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Article History
SAN FRANCISCO (Map, News) - After being sworn in for a second term, Mayor Gavin Newsom pledged to build on current city efforts in areas such as health care, the environment and education, but offered few landmark proposals during his inauguration speech Tuesday at City Hall.
The 40-year-old mayor did promise to set The City on a path toward a carbon-neutral footprint by 2020, create a $500 baby bond for every new resident born in The City, and give a tax break to companies employing military veterans.
While his fiancée Jennifer Siebel, his sister and his two nieces looked on, the newly elected Newsom was sworn in by his father, former appellate judge William Newsom, before a packed crowd that included such San Francisco dignitaries as former Mayor Willie Brown, U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein and former Secretary of State George Shultz.
The mayor — who made a notable political comeback after revelations in early 2007 that he had a drinking problem and slept with his secretary, the wife of his campaign manager — received numerous rounds of applause during the
45-minute speech, which mostly built upon several initiatives and ideas already announced in the run-up to the mayor’s second term.
Newsom highlighted initiatives such as a solar-energy incentive plan, an effort to have more private property owners install solar panels, and green building requirements for new development in The City. He also made a new pledge to make the entire city carbon neutral — when a balance is achieved between what polluting emissions are put into the air and what is taken out through environmental efforts — by 2020.
“I recognize that it’s a daring challenge,” Newsom said, “but we can make it a reality by doing things — by doing what we’ve been doing by pioneering initiatives like our carbon tax and our carbon offset plan, our 100 percent biodiesel fleet, our solar incentive plan, our green power tax credit, and our new green building requirements.”
The Civic Center would become The City’s first sustainable-resource district as part of a pledge to make all city buildings powered entirely by renewable energy, he added.
Additionally, Newsom said he would push for a community service requirement for all high school students in The City as well as a new $500 “Baby Savings Bond” invested for new residents born in The City. An individual could use the bond when they grew up, for college or a first home, but access to the fund would be contingent upon completing the mandatory community service.
After the speech, Supervisor Jake McGoldrick said Newsom laid out “some pretty lofty goals” but “the devil is always in the details.”
Newsom also pledged to add 40,000 more residents to his universal health care program, expand affordable housing, cut bureaucratic red tape in the planning process, reform The City’s retirement system, increase the payroll tax exemption, and create a “China desk” in his office to promote economic outreach to that nation.
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Comments from Examiner Readers
11:47 AM MST on Tue., Apr. 22, 2008 re: "Newsom uses radio gig to move beyond City Hall"
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2:29 PM MST on Thu., Apr. 3, 2008 re: "Vacant city positions given the ax"
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11:54 AM MST on Wed., Mar. 26, 2008 re: "Newsom mum about governor run"
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12:24 PM MST on Tue., Feb. 26, 2008 re: "Newsom�s car vandalized"
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12:19 PM MST on Tue., Feb. 26, 2008 re: "More than one-fourth of mayor�s payroll funded by other departments"
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10:34 AM MST on Tue., Feb. 26, 2008 re: "Newsom�s car vandalized"
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10:33 AM MST on Tue., Feb. 26, 2008 re: "More than one-fourth of mayor�s payroll funded by other departments"
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9:24 AM MST on Tue., Feb. 26, 2008 re: "More than one-fourth of mayor�s payroll funded by other departments"
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11:21 PM MST on Mon., Feb. 25, 2008 re: "More than one-fourth of mayor�s payroll funded by other departments"
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3:00 PM MST on Sun., Feb. 24, 2008 re: "More than one-fourth of mayor�s payroll funded by other departments"
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12:05 PM MST on Fri., Feb. 22, 2008 re: "More than one-fourth of mayor�s payroll funded by other departments"
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11:40 AM MST on Fri., Feb. 22, 2008 re: "More than one-fourth of mayor�s payroll funded by other departments"
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4:57 PM MST on Sat., Jan. 12, 2008 re: "Newsom�s car vandalized"
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2:06 AM MST on Sat., Jan. 12, 2008 re: "Newsom�s car vandalized"
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8:44 AM MST on Fri., Jan. 11, 2008 re: "Newsom�s car vandalized"
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11:53 PM MST on Thu., Jan. 10, 2008 re: "Newsom�s car vandalized"
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9:00 PM MST on Thu., Jan. 10, 2008 re: "Newsom�s car vandalized"
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6:18 PM MST on Thu., Jan. 10, 2008 re: "Newsom�s car vandalized"
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10:54 AM MST on Thu., Jan. 10, 2008 re: "Man vandalizes Newsom�s car near apartment"
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10:03 PM MST on Mon., Dec. 31, 2007 re: "Newsom gets engaged"
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2:58 AM MST on Sun., Dec. 30, 2007 re: "Newsom pitches idea of an open office"
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7:15 PM MST on Sat., Dec. 29, 2007 re: "Newsom pitches idea of an open office"
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10:21 AM MST on Sat., Dec. 29, 2007 re: "Newsom: Second term as daring as first"
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5:58 PM MST on Sun., Nov. 11, 2007 re: "Newsom: Second term as daring as first"
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10:59 PM MST on Thu., Nov. 8, 2007 re: "Newsom: Second term as daring as first"
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Examiner Reader said:
The jerk completely forget that he was elected to focus on SF not "something much bigger than who�s up and who�s down at City Hall" Resign and start running for governor now and let us have someone to run SF.
1 agree | 0 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
I had posted a comment regarding reducing the number of SF Board of Supervisors as a start. But somehow the post is no longer there. So here it is again. Eliminate some positions at the Board. there is no need for 11 Board members plus a mayor to run this City. And the excuse that SF is a "City/County" wont fly. We only need about 5 people to efectivly run this town.
5 agree | 2 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
Can one say Rebulicans? They will have a field day with this loser if he runs.
3 agree | 1 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
Why no photo of the ex-con MORON who was arrested? Laughable. Never, never trust an ex-con.
31 agree | 27 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
We, the voters, need to develop & place on the ballot via an initiative some sort of State Constitutional mandate that funds paid into any City, County, or the State Treasury be used for specific budgets. The State until recently, as we all recall, had been diverting "transportation funds from transportation taxes" to NONtransportation budget items. i.e. funds diverted to the pork projects of slick and manipulative politicians. If the Mayor cannot do his job on his own, he should resign. The so called public "services" have obviously been damaged by taking funds from the departments w/o alerting the public.
37 agree | 30 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
Well thanks to this article for telling everyone in the world where we can find Newsom's car at 9am. Let's hope there are more acts of vandalism.
20 agree | 17 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
When facing a 220 million dollar shortfall the mayor should be the first one to sacrifice and set a good example but obviously he just wants to put the blame some place else and call it politically motivated. Well gee, when the residents in your city are calling for you to set a good example and not hire your buddies to senior positions which pull money from already cash strapped programs I do not think that is politically motivated. Democrats are just as corrupt as Republicans.
24 agree | 28 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
So the price tag for a homeless czar is the same as paying 311 homeless CAAP recipients $59/mo for a year or 53 housed CAAP recipients $345/mo. Running guvmint like a bidness, huh?
37 agree | 30 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
Yep, I'm afraid we must live with the fact we put Mayor Newsom in office and must now endure this mayor for 4 more years.
33 agree | 26 disagree
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fred said:
who is stupider -him or us for electing him in the first place? How do we get this idiot out of office?
36 agree | 26 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
These salaries are outrageous for government service.
41 agree | 31 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
Can't that Mayor do ANYthing himself?
31 agree | 25 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
i saw the resulting arrest. There was some 'resistance' that's certain. And there were about ten cop cars and a couple unmarked ones all over the place. It was like they thought they'd caught a terrorist!!!! Go sfpd!!!
67 agree | 61 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
But if the cops actually saw the person doing it like they did in this story I'll bet they would respond exactly the same way -- even if it had been the vehicle or home of any "anonymous taxpayer."
63 agree | 50 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
The only reason the cops did anything is because this is Newsom's car. Had it been the vehicle or home of any anonymous taxpayer, the cops would have laughed at requests to investigate--do you think this is an episode of Dragnet or something?--and gone back to eating their donuts.
61 agree | 35 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
It�s amazing how a story about a parolee vandalizing Newsom's car and resisting arrest devolves into people berating him for things that have nothing to do with the story, and embellishing it with expressions of jealousy about SF cloaked in disparaging comments. Of course if this happened to any of you it would be a huge issue and you�d be happy to see the guy arrested and charged with a felony.
57 agree | 56 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
Mr. Burgos, who is probably a bi-polar street person needs an ACLU attorney who could plead the San Francisco twinkie defense previously used by Dan White. Frisco unfortunately has earned the reputation for being the weirdest city in America and not wholesome & family friendly. How sad.
67 agree | 53 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
If the damage is over $400, it is a felony. This amount is a drop in the bucket and anyone who's had so much as parking lot dings can tell you what a body shop charges for repairs.
64 agree | 40 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
A felony for vandalism? Is that because it was Newsom's car? Welcome to the city.
58 agree | 62 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
After Gavin spent all this time campaigning for same-sex marriage, why is he marrying a woman? If he thinks marrying another man is the same as marrying a woman, he should practice what he preaches...
60 agree | 73 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
Settling "homeless" people in full-service centers is arguably a "different" approach to this on-going problem. I'm not sure how that necessarily equates to "courageous." Other cities/states were already in the forefront when it came to same-sex marriage before our mayor endorsed it. Our State Supreme Court invalidated the mayor's decision and will, if history proves true, line up against same-sex marriage, too. So it would seem while the mayor's decision might leave him with a black eye for not correctly reading the political winds in California, it likely ingratiated him to a considerable portion of the gay community, which is a major voting block in San Francisco. "courageous?" maybe, politicaly smart, absolutely.
68 agree | 81 disagree
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sickofrisco said:
I will give Newsom grudging respect for attempting to do take on the entrenched homeless advocacy establishment when he showed up. As far as pushing for same-sex marriage, that doesn't strike me as being especially "courageous" in a city where people think that being sexually confused elevates you to the status of "protected species"...
75 agree | 83 disagree
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James, San Francisco said:
Mayor Newsom's first term implemented the project for homeless that placed many of them in full-service residential centers. His first term was also marked by his courageous stand for same-sex marriage. Granted, both of these initiatives require a commitment for the long-term, which he has demonstrated. These were both daring moves and his first term can be therefore described as such.
62 agree | 64 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
Mayor Newsom's first term was daring? How so?
95 agree | 87 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
Who would want to be Mayor of Sin Fransico ,still a beautiful city run by no brainers. Newsence can keep it.
84 agree | 89 disagree
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