A new citywide zoning vote on next month's ballot would require 25% affordable units in new developments, directly affecting housing costs and community stability across the Mission, SOMA, and beyond.
As the district faces a $92 million budget shortfall, educators across the Mission, Sunset, and Bayview neighborhoods warn that layoffs and resource reductions threaten the city's most vulnerable students.
As the Planning Department moves forward with upzoning initiatives across the Mission and outer neighborhoods, longtime residents fear the cure for the housing crisis may be worse than the disease.
Years of competing ideologies, failed ballot measures, and neighborhood opposition have shaped today's contentious debate over development, affordability, and who gets to live in the city.
As humanitarian crisis deepens abroad, local organizations launch rapid-response initiative to help newly arrived families navigate housing and employment.
Years of tech boom displacement have fundamentally reshaped San Francisco's most vibrant Latino enclave, forcing longtime residents and community leaders to reckon with what comes next.
New SFPD data shows violent crime surged 18% year-over-year in neighborhoods from the Mission to the Tenderloin, raising fresh questions about emergency response times and resource allocation.
From Mission District rooftop gardens to new waterfront restoration projects, the city doubles down on environmental commitments as climate targets loom.
Decades of environmental setbacks forced the city to reimagine its relationship with waste, energy, and urban planning—transforming necessity into innovation.
From the tech boom to present day, a cascade of zoning restrictions, NIMBYism, and political gridlock transformed the city's most pressing challenge into an intractable problem.
While international counterparts grapple with resource constraints, the Bay Area deploys technology and coordination strategies that offer a roadmap for urban safety.
As the school year winds down, San Francisco's education sector faces layoffs, record university applications, and fresh pushback on classroom security.
As major infrastructure projects face delays and cost overruns, the metrics tell an increasingly troubling story about the city's aging transport network.
District leaders must navigate declining student numbers, aging infrastructure, and dwindling reserves as they plot the next chapter for Bay Area education.