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.

As usual Haight-Ashbury  residents voted significantly different than other  San Franciscans. While the recall passed citywide by a margin of 55% yes and 45% no, it failed  61% no to 39% yes in the Haight-Ashbury   The DA recall did not carry a single precinct in the Haight-Ashbury.   And while the MUNI bond (Propositon A)  failed citywide Haight-Asbury voters gave it the highest vote in the City, a whopping  78% Yes . Turnout was higher in the neighborhood than citywide, with 59% for the entire Haight-Ashbury as opposed to 52% citywide. Voter participation was even  higher in the left  liberal precincts with a 60% turnout in the North Panhandle ( Fell to Grove, Stanyan to Baker) and 61% in  the "Flatland" precincts ( Oak to Frederick, Stanyan to Baker).

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10 July 2022

How to Join the July HANC Meeting

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Please join us on Thursday, July 14, at 7:00 pm.  Stanley Mouse and San Francisco Heritage have been invited to discuss the artist-in-residency program at the Doolan-Larson Building, Calvin Welch will present “How the Haight Ashbury Voted in the June election,” and we will provide an update of new businesses in the neighborhood.

To join the meeting, copy this link:
https://zoom.us/j/97001985280?pwd=Nkx2UVFPSTRVWGVXUVZEbFRkb0xwQT09


Or, with the Zoom app:

Meeting ID: 970 0198 5280
Passcode: 333544

Zoom also provides telephone numbers.  These are not toll-free numbers.  Check with your phone company before you incur charges.

The closest number is:
        +1 669 900 6833 US (San Jose)
Meeting ID: 970 0198 5280
Passcode: 333544


Additional numbers can be found at: https://zoom.us/u/acJ3FRWOWk

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 .

The current artist-in-residence is Stanley Mouse, who gained fame in the 1960s and 1970s for his psychedelic poster art.  His art is on exhibit at the San Francisco Heritage Gallery,  1506 Haight Street, Wednesday through Sunday from noon to 6 pm through July 28, when his residency ends.

We have invited San Francisco Heritage and Stanley Mouse to our July meeting to provide further information about the gallery and the artist-in-residency program.

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!

10 July 2022

Our City Our Home Funds Trickle to Those in Need

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By Christin Evans, HANC Board

The 2018 ballot measure, Our City Our Home, which taxes San Francisco’s largest businesses to fund housing, shelter and other solutions for people experiencing homelessness has finally started to trickle out to reach those in need.  Delayed by a court challenge, the first Prop C funds were unlocked in late 2020 by a California Supreme Court decision. While some funds were allowed to be spent, primarily on emergency shelter, at the height of pandemic, the bulk of the stockpiled funds were allocated by Mayor Breed and the Board of Supervisors in July 2021.

 

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10 July 2022

Five Finalists Selected for 730 Stanyan Public Art

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As we reported in the March HANC Voice  (https://www.hanc-sf.org/24-home/676-call-for-artists-public-art-at-730-stanyan ), the affordable housing planned for 730 Stanyan is required to use part of the construction budget to fund art that is visible from the street.

An updated Public Art Request for Qualifications was released on April 18, and forty artists responded by the May 26 deadline.  Out of these forty, five semi-finalists have been chosen:  Kim Anno (https://www.kimanno.com/ ), Jenifer Wofford (https://wofflehouse.com/ ), Miguel Arzabe (https://www.miguelarzabe.net/ ), Laura Haddad and Tom Drugan (https://haddad-drugan.com/) and Andre Jones and Sorrell Tsui of the ABG Art Group and Bay Area Mural Project (https://thebamp.org/ ).

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10 July 2022

New Businesses in the Haight-Ashbury

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New businesses have recently emerged in the Haight Ashbury.  Here are a few:

Kimono Dave

Grooming

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Borderlands

We will continue to provide updates on new businesses in the Haight-Ashbury, either during our July meeting or in future issues of the Voice.

 

 

10 July 2022

Announcements

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6 AND 21 BUS LINES TO BE RESTORED

The next step for the restoration of MUNI lines is scheduled for July 9.  Among the announced changes, the 6 Parnassus will be restored to its old route.  The 21 Hayes is also returning, but with a shortened route—it will end at Grove and Hyde Street, by the Main Library and the Civic Center BART station.  Both lines will have scheduled frequencies of 20 minutes.  The 43 Masonic, which now ends at California and Presidio, will have its former route returned, and will go through the Presidio and the Marina, and to Fort Mason.

HANC will continue to advocate for greater frequency for the 6 and the 21, and for extension of the 21 to its full former route (as well as for bus service within Golden Gate Park from other parts of the City).

BUENA VISTA PARK COMMUNITY MEETING JULY 12

There will be a virtual community meeting on July 12, from 6 to 7 pm to “review the findings of the 2020 Buena Vista Park Needs Assessment and Cost Analysis and finalize the scope of the improvements to be funded with three million dollars from the 2020 Health and Recovery Bond. 

The Zoom link is available here:  https://sfrecpark.org/CivicAlerts.aspx?AID=740 .

The 2020 Buena Vista Parks needs Assessment and Cost Analysis (which runs 157 pages) can be downloaded here:  https://sfrecpark.org/1641/Buena-Vista-Park-Improvement-Project .

  1. June 9th at HANC: The Ties That Bind Us
  2. Welcoming Tenderloin Neighbors in New D5 Boundaries
  3. Traffic Managment Modifications at Page "Slow" Street
  4. 730 Stanyan May Community Event a Success
  5. Government Public Meetings Rules Under Threat, Weakened by State Legislature
  6. Why We Changed Our Endorsement of Proposition D

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