| Send to Printer | << Back to Article |
| Letters |
|
Letters: May 11th, 2006
The park and public opinionThis was referring to the fact that the idea for closure has already been voted down not once, but twice. Mr. Rundin seems to be acknowledging that a majority of San Franciscans don’t want their park closed on Saturdays. I think his viewpoint would be much more appropriate for the Beijing authorities — they more closely share his view about the inconvenience of public sentiment that doesn’t mirror their own. I hate it when someone tries to tell me his opinion is more important than mine because he knows that the court of public opinion doesn’t support his specialness. Boosting city work forceUntil Mayor Newsom, DHR and the Civil Service Commission get serious about civil service reform, more employees simply add to the inefficiencies in most city departments. When San Francisco had nearly 30,000 employees before, many services were still poor, so it is unlikely that manpower alone will improve them. Mayor Newsom needs to do more than pay lip service to reform — he needs to understand how large and unwieldy the city bureaucracy has become. There is no good reason to hire for the sake of hiring until fundamental structural changes are made first. City debt policiesA good example is the San Francisco Public Utilities Commission. In 2002 they said they had a plan to fix Hetch Hetchy and that what was required was the right to issue revenue bond debt. Proposition A allowed the SFPUC to issue an initial $1.6 billion to begin the Hetch Hetchy fix-up. A group of wary suburban customers, the Bay Area Water Supply and Conservation Agency, pushed the state to pass AB1823, which set two completion milestones for finishing the fix-up program — 50 percent by 2010 and 100 percent by 2015. As of this writing, the SFPUC has spent approximately $134 million (3.1 percent of the now estimated total cost) while approximately 26 percent of the time allowed under AB 1823 has passed. Are we trying to give Hetch Hetchy away? Condo conversionWhat was surprising was the participation of Mayor Gavin Newsom and Supervisor Bevan Dufty in this attack on would-be homeowners. In a time when evictions are at historic lows, when there were fewer Ellis Act evictions this year than last, and when the middle class is being driven out of San Francisco by an affordable homeownership crisis, I never would have expected Mayor Newsom and Supervisor Dufty to turn their backs on middle-class renters and tenancy-in-common owners in this way. The most ironic aspect of this vote is that it will do nothing to stop evictions, as property owners will continue to want to go out of the rental business as long as The City continues to demonize them, and as long as the demand for homeownership in The City continues unaddressed. No impact on evictions, and a big burden on would-be first-time homkowners. That’s not something to be proud of. Plan C San Francisco |