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News & Analysis
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Proposition J would create an oversight body to monitor city government spending on programs helping children and young people.
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Proposition I would improve retirement packages for 9-1-1 dispatchers, as well as nurses who transition from temporary to full-time roles.
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Proposition H would lower the retirement age for San Francisco firefighters from 58 to 55.
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Proposition G would reduce rent in hundreds of units serving extremely low-income seniors, families and people with disabilities.
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Proposition F allows retirement eligible police officers to stay on the job while receiving both their salary and pension for up to five years.
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Proposition E would create a five member task force to assess San Francisco’s many commissions and recommend whether any should be altered or eliminated to improve local governance.
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Proposition D would dramatically alter governance in San Francisco, slashing City Hall commissions from the current 130 to a maximum of 65, retaining 20 major commissions.
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Proposition C aims to fight corruption in the San Francisco government by creating an inspector general to investigate fraud, waste and abuse.
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Your Legal RightsWe are happy to bring you a landlord/tenant broadcast where, in addition to the usual array of landlord tenant issues, there is a controversial ballot measure with varying takes on just what the ballot measure would accomplish.YLR Host, Jeff Hayden, is joined by three of the best landlord tenant lawyers around: Jessica Chylik from San Francisco, Paul Lee from San Mateo, and Sal Timpano from San Francisco.Questions for Jeff and his guests? Please call, toll free, at (866) 798-8255.
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Your CallIdaho has one of the strictest abortion bans in the country. Project 2025 could make that ban a reality across the country, according to Guardian reporter Carmen Sherman.
Gimme My Props
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Proposition J would create an oversight body to monitor city government spending on programs helping children and young people.
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Proposition I would improve retirement packages for 9-1-1 dispatchers, as well as nurses who transition from temporary to full-time roles.
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Proposition H would lower the retirement age for San Francisco firefighters from 58 to 55.
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Proposition G would reduce rent in hundreds of units serving extremely low-income seniors, families and people with disabilities.
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Proposition F allows retirement eligible police officers to stay on the job while receiving both their salary and pension for up to five years.
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Proposition E would create a five member task force to assess San Francisco’s many commissions and recommend whether any should be altered or eliminated to improve local governance.
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Proposition D would dramatically alter governance in San Francisco, slashing City Hall commissions from the current 130 to a maximum of 65, retaining 20 major commissions.
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Proposition C aims to fight corruption in the San Francisco government by creating an inspector general to investigate fraud, waste and abuse.
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Proposition B would let San Francisco borrow up to $390 million to build new infrastructure and upgrade existing buildings, roads, and public spaces.
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Proposition A would let the San Francisco Unified School District borrow up to 790 million dollars to upgrade, repair and retrofit its properties.
Bay Area Headlines
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The results of the election have had a polarizing effect on communities across the country. KALW asked San Franciscans about how they were moving forward.
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Monday was the last day for California voters to register by mail or online for the November 5 election.
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Continued San Francisco Unified School District travails, an Oakland election explainer, Bay Area voter outreach to swing states.
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A group of business and community leaders held a press conference in Oakland’s Chinatown today to speak out against the campaign to recall Mayor Sheng Thao.
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San Francisco Mayor London Breed did not appear for a mayoral forum last night that was hosted by the San Francisco League of Women Voters.
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A Bay Area-based nonprofit polled 900 Latinos from across the state on their election concerns.
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The first week back for 50,000 students in San Francisco’s public schools was capped with an unexpected change of leadership on the school board last Friday.
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Amid campaigns to recall Oakland Mayor Sheng Thao and Alameda County District Attorney Pamela Price, a group of recall opponents gathered in East Oakland to push back.
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While a huge showing of California delegates are at the Democratic National Convention to support Kamala Harris, not all in attendance are there to root for her.
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The San Francisco Bay Area Planning and Urban Research Association — or SPUR — is a public policy think tank that aims to develop solutions to the problems facing Bay Area cities. The nonprofit released a 44-page report that details the inefficiencies it sees in San Francisco’s government.