Wednesday, November 06, 2024

How much damage will they do? I guess we'll find out

Daily Kos

After listing what Trump wants but may not be able to do, Kevin Drum sums the election up:

But even that's not why this is so depressing. That's simpler: It's the fact that Americans would elect a boorish, blustering, fantasizing, moronic, self-absorbed dimwit like Trump. Any other Republican, sure. Sometimes the country turns right. But how can a man like Trump be supported by the vast majority of the Republican Party? That's depressing.

Yes, well put. I am not a depressive, but I'm an old man who lost any illusions I had about American history, government or people way back in the early 1960s when my country attacked and invaded Vietnam, a slo-motion atrocity that killed more than a million Vietnamese and more than 58,000 American troops. 

The United States is a wonderful country, but it's scary when it's on a political or military rampage. We have to assume the country will survive another four years of a Trump presidency. 

The only question: How much damage will he and the contemptible Republican Party do to the country in four years?

Labels: , , ,

Saturday, November 02, 2024

Trump: 'Whether the women like it or not'

Labels:

Before and after

Rob Rogers

Labels: ,

Not just a metaphor

On Facebook


The safety net used during the construction of the Golden Gate Bridge. While the net did save the lives of 19 men who became known as the “Halfway-to-Hell Club,” eleven men did die during construction. 

The first fatality was Kermit Moore on October 21, 1936. Then, on February 17, sadly ten men – O.A. Anderson, Chris Andersen, William Bass, Orrill Desper, Fred Dümmatzen, Terence Hallinan, Eldridge Hillen, Charles Lindros, Jack Norman, and Louis Russell – lost their lives when a section of scaffold fell through the safety net. The men are honored on a plaque located at the south side entrance to the west sidewalk.

Labels:

Friday, November 01, 2024

Proposition K: Close The Great Highway?

San Francisco Public Press

Don’t Close Critical Upper Great Highway

Labels: , ,

We won't go back

Driftglass

Labels: , , , ,

LeBron James Endorses Harris

Labels: , , ,

Thursday, October 31, 2024

"Honey"? The dumbest political ad of the year with goofy condescension to American women

Don't worry honey, those abusive men in your life will never know that you voted for Harris! Of course women already know that.

You don't have to be a feminist to find this shocking---checking the calendar---in 2024!

Labels: , , ,

Don't forget the 2021 trial run

Labels: , , ,

Wednesday, October 30, 2024

Arnold blasts Trump, endorses Kamala

Daily Kos:

Action star and onetime California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger released an impassioned statement Wednesday endorsing Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris and her running mate, Minnesota Governor Tim Walz.

“I don’t really do endorsements. I’m not shy about sharing my views, but I hate politics and don’t trust most politicians,” Schwarzenegger said in a statement posted on social media site X.

The world-renowned celebrity said that while he is fed up with the divisiveness in the country and would love to “tune out,” he can’t because “rejecting the results of an election is as un-American as it gets.”

“I will always be an American before I am a Republican,” Schwarzenegger continued. “That’s why, this week, I am voting for Kamala Harris and Tim Walz.”

Schwarzenegger, who has previously characterized Republican nominee Donald Trump as "a failed leader," says a second Trump presidency would “just be four more years of bullshit with no results that makes us angrier and angrier, more divided, and more hateful.”

“We need to close the door on this chapter of American history, and I know that former President Trump won’t do that,” he continued. “He will divide, he will insult, he will find new ways to be more un-American than he already has been, and we, the people, will get nothing but more anger.”


Labels: , , , ,

Monday, October 28, 2024

The hate rally at Madison Square Garden


Labels: , , , ,

January 6, 2021


Labels: , , , ,

Peskin, Preston, and Chan rally on the Panhandle

Aaron Peskin got the crowd charged up.
Photo: Andrew Brobst

Dean Preston
Tim Redmond:

Mayor London Breed held a re-election rally before a modest crowd Saturday, and not long after some 400 people showed up in the Panhandle in a final get-out-the-vote push from Supervisor Aaron Peskin and other progressive candidates.

Peskin noted the contrast: The attendees at the Breed rally were “voluntolds, not volunteers,” he said.

The vast majority of the folks at the Unity Rally were volunteers, and the atmosphere was energetic.

When Peskin started his race for mayor, “The narrative was that progressives were divided, and the moderates united. Today the opposite is true.”

Yes: The billionaires right now are fighting over which neo-liberal candidate they want to see in Room 200, and the progressives seem solidly behind Peskin.

Supervisor Dean Preston, in a tight race for re-election and facing a torrent of Big Tech and real estate money, noted:
“The narrative funded by a bunch of billionaires is that somehow this city was transformed overnight into a place where people hate tenants and artists and only want billionaires to live here.”
Supervisor Connie Chan, also facing a big-money challenge, spoke about issues driving her campaign: “Sick people need treatment, not jail.…the people in Room 200 want to divide us and gaslight us every day.”

Peskin brought up the issue that clearly united everyone in the park: Rent control. Peskin, Preston, and Chan are all pushing efforts to expand rent control to most of the existing housing units in the city; Breed signed Peskin’s bill that would take effect if Prop. 33 passes, but she’s never been a big promoter of expanded rent control. 

Daniel Lurie and Mark Farrell oppose more rent control.

Labels: , , , , , ,

Sunday, October 27, 2024

Labels:

Saturday, October 26, 2024

Putin campaigns for Trump

Kevin Drum:

Vladimir Putin is doing whatever he can to help Donald Trump win:
U.S. intelligence officials on Tuesday said Russians seeking to disrupt the U.S. elections created a faked video and other material smearing Democratic vice-presidential nominee Tim Walz....They added that Russian government agencies and contractors, which generally seek to boost Republican former president Donald Trump’s campaign, are considering trying to instigate physical violence in the fraught period after voters cast their ballots.

....Russia is “potentially seeking to stoke threats towards poll workers, as well as amplifying protests and potentially encouraging protests to be violent,” the official added.
Why is Putin so enamored of Trump? Lots of reasons, but I suppose the biggest one right now is that he thinks Trump will cut off aid to Ukraine and guarantee a Russian victory.

If I were Putin, I suppose I'd prefer Trump too.


Labels: , , , , ,

Friday, October 25, 2024

No evidence Oswald fired a rifle

 
From JFK Facts:

While reaching different conclusions about the nature of President John F. Kennedy’s assassination, the Warren Commission in September 1964 and the House Select Committee on Assassinations in January 1979 agreed that Lee Harvey Oswald had shot JFK with a WWI-vintage 6.5 mm Mannlicher-Carcano rifle. 

Yet both panels also ignored much “reasonable doubt” about Oswald having fired a rifle at all.

The young ex-defector to the USSR himself insisted throughout his time in Dallas police custody that he “didn’t shoot anybody,” and substantial evidence supported Oswald’s declarations in his own defense. Unfortunately for historical truth, the Warren Commission omitted such evidence, some of it in the form of compelling forensic test results. Political considerations trumped science.

Standard Police Procedure

The Dallas police subjected Oswald’s face and hands to paraffin tests soon after his arrest. This customary process, performed by applying warm paraffin wax to the hands and face of someone suspected of firing a gun, tests for a higher-than-normal concentration of nitrates implanted on the skin of the suspect as residue from the gunshot blast. The wax forms a cast, and nitrates adhere to the cast.

Though both of Oswald’s hands returned a positive paraffin test result, investigators couldn’t treat this as “probative” evidence he had discharged any firearm, never mind a rifle. Oswald stood accused of gunning down a Dallas police officer with a .38 caliber revolver 45 minutes after President Kennedy was shot, but a positive result for a hand has probative value only if the other hand (the one not holding the handgun) tests negative.

Apart from that, many substances can test positive for nitrates, including everyday household products such as paint. On the morning of the assassination, Texas School Book Depository (TSBD) workers were installing freshly painted floorboards on the sixth floor. Had Oswald been involved in that kind of manual labor, his hands would have tested positive for nitrates without having even handled a weapon.

Further confusing matters, more nitrates were found on the insides of Oswald’s hands than on the outside. Since the backs of hands holding a firearm would absorb most of the gunshot blast residue, the paraffin test suggested the pattern of nitrate deposits resulted from something Oswald touched on the day of the assassination, not from firing a gun.

But more important to the mystery of JFK’s murder, the cast of Oswald’s face tested negative. Had he fired a rifle, nitrates from his right cheek would have shown up on the wax cast. But the Dallas County Criminal Laboratory, which processed the casts, found no traces of nitrates on the accused assassin’s face.

The Warren Commission treated the paraffin tests as immaterial to any presumption of innocence for the accused. In fact, facing the possibility that the tests might exonerate Oswald, the Commission simply declared the paraffin tests “completely unreliable.” The Warren Report even remarks that because there is “no gap between the chamber and the barrel,” one would “not expect nitrates to be deposited on a person’s hands or cheeks as a result of his firing a rifle.” (Warren Report, p. 561)

On April 1, 1964, FBI firearms expert Cortlandt Cunningham testified to the Commission that he “personally wouldn’t expect to find any residues on a person’s right cheek after firing a rifle” because “the cartridge itself is sealed into the chamber by the bolt being closed behind it,” so that “the cartridge case expands into the chamber filling it up and sealing it off from the gases, so none will come back in your face… .” (p. 561)

But Special Agent Cunningham evidently based his opinion only on the paraffin test conducted by the Dallas police. There is no evidence that, at the time he testified, Cunningham knew that the FBI already possessed evidence from a much more sophisticated and sensitive form of forensic examination.

State-of-the-Art Analysis

Soon after the assassination, officials at the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) began contacting the FBI, making repeated offers to subject Oswald’s paraffin casts to neutron activation analysis (NAA) at the AEC’s National Laboratory in Oak Ridge, Tenn. While researchers such as Dr. Gary Aguilar have effectively discredited the infallibility of NAA in determining the provenance of bullets — i.e., which fragments come from which slug or rifle — the process is highly reliable in detecting the presence of gunshot residue.

The reluctant FBI eventually relented to the AEC’s requests, while demanding control of the results. In an internal memo, FBI Special Agent Roy H. Jevons noted that Oswald’s murder had ensured the tests would never be examined at trial, and “any such examinations will, of course, be with the strict understanding that the information and dissemination of the results will be under complete FBI control.” (See FBI HQ JFK File, 62–109060–5).

In December, the FBI contracted with a private firm to run the NAA tests on the paraffin casts at the AEC’s top secret Oak Ridge facility. FBI lab specialist John F. Gallagher brought the samples to the lab and stayed there with them until the tests were complete.

Unlike the paraffin tests at the Dallas police station, the NAA [neutron activation analysis] detected traces of barium and antimony, substances found in the residue of discharged rifle cartridges on the surface of the cast of Oswald’s cheek. 

Unfortunately for the FBI, which had already issued a 400-page report identifying Oswald as the “lone gunman” in JFK’s assassination, the NAA results created a new set of problems for the Bureau in establishing Oswald’s guilt.

In February Dr. Vincent P. Guinn, a physicist with the General Atomic Division of General Dynamics Corporation, compounded the FBI’s troubles by calling Gallagher to tout the wonders of his recent NAA research at Oak Ridge. Guinn said that over the past few years he and his colleagues had been using NAA to test powder residues from discharged firearms, including a rifle similar to Lee Harvey Oswald’s.

The triple firing of the rifle, Guinn advised, “leaves unambiguous positive tests every time on the paraffin casts. Because of the inferior construction of the Mannlicher-Carcano….Guinn noted that the blowback from one or three shots deposited powder residue “on both cheeks” of the shooter.…Guinn also reported that “it appears that these results can be obtained even if the paraffin casts are made 2.5 hours after the shooting.…providing the skin of the shooter has not been washed in the meantime. (“Breach of Trust,” p. 211)
No evidence has ever emerged that Lee Harvey Oswald washed his hands or face between the time of the shootings in Dealey Plaza and his arrest at the Texas Theatre 80 minutes later. NAA hassles thus mounted for the FBI — and its conclusion that Oswald was a lone gunman — as the Warren Commission investigation progressed.

An Acute Problem’

On March 6, 1964, the FBI reported the NAA findings in an internal letter, explaining that “as a result of these examinations, the deposits found on the paraffin casts from the hands and cheek of Oswald could not be specifically associated with the rifle cartridges.”

Apparently Warren Commission Chief Counsel J. Lee Rankin only learned in March that the FBI had submitted the paraffin casts to NAA testing. Once he knew, he demonstrated no curiosity about the results even as his subordinate lawyers sought more information on NAA’s effectiveness in detecting gunshot residue.

As McKnight notes, the issue of the paraffin casts continued to develop into “an acute problem” for Commission lawyers Norman Redlich and Melvin Eisenberg, who were responsible for this area of the Warren Report. The Commission was still counting on the “highly sensitive and discriminating NAA procedure to make a clear determination of whether Oswald had actually fired a weapon.” The young lawyers had none.

By July, when the staff lawyers were putting together the final draft of the Commission’s findings, Redlich found himself in a quandary about how to smooth over test results that pointed more in the direction of Oswald’s exculpation than incrimination. (“Breach of Trust,” p. 207)

On July 2, the FBI reported the NAA findings to Redlich over the phone, as another internal FBI letter on that day confirms.

Excerpt of an internal letter from Jevons to Conrad, July 2, 1964

Although the FBI’s letter to the Commission “covering the results” didn’t include the original NAA test results, Redlich evidently still felt he had enough information to write to Warren Commissioner Allen Dulles. He reported to the ex-CIA chief that the analysis showed, at best, that Oswald “may have fired a pistol, although this is by no means certain.” At the same time, there was “no basis for concluding that he also fired a rifle.”

By Sept. 5, 1964, with the Warren Commission’s final report already in “galley proof” format for printing, the Commission lawyers who had the task of clearly determining that Oswald had actually fired a weapon still hadn’t seen the results of the NAA tests. 

Under these circumstances, 10 days later, the Commission called John Gallagher — the FBI man who had overseen the NAA tests — as its very last witness. Norman Redlich questioned Gallagher, who could not explain why the outside surface of the cast of Oswald’s face had more residue traces than the surface touching his skin.

When Redlich asked him whether he had “any explanation” for the greater amount of barium on the outside than on the inside of the cast, Gallagher said he had none.

The Warren Commission excluded actual results of the NAA from its report and all 26 volumes of exhibits, evidence and testimony, thus shielding them from the prying eyes of outside experts. Instead, the Commission’s report includes a reference to the NAA testing in an awkward single paragraph, which actually admits that the Commission had no forensic evidence that Oswald had fired a rifle:
The paraffin casts of Oswald’s hands and right cheek were also examined by neutron-activation analysis at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory. Barium and antimony were found to be present on both surfaces of all the casts and also in residues from the rifle cartridge cases and the revolver cartridge cases. Since barium and antimony were present in both the rifle and the revolver cartridge cases, their presence on the casts were not evidence that Oswald had fired the rifle. 
Moreover, the presence on the inside surface of the cheek cast of a lesser amount of barium and only a slightly greater amount of antimony than was found on the outside surface of the cast rendered it impossible to attach significance to the presence of these elements on the inside surface. Since the outside surface had not been in contact with Oswald’s cheek, the barium and antimony found there had come from a source other than Oswald. (Warren Report, p. 562)

In other words, the Commission simply ignored the significance of the NAA test results and effectively buried them in its report. This was because high-tech forensic tests implied that, if the Mannlicher-Carcano rifle in evidence had been used to kill the President, Oswald himself hadn’t fired it.


Labels: ,

Peskin gaining in race for mayor

Photo: Stephen Lam

JD Morris in the SF Chronicle:

As Supervisor Aaron Peskin tried to spread the word about his mayoral campaign in San Francisco’s Mission District Wednesday morning, he kept encountering the same response. Over and over passersby said they had already voted for him or planned to do so.

Peskin wasn’t surprised by the reception he received at the 24th Street BART plaza in one of the city’s most progressive neighborhoods.

“There is hope and excitement that a grassroots candidate might actually be able to prevail in this contest,” Peskin said with a smile, clutching campaign literature that sought to distinguish him from Mayor London Breed and two other leading candidates, Daniel Lurie, and Mark Farrell.

“It's getting closer to the election. Everybody is tuning in,” he said. “(There’s a) very clear contrast between me and the other major candidates, and then the recent polling information — regardless of whose poll you look at — shows that my numbers are going up”....

Rob's comment:
I've been a harsh critic of Peskin in the past, but that was long ago! Peskin is a better choice for mayor than London Breed.

Labels: , , , ,

Wednesday, October 23, 2024

Removing dams on the Klamath River

Labels: ,

Tuesday, October 22, 2024

Aaron Peskin for mayor

Labels: ,

Monday, October 21, 2024

Slaughter

Rob Rogers

Labels: , ,

Trump fakes a shift at McDonald’s

It's fake. Has Trump ever actually worked?


Labels:

Sunday, October 20, 2024

Donald Trump's thought disorder

Labels:

Friday, October 18, 2024

 

Labels: ,


Rob's comment:
Gee, could Repug pessimism be because there's a Democrat in the White House? I suspect these findings will reverse if/when Trump is elected. I hope we don't see that, since another Trump presidency would be catastrophic.

Labels: , , ,

Thursday, October 17, 2024

The capitalist and the supervisor


On the morning that one of the richest men in San Francisco took to the pages of the New York Times to accuse Aaron Peskin of ruining the city, Peskin, mayoral candidate and president of the Board of Supervisors, was standing at a foggy bus stop on Mission Street in the Excelsior, engaging in the election ritual known as “morning visibility.” This entails making small talk with commuters and answering questions about political developments, like school closures, before heading into work at City Hall.

The New York Times op-ed, written by Michael Moritz, a former tech journalist turned venture capitalist turned funder of a local newspaper (the San Francisco Standard) was titled, “The Progressive Politicians Who Failed San Francisco.” 

Despite the use of the plural in the title, it was accompanied by a picture of exactly one guy: An enormous Peskin playing with San Francisco’s skyline like a collection of TinkerToys.

The op-ed didn’t name any progressive politicians other than Peskin. It described him in one very long run-on sentence as the most powerful example of “a generation of local politicians who have burrowed themselves into the city and used its resources to execute their devotion to a polarizing ideology that embraces a knee-jerk opposition to progress, a deep-rooted antipathy to many forms of law enforcement and a belief that higher taxes are a cure for all evil.”

Moritz charged that Peskin was almost single-handedly destroying San Francisco by blocking the construction of new housing, levying a tax on commercial real estate to fund childcare and early education, increasing the transfer tax on real estate sales of more than $5 million, and supporting an extra payroll tax for businesses whose highest-paid managerial employees earn more than 100 times the median employee salary.
“He is now serving his third stint as president of the board,” Moritz wrote, “a position he has helped transform into an office that, arguably, approaches that of the mayor. He did this via an impressive command of the arcane legislative and procedural rites of city government and a willingness to endure late-night negotiating sessions.”
Peskin disagrees. The board president is not that powerful, he says. They don’t have more power than any other member of the board. If they can put together a coalition of votes to support their legislation, their legislation gets passed, same as anyone else. A major component of the position is running the board meetings. “It is largely a job of making sure that everybody’s working well together,” says Peskin. “I’m glad that he thinks that I’m good at it.”

“This is a guy who wants San Francisco to be a monarchy,” says Peskin, of Moritz. “Here’s a guy who paid the Queen of England to — you’ve seen the picture.” In 2013, Moritz, who was born in Wales, was granted a knighthood “for services promoting British economic interests and philanthropic work.” He donated $115 million to Oxford University in 2012.

Peskin has known Moritz was targeting him in a piece for the Times for nearly a month. On Sept. 11, during a meeting with Hamid Moghadam, the CEO of ProLogis, the San Francisco-based logistics and real estate conglomerate, Moritz appeared suddenly via videoconference, and complained that Peskin had never reached out to meet with him.

“I said something to the effect of, ‘Well, there are 800,000 San Franciscans,’” says Peskin. “I’m very accessible. I don’t understand why I’m supposed to reach out to him. But I said I was happy to meet with him.”

A little over a week later, at 9:43 a.m., Peskin got an email from an editor in the New York Times opinion section. The paper was publishing a “guest essay” by Moritz. He had until 11 a.m. the next day to respond to....

Peskin wrote back:
I have received your email advising of the highly derogatory and false (and potentially libelous) statements that presumably are to be included in a piece the NYT is planning to publish shortly. You should be aware, and your readers should be aware, that Michael Moritz has a partisan and direct financial interest in the outcome of San Francisco’s Mayoral election. He has endorsed Mark Farrell for Mayor and just this week made a $500,000 contribution to a Political Action Committee supporting Farrell’s candidacy. To put that number in context, most voters in San Francisco are subject to a $500 limit on political donations, and there is no Political Action Committee being used as a slush fund to support my candidacy.
Peskin did his best to refute each statement, turned in his response by the deadline, and waited. Shortly after that, he says, he was contacted by a member of Moritz’s staff. Moritz was wondering, they said, why Peskin hadn’t followed up about the meeting.

Peskin invited Moritz to meet him the morning of Sept. 27, at his standing coffee date with former mayor Willie Brown at Caffe Greco, so that he would have a witness if things went south. When Moritz arrived he, surprisingly, did not want to talk political shop. Instead, Moritz took out his phone and showed Peskin pictures of the Grammy-winning musician Jon Batiste performing at Moritz’s 70th birthday party the night before. 

“He repeated again and again and again, very insistently....how great he was because of all of his philanthropic contributions,” recalls Peskin. “I sincerely thanked him for his philanthropy.” 

When Peskin excused himself to leave for a meeting, he says, Moritz followed him into the street and told him that he was going to make it his life’s work to make sure that Peskin wasn’t elected mayor. “I said, ‘fine, whatever,’” Peskin recalls.

The op-ed that came out in the Times on Wednesday shows signs of Peskin’s responses to the newspaper’s request for comment. There’s a brief paraphrase of Peskin’s written response to the accusation of being anti-housing, and some disclosure of Moritz’s support for Peskin’s opponent, Mark Farrell. 

Moritz describes making a $500,000 contribution to a committee created by Farrell in support of Proposition D — the PAC that Farrell has been accused of using to circumvent the $500 contribution limits on giving to candidates directly, and of borrowing from to commingle staff and resources for his own campaign.

Moritz’s article also admits, in a roundabout way, to having some financial stake in Peskin not becoming mayor. (“Mr. Peskin has attacked my involvement in an ambitious plan to build a large housing development in northern San Francisco”). He cops to funding Prop. D, a ballot measure that is opposed by Peskin and would strengthen the mayor’s already-considerable powers (Moritz describes it as “an initiative, of which I have been the principal financial backer, to halve the city’s roughly 130 commissions”). 

He does not mention the existence of Proposition E, a rival ballot measure authored by Peskin, that would also make cuts to the city’s commission-heavy structure, but via an independent blue-ribbon panel and without permanently enhancing the authority of the mayor and the police chief.

When describing Peskin as “one of the city’s two most powerful politicians,” Moritz, oddly, does not mention by name the city’s single most powerful politician — its current mayor, London Breed, who is also running in the mayor’s race. 

There’s a lot about San Francisco’s economy and well-being that is beyond the control of any one individual, but Breed is, arguably, the single person most responsible for the San Francisco of the last four years — particularly the city’s admittedly bloated budget, over which a mayor has far and away the most control — in the 2023-24 budget, Breed controlled about 80 times as much of the budget as the entire Board of Supervisors.

The text of the final op-ed, Peskin says, is still riddled with other easily refutable factual errors. Moritz writes that Peskin has “a deep-rooted antipathy to many forms of law enforcement” when Peskin has voted to increase the police budget, overtime, and staffing.

Moritz states that Peskin believes that “higher taxes are a cure for all evil” — like most politicians, over the years Peskin has supported raising some taxes and cutting others. Also, Peskin points out, all those taxes that Moritz objects to were passed via ballot measures, and approved by a majority of San Francisco voters.

Pew Research has found that many readers slip up when distinguishing between op-eds (which typically aren’t fact-checked — what Peskin received was a request for comment) and news stories (which, at least at the New York Times, typically are). This is particularly true regarding online articles, Pew concluded, which people tend to read in isolation, instead of section by section the way that print readers do....

“I have, for seven months, been saying that I am running a real grassroots campaign, and that I am the only major candidate in this race that is not being supported by a bunch of billionaires,” says Peskin. “He’s trying to change the entire conversation to be about me, because I may well become the next mayor of San Francisco.”

Labels: , , ,

Housing on the DMV site?

In the SF Chronicle:

An outdated Department of Motor Vehicles office in San Francisco is expected to become one of the city’s largest affordable housing complexes after Governor Gavin Newsom announced a plan to transform the site Thursday.

A mixed-use complex containing 372 affordable housing units, a new DMV office, and parking spaces is slated to be built on the state-owned 1377 Fell St. site. The tallest building planned for the complex would stand eight stories high. 

The current DMV building, which was built in 1960 and does not comply with health and safety codes, would be demolished, said Tara Gallegos, a spokesperson for the governor’s office.

“We will continue to use all our tools to create more affordable housing throughout California — including by converting underutilized state property into homes,” Newsom said in a statement. “I’m particularly proud of this site for bringing affordable housing to the heart of San Francisco in a diverse and thriving neighborhood.”

The modernized DMV office is scheduled for completion in June 2029, and the first phase of housing should be finished by August 2030. The housing units will be designated for residents who make 30%-80% of the area’s median income, Gallegos said.

In-person DMV services will be relocated to a temporary location in the interim and online services will be available as usual....

Building affordable housing on the state-owned site has been a key priority for Supervisor Dean Preston, whose district includes the site. He and Assembly Member Phil Ting have been working with state officials since 2023 to pivot the site to fully affordable housing.

Dean Preston:
“Since we called for this site in the heart of District 5 to be converted to large-scale affordable housing, Assemblymember Ting brought state officials together to make it happen. This shows what can happen when local and state leaders work together to ensure that our affordable housing needs are met. I’m grateful for the partnership, and thrilled that we will be adding 372 units of affordable housing to our district on this state owned land.”
Ting said he facilitated a meeting between Preston and state agencies to discuss the future of the Fell Street site and thanked him for his advocacy.

“Without his and his staff’s work, this project would not have moved forward,” Ting said. “This project demonstrates the incredible work that can happen when local and state governments work together.”

State agencies selected the Related Companies of California, a privately owned real estate company, and nonprofit Tenderloin Neighborhood Development Corporation to jointly redevelop the 2½-acre lot overlooking the Panhandle. Officials first put out a request for qualifications in September 2023.

The site was identified as a possible location for affordable housing under a 2019 executive order from Newsom, which ordered state agencies to solicit proposals for affordable housing development on underutilized state-owned land parcels.

The planned housing complex could help the city meet its state-mandated target of building 82,000 housing units by 2031, more than half of which must be affordable. Affordable housing projects in other parts of the city have faced opposition or delays, like in a brewing battle over so-called Parcel K in Hayes Valley.

Back in 2008, state agencies also solicited proposals to build housing on the site and selected Build Inc. as the developer, but plans fizzled during the recession.

With plans going forward this time, officials said the DMV project could serve as a model for converting other state-owned parcels in the state into affordable housing....

Labels: , , , , , ,

Wednesday, October 16, 2024

Colin Allred Rips Ted Cruz

Labels: ,

Tuesday, October 15, 2024

Labels: , ,

General: Trump the 'most dangerous person ever'

Labels: , , ,

Monday, October 14, 2024

Labels: , , ,

Sunday, October 13, 2024

Trump

Labels:

Tuesday, October 08, 2024

Elon Musk’s dark MAGA

Labels: ,