SFNext: Fixing Our City - podcast cover

SFNext: Fixing Our City

San Francisco Chronicle
Like any big city, San Francisco has big problems. Rampant homelessness, an opioid epidemic, widening income equality and deep political divisions. What’s stopping the city from fixing itself? Where are the creative solutions? And what happens when one person’s solution is another’s root of the problem? Host Laura Wenus and producer Cintia Lopez are on a quest to find out, one San Francisco story at a time. SFNext: Fixing Our City is part of the San Francisco Chronicle's SFNext project. Unlimited Chronicle access: sfchronicle.com/pod. Twitter: @sfnext Got a tip, question, comment? Email us at [email protected]
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Episodes

‘No Moderate or Progressive Potholes’: Board President Aaron Peskin Says Now is the Time to Come Together

Aaron Peskin, president of the Board of Supervisors, has spent the majority of the last 23 years in office in San Francisco, representing District 3. His district includes North Beach, Chinatown and the Financial District, but the role of president means he must broker compromises between his colleagues and the mayor. On complex crises like the coronavirus pandemic, fentanyl use, and homelessness, he says he also helps coordinate siloed city departments. And with so many crises at hand, Peskin s...

Jun 20, 202326 min

Soup With the Supes: Ronen Says Local Solutions Ignore Root Causes

Supervisor Hillary Ronen represents the Mission, the Portola and Bernal Heights, but she has been trying to tackle problems in those neighborhoods since before she was elected. Now, she’s termed out, and she says she’s conflicted about trying to address the fallout of national issues with a municipal toolkit. While San Francisco’s government has its shortcomings, she says, it’s grappling with effects of poverty and inequality around the country — from homelessness to drug dealing to the housing ...

Jun 13, 202328 min

Soup With the Supes: Catherine Stefani on Police and Public Safety

Supervisor Catherine Stefani represents a part of San Francisco that does not have a reputation for violent crime — District 2 includes the Marina, Pacific Heights, Cathedral Hill, Laurel Village and NoPa. But shortly before SFNext: Fixing Our City interviewed her, a violent assault in the Marina made headlines, though it wasn't yet apparent that there was allegedly more to that story. Stefani describes how she would like to handle challenges with hiring cops, what we expect police officers to d...

Jun 06, 202326 min

Soup With the Supes: Matt Dorsey Lays Out His Drug Policy

District 6 Supervisor Matt Dorsey, who lives in the Mid-Market area and represents downtown as well as SoMa, Mission Bay and Treasure Island, expresses some hope that the city’s economic engine is coming back to life. The former police spokesperson has experience with drug and alcohol abuse and talks about his own setbacks during the pandemic. One reason he ran for office was to represent people in recovery. Now, he has ambitious plans for the police department and its role in addressing drug de...

May 30, 202325 min

Soup With the Supes: Connie Chan Is a Budget Wonk and Chowder Enthusiast

Supervisor Connie Chan keeps a decorative sign in her office that says “I’ll be nicer, if you’ll be smarter.” She is chair of the Budget and Finance Committee and has made it a point to call for hearings about department overspending or inefficient spending. As part of our Soup With the Supes series, Chan tells the story of how she was introduced to clam chowder in a bread bowl and shares her vision of San Francisco’s economic future. | Unlimited Chronicle access: sfchronicle.com/pod Fixing Our ...

May 23, 202324 min

Overdoses Have Spiked. How Will San Francisco Respond?

San Francisco has consistently seen more than 600 overdose deaths a year, and the rate of fatal overdoses has recently spiked. Dr. Jeffrey Hom, director of the city’s Office of Overdose Prevention, is optimistic that the city can turn the tide on overdoses, but acknowledges a long road ahead. The health department released a plan last year to reduce fatal overdoses, which calls for expansions in medication treatment and Narcan distribution as well as establishing safe consumption sites. Despite ...

May 16, 202329 min

The Cases For and Against Safe Consumption Sites

Hundreds of people are dying from drug overdoses every year in San Francisco, and the rate of deaths has spiked. In the same time frame, thousands more overdoses are reversed. Public health and harm reduction workers battling the opioid crisis are calling for the creation of safe consumption sites, which offer a place to use while trained staff are on duty to intervene if someone overdoses. Critics fear they would attract crime and open drug use and enable addiction, but city leaders have almost...

May 09, 202325 min

Housing Wonks on a Mission to Shorten S.F.'s Permitting Process

San Francisco has a unique system of “discretionary review,” and YIMBY advocate Bilal Mahmood (with the pro-development Yes In My Back Yard group) and California Assemblymember Matt Haney see this process as a major roadblock to new housing. Mahmood went down the rabbit hole to suss out exactly how tangled this bureaucracy is for a Chronicle opinion piece. Haney has crafted two pieces of state legislation intended to make the process of getting new housing or office conversions approved a little...

May 02, 202327 min

How to Help Homeless People? Outreach Worker Uses “Radical Hospitality”

When Castro neighbors see Erica McGary doing outreach, they sometimes assume she’s a volunteer. But McGary works for the Department of Public Health, and it’s her job to get to know people in the neighborhood — whether they’re unhoused, working or have a home or apartment there. Building relationships with chronically homeless people and newcomers alike helps foster trust in city services, which can be a major obstacle to accessing services. The approach has already helped several people find a ...

Apr 25, 202319 min

Soup With the Supes: Rafael Mandelman

Supervisor Rafael Mandelman wonders whether a local government needs a system of checks and balances and, over matzo ball soup, explains why he thinks certain controversies have been exaggerated. Mandelman represents District 8, which includes the Castro, Diamond Heights and Twin Peaks. He says San Francisco government has too many checks and balances for its size. He describes the huge fight over “killer robots” as blown out of proportion and says San Francisco is not failing to solve homelessn...

Apr 18, 202327 min

These Teens Love San Francisco, but They’re Leaving

Three local high school students who are active in their communities share their concerns and hopes for San Francisco: They’re frustrated with the high cost of living, lack of support for educators, distant politicians and persistent damaging narratives about race. We take a hard look at the city from their perspectives and hear why all three plan to leave. | Unlimited Chronicle access: sfchronicle.com/pod Fixing Our City is part of the San Francisco Chronicle’s SFNext Project Got a tip, questio...

Apr 11, 202324 min

How Could San Francisco Defy a Doom Loop?

We’ve painted a grim picture of the future if Downtown doesn’t bounce back and San Francisco doesn’t reinvent itself. So we got some smart people together to come up with ideas to save the city. Panelists Desi Danganan from Kultivate Labs, Ixchel Acosta from Avenue Greenlight and Sujata Srivastava from SPUR share ideas for policies and personal civic engagement. The crowd at Manny’s chimes in with their own creative proposals. | Unlimited Chronicle access: sfchronicle.com/pod Fixing Our City is ...

Apr 04, 202330 min

Why You Should Care About Downtown Office Buildings Losing Value

The move to remote work has created a self-reinforcing phenomenon of empty downtowns and sluggish recovery. It has also led to office building depreciation. A group of New York economists are warning that this could spell disaster. The economic activity that office workers fuel, and the tax revenue their activities yield, are essential to the city’s budget. But cutting services may drive out even more workers, and the city could get caught in a “doom loop.” Arpit Gupta of the NYU Stern School of...

Mar 28, 202328 min

Soup With the Supes: Dean Preston

You know him for being a Democratic Socialist who is passionate about affordable housing. Did you also know his office has pored over the police budget item by item, and that he says he could cut millions out of it without any effect on public safety? The District 5 supervisor, who represents a diverse set of neighborhoods in the city’s center, digs into some phở and the details of his stances on development, public safety and a disconnect between the Board of Supervisors and Mayor London Breed....

Mar 21, 202330 min

Soup With the Supes: Supervisor Ahsha Safaí

In October, San Francisco Supervisor Ahsha Safaí was the victim of a home burglary. Thieves made off with his stove, of all things. What he took from that incident features prominently in this entry in our Soup With the Supes miniseries. Over tortilla soup, the representative for District 11 in the southern part of the city talks about what the task force dedicated to addressing retail theft has accomplished, how he handled constituents’ fierce opposition to a parking site for vehicle dwellers n...

Mar 14, 202327 min

Soup With the Supes: Supervisor Joel Engardio

Joel Engardio was elected in November to represent District 4, which consists of a chunk of the west side: The Sunset, Parkside, and Outer Sunset. A moderate, he unseated progressive incumbent Gordon Mar. Over stewed lemongrass coconut chicken soup, he lays out his case for increasing the police department’s budget to help hire officers, critiques the city’s district supervisor system, and talks about how he would cut red tape to foster small businesses. | Unlimited Chronicle access: sfchronicle...

Mar 07, 202326 min

Soup With the Supes: Supervisor Myrna Melgar

What would San Francisco Supervisor Myrna Melgar do if she were queen of San Francisco for a day? In this episode of SFNext: Fixing Our City, we kick off a new feature — Soup With the Supes. Members of the board talk about local issues while eating soup with host Laura Wenus and producer Cintia Lopez. Over pozole, Melgar explains why she wouldn’t put a safe consumption site in her district even though she supports them, how she’s working to get the certification of Laguna Honda Hospital sorted o...

Feb 28, 202328 min

At This Stanford Lab, Government Interventions Are the Experiments

Stanford’s RegLab designs real-world scientific experiments to test the outcomes of government interventions, figuring out what works — and what doesn't. Derek Ouyang is a research manager there and he also co-founded City Systems, an organization that explores potential fixes to municipal problems. From deploying Spanish-speaking contact tracers to developing a low-cost kit to turn garages into apartments, Ouyang is exploring equitable solutions to local cities’ most intractable challenges. And...

Feb 21, 202326 min

Privacy for Safety Is a Bad Trade, Camera Foes Say

Last week, Fixing Our City probed whether giving police greater access to live monitoring of private security cameras has been a useful crime-fighting strategy. Now, we hear from privacy advocates who warn that any new surveillance capacity has the potential to be abused, and who also hold that it doesn’t actually work to reduce crime. A former beat cop cautions that cameras aren’t perfect witnesses. But those closest to the camera networks in question emphasize that the equipment does a good jo...

Feb 14, 202323 min

Can SFPD Access to More Security Cameras Help Stop Crime?

A security camera mounted on a pole captured damning evidence of the police killing of Tyre Nichols in Memphis. San Francisco is blanketed by security cameras too. But unlike in other cities, police aren’t monitoring them around the clock. The network they once used is defunct, so law enforcement here often relies on privately owned cameras for footage. Their ability to monitor private feeds live was recently expanded. Will that work to curb crimes like theft and drug dealing? | Unlimited Chroni...

Feb 07, 202321 min

Be Angry at Systems, Not People, Says Organizer Vinny Eng

He was once a prominent sommelier at San Francisco’s Tartine Manufactory. Now, as the director of policy and advocacy for Safer Together, Vinny Eng’s job is to demand better health equity from our institutions. Even in the face of fear and uncertainty — Eng is a native of Monterey Park and experienced a grueling wait for news from his family as the recent mass shooting there unfolded — he insists we have more in common than what divides us. He has some recipes for getting action from systems tha...

Jan 31, 202324 min

What San Diego Got Right About Housing Vouchers

While the name of the federal Emergency Housing Vouchers rental subsidy program underscores how urgent finding housing is for at-risk groups, only a little more than half of the vouchers are in use in California. San Francisco has used 51% of its vouchers. But San Diego is seen as a standout success, having put more than 100% of its allotment to use on new leases. How did San Diego — the state’s second-biggest city — manage this, and can other cities take a page out of its book? | Unlimited Chro...

Jan 24, 202328 min

SFUSD Is in Trouble. What’s the New Superintendent’s Plan?

The San Francisco Unified School District has gone from one crisis to another, frustrating parents. Many were furious schools didn’t return to in-person instruction sooner, while others felt their kids were being pushed back into underprepared schools. Attendance, academic achievement, students’ mental health and overall enrollment were all battered by the pandemic, while longstanding racial inequalities in student achievement worsened. Dr. Matt Wayne, the new superintendent, lays out his plans ...

Jan 17, 202327 min

Formerly Homeless Nonprofit Director Offers Solutions to the Crisis

As the executive director of Hospitality House, which serves primarily adults struggling with homelessness and other socioeconomic challenges, Joe Wilson has a front row seat to the situation unfolding on San Francisco’s streets. While a biennial snapshot of homelessness does show a drop in the number of unsheltered people, many residents feel the problem is not improving. Wilson says an insistence on quick solutions to problems that have vexed society for centuries is part of what’s holding us ...

Jan 10, 202339 min

Best of FOC: How S.F. Keeps Poop Off Streets

Opening public toilets to address a public urination and defecation problem may not be revolutionary, but San Francisco’s Pit Stop program adds a crucial element: Attendants who make sure the toilets are used for their intended purpose only, clean up the surrounding area, and connect with visitors seeking relief. While resident reports of poop in the streets citywide have increased steadily over the years, data shows that in the Tenderloin, which has a high concentration of Pit Stops, reports ha...

Jan 03, 202325 min

Best of FOC: Why a Hole in the Ground Is “The Death in the Mission”

A 2015 apartment building fire at Mission and 22nd streets killed one person and displaced 50. Seven years later, there’s an empty lot, gathering trash and growing weeds. In the middle of a housing crisis. Why has nothing been built in the years since? The answers to that question are painfully emblematic of some of the biggest problems facing San Francisco. Host Laura Wenus and producer-reporter Cintia Lopez search for solutions. This debut episode of Fixing Our City first published in June. We...

Dec 27, 202226 min

Institutionalize Innovation? This Former NYC Staffer Has Ideas

To the average citizen, government processes can seem rigid and impenetrable. In her work across finance, municipal government, and the arts world, Sara Fenske Bahat has picked up some ideas about incorporating creativity into policy. Her experience as a New York City municipal staffer bridged the Bloomberg and Giuliani administrations, giving her insight into radically different approaches to local governance. Now, she’s interim CEO of the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts. Fenske Bahat says lead...

Dec 20, 202247 min

Why Can’t San Francisco Build Housing More Cheaply?

Housing is too expensive in San Francisco, and there’s heated disagreement about how to tackle the cost of building it. Construction and labor costs are through the roof. San Francisco has experimented with lowering the cost by having individual apartments constructed in a factory, then assembled on-site. At the SFNext Solutions Conference in October, this turned out to be a hot-button issue. John Doherty of the electrical workers union IBEW Local 6 and Jay Bradshaw of the NorCal Carpenters Unio...

Dec 13, 202233 min

Pandemic Over? Not for San Francisco Restaurants

Bruce Hill, owner of the Italian restaurant Zero Zero, did his best to weather the uncertainty of the coronavirus. He secured PPP loans, applied for federal relief money, downsized his staff, and provided takeout and delivery. Still, he was forced to close. Hill says he isn’t sure what else San Francisco could do to keep ailing restaurants downtown afloat. Laurie Thomas, head of the Golden Gate Restaurant Association, has some ideas — and says far from giving up, now is the time for urgent colla...

Dec 06, 202223 min

Shelter Expansion: Proponents Are Hopeful, Critics Doubtful

New York City’s shelter mandate, requiring the city to offer a placement to everyone who needs it without forcing anyone to accept it, is often cited as a model. Now San Francisco’s Department of Homelessness and Supportive Housing is developing a plan to offer some kind of shelter — ranging from a safe place to pitch a tent to a more permanent solution — to everyone willing to take it. While temporary shelter alone will not solve homelessness, advocates for shelter expansion see it as a crucial...

Nov 29, 202231 min
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