San Francisco, CA
San Francisco holds 'sister demonstration' for Gaza
This demonstration comes days after the San Francisco Board of Supervisors passed a resolution calling for a ceasefire.
San Francisco holds a “sister demonstration” after Washington’s March for Gaza the previous day. [Brooke Anderson/TNA]
Following the massive March on Washington for Gaza on Saturday, San Francisco held a “sister demonstration” on the west coast on Sunday to call for a ceasefire in Israel’s war on Gaza.
With this weekend marking the hundred-day milestone of the war, demonstrations around the world were held as Gaza’s death toll approaches 24,000.
The crowd, which the Palestinian Youth Movement estimated at around 25,000, gathered in front of City Hall and then headed downtown, blocking afternoon traffic as they marched down the city’s main thoroughfare of Market Street.
As the march began, a truck parked nearby with Palestinian flags played music while another truck carrying demonstrators with megaphones led the march.
The crowd was diverse, with a strong showing of Arabs from different parts of the San Francisco Bay Area and allies from different backgrounds.
In addition to the frequently-seen signs reading “Ceasefire Now”, “Let Gaza Live”, and “Free Gaza”, many held signs (sometimes in different languages) to show their own community’s support, such as Latinos for the Liberation of Palestine or the Black Community Stands with Palestine. Healthcare workers and journalists also noted their affiliations, holding signs reading: Stop killing our colleagues.
Elliot Morado, a resident of the East Bay, told The New Arab that he was moved to attend the march after following months of news reports on Israel’s bombing of Gaza. He said he came out “to stand on the side of what’s right.”
As the march passed downtown, a group of street musicians gave a rap performance with the repeated line, “Free Palestine”.
This demonstration comes days after the San Francisco Board of Supervisors passed a resolution calling for a ceasefire, making it the largest US city to make such a move.
San Francisco, CA
San Francisco tops US housing market as homes sell far over asking, report says
The average San Francisco home sold for nearly 90% over the asking price in March, according to Redfin.
The city is now the most expensive metro area in the country.
Artificial intelligence is driving much of those costs, as companies grow and hire, with many requiring staff to work in person.
Housing inventory, on the other hand, isn’t keeping up.
NBC Bay Area spoke with Arrian Binning, an agent with the Binnings Team at Christie’s San Francisco, who said the city is expensive but worth the investment.
“San Francisco is one of the best markets in the world,” Binning said. “I’ve seen supply constriction benefit property owners, so when you’re a property owner in a market that has scarce inventory but also is an engine of growth, that’s kind of the trifecta in terms of investing your hard-earned dollars into a new home.”
San Francisco bumped San Jose out of the top spot.
In San Jose, the median home price in March was more than $1.46 million, about what it was a year ago.
NBC Bay Area’s Kris Sanchez has the full report in the video above.
San Francisco, CA
Thousands head to San Francisco’s East Cut for 415 Day Market & Party
On April 15, back in the year 1850, San Francisco was first incorporated as a city. Each year on April 15, many in San Francisco celebrate 415 day, honoring that anniversary and the date that aligns with the city’s area code. Wednesday, thousands of people headed to The Crossing at East Cut for a night market to ring in the occasion.
This night market was hosted by San Francisco-based record label EMPIRE along with the East Cut Community Benefit District. The event brought a fleet of food trucks and local vendors to the plaza at The Crossing at East Cut, as well as musical talent performing throughout the evening. This night market was free for attendees and drew in people of all ages, many of whom were decked out in their most San Francisco-inspired outfits.
“We are so honored to have this happening here at The Crossing at East Cut, to be welcoming people from across the city, from across the Bay Area, to come see what downtown can be, and to celebrate the beauty of San Francisco,” said Andrew Robinson, the executive director of the East Cut Community Benefit District. Robinson explained that this was the Benefit District’s first time helping to put on the 415 Day celebration. He noted that the event brought in welcome business and foot traffic to the neighborhood.
EMPIRE CEO Ghazi Shami, who is a San Francisco native, was at the event too. Shami explained to NBC Bay Area that the event is a chance to put a spotlight on the creative community in San Francisco.
“I’m a product of my environment, I love San Francisco,” Shami said.
“It’s perfect time to celebrate, like our cultural diversity, music, food, street fashion, all the things that make San Francisco unique,” he said.
Shami added that he hopes next year to see even more 415 Day celebrations across San Francisco.
“I hope this becomes something that everybody adopts and celebrates no matter where you’re from,” he said.
The crowds at the event continued to grow throughout the night. People stopped to take photos with a giant, illuminated “415 Day” sign at the plaza.
“Just seeing this community come together, the diversity, the music, the food, we got it all in San Francisco,” said San Francisco Mayor Daniel Lurie, addressing the crowd at the start of the event.
An artist who goes by the name Mando told NBC Bay Area he though the event was “well orchestrated,” he enjoyed the food, drinks, and entertainment.
Mando, who lives in San Francisco, said he thinks 415 Day is an important holiday for the city.
“I think celebrating 415 Day is like a religion, if you’re from the city you basically gotta live it up today, today is the day,” he said.
“The bridge, the city, the everything, the music, the culture, it’s a beautiful thing, today’s the day to just let it all out and not care about nothing,” he continued.
San Francisco, CA
San Francisco pedestrian’s hit-and-run death investigated as a homicide
A collision that killed a pedestrian in San Francisco’s South of Market neighborhood is being investigated as a homicide, police said.
The crash was reported around 3:23 p.m. Monday, April 13, in front of a gas station at Mission Street and Van Ness Avenue. A person described as elderly was dead; the car had left the scene, the police said.
The suspect vehicle was stopped by San Francisco sheriff’s deputies near Potrero Avenue and 18th Street, about a mile from the crash site, the police said. The driver, a 30-year-old San Francisco man, was arrested on suspicion of homicide and felony hit-and-run with injury.
The San Francisco Standard obtained video that shows the pedestrian stepping into the street to go around a Mercedes-Benz sedan that is blocking the sidewalk at the gas station’s driveway. As the pedestrian passes in front of the car, the driver accelerates. The pedestrian is thrown onto the hood, then falls under the wheels and is dragged for several feet.
The suspect’s attorney told the Standard that his client, whose wife and two children were in the car, “believed his family was about to be violently attacked” and said that witness accounts corroborated the driver’s claim that someone had “aggressively” approached the car.
The pedestrian was identified by the medical examiner as Dannielle Spillman, 74.
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