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Showing posts with label Mayor Lee. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mayor Lee. Show all posts

Friday, January 17, 2014

Sneak peek: Mayor Ed Lee has a housing solution

From SFGate,
Lee will propose a seven-point plan that includes building housing over existing city facilities and doubling the amount of down-payment assistance that the city will provide to middle-income home buyers, up to $200,000. Lee wants 5,000 new homes built or rehabilitated each year over the next six years. 
With the city's economy growing, construction is already speeding up. This year, more than 10,000 housing units are under construction or are holding building permits and are ready to be built, according to city figures. Another 12,000 units are in the permitting pipeline, with an additional 25,000 part of already adopted development plans, Lee's administration said.

Sunday, April 1, 2012

Coffee with the Mayor

From SFGate,
(Photo by Lea Suzuki / The Chronicle)
Have coffee with Mayor Ed Lee

The mayor, his coffee and ... you?

Do you have a brilliant idea to make Muni run on time or are you just annoyed by that guy who camps on your front steps?

Here’s your chance to tell the man in charge.

Starting Saturday, Mayor Ed Lee will be hosting monthly coffee chats with regular folks across the city.

“We need to hear directly from our residents about the issues that matter most to them,” Lee said in announcing the move.

It’s not the first time one of our mayors has tried something like this. Lee’s predecessor, now-Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom, had “open door sessions,” although the first two were at police stations in the Tenderloin and the Mission — not exactly coffee-house cozy. Newsom borrowed the idea from former Mayor Willie Brown, who is Lee’s buddy and now a Chronicle columnist.

Lee’s spokeswoman, Christine Falvey, said the plan grew out of town halls the mayor held last year to hear community priorities on balancing the budget. Those are continuing, too. Here’s the schedule:

District 10 & 11 with Supervisors Malia Cohen & John Avalos
Saturday, April 28, 2012 (10 – 11:30 a.m.)
City Arts and Technology High School, 325 La Grande Avenue


And seeing how Lee has embraced the “technology mayor” handle, those wouldn’t be complete without a lunchtime digital townhall on Google+, similar to the Google+ Hangout with President Obama earlier this year. The date is still being sorted out.

As for getting some one-on-one time with the mayor, interested residents can call 311 and leave their name, contact information, and brief details about what they want to discuss. The mayor’s office says participants will be selected at random. Residents will be notified of their appointment the Thursday prior to the meeting. People will get about 10 minutes with the mayor, who plans to meet with a dozen or more folks (depending on if people bring family, etc.) over about two hours at each session, staff said.

Here’s the “community coffees” schedule:

Saturday, March 10, 2012 – District 11
Saturday, April 21, 2012 – District 6
Saturday, May 19, 2012 – District 1
Saturday, June 9, 2012 – District 8 & 9
Saturday, July 14, 2012 – District 10
Saturday, September 15, 2012 – Districts 4 & 7
Saturday, October 13, 2012 – District 5

Lee, who often waxes fondly about cleaning up trash or wading through water from burst pipes during his Department of Public Works days, has set up the coffees to correspond with “Community Clean Team” events, where volunteers and city crews clean up trash, paint over graffiti, remove weeds and the like.

First up is Ingleside Heights for an Arbor Day-inspired clean up effort, where, you guessed it, they’ll be planting a tree (besides plenty of other work). The coffee session will be at a nearby coffee shop.
 h/t R Davis & A deJesus

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Mayor Lee to accept Miracle Gro Award at Quesada Gardens

Back in January, it was announced that the Mayor's office had been awarded one of five 2012 Scott's Miracle Gro Awards for work to be done at Quesada Gardens.

This coming Tuesday, March 13, from 4:00 until 5:30PM, Mayor Ed Lee, gardening gurus from the National Gardening Association, the US Conference of Mayors and executives with Scotts Miracle Gro will hold a program at the Quesada Gardens (1700 block of Quesada Ave. between Newhall and Third St.) to kickoff changes to the landmark community project. Everyone is welcome!

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Mayor Lee Launches Invest in Neighborhoods Initiative to Marshal City, Private Sector Resources to Revitalize Neighborhood Commercial Corridors

Mayor Convenes Invest in Neighborhoods Strategy Working Group as First Phase of Renewed Effort to Better Leverage, Coordinate City & Other Resources to Boost S.F. Commercial Districts, Create Neighborhood Jobs

3/6/12—Mayor Edwin M. Lee today launched his Invest in Neighborhoods Initiative, a renewed effort to marshal City and private sector resources and services to help revitalize the City’s neighborhood commercial corridors, support neighborhood small businesses and boost neighborhood job creation. The Invest in Neighborhoods Initiative will build on the City’s existing patchwork of programs that support neighborhood small businesses and commercial corridors and aims to prioritize, leverage and better coordinate resources and services available across City departments, nonprofits and the private sector to targeted commercial corridors throughout the City.
Standing with District 10 Supervisor Malia Cohen on the vibrant, revitalized San Bruno Avenue in the Portola District, Mayor Lee also announced the first phase of the new neighborhood initiative – the convening of the Invest in Neighborhoods Strategy Working Group of City department heads, neighborhood business leaders and technical experts to evaluate existing resources and tools, identify best practices and make recommendations for a more comprehensive strategy and additional resources through the Mayor’s FY 2012-2013 budget.

“Our neighborhood commercial districts and small businesses help drive our economy, create neighborhood jobs and make San Francisco a great place to live,” said Mayor Lee. “Strengthening our diverse neighborhood commercial districts and small businesses requires a focused, ‘all hands on deck’ approach. Our Invest in Neighborhoods initiative will maximize resources across City Departments, the private and nonprofit sector to build on existing successful efforts, create new neighborhood jobs and support vibrant, thriving neighborhood commercial districts for residents and visitors alike.”

“I am thrilled to help launch this neighborhood initiative in District 10, where we see both great need and great promise for our City’s neighborhood commercial corridors,” said Supervisor Cohen. “I’m very proud to showcase the comprehensive work done by neighborhood stakeholders and the City on San Bruno Avenue in the Portola, and look forward to working with the community to complete future projects. Especially with the loss of funding from the now-dissolved Redevelopment Agency, we need the focused, coordinated approach to neighborhood revitalization and economic development that the Invest in Neighborhoods can bring.”

The Invest in Neighborhoods Initiative is a new multi-agency initiative that will coordinate a wide range of resources for neighborhood commercial districts across the city. In each participating commercial district, City services—including business retention and attraction programs, community planning activities, cleaning, greening and beautification services, public safety programs, and neighborhood art projects—will be deployed in a focused, customized manner that responds to the corridor’s unique challenges and opportunities.

Each participating corridor will receive a set of baseline services that includes an economic assessment; a resource person from the Office of Economic and Workforce Development; targeted business development and financing resources; and priority consideration for various City programs including the Community Challenge Grant.

Specific additional programs and services will then be assigned to corridors based on a corridor’s assessment and funding availability. In neighborhoods demonstrating high need, opportunity for economic growth, and existing community capacity, the City will provide operational support for a community-based organization providing focused support to neighborhood merchants, residents, property owners, nonprofits, and other stakeholders.

On San Bruno Avenue, the City and community development partner Local Initiatives Support Corporation (LISC) have partnered since 2005 with the Portola Neighborhood Steering Committee—a group of merchants, residents, and community-based organizations that is focused on improving the neighborhood and attracting more visitors and shoppers to San Bruno Avenue. Accomplishments have included a major streetscape overhaul, the completion of 8 storefront improvements, a 40 foot mural on a Caltrans support pillar, and a community safety ambassador program. The community's current priorities for the neighborhood are the attraction of a coffee shop and the development of a pocket park at the intersection of Burrows and San Bruno.

Since 2005, at a time when the vacancy rate citywide increased, San Bruno Avenue’s vacancy rate has decreased from 7 percent to 4.8 percent. Its annual sales tax revenue has increased 8 percent, in comparison to a 3 percent increase citywide – in spite of the Great Recession and the economic downturn.

“We appreciate Mayor Lee’s leadership to bring together all the different City departments in order to achieve concrete results for our neighborhood,” said Portola Neighborhood Steering Committee Manager Robert Ramirez.

The first phase of the effort is the convening of the Invest in Neighborhoods Strategy Working Group over the next two months of City department heads, neighborhood commercial leaders and technical experts to evaluate existing resources and tools, identify best practices and make recommendations for a more comprehensive strategy and additional resources through the Mayor’s FY 2012-2013 budget. The Working Group will be co-chaired by City Administrator Naomi Kelly and Office of Economic & Workforce Development (OEWD) Director Jennifer Matz and includes the Department of Public Works (SFDPW), the San Francisco Public Utilities Commission (SFPUC), Office of Small Business Assistance, Recreation & Parks Department, San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency (SFMTA), San Francisco Police Department (SFPD), Office of Civic Engagement & Immigrant Affairs, Mayor’s Housing Opportunity, Partnerships and Engagement (HOPE) Director and former Supervisor Bevan Dufty and many others. The Mayor’s Office and OEWD staff will also meet with each District Supervisor in the coming weeks to seek input and identify recommended commercial corridors for participation in the comprehensive initiative.

The Invest in Neighborhoods Initiative is part of Mayor Lee’s 17-point Roadmap to Good Jobs and Opportunity plan to create jobs and promote smart economic growth and development for San Francisco.

Monday, March 5, 2012

Radio Africa Kitchen Opening

 

Pleased to attend today's ribbon cutting at Radio Africa Kitchen at 4800 Third St. Mayor Ed Lee, Supervisor Cohen, and others joined a diverse group of neighbors in opening this exciting new restaurant.  Chef Eskender Aseged prepared three wonderful dishes for us to try, and I can tell you, this man knows how to cook.

As Supervisor Cohen said during her remarks, the addition of RAK to the Third Street Corridor continues to highlight the diversity in the Bayview neighborhood.  I have to echo the remarks of Al Norman of the Bayview Merchant's Association, too, in saying that we are all working toward the day when people come to shop, eat, work and play in the Bayview, enjoying an experience that is as safe and vibrant as one on Union St.  It was good to hear Mayor Lee reinforce the city's commitment to the corridor and to the town center around Mendell Plaza.

Radio Africa Kitchen, at 4800 Third St at Oakdale, opens officially on Wednesday for dinner only, with lunch service starting soon.

Read more at SFGate's City Insider

Thursday, January 19, 2012

Quesada Gardens Initiative wins 2012 GRO1000 Award

This is HUGE!!  Congratulations, Quesada Gardens Initiative!!

The United States Conference of Mayors has bestowed upon San Francisco Mayor Edwin Lee's office the 2012 GRO1000 Gardens and Green Spaces Grant Award to be used by the Quesada Gardens Initiative!  The GRO1000 Award is sponsored by Scotts Miracle-Gro and the U.S. Conference of Mayors.  The five award-winning cities were determined by an independent panel of judges selected by the U.S. Conference of Mayors.  Awards will be officially announced at the annual Winter meeting  in Washington, DC on Thursday, January 19, 2012.

Award winners each receive grants in the amount of $25,000 ($15,000 in cash and $10,000 in-kind product provided by Scotts Miracle-Gro).  Look for a local dedication event sometime this Spring.

The Quesada Gardens Initiative is a community-based non-profit located in the Bayview district of San Francisco.  It began ten years ago on the 1700 block of Quesada Ave, and has grown to include over 30  art, garden, and community projects throughout the district.

Monday, November 14, 2011

How SF's Neighborhoods Voted

Mayor Lee was the only candidate (to my knowledge) who had an office in D10, and I think I saw him here more than other candidates, so no surprise that he won in most parts of the district.

Beyond Chron has a really nice analysis of how Mayor Lee ran a citywide campaign that ultimately crushed his competition, even in their own districts.

From SFGate,
With the exception of a small bite in Potrero Hill and adjacent Dogpatch neighborhoods on San Francisco's eastern edge - home to City Attorney Dennis Herrera, who placed third in the mayor's race - Lee got the most first-place votes in the neighborhoods that ring the city.

Among Lee's strongholds: Chinatown, the Marina, the Richmond, the Sunset, Ingleside, Visitacion Valley and Bayview-Hunters Point.

Read more at SFGate

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Bay Area Science Festival

Today, UCSF Vice Chancellor Keith Yamamoto, San Francisco Mayor Edwin M. Lee, and Congressional Democratic Leader Rep. Nancy Pelosi were on-hand at UCSF's Mission Bay campus to announce the First Annual Bay Area Science Festival (running Oct. 29-Nov. 6).

Featuring more than 100 free events, the inaugural Bay Area Science Festival will bring together an unprecedented brain trust of the region’s scientific and educational partners to produce what is expected to be one of the largest science-based events ever held in the United States.

The San Francisco Bay Area is known for its groundbreaking work in science and technology, yet many who call the Bay Area home have little opportunity to experience the wonder of science. Led by the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF), the Bay Area Science Festival is designed to inspire and build interest in science, technology and engineering among people of all ages and backgrounds.
The public will be invited to this series of events stretching from Santa Rosa to San Jose, including opportunities to experience science in action and hear about the latest scientific discoveries and culminating in a blow-out finale at AT&T Park.

On the web at:

Thursday, July 28, 2011

Poll: Most Chinese voters would support Ed Lee for SF mayor


Our interim Mayor realizes he likes the top job and that he wants to keep it, and so is planning to announce that he'll be a mayoral candidate this fall. By doing so, he'd be going back on his promise to only remain in office for a year, a promise that put him there in the first place. Ex-supervisors, like D10's Sophie Maxwell, who voted to put him into office, will be ticked, I'm sure, when he announces his candidacy. Not unexpectedly, it seems that his incumbent status would serve him very well among the city's Chinese community, leaving all other candidates in the dust. Is this just business as usual SF politics?

More from the Bay Citizen,

Thursday, April 14, 2011

D10 Budget Town Hall with Mayor Lee & Supervisor Cohen

Last night's D10 Budget Town Hall with Supervisor Cohen was not quite what I expected, and ended up being rather farcical.  First, questions were solicited from the audience on confusing, color-coded cards meant to identify the theme of each question.  Those cards were then submitted to handlers, who presumably sorted them and picked questions to be asked later.  The problems that ensued stemmed from organizers then asking the questioner to go up to a microphone to ask their question.  What happened was that people were suddenly given a forum to prattle-on at length (no time limits!!), not actually ask a question, and often not offer suggestions to the city's department heads and the mayor, which was supposedly why we were there.  The meeting devolved into diatribes by visibly angry people and our supervisor shouting at a resident to try to get him to end his outburst.  His outburst, by the way, was about trying to get a straight answer from Supervisor Cohen about whether she supported the city's local-hire law or not.  Her response left us all wondering if maybe she didn't, saying, "As a legislator, it is my duty to uphold the laws of the city, and this is one of those laws that I will uphold."  She never said that she supported the law, only that she would uphold it.  The audience member immediately caught this, and tried to press her on it.  The mayor took over from that point to assure the resident that the city is behind the law.

My suggestion to the organizers of the seven remaining budget town hall meetings: in a 10-minute segment, have the mayor explain what the city departments are already doing to reduce their budgets, and then have the moderator, presumably the supervisor for the district, READ the questions and suggestions that have been submitted by the audience and online.  DO NOT allow attendees to use the mic!!    Let the audience know that all their questions and comments will be compiled into a single document at the end of the forums and posted online for all to see.

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

D10 Budget Town Hall with Mayor Lee & Supervisor Cohen - update

Tonight: Please join Supervisor Malia Cohen for a District 10 Budget Town Hall with Mayor Ed Lee at UCSF Mission Bay Campus Genentech Hall Auditorium 600 16th Street (between 4th and Owens Sts.) San Francisco, CA 94158, Wednesday, April 13, from 6:00-7:30 PM