[SFGP] Greenzine - Green Voter Guide to today's election
Announcement list for SF Green Party, updated weekly
announce at sfgreens.org
Tue Nov 8 07:53:17 PST 2022
November 8, 2022
GREENZINE
SF Green Party Weekly News and Events
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Dear Greens,
It's voting day! Our Green Voter Guide is here:
https://sfgreenparty.org/endorsements/102-november-2022-endorsements
A text copy of the Green Voter Guide is also included below;
feel free to share it with other interested voters!
SF has same-day voter registration, so you can go to any polling
place and vote, even if you are not currently registered to vote. If
you are already registered to vote, you should have received a ballot
in the mail. You can still mail it today, or drop it off at any
polling place. If you didn't receive your ballot, go to a polling
place and let them know.
After the polls close at 8 pm tonight, join Greens at Rebecca
Young's victory party at The Ramp (855 Terry Francois Blvd, in Mission
Bay near Crane Cove Park).
*===========================*
Green Voter Guide for November 8, 2022:
John Hamasaki for District Attorney
The San Francisco Green Party is proud to support John Hamasaki for
District Attorney of San Francisco. Hamasaki spent years on the
Police Commission, where he was a strong voice for police
accountability. He has served as President of the Asian-American Bar
Association. He opposes the death penalty, and supports the work of
the Innocence Commission.
The continuation of the Innocence Commission is very much hanging in
the balance with this election. Recalled former San Francisco
District Attorney Chesa Boudin launched the Innocence Commission to
free prisoners who were wrongfully convicted. After Brooke Jenkins
was appointed by Mayor London Breed to replace Boudin, she fired
Arcelia Hurtado, who was the District Attorney liaison to the
Commission.
Hamasaki was vocally opposed to the recall of Chesa Boudin. Kaylah
Williams May, who ran Boudin's winning campaign in 2019, is managing
Hamasaki's campaign. Hamasaki believes in ending cash bail, and that
"individuals who do pose a demonstrated public safety risk may be
detained irrespective of how much money they have in their bank
account." Hamasaki pledges to expand the Public Corruption Task
Force. Unlike Brooke Jenkins, Hamasaki is independent of Mayor Breed.
Hamasaki believes in holding police officers accountable, and is
willing to prosecute members of the San Francisco Police Department
who commit crimes.
In his responses to our questionnaire
(http://sfgreens.org/questionnaires/2022/hamasaki_da.html), Hamasaki
also pledged to prosecute wage theft, and to check the power of
Transportation Network Companies, like Uber and Lyft, who violate the
law.
Joe Alioto Veronese also applied for our endorsement. We did not
endorse him because of his stance on cooperating with Immigration and
Customs Enforcement (ICE). He also supports a larger police budget
and allowing police to set their own priorities, instead of requiring
that they focus on solving serious and violent crimes.
Rebecca Susan Feng Young for Public Defender
The San Francisco Green Party is proud to support Rebecca Susan Feng
Young for Public Defender. She is an experienced trial lawyer who
favors abolishing the death penalty. Young spent many years in the
San Francisco Public Defender's office under the leadership of the
late Jeff Adachi. She vocally opposed the recall of former District
Attorney Chesa Boudin.
Young says she was urged to run by colleagues in response to a
deterioration of morale under the current incumbent. Felony caseloads
are unmanageably high. Chief attorneys are overseeing people with
more experience. Management is draining resources needed to prepare
for trials. Young has specific ideas about how to improve the Public
Defender's office. In her responses to our questionnaire
(http://sfgreens.org/questionnaires/2022/young_pd.html), she pledged
to fully staff the Felony Trial Unit, and expand the Post-Trial
Conviction Unit.
Incumbent Public Defender Mano Raju did provide any contact
information to the Department of Elections, and his website also does
not provide a means to contact him. We tried several times to contact
him through Twitter and even through his official City email address,
but we were unable to reach him in time for him to submit his
questionnaire responses before our deadline. Although Raju did
provide a late response
(http://sfgreens.org/questionnaires/2022/raju_pd.html) we thought his
answers were not nearly as detailed and thoughtful as Rebecca Young's.
William Walker for Community College Board
Four seats are up for election on the College Board. Three of the
contests are for a full four-year term, and one is for a two-year term
to finish the rest of Tom Temprano's term. Temprano resigned from the
College Board to work for Equality California, a nonprofit with close
ties to the Democratic Party, allowing Mayor Breed to appoint a
temporary replacement. Three incumbents (Rizzo, Davila, and Selby)
are running for re-election, and are being challenged by a slate
endorsed by the Teacher's Union (Chung, Martinez and Solomon).
Interestingly, none of the latter slate responded to the Green Party's
questionnaire. We chose to endorse only one candidate, William
Walker, who best represents our values in this contest.
The most important factor in considering our endorsements was once
again the renewed threat of privatization of the school. During
COVID, the College saw a 30% loss of enrollment, and despite classes
being free, enrollment numbers have not recovered. In response, City
College eliminated a number of classes, including foreign language
classes, that are of great benefit to San Franciscans. This has
turned into a "death spiral" in which even fewer students enroll in
classes, leading to more cuts. See our discussion of Prop O for more
on City College funding.
In addition to the class cuts, another likely factor keeping City
College enrollment from recovering is the continuing requirement that
all students wear masks, even though mask mandates are no longer
endorsed by health care professionals, have been dropped in most areas
of society, and have not been shown to be effective at stopping
community spread of COVID (compared to voluntary use of masks).
William Walker gave thoughtful answers to our questionnaire
(http://sfgreens.org/questionnaires/2022/walker_ccb.html), showing he
is well aligned with the Green Party's 10 Key Values. He is firmly
opposed to privatization and has good ideas for growing enrollment.
He promises to follow the advice of health care professionals in
guiding the College's COVID response. We previously endorsed Walker
in 2014, citing his anti-privatization work. He will make an
excellent addition to the Board if he wins this time.
We did not endorse any of the incumbents, as they have now presided
over multiple accreditation crises without being proactive and finding
a stable source of funding. As one of the challengers pointed out at
our endorsement meeting, some layoffs may occasionally be necessary,
but mass layoffs are an indication of a failure of leadership. When
we last endorsed Rizzo and Davila in 2018, we wrote that we were
pleased they'd "finally solved the accreditation crisis." With
accreditation and funding issues coming back again, we think it's time
to let new voices be heard.
We did not endorse any candidate for the two-year term. Daniel
Landry, a candidate who we previously awarded a #2 ranked endorsement
when he ran for D5 Supervisor, sought our endorsement. However, his
answers to our college board questionnaire
(http://sfgreens.org/questionnaires/2022/landry_ccb.html) did not give
us confidence that he is ready for this position. Mayor Breed's
appointee to this position, Murrell Green, did not provide contact
information to the Department of Elections and did not seek our
endorsement.
We therefore strongly endorse a vote for William Walker for the 4-year
College Board seat.
No endorsements for Board of Education
Three seats are up for election on the School Board. All three are
currently held by incumbents who were appointed by Mayor Breed after
the successful recall election in February. One of these incumbents
sought our endorsement, as did three challengers. As discussed below,
none of these candidates merited endorsement.
As we discussed in our 2020 Green Voter Guide
(http://www.sfgreenparty.org/endorsements/95-november-2020-endorsements),
a key issue for us (and a major failing of the previous
Superintendent) was the need for in-person learning in public schools.
We wrote: "Zoom classes don't work for young children, and keeping
kids at home has had a serious impact on parents, especially on women,
who disproportionately provide for childcare and homeschooling."
Another important issue for Greens is the enormous amount of resources
wasted on standardized testing. As we discussed on our website,
students now spend as much as 7 weeks of valuable classroom time
preparing for and taking standardized tests
(http://www.sfgreenparty.org/10-campaigns/79-opt-out-of-standardized-tests),
with little to no benefit. We were encouraged when the previous Board
of Education ended the use of standardized test scores as a criteria
for admission to Lowell High, but this decision was quickly overturned
by Mayoral appointees.
Finally, Greens are very concerned that money allocated by the public
to maintain and repair public schools has not been well spent. We
need School Board members who will take their oversight
responsibilities seriously. Some of these issues are covered in a
series of articles by SF Green Party member Erika McDonald, here:
https://erikasf-45502.medium.com/civil-rights-in-education-in-california-the-williams-case-and-the-williams-complaint-de763f789095
https://erikasf-45502.medium.com/civil-rights-in-education-in-california-f518e8991f8
https://erikasf-45502.medium.com/civil-rights-in-education-in-california-7b2e9458aebe
We are concerned that without adequate oversight of spending, schools
will fall further into disrepair, and the conservative bloc on the
Board will convert public schools into charter schools, or even sell
off properties in order to build more luxury condos.
We hope that in future School Board elections, candidates will step
forward who agree with us on these criteria. Although Greens thought
that each of the current candidates had some positions aligned with
our values, all had significant negatives as well, and we ultimately
decided that none merited our support:
We were excited to endorse Gabriela López in 2018, as she was an
elementary school teacher and clearly understood the problems with
standardized testing. Her values still align very well with ours, and
we commend her for (temporarily) opening admissions at Lowell High to
a more diverse student body. However, during her last term on the
Board, López was unable to effectively oversee spending on bonds. She
also ignored appeals from parents and approved a fraudulent
contractor's assessment that labeled a number of poorly maintained
schools as being in "good" condition. During the beginning of the
COVID pandemic, rather than focusing on safely reopening schools, the
Board spent time on a failed attempt to rename a number of schools.
The centralized renaming committee, poorly managed and dominated by
insiders, advocated renaming some schools based on inaccurate
information, and did not engage students as was done in successful
campaigns elsewhere in the Bay Area
(http://www.sfgreenparty.org/endorsements/99-school-board-recall-2022-endorsements).
After being rejected by more than 70% of voters in the recall
election, we do not believe that López has made a convincing case for
being returned to office.
Alida Fisher failed to win our endorsement in 2020 after strongly
supporting JROTC. She has reformed that position and is now neutral
on the program. However, she still has an unclear position on
standardized testing, choosing to talk about the Common Core
curriculum in response to a question we asked about testing. Her
position on Lowell admissions is also unclear. She is also strongly
supportive of distance learning, calling it "ideal" for a subset of
students. While this may be true for a small number of kids, the
overall effects of closed schools were quite harmful, and we are
concerned that Fisher does not seem to realize this. On the other
hand, Fisher does clearly understand the dangers that charter schools
pose to public education, and she is a strong advocate for special
education and for students with disabilities.
Karen Fleshman is a parent who supports Individualized Learning Plans
for all students. This is a great idea. She also recognizes that
test-based admissions at Lowell are illegal, and she seems like she
would be able to effectively oversee bond spending. However, she did
not come out strongly in opposition to the time wasted on standardized
tests. She also wants to reinstate mask and vaccine mandates for kids
to eligible to attend public school. Voluntary masking and
vaccination have worked to prevent COVID spread in SF schools, and new
mandates would only drive more families into private schools.
Fleshman also seems to have a low threshold for shutting down
in-person learning, and does not seem to appreciate the problems with
distance learning. For example, she brought up "school bathrooms not
in good condition" as a reason to cancel in-person classes, even
though COVID does not spread via toilets.
Lisa Weissman-Ward is the only Mayoral appointee who sought our
endorsement. Although she takes the sensible approach of deferring to
the SF Department of Public Health on COVID-related matters, and says
she opposes charter schools, we are very concerned about some of her
other positions. She is completely misinformed about standardized
testing, believing that it helps teachers plan individual lessons for
students (this is incorrect, as SBAC test scores are not available
until after the school year ends). Weissman-Ward supported a return
to test-based admissions at Lowell. This appears to violate the CA
Education Code, which requires a "random, unbiased" process to
determine which kids get to attend schools in high demand, and forbids
admissions standards based on "academic or athletic performance."
(https://leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_displaySection.xhtml?sectionNum=35160.5.&lawCode=EDC)
Weissman-Ward conflates Lowell, a "general education" school subject
to the above restrictions, with SOTA, a specialized arts school that
does not. She also did not convince us that she will effectively
oversee bond spending or handle Williams complaints from parents at
poorly maintained schools.
No endorsement for BART Board
Four years ago, the Green Party endorsed Janice Li for BART Board,
representing the West side of San Francisco. Although she is running
unopposed, the Green Party is not endorsing her for another term.
BART suffers from numerous problems, including a focus on building
higher fences and new facades for their stations while neglecting
maintenance of the system to the point where even a light rain
routinely causes lengthy delays. They have hired expensive Muni-style
fare enforcement teams to harass riders.
Fare enforcement on BART has been especially problematic during COVID.
During a period of low ridership caused by the pandemic, BART started
doing "fare enforcement sweeps", stopping morning trains traveling
eastbound from Embarcadero and asking every passenger for proof of
payment. As the pandemic slowed and ridership rebounded, these sweeps
began to take more time, routinely causing trains to back up
throughout SF's downtown stations. Because the location and timing of
fare enforcement sweeps is widely known to riders, the sweeps do not
incentivize payment of fares.
Li has not spoken out on fare enforcement or maintenance issues, and
seems more focused on YIMBY priorities such as developing market rate
condos on BART property. She also sponsored a performative "mask
mandate" on BART, long after other Bay Area mask mandates were
dropped. This mandate was neither enforced nor effective, and seems
to have been done purely as a political stunt to express opposition to
a Trump-appointed judge ending the federal mandate on airlines and
public transit. As a result, many potential riders chose alternatives
such as Uber and Lyft, which did not require passengers to wear masks.
We hope that in four years, we will have a chance to vote for a
candidate who actually represents BART riders instead of real estate
developers.
No endorsement for Assessor-Recorder
This election is uncontested, and the incumbent did not seek our
endorsement.
No endorsement for D2 Supervisor
This election is uncontested, and the incumbent did not seek our
endorsement, or even provide any contact info for their campaign to
the Department of Elections.
No endorsement for D4 Supervisor
Four years ago, Gordon Mar was elected to the D4 Supervisor's seat,
becoming the first incumbent in years who was not thoroughly loyal to
the Willie Brown machine. During his time in office, Mar has
generally been a progressive voice, and he has been a clear
improvement over the Machine hacks who had previously warmed the D4
seat. He has been especially good in supporting organized labor,
including City workers.
Although Mar's votes are an improvement over his predecessors, he has
not been proactive in challenging Machine power in SF. In his
responses to our questionnaire
(http://sfgreens.org/questionnaires/2022/mar_d4.html), he did not
recognize the need for radical reform of the "strong Mayor" system of
government that is responsible for much of the corruption in SF. He
indicated in his questionnaire that he supports fare-free Muni, but
then mentioned in our candidate interview that he would be concerned
about wealthy people receiving a benefit they did not need. He also
recently voted in favor of live police surveillance of San Franciscans
through internet-connected cameras such as Ring doorbells, a position
that was strongly opposed by civil liberties advocates including the
Green Party.
We hope Mar will be support more progressive positions if he wins a
second term as Supervisor. However, his record to date does not merit
our endorsement.
No endorsement for D6 Supervisor
No candidate for D6 Supervisor sought our endorsement.
No endorsement for D8 Supervisor
In June 2018, Greens endorsed Rafael Mandelman in his contest vs a
Mayoral appointee for the Supervisorial seat previously held by Scott
Wiener. However, Mandelman's voting record in the past four years has
been far more similar to that of his predecessor than we'd hoped, so
we do not endorse him for another term in office.
Mandelman first ran for the D8 Supervisor seat in 2010, and was later
elected to two terms on the College Board. He is therefore one of the
most experienced elected officials in the City, and is quite familiar
with the way SF government works, or more often, fails to work for
ordinary people who are not wealthy or politically connected. It is
therefore extremely disappointing that he has not used this experience
to benefit the public, e.g., by proposing the sort of radical charter
reform that would be needed to end the "strong Mayor" system that is
responsible for much of the corruption in SF.
Instead, Mandelman has followed the blueprint of Wiener in climbing
the political ladder: an extreme punitive approach to homelessness,
without proposing any viable solutions. For example, Mandelman
championed the "conservatorship" model of forcing people into
court-ordered mental health and drug treatment, but this program has
only been used to help two individuals
(https://www.sfchronicle.com/bayarea/article/S-F-planned-to-compel-more-people-into-drug-and-16833440.php).
Despite all the grandstanding, nothing has changed.
Mandelman also has the unfortunate habit of claiming he's "just
representing my constituents" when he supports regressive policies.
However, Mandelman rarely attempts to make a case for taking a
progressive position, and even misrepresents proposed legislation to
his constituents. For example, he justified his recent vote in favor
of police surveillance using internet-connected cameras by claiming
the program is "voluntary." This misrepresents who is "volunteering"
to provide live footage to the police: under the new law, blanket
consent to spy on San Franciscans using all Amazon-manufactured
cameras is given by the Amazon corporation, not by the actual owner of
each camera.
Mandelman, like Wiener before him, occasionally proposes good
legislation. For example, his bill to require electricity instead of
natural gas to power in new commercial buildings is an important
response to the climate crisis. However, a progressive district like
D8, which voted for Matt Gonzalez over Gavin Newsom in 2003, deserves
a progressive champion in City Hall. Therefore, Greens cannot endorse
Mandelman for another term in office.
Shamann Walton for D10 Supervisor
We did not previously endorse Shamann Walton when he was elected as
D10 Supervisor four years ago. However, he's been a strong advocate
for environmental justice, and a very welcome change from his
predecessors who often placed the interests of corporations like
Lennar over their constituents. Greens are therefore proud to endorse
Walton for a second term.
In a recent City Hall hearing that Supervisor Walton was leading, he
openly called for a 100% cleanup of the Hunters Point Shipyard Site -
and for the City to refuse to accept any land at the site from the
Navy until it is fully cleaned. This is a very courageous stand:
Walton may be the first elected to representative to stand with the
people of Bayview / Hunters Point, and the Green Party, in demanding a
full cleanup.
Walton agrees with the Green Party on other significant social and
environmental justice issues as well. As he stated in response to our
questionnaire
(http://sfgreens.org/questionnaires/2022/walton_d10.html), he is a
major proponent of the City purchasing PG&E's assets, to ensure we can
provide the cleanest energy possible to our residents. He has also
been a long-time supporter of CleanPowerSF, and wants to expand the
program. And he was the only Supervisor running for re-election to
vote against warrantless police surveillance of San Franciscans.
Although Walton does not agree with the Green Party on all positions
(e.g., he opposes closing parts of Golden Gate Park to cars), his
positions and values are well aligned with ours and we strongly
endorse his re-election.
No on A: Limits increases in pensions for some City retirees
Currently, City retirees receive two types of annual increases in
their pensions after they retire. There is a "basic" adjustment,
which is based on the inflation rate, but capped at 2% per year.
There is also a "supplemental" adjustment which can provide another
1.5% increase, if inflation is high and the City retirement fund has
sufficient funds. These increases aim to offset inflation, to ensure
that retirees do not fall into poverty as prices increase. Prop A
would limit the "supplemental" adjustment to about 0.5% for workers
who retired before 1996 who earn more than $50,000 per year in
retirement income. Greens are opposed to limiting pensions, and
oppose Prop A.
It should be noted that the annual inflation rate is currently 8.3%,
as measured by the Consumer Price Index (CPI, which is the same
measure that SF's retirement system uses). Therefore even with the
maximum 3.5% annual increase in retirement income, SF's retirees are
effectively taking a 4.8% pay cut. To make matters worse, CPI is a
lowball estimate of the real inflation rate in SF, because a retiree
might spend the majority of their income on rent and food, both of
which are increasing in price more rapidly than CPI inflation. For
example, average rent in SF increased more than 12% in the last year.
Even though Prop A applies to only a few workers, and is partly offset
by a retroactive increase in pensions for some workers, Greens are
opposed to limiting pensions on principle. We do not believe that
$50,000 is such a high salary that it should be capped, given the cost
of living in SF.
Prop A also would also increase the salary paid to the executive
director of the Retirement System, and would hire this person through
an individual contract, which "may provide an incentive compensation
plan." This would prevent the director from being laid off regardless
of the state of SF's budget, and is another step toward
"corporatization" of City managerial workers.
The SF Green Party urges voters to vote NO on Prop A.
No on B: Reverses voter-approved changes to create Department of
Sanitation and Streets
Two years ago, voters approved splitting a new "Department of
Sanitation and Streets" off from the Department of Public Works. This
year's Prop B would reverse those changes. As we wrote at the time, a
new street cleaning department would be an essential check on Mayoral
corruption:
Street cleaning is a service long used to punish Supervisors (or
even constituents) who fail to back the Mayor. After Mayor Newsom
narrowly beat Matt Gonzalez in the 2003 Mayor's race, some precincts
that voted overwhelmingly for Gonzalez weren't cleaned for years,
other than when Newsom needed to drop by for a PR stunt.
Splitting street cleaning into a separate department will prevent
deliberate "oversights" such as forgetting to clean a precinct for a
few years - these things will stand out more in a smaller
department, rather than being lost in the massive Department of
Public Works.
We also noted that the new Sanitation and Streets oversight commission
would not have the majority of its members appointed by the Mayor, and
therefore would be consistent with our Key Value of Decentralization.
Prop B would undo reforms approved by voters in 2020 before this new
Department is even established. Greens therefore strongly oppose Prop
B.
Yes on C: Homelessness oversight commission
Prop C would create a new commission to oversee spending by the
Department of Homelessness and Supportive Housing. Four members of
the commission would be appointed by the Mayor (with Board of
Supervisors approval), and 3 would be appointed directly by the Board.
The new commission would oversee spending by the department and advise
both the Mayor and Board on how to spend the money.
Under SF's "Strong Mayor" system of government, the Board of
Supervisors has little actual power over how the Mayor chooses to
spend money. However, creating another commission to review Mayoral
spending would help shine sunlight on a department with a huge budget
and little public oversight. It is clear to everybody in SF that vast
amounts of money are being spent, with very little improvement in the
lives of homeless people.
We have taken the advice of homeless advocates such as Paul Boden from
the Western Regional Advocacy Project and others from the Coalition on
Homelessness. They agree that more oversight would be a positive
development, and so Greens are joining them in supporting Prop C.
No on D: Redefines luxury housing as "affordable"
Over the past two decades, progressive Supervisors have steadily
increased the fraction of housing units in market rate development
that are required to be made "affordable" to people who aren't
wealthy. However, over the same period, they have changed the
definition of "affordable" to apply to fairly well off people, not
just the poor - e.g., a single person earning $116,000 (or a family of
four earning $166,000) now qualifies to rent or purchase "affordable"
housing. Greens believe that the standard for affordability should be
based on the neighborhood in which housing is built, so that new
housing does not lead to gentrification and displacement of current
residents.
Prop D would again redefine "affordable" by increasing the income
limit by another 20%. This means that to meet zoning requirements,
developers would have to reserve some units for families making up to
$194,000/year. This would not result in any housing for low income SF
residents, and would only lead to more displacement.
As an alternative, Greens support building more social housing, a type
of mixed income public housing in which all residents pay a fixed
percentage of their income in rent. In this European-style model of
public housing, residents have a democratic voice in the governance of
their apartments, unlike the traditional US model that imposes
punitive rules on public housing residents. SF voters have already
approved funding to build or purchase 10,000 units housing with 2020's
Prop K, but the Mayor does not support the program and has refused to
spend the money.
Prop D would benefit real estate developers and wealthy people, while
displacing more middle- and lower-income SF residents. Vote NO.
No on E: Skips environmental review of "affordable" housing
development
Prop E is the Supervisors' response to Prop D, and would streamline
the construction of "affordable" housing (using the current definition
of "affordable", which Greens note is unaffordable to most SF
residents). Greens oppose Prop E because it would limit environmental
review of projects. For example, Prop E would allow development to
occur on polluted sites before the site is cleaned up. This would
result in contamination of the surrounding neighborhoods, and risk to
residents.
Instead of cutting safety rules in a rush to let developers build more
privately owned housing, SF could best solve the housing needs of our
residents by building social housing. We have the funds, but the
Mayor needs to be pressured to spend the money as voters intended.
Yes on F: Extend library preservation fund
Prop F would extend a budget set-aside to build libraries, which would
otherwise expire next year. This set-aside is a small percentage
(0.025%, or 2.5 cents per $100) of property taxes collected by the
City. This fund was last approved by voters in 2007, and Prop F will
extend it for another 25 years. Greens support a YES vote on Prop F.
Greens support Prop F because it is public investment in our
libraries, which otherwise rely on a lot of private funding through
"Friends of the SF Library" nonprofits. Since donations through
nonprofits have been used to corrupt public officials in recent years,
we think public investment that decreases the need or private
fundraising is a good alternative.
Greens are somewhat concerned about a provision in the library
preservation fund that allows revenue bonds to be issued by the Mayor,
using the Prop F set-aside revenue stream as a backing. This is a
loophole in the way revenue bonds are supposed to work. "Revenue"
usually means revenue from a particular project, such as a toll road,
that is used to back bonds that fund the project. A property tax
set-aside stretches that definition.
In 2007, Greens were sufficiently worried about this new provision in
the library preservation fund renewal that we opposed the renewal
measure (Prop D), because repaying any bonds issued would take
precedence over directly funding our libraries.
To date the fund seems to have been maintained responsibly, so we
support Prop F to renew it this year.
Yes on G: Minor increase to school funding
Prop G would create a new "Student Success Fund" with a budget of
approximately $35 million / year, which would be awarded by the
Department of Children Youth and their Families as $1 million grants
to various public schools. These grants would pay for counseling and
emotional wellness programs, as well as programs designed to enhance
student achievement. This is a fairly minor increase for a school
district with an annual budget exceeding $1 billion, but emotional
wellness is an worthy goal, so Greens support it.
We have some concerns that because a Mayor-controlled department will
be spending the money, the grants will be awarded as political payback
rather than going to where they are most needed. However, we think
that the majority of the money will be spent in a way that helps
public school students, even if some money is wasted due to
corruption. Therefore, we are supporting a YES vote on Prop G.
No on H: Canceling elections in odd-numbered years
Prop H would eliminate local elections in odd-numbered years, moving
the contests for SF elections that would be up in 2023 back a year to
2024, extending the term of the Mayor and District Attorney by one
year. Starting in 2024, elections for local office and ballot
measures would take place every two years.
In 2008 and 2012, Greens opposed similar ballot measures. In 2012, we
wrote:
We oppose this proposition as undemocratic, since fewer elections
would result in even more power for the Mayor and only benefit
corporate-funded campaigns and candidates.
More elections crowded onto a single ballot will result in even
fewer voters paying attention to important down-ticket offices.
(...) Moving them into a single election when fewer voters will pay
attention will benefit well-funded corporate candidates and their
campaign consultants, but will not result in more informed voters.
Eliminating elections will also result in more propositions being
crammed onto a single ballot when we do have elections. Do we
really want a repeat of 2008, when local propositions ran through
the alphabet all the way from A to V?
Finally, (this measure) will consolidate more power in the Mayor's
office, because Mayoral appointees fill vacancies until the next
election. Even if we someday elect a mayor less corrupt and
partisan than the current one, Greens support the principal of
decentralization, or spreading power among more elected offices.
We appreciate that voters are tired of having too many elections,
especially repeated contests between uninspiring candidates such as
David Campos and Matt Haney. Rather than consolidating important
local elections, Greens support implementing ranked choice voting and
the elimination of "Top Two" elections at the State level, which would
remove the need for things like Assembly runoff contests.
Election consolidation in 2012 did not result in more democracy:
elections in 2015 and 2019 for City Attorney and Treasurer were
uncontested, and the 2016 ballot was even more crowded than in 2008.
Now that we have universal vote by mail, everyone has an entire month
to vote, so there is no reason (other than bad candidates) for people
not to vote once each year. Don't cancel the 2023 election: vote NO
on Prop H.
No on I: Cars everywhere
During the COVID pandemic, a number of streets were closed to private
cars in order to provide space for people to exercise outdoors. These
streets included JFK Drive in Golden Gate Park, various Slow Streets
throughout the City, and the Great Highway. Since the pandemic has
waned, there have been political debates about which of these programs
to continue and which to end. Prop I would prevent the City from
restricting private cars from driving on any street in Golden Gate
Park (other than on some weekends and holidays), and also require that
a section of the Great Highway that is currently scheduled to be
closed due to coastal erosion be kept open. Greens urge a NO vote on
Prop I.
For more than 20 years, Greens have supported closing roads in Golden
Gate Park to cars. See our discussion of Yes on J for more of that
history. And although we think that the City has run its COVID-era
street closure programs more for the benefit of real estate developers
and lobbyists than for San Franciscans, the closure of JFK Drive has
been well executed.
We also recognize that coastal erosion (due in part to the climate
emergency and rising sea levels) requires a strategy of "managed
retreat" from parts of SF that are most vulnerable to flooding.
Therefore, we support the City's plan to close the Great Highway
Extension and re-route traffic to Sloat and Skyline Boulevards
instead.
Prop I is mainly funded by a wealthy socialite, Dede Wilsey, who
previously ran the de Young Museum. We should not let wealthy
individuals buy access to our public streets. Vote NO on Prop I.
Yes on J: Car-free JFK Drive in Golden Gate Park
Prop J would keep JFK Drive in Golden Gate Park open to pedestrians
and bike riders, and closed to private cars. Greens strongly support
this.
Since the SF Green Party was founded, our members have been active in
the fight to close roads in Golden Gate Park to cars. In 1998, we
fought against a ballot measure to build a garage under the park for
museum patrons. The ballot measure was sold to voters as creating a
"pedestrian oasis" in the Music Concourse, but this never happened.
Instead, the roads of the Music Concourse have been used as a bypass
for commuters crossing the park, and the surface roads in Golden Gate
Park have been used as a parking lot for commuters.
Car-free JFK has been very popular with San Franciscans, and is more
consistent with what we think parks should be used for: recreation and
nature, rather than driving. Although we think this program has been
used by the Municipal Transportation Agency (MTA) and Rec and Parks
Departments as a distraction from the MTA's failure to provide decent
public transit or bike infrastructure, Car-free JFK is still well
worth supporting on its own merits.
We strongly urge a YES vote on Prop J.
No on K: "Amazon Tax" that wouldn't apply to Amazon (removed from
ballot)
Prop K would have taxed e-commerce businesses and used the money to
pilot a Basic Income program for some San Franciscans, including
transgender people and pregnant Black women. Prop K was targeted at
taxing Amazon, which has used its monopoly status during the COVID
pandemic to exploit its workers and drive many local San Francisco
businesses into bankruptcy. However, when its backers found out that
Amazon is taxed as a computer services provider rather than as an
e-commerce company, they pulled the measure from the ballot.
Greens strongly support the concept of "basic income" - meaning a
basic level of government funding provided to all people in order to
prevent poverty. We believe the concept has been well studied already
and proven to be effective, so we don't support another limited pilot
program that is targeted only at a small number of San Franciscans.
Instead, we need a much larger transfer of money from corporations and
wealthy individuals, in order to provide this benefit to all San
Franciscans.
Prop K will no longer appear on the ballot, but had it been, the
failure to tax Amazon and provide benefits to more people would have
prevented us from supporting it.
Yes on L: Keep sales tax to fund transit
SF currently raises around $100 million per year for transit and
street improvements through a 0.5% sales tax. That sales tax is set
to expire in 2034, and Prop L would extend it through 2052. Failure
of Prop L would result in even more unreliable transit (including
paratransit) service, so Greens are endorsing a YES vote on Prop L.
Like Prop F, Prop L money will be spent by issuing revenue bonds
backed by this tax revenue stream. This is a loophole in the way
revenue bonds are supposed to work, and we have concerns about
borrowing money in advance via bonds rather than spending the sales
tax money directly on Muni.
Despite these accounting irregularities, the majority of the Prop L
money is expected to be spent on badly needed transit priorities, such
as bus maintenance and buying new buses and trains. About 20% of the
money will be spent on street repaving. Some of the money will be
used for federal matching grants, which is why the backers of Prop L
say it is so urgent to extend well before the 2034 deadline.
Greens believe that public transit needs to be much better funded than
it currently is, in order to be made more frequent, reliable, and free
to all riders. Funding should come from the federal and state
governments, but in their absence, we could raise a lot of money
locally through a progressive parcel tax (like Prop O) or other taxes
that are primarily paid by large corporations (like the one voters
recently passed to raise more money for homeless services).
The Democratic Party shows they are not taking the climate emergency
seriously when they keep proposing the same regressive and inadequate
funding sources for public transit that they always have.
Essentially, they're holding transit riders hostage to ensure that
voters pass legislation like Prop L. Because the consequences of
failure would be so harmful to transit riders, Greens are supporting a
YES vote.
Yes on M: Tax on keeping residential apartments vacant
Prop M is a tax on vacant apartment units. This tax would fall mainly
on real estate speculators who purchase property as an investment but
who don't want to deal with the hassle of renting it out. The tax
would also be paid by people who own "pied-a-terre" apartments in San
Francisco but who don't live in them (or rent them out) for more than
6 months out of each year.
In 2013, the Bay Guardian did a study that found SF had 31,000 vacant
apartment units (8% of the total number of units), up from just under
5% back in the year 2000. In 2022, a new City-funded study found the
number of vacant units had increased to over 40,500 (10% of all
units). These vacant units are mostly in large luxury condo
developments, purchased as investment properties.
Prop M would tax vacant apartments in buildings with 3 or more units,
if the unit is vacant for more than half the year. "Vacant" means the
unit is not being lived in by anybody - even short term vacation
renters count towards a unit being occupied. The owner of each
apartment would need to file a form, under penalty of perjury, stating
whether or not the unit is vacant for more than half the year. The
tax rate would increase with the size of the unit, and the longer the
unit is kept vacant.
Prop M is well written to be sure it does not affect ordinary San
Franciscans. It excludes properties that are under construction or
awaiting construction permits, or where the owner has suffered a
medical emergency or died. It excludes single family homes and
duplexes, which are not commonly used as investment properties, so as
not to burden the owners of such properties with additional paperwork.
If Prop M succeeds, it will not raise much tax money for the City, but
instead incentivize more investors to rent out their properties. This
would improve our housing shortage far more simply than building more
luxury condos for investors to purchase. The Green Party strongly
recommends a YES vote.
Yes on N: Take over Golden Gate Park garage
In 1998, voters authorized the construction of a garage under Golden
Gate Park, to benefit museum patrons. One of the provisions of that
ballot measure was that the garage would be "free" to SF taxpayers -
it wouldn't be publicly funded, but the garage would be run by the
museums through a shell entity called the "Concourse Authority." Prop
N would be a public takeover of the garage, eliminating the Concourse
Authority and having the City pay for the garage and control parking
policies and rates.
Greens fought hard against the garage, and lost. The promised
"pedestrian oasis" in the Music Concourse became a traffic circle. SF
taxpayers have heavily subsidized the garage over the years, without
having any say in how it is run. And the garage entrances that were
supposed to be located outside of the park are instead near the
museums, which makes more cars drive through the park in order to get
to the garage.
The current situation is the worst of both worlds: SF residents are on
the hook for paying for the garage, while having no say in how it is
run. It's time to bite the bullet and take it over. Having control
over the garage would allow SF to allow the garage to be open as
needed, and set parking rates at a level that would allow museum
visitors to park there instead of clogging up surface streets. SF
could also open JFK Drive to recreational uses without making
convenient parking for people with disabilities prohibitively
expensive.
Although Greens still support closing the garage altogether, taking it
over from the museums would be a step in the right direction. Vote
Yes on N.
Yes on O: Parcel tax to fund City College (restoring some of the
classes that were cut)
Prop O is a parcel tax to restore classes that were recently cut at
City College. See our College Board endorsement for more on that
decision. Unlike most "flat" parcel taxes, in which all property
owners pay the same amount, Prop O is progressive, with larger
buildings and commercial property owners paying more. It's therefore
both a good way to raise funds, and a worthy cause to spend money on.
Greens strongly endorse Prop O.
For the last 20 years, private interests have salivated at the thought
of driving City College into financial insolvency and then taking it
over. And although SF voters enthusiastically endorsed Prop W in
2016, most of the funds raised by the real estate transfer tax have
been captured by our corrupt City government, rather than being sent
along to the college as voters intended. This has resulted in another
accreditation crisis, and mass layoffs of teachers who taught classes
that are valuable to our community.
Greens value City College as a place where San Franciscans of all ages
can go to take classes, not just as vocational training or preparation
for a 4-year college, but also for personal enrichment. Language and
arts classes are particularly important. This year's mass layoffs
made such classes especially hard to get into; it seems the priority
of current City College leadership is to turn the institution into a
junior college that feeds students into 4-year universities, rather
than a public institution that improves the lives of all San
Franciscans.
Prop O funds are dedicated to "supporting student enrollment and basic
needs," "basic-skills needs of City residents," job training, and
equity and social justice programs. We expect that Prop O funding
will be used to re-hire teachers who were laid off, and restore more
language and arts classes, as these directly address the needs of City
residents.
Prop O is a good example of how to design a parcel tax that requires
wealthier people to pay more. The annual tax would be $150 for single
family homes and duplexes, or $75/unit for apartment buildings. Small
commercial properties (under 5,000 square feet) would also be taxed at
$150/year. However, larger commercial properties would be taxed at
higher rates, up to $4,000/year. Although this is not as progressive
as a tax that falls exclusively on wealthy people and corporations,
it's more progressive than most taxes in SF.
Please join us in voting YES on Prop O!
Yes on 1: Protect abortion rights
The right to an abortion is a fundamental civil right that is
threatened by reactionaries on the Supreme Court and in Congress.
Prop 1 would recognize this right by adding it to the California
constitution.
Enshrining the right to abortions in law, as opposed to relying on
court decisions, is something that pro-choice politicians should have
done long ago at both the state and national level. This demand has
been part of the Green Party platform from the time our party was
founded, and making it happen in California is better late than never.
Abortions, like all other medical care, should also be free to
patients, paid for through an expanded "Medicare for All" style
universal health care system.
Join us in supporting Yes on 1!
No on 26 and 27: Regressive tax on addicts, loss of tribal
sovereignty, supports animal cruelty.
Prop 26 would allow in-person sports betting at both Native American
Gaming locations and Horse Racing tracks, and dice games in Native
American casinos. Greens are opposed to subsidies for horse racing,
as the practice is cruel to animals.
Prop 27 would allow online sports betting, but only outside of Native
American lands. It would also require an "operating agreement" with a
gaming tribe.
Neither initiative takes into account the associated issues of
addiction and corruption that are tied in with gambling, and neither
reference the additional pressures on college athletes, outside of
California, when betting on college sports is allowed.
For Prop 26 our major specific concerns are the "nuisance lawsuits" it
promotes and the disproportionate distributions to specific larger
"gaming tribes." And although many tribes support Prop 26, we have
concerns about creating yet another precedent for requiring supposedly
sovereign tribes to obtain permission from the state for activities on
their lands.
For Prop 27, the far more pernicious of the two, the fee structure
will 'price out' potential California participants, while allowing
"key individuals" with out of state licenses cheap access to the
California 'online gaming' market. While they must have an "operating
agreement" with a gaming tribe it does not have to be a California
tribe. Finally, given the fact that it is online, unlike Prop 26,
there will be no way to check underage gambling.
Vote NO on both 26 and 27.
Yes on 28: Minor net increase in art and music funding for K-12
schools
Prop 28 would increase state spending on K-12 schools in CA by 1%, in
order to pay for arts and music. The Green Party supports it.
Greens think 1% is not enough funding, and we are also concerned that
some of the money will be spent on charter schools, which have low
standards for public accountability. However, Prop 28 is a step in
the right direction: increased spending on public schools, so we
encourage a YES vote.
Yes on 29: Another battle between SEIU-UHW and corporations that run
dialysis clinics
Prop 29 is another re-run of 2018's Prop 8 and 2020's Prop 23. Like
the previous propositions, Prop 29 would create new regulations around
staffing at dialysis clinics. Greens supported the previous two
propositions, and have also endorsed YES on Prop 29. In 2018, we
wrote:
(The prop) was put on the ballot by SEIU-UHW (Service Employees
International Union-United Healthcare Workers West), as part of a
campaign against several large, rabidly anti-union, medical
corporations. We'll continue to fight for universal health care for
all. In the meantime, we're happy to stand in solidarity with
SEIU-UHW in support.
Greens are once again standing with SEIU-UHW in support of Prop 29.
Although this is likely to fail as the previous attempts did, it may
help the union get a better deal at the bargaining table. Vote YES.
No on 30: Lyft-sponsored proposition to defund public transit,
subsidize electric cars and clear-cut forests
Proposition 30 is an environmentally destructive corporate giveaway,
enriching huge ride-hail corporations and logging companies,
undermining mass transit, and only pretending to protect forests and
the climate, while doing the opposite.
Undermining Mass Transit:
80% of Prop 30 taxes would be spent to heavily subsidize private
electric vehicles and charging stations while spending no funds at all
on environmentally superior mass transit. Ride-hail giants Uber and
Lyft (the latter of which has provided the vast majority of funds
spent in support of Prop 30) have openly stated their plan is to
peddle heavily subsidized, under-priced auto travel, so artificially
cheap it will torpedo the revenue of municipal buses and trains, and
put mass transit out of business.
The rise of Uber and Lyft has already dramatically reduced mass
transit ridership. Prop 30 would give these private corporations
massive state subsidies to create a fleet of cars and charging
stations for free, leaving electric buses and trains in the dust.
Greenhouse gases emitted to build electric cars and batteries are so
high that new EVs won't begin to reduce climate warming for a full
decade. Because building mass transit requires far less materials and
emissions per rider, it reduces greenhouse gases much more, much
faster.
The legislative analyst projects that Prop 30 would actually reduce
the amount of money CA spends on public transit, as it would "reduce
existing state revenues used to pay for activities not funded by
Proposition 30."
Logging Forests:
20% of Prop 30 taxes would be spent on "Wildfire Response and
Prevention." But a closer look shows that in California logging
companies have hijacked our fire prevention programs in order to get
paid to clear-cut California forests, claiming that they are
"thinning" to "reduce fire risk" when in fact such "thinning" actually
increases the intensity and danger of wildfires!
To save the planet we need to spend our government dollars on public
transit, not private cars, and on planting trees, not cutting them
down.
Vote NO on Prop 30!
Yes on 31: Uphold the ban on flavored tobacco products
Prop 31 is a referendum to uphold a law passed by the state
legislature to ban flavored tobacco products. A YES vote upholds the
ban, and a NO vote overturns the ban. Greens have endorsed a YES
vote.
Tobacco corporations add menthol and even candy flavors to tobacco
products in order to make them more attractive to young people.
Getting people started on tobacco at younger ages makes it more likely
they will develop lifelong, unhealthy, nicotine addiction.
Prop 31 is also another case of large corporations pouring millions of
dollars into ballot initiatives in order to buy laws that help them to
profit. This is especially easy in the case of referendums, which are
confusingly worded: many voters sign thinking they are supporting the
legislative action rather than overturning it. Tobacco companies have
tried several times to overturn similar regulations in SF (Prop E in
June 2018, and Prop C in 2019). Both times, they failed. However,
other large corporations such as Lyft and dialysis companies (see Prop
29) have been more successful. As we've written previously, it's past
time to prohibit corporations from spending money to put measures on
the ballot. Only humans, not corporations, should be allowed to spend
money and otherwise participate in democracy.
Vote YES on Prop 31 to uphold the legislative ban, and to send a
message to corporations that want to rewrite our regulations on
tobacco.
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