of people offered a hotel room on the streets of San Francisco each day in June, July, and August 2020 accepted those rooms. 

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21 August 2022

HANC Welcomes Park Police Captain Jack Hart

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Captain Jack HartOn July 1, former Park Station Police Captain Chris Pedrini transferred to the San Francisco International Airport, and Jack Hart became the new Park Station Captain.  Captain Hart previously held commands at Ingleside Station, the Police Academy, and most recently (before Park Station) was the Night Captain in charge of the entire City during overnight hours.

Here is a further biography (copied from when he was Ingleside Captain):

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21 August 2022

People Have the Power: Partial Restoration of Beloved Local 21, 43, and 6 Bus Lines

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By Lisa Awbrey, HANC President

For over a year, a broad coalition of riders, community groups, unions, Supervisors and transit advocates urged the SFMTA to restore additional lines removed during the pandemic. It has now been a little over one month since SFMTA fully restored both the local neighborhood serving 43 Masonic and the 6 Haight-Parnassus lines, and partially restored the 21 Hayes (current start/end points Fulton and Shrader to Hyde and Grove). We requested ridership data since the return of these lines but didn’t hear back from SFMTA before print deadline. As of this writing, there are no upcoming public hearings or deadlines regarding these lines. 

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10 July 2022

July 14th at HANC: How the Haight Voted in the June Primary

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By Calvin Welch, HANC Board

Going into the June primary, election media coverage almost  exclusively focused on the recall of District Attorney Chesa Boudin.  The stories written immediately after the election reported a massive vote in favor of the recall.  But those reports were, in fact , factually wrong as they were based on Election Day reports, which were less than half the votes actually cast.  In fact these early reports were based on returns from the more conservative portions of the City that supported the recall. For example the deeply conservative voting District 2 (Marina, Pacific Heights)  had fully half of its total vote reported in these  early returns while our district ( District 5) had but 43% of its total vote reported at the end of Election Day.  It took another fifteen days during which another 120,000 votes were counted.  Unreported by the media was that in these late counted votes the DA recall actually narrowly LOST 59,217 to 57,686.

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10 July 2022

Artist-in-Residency Program at the Doolan-Larson Building

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The Doolan-Larson building is the big white building at the northwest corner of Haight and Ashbury Streets.  Its former owner, Norman Larson, donated the building to San Francisco Heritage upon his death in 2018.

San Francisco Heritage launched a pilot program in late 2020 exploring the potential of the Doolan-Larson building as a center of artistic expression.   Individual artists and groups have lived, worked, and performed in and around the building since then.  More information on the program can be found here:  https://www.haightandashbury.org/residencies .  Information about some of the artists who have participated is here:  https://www.haightandashbury.org/artists .

 

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10 July 2022

Local Eviction Protections

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In March, 2022, San Francisco passed an ordinance extending the eviction moratorium until the state of emergency ends.  That never went into effect because it was preempted by weaker State legislation.  The State legislation expired on June 30, so as of July 1, the San Francisco ordinance has been in effect.  Here is what it does:

  • Landlords are prohibited from evicting SF residential tenants for non-payment of rent that came due on or after July 1, 2022 and was not paid due to the COVID-19 pandemic (note this does not protect tenants against eviction if the rental debt was incurred prior to July 1, 2022).
  • Landlords are also prohibited from imposing late fees or penalties on this rent.
  • Landlords can seek to collect rent through civil court, but cannot evict for it.
  • There is no specific notification requirement for tenants.
  • These protections continue until Mayor London Breed terminates her COVID-19 Emergency Proclamation.

As a reminder, the state rent relief program has closed, but the local Emergency Rental Assistance Program remains open. Go to sf.gov/renthelp to apply!

  1. Our City Our Home Funds Trickle to Those in Need
  2. Five Finalists Selected for 730 Stanyan Public Art
  3. New Businesses in the Haight-Ashbury
  4. Announcements
  5. June 9th at HANC: The Ties That Bind Us
  6. Welcoming Tenderloin Neighbors in New D5 Boundaries

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