Intern Voice features student interns in Supervisor Joel Engardio’s office who researched issues and wrote OpEds for their final project.
Read MoreIntern Voice features student interns in Supervisor Joel Engardio’s office who researched issues and wrote OpEds for their final project.
Read MoreSan Francisco spends $646 million a year trying to address homelessness with less than desirable results. Yet a small nonprofit that gives free legal services to poor people claims it can reduce homelessness by 40 percent in four years — for only $4 million. Sound too good to be true?
Read MoreStruggling with debt? Trying to save to buy a home? Worried about paying off student loans? City Hall offers a program called “Smart Money Coaching” for anyone who lives, works, or receives services in San Francisco.
Read MoreIt’s an honor to be given the opportunity to lead the next steps as a newly elected city supervisor. How we won.
Read MoreI believe San Francisco’s best days are ahead. We deserve to live in a city that works. Here’s how.
Read MoreDo you still believe in San Francisco? I do. I’m running for supervisor to create our best San Francisco.
Read MoreA federal investigation has targeted multiple city departments with arrests and subpoenas. Residents are fed up with how our city is run. If City Hall is ever going to get the basics right — clean streets, less crime and better services — we need independent leadership that will end the corruption.
Read MoreThe Neighborhood News Network interviews Joel Engardio about what City Hall must do to maintain open space in San Francisco
Read MoreThe Neighborhood News Network interviews Joel Engardio about what City Hall must do to save small businesses in San Francisco.
Read MoreSan Francisco has been good at flattening the coronavirus curve. But will City Hall make the tough decisions to flatten a devastating economic curve? Our $13 billion budget was racking up debt in boom times. Now, the projected deficits are staggering. There are no shortcuts to survive the coming recession. We must enact a "pandemic-era" budget of shared sacrifice.
Read MoreA radical change in our attitude toward business is needed if we want local merchants to survive beyond coronavirus — and keep our city from spiraling into irrelevance. Small businesses were going extinct in San Francisco long before the pandemic turned everything upside down. City Hall’s excessive fees, regulations and bureaucracy are to blame.
Read MoreMany middle-income homeowners who lost their jobs during the coronavirus shutdown faced a giant tax bill on April 10 they couldn’t pay. They begged for relief and the deadline was eventually extended to May 4. But it wasn’t easy getting politicians to take up the cause of struggling homeowners.
Read MoreA letter and petition to California Governor Gavin Newsom from more than 400 homeowners experiencing hardship from the coronavirus pandemic shutdown. They are asking for the property tax payment to be moved from April to July, when state income taxes are now due.
Read MoreA looming San Francisco property tax bill will be hard to pay for homeowners during the coronavirus pandemic shut down. City Hall should tell the state to postpone the property tax due date from April until July, just like the federal government already has for individual taxes.
Read MoreHere are a few things San Francisco politicians don’t like to talk about: Billions in unfunded pension liabilities, police no longer part of the FBI’s terrorism task force, and not enough water to fight fires after an earthquake (the Westside could be left to burn). The civil grand jury is speaking out — but will anyone listen?
Read MoreIf a defendant is re-arrested awaiting a court appearance, the sheriff needs to know. Yet she often doesn’t because San Francisco lacks a fully interconnected criminal justice database that shares information in real time. After 20 years and tens of millions spent, will City Hall ever get it to work?
Read MoreHeroin needles and broken glass from car break-ins litter San Francisco streets. Property crimes and housing prices continue to soar. Perhaps our city should turn its lonely eyes to Assessor Carmen Chu: "Think of me as your neighborhood assessor."
Read MoreShrugs abound when asking people on the street what they know about the Office of Assessor-Recorder at City Hall. Yet Carmen Chu is poised to become the most famous and celebrated assessor-recorder in San Francisco history — by helping us survive the financial retribution of President Trump.
Read MoreMy second-place showing against incumbent Norman Yee and three other challengers for District 7 supervisor feels like a success. Thousands of voters embraced my campaign’s forward-looking message, which will ultimately influence the direction of our city.
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