SF Chron: $20 billion housing tax won’t make Bay Area more affordable. How about a new approach?

Word is starting to spread across the whole Bay Area about the misguided and mammoth regional housing tax that will be on the November ballot. And the initiative's deep flaws are getting daylighted in city after city. The result? New, unexpected ideas are getting voiced. Thomas Busse writes in the SF Chron.

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Case study SF: Too big to fail nonprofit finally asked to pay back millions in loans and Medi-Cal billing

SF’s habit of giving cash advances to struggling nonprofits helped sink Baker Places into debt of $7.7 million, with about a million of that from an audit of the nonprofit’s Medi-Cal billing. Turns out taking a city employee off their payroll didn’t trim enough fat, so now Baker Places has to hand over $3 million in real estate and get on a 20-year payment plan. The San Francisco Standard’s Gabe Greschler explains.

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SF Mayor unable to stop downsizing bill while anti-stack-and-pack Supe dangles mayoral run

Mayor Breed isn’t happy about Supervisor Peskin’s bill, which defies a statewide mandate to cram housing units into urban areas. Breed says it turns SF back toward being a “city of no.” But preserving Gold Rush era buildings in the heart of San Francisco might get voters to say “yes” to the idea of a Mayor Peskin. Gloria Rodríguez, Amanda del Castillo, and Luz Pena report for ABC7 News reports. 

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Back in action: financial troubles plague nonprofit director for decades, but SF won’t disbar her

Surprise, surprise. After her nonprofit Inter-City got interrupted by “financial mismanagement,” Patricia Doyle came back a few years later to bury Providence Foundation in overspending to the tune of hundreds of thousands. As shady receipts and unfair labor accusations come to light, her ex-accountant says the city should have flagged her much sooner this time around. Maggie Angst writes for the San Francisco Chronicle. 

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Costly local ballot measures come under fire

SCC Libertarians oppose what they perceive as wasteful regional housing bond and Sunnyvale transfer tax. From their formal statement, below. 

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☆ Billy DeFrank leader supports Doan/Batra call for homelessness audit

Gabrielle Antolovich, Board President of the Billy DeFrank LGBTQ+ Community Center, approves of the SJ CMs' calls for clarification of different gov't responsibilities and precise focus on customized services for people in need. An Opp Now exclusive

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California's $20 Fast Food minimum wage law is already having disastrous unintended consequences

Many workers locally and around the state are seeing their hours reduced--or have lost their jobs entirely. Reason magazine explores.

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Bay Area leaders see lack of accountability in mammoth regional housing tax

Marin County community and tax authorities express serious concerns that monies generated by huge regional tax won't be seen by the cities that pay for them--and that the whole regional bill may run counter to popular will in particular counties. Marin Independent Journal reports.

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Case studies SF, Seattle: How so-called "homelessness services" non profits rip off cities

There is growing concern in SJ--and around the country-- about how non profits are unaccountable and need stricter oversight.  Jonathan Ireland in American Affairs outlines how NPO's can funnel taxpayer funds into lobbying efforts and actively work against their stated missions.

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CA politicians still won't blame skyrocketing retail theft on Prop 47’s gift to criminals—a jail-free shopping spree

In 2022, Santa Clara County’s retail theft shot up by 14% from 2019, nothing compared to San Mateo’s whopping 53% increase. Now forced by public pressure to pay “intense attention” to the problem, Retail Theft Committee Chair Rick Chavez Zbur (D-Hollywood) refuses to blame CA’s Prop 47, the state’s all-you-can-shoplift-up-to-$950 misdemeanor buffet. This fall, however, voters might take a bite out of the pro-crime policy. Clara Harter of The Press-Enterprise reports.

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State budget cuts threaten public safety and housing while teachers’ unions keep asking for more money

San Jose, CA will lose crucial funding for interim housing units  as Los Angeles Council members push to freeze cops’ salaries. Having taken a break from handing out inflationary stimulus checks, the state now wants to explain the concept of lean government to cities and stakeholders. But teachers’ unions won’t learn the lesson—instead they’re asking for $23 billion in additional education spending. Wayne Avrashow of California Globe reports.

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Green Elephant: with no end in sight, CA bullet dream will cost another $100 billion and empty out state environmental funds

Before it can start saving the planet, CA’s high-speed environmental train still lacks environmental clearance. Only then can the rail authority expect to give an ETA for the SF and LA segments. Those should only cost $100 billion. But don’t worry, that amount doesn’t include $35 billion needed to wrap up the Bakersfield to Merced line—by around 2033. KCRA’s Ashley Zavala reports.

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