The Board of Supervisors faces decisive moments on affordable housing mandates, Mission District zoning, and the Downtown Office-to-Housing Conversion initiative that will shape the city's next decade.
With enrollment declining and budget pressures mounting, San Francisco's education leaders must navigate staffing cuts, facility consolidation, and a controversial proposal to reshape the district's footprint.
As violent crime surges across neighborhoods from the Tenderloin to the Mission District, a Daily SF investigation reveals how systemic underfunding and competing departmental priorities created the public safety crisis residents face today.
As Bay Area Rapid Transit eyes a controversial extension through the Mission, community groups say local voices have been drowned out by corporate interests.
As rents in San Francisco's Mission District surge past $3,500 for a one-bedroom, long-time residents and business owners are sharing their struggles with displacement.
City leaders and immigration advocates say rapid displacement is reshaping the demographic fabric of historic neighborhoods like the Mission District and SoMa.
From the Transbay Transit Center's troubled opening to BART's aging infrastructure, the Bay Area's transport gridlock didn't happen overnight—it's the result of bureaucratic delays, funding shortfalls, and competing regional interests.
As the neighborhood grapples with rising rents and changing demographics, residents and business owners face critical decisions about preserving community character.
As the city doubles down on climate initiatives, residents in Mission District and beyond are seeing tangible benefits—from energy savings to cleaner air.
As the university faces unprecedented funding pressures, local students, hospitals, and neighborhoods brace for cuts that could ripple across the region's economy.
As national immigration debates intensify, local organizations on Mission Street and beyond report surging demand for legal services and community support.
As the city grapples with another round of zoning reforms, longtime residents and renters say they're still being shut out of the decisions that will determine their neighborhoods.
As the city pushes forward with Central Subway completion and regional rail expansion, infrastructure experts say Bay Area projects move slower and cost more than comparable upgrades in global peer cities.
With construction stalled and homelessness surging, the city faces make-or-break votes on zoning reform and affordable housing mandates that will shape the next decade.
As the city grapples with ambitious climate goals, leaders face pivotal choices on transit funding, waterfront development, and building retrofits that could reshape Bay Area environmental policy.
Police leaders, district attorneys, and community safety advocates warn that without immediate investment in staffing and prevention programs, the city faces a dangerous spike in violent crime during the warmer months.