Connect with us

San Francisco, CA

San Franciscans sound off on study labeling city 'worst-run' in the US for second consecutive year

Published

on

San Franciscans sound off on study labeling city 'worst-run' in the US for second consecutive year


Join Fox News for access to this content

Plus special access to select articles and other premium content with your account – free of charge.

By entering your email and pushing continue, you are agreeing to Fox News’ Terms of Use and Privacy Policy, which includes our Notice of Financial Incentive.

Please enter a valid email address.

Having trouble? Click here.

San Franciscans had mixed reactions while sounding off on a recent study that dubbed their city the “worst run” in the United States for the second year in a row.

Advertisement

The ranking comes courtesy of WalletHub, a personal finance company that measured the “effectiveness of local leadership” by comparing the quality of city services matched against the city’s total budget to determine its operating efficiency. Their “Best & Worst-Run Cities in America” report casts an analytical eye on 148 sizeable U.S. cities, scrutinizing their performance across several critical service categories and 36 key metrics, while also considering their per-capita spending.

“The best-run cities in America use their budgets most effectively to provide high-quality financial security, education, health, safety and transportation to their residents. Many of the top cities also have a very low amount of outstanding government debt per capita, which can prevent financial troubles in the future,” WalletHub analyst Cassandra Happe explained in a report detailing the study earlier this month.

Despite coming in at 24 in quality of services, analysts placed San Francisco last in its total budget per-capita rank, along with having the highest amount of long-term debt outstanding. The city ranked 148th overall.

SAN FRANCISCO DUBBED WORST CITY IN THE UNITED STATES, ACCORDING TO NEW REPORT

San Francisco, California’s Golden Gate Bridge. (iStock)

Advertisement

“I’m not surprised at all,” Tom Wong, a lifelong San Francisco resident who owns a private security firm in the area, told Fox News Digital of the ranking last Monday. “What we have in San Francisco is not a problem of governance. We have a problem with criminals in governance.”

Wong, a Republican, has voiced his dissent with local officials multiple times, including on the Fox News Channel and the FOX Business Network. When asked what he believes caused many of the city’s issues he identified, he restated that dissent.

“The progressive movement is not about making things better. It’s about how much they could grift before it bellies up,” he said. “They’re pushing the limits of how much people will tolerate beforehand so, in order to fix what we have in the city, we need to change just about everything… The city’s broken. That’s because every level of governance is corrupt.”

A second respondent, who asked to remain anonymous, also agreed with WalletHub’s findings.

“As a New Yorker that has been here in San Francisco for well over a decade, I would say, yeah, it’s pretty poorly run. I wouldn’t argue with the findings,” she told Fox News Digital during an interview last Wednesday.

Advertisement

“The budget is $49 billion, and so I think a lot of people and the residents of the city wonder where that money’s going. We know that it’s going to inflated salaries or whatever, but why aren’t they paying teachers and cops? Teachers sometimes have to pay out of their own pocket for supplies for their classrooms, and we’re understaffed with cops. We can’t attract talent because cops aren’t respected here.”

The respondent identified herself as a “left-leaning progressive” who has become more moderate over time. When asked for her thoughts on city leadership, she pointed out a great divide between progressive Democrats and moderates.

“The city supervisors are split. They prevent Mayor Breed from doing her job. We have a lot of city supervisors that are just really toxic, and they are just bottlenecks for Breed,” she said, particularly naming Supervisors Connie Chan, Hillary Ronen, Dean Preston and Shamann Walton.

“They literally oppose law and order,” she added.

SAN FRANCISCO BECOMES ONE OF THE FIRST MAJOR US CITIES TO DELCARE ‘SANCTUARY’ STATUS FOR TRANSGENDER PEOPLE

Advertisement

San Francisco Mayor London Breed listens at a press conference at City Hall on Feb. 16, 2022, in San Francisco, California. Breed criticized WalletHub’s report, calling it “misleading and inaccurate.” (Gabrielle Lurie/The San Francisco Chronicle via Getty Images)

Ben Wang, owner of San Francisco clothing store Dare Fashion, offered a different take on the study. While speaking to Fox News Digital last Thursday, he emphasized San Francisco’s unbreakable spirit and its longstanding reputation as a progressive haven, where people could go if they felt they didn’t belong anywhere else.

“I totally disagree that San Francisco is the ‘worst-run’ city,” he said.

“I mean, I don’t know because I don’t live in another city,” he continued. “But it might be a little bit unfair because most of the bigger cities on there [the study] have lower ratings… and that makes a lot of sense because problems get more complicated when you have a bigger city and more diverse neighborhoods, and it doesn’t work all over the city. Whereas smaller cities tend to be a bit more homogenous.” 

Wang additionally disagreed with the study’s general premise and methodology. 

Advertisement

“Philosophically, I don’t agree with these types of rating systems because you’re trying to take something that’s very complicated and put it into a numbered list,” he said.

“As a former scientist, I can understand doing some sort of what’s called a multivariate analysis. You’re putting a lot of variables into something, and you’re trying to get it into one metric, but I didn’t see anything that took into account the size of the city, the population of the city or the population density, as a factor in their multivariate analysis. Without those factors, New York City is really low on their list. So is Los Angeles, so is San Francisco, because I feel like maybe a factor was being left out, which is actually very important.” 

Wang feels that pinning the blame on city officials is largely unfair, given the complex nature of commonly-cited problems like drug use and homelessness. He emphasized the need to “dig around for the roots of the problem” instead of blaming those problems on the people who are trying to fix them, even if their efforts sometimes might not yield positive results.

“Where did this problem start? A lot of the homelessness comes from habitual heroin users, and where did they start? I think Big Pharma started that problem with the opioid crisis, pumping out cheap pills, and telling people they weren’t going to get addicted, and they did.”

SAN FRANCISCO OFFICIALS PUSH FOR DRUG-FREE HOUSING IN REVERSAL OF ‘DRUG PERMISSIVE’ POLICIES: REPORT

Advertisement

Ina Coolbrith Park, San Francisco, California, USA. (iStock)

Despite the respondents each having their own take on the study, they shared a few common themes. For one, they had all witnessed crime to some extent.  

Tom Wong, for instance, told FOX Business’ Ashley Webster last year that his private security firm had been rattled by thieves – both the physical business location and vehicle break-ins as well.

“Safety-wise, it’s not good,” he said of the crime conditions in San Francisco last week. “The reason being is that a lot of the crime is being underreported because there are not enough detectives, so the police are not responding to a lot of calls. The business owners, the homeowners are so fed up that they don’t even report the crime.”

Law enforcement, he elaborated, tends to go after more violent crimes under the assumption that insurance will help cover expenses incurred from burglaries.

Advertisement

“After dark, it’s a Third World country,” he added.

Despite his fashion shop being robbed twice in the last three years – with the most recent incident costing the business a whopping $300K that forced him to set up a GoFundMe page to help alleviate the cost – Ben Wang remains determined not to give up on San Francisco.

“I think it’s a big problem,” he said when asked about crime. Linking back to his cause-and-effect example of Big Pharma instigating drug usage and homelessness, he added that income inequality exacerbated by the COVID pandemic made poorer residents more desperate and therefore more likely to commit crimes.

“I love that San Francisco is a very progressive place, and that the whole idea of this place is that we’re going to try new things. The environmental movement started here, all these cool things, Dotcom and the Silicon Valley… it encourages people to try new things, which is fantastic. One of the things that we tried was not prosecuting, shoplifting and small crimes and also going easier on drug crimes and users and all that stuff, and it didn’t work out well,” he added.

The anonymous respondent shared an experience from her own neighborhood, when a nearby abandoned home was burglarized earlier this year.

Advertisement

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

“The cops are called at 2:30 in the morning on a Monday morning, and you have a bunch of SFPD respond to this call. You could see that the gate was broken. You could see that there was a light on. You could see that there were burglars in the house. The cops even had nest cam footage showing the casing and them coming back with crowbars and flashlights. You had all the evidence,” she said. 

“My husband dealt with the cops and the neighbors. I went back to bed. When I woke up at 8:30 in the morning, their getaway car was still parked outside. The cops left the burglars inside the house because they stated that there wasn’t a homeowner to give them permission to enter the house.”

Meanwhile, Mayor London Breed called WalletHub’s ranking “misleading and inaccurate” because she said the study compared San Francisco’s city and county budget with other cities, which only have city budgets, according to FOX 2, an affiliate based in San Francisco,

The report highlighted her previous remarks from her State of the City Address, where she said, “I’m tired of the people who talk about San Francisco as if our troubles are inevitable and our successes a fluke. Our successes are not a fluke, and they’re not fleeting,” adding, “They’re the product of years of hard work, collaboration, investment, creativity, and perseverance. They’re the output of thousands of people, in government and out, who believe in service not cynicism.” 

Advertisement

All three respondents have their own unique bond with the city – and each raved about it in their own way.

“It is the most beautiful place,” Wong said, adding later, “There’s plenty of good food here.”

The second respondent had some similar opinions to share. “There’s a lot of creative, smart people that live here. We have excellent culture and food. The weather is amazing. We’re close in proximity to Big Sur and Napa. And, if you feel like you need services – not that I do – but it’s nice to know that those services are available to people.”

“You just can’t kill the spirit [of the city],” Wang said.  “That’s what San Francisco has been from the times of the Gold Rush. Chinese people came here early… this was always a place that there was opportunity… Even if it’s taking us a little longer, and we should be backpedaling from some misguided policy or things that we tried that didn’t work, I just I find it difficult to believe that you’re going to really kill the spirit of the city.”

Fox News’ Lindsay Kornick contributed to this report.

Advertisement



Source link

San Francisco, CA

Bogen Untouchable at T100 San Francisco as Wilde Takes Third – Slowtwitch News

Published

on

Bogen Untouchable at T100 San Francisco as Wilde Takes Third – Slowtwitch News


Photo: Wouter Roosenboom

Well, it turns out that the answer to the question we posed in Thursday’s preview – “Can anyone beat Hayden Wilde at T100 San Francisco?” – is a resounding “yes.” After having to pull out of the World Triathlon Championship Series (WTCS) Alghero event last weekend when he spent five days in bed fighting a vicious bug, it’s reported that Wilde was a questionable start for today’s race in San Francisco even after he arrived in California a few days ago. So, it shouldn’t have been much of a surprise that the Kiwi wasn’t ever really in the mix for the win.

Wilde being sick doesn’t take anything away from the performance of the man who did take the win – Rico Bogen. The German successfully defended his T100 San Francisco title using the same tactics he did a year ago – blasting clear on the bike and then putting together a solid run for a comfortable win.

The German was so dominant that Wilde was quick to point out that he would have been hard to beat – regardless of everyone else’s fitness.

“It was a tough day out there,” Wilde said after the race. “(I was) just battling all day, but honestly, to be fair, full respect to Rico — I think even on a good day it would have been damn hard to beat him today. He was pushing it up there on the front and there was not much I could do out there. The only thing I could really do is just be smart and get as super aero as possible, because I just wasn’t pushing the power I wanted to. I actually turned around and had a good run, but the whole day was … a little bit rough.”

Advertisement

It was anything but rough for Bogen, who came out of the frigid water just a couple of seconds behind swim leader Morgan Pearson. The down-current swim from just off of Alcatraz island to the swim finish was as quick as ever and, as usual, didn’t provide a lot of separation between the athletes. Jason West was ninth out of the water, just 16 seconds down, and there were only two minutes separating Pearson from the last man out of the water, Marcel Bolbat.

It was apparent that Wilde wasn’t on his game from the start – he would begin the long run to T1 44 seconds down.

Once on the bike it quickly became the Rico Bogen show. After finishing third here at the inaugural race, then winning last year, the 25-year-old considers this “his” course, and wasted no time to let the rest of the field know he wasn’t playing around.

“I had to push really deep on the bike,” Bogen said after the race. “I thought, maybe I’m destroying myself — I pushed even harder than last year.”

It might have been a risky move, but the dominant bike leg put Bogen in a seemingly unsurmountable position for the win. Fellow German Lasse Nygaard Priester, making his T100 debut, was the only athlete even close coming in to T2, and that gap was still 2:24. (And, in reality, the gap was closer to three minutes as Priester would be given a 30-second equipment penalty – reportedly for leaving his socks in transition when he decided not to pull them on.) Wilde was next in to T2, sitting 5:35 down and just ahead of France’s Leo Bergere, who had also had to serve a one-minute penalty, but still managed to ride himself back up to the chase group. A few more seconds back came a group that included Estonian Henry Räppo, Aussies Kurt McDonald and Jake Birtwhistle, followed by Brit Will Draper another minute behind.

Advertisement

Out on the run course there really was no touching Bogen, who, as he put it, “had good run legs.” The German felt good through the first two of the four laps of the 18 km run course, and admitted after the race that the last lap “was quite tough – my legs were completely destroyed, but I could hold it.”

While Nygaard Priester was putting together an impressive run, Bogen took solace in the news that his countryman had a penalty.

“I heard on the third lap that he had a penalty, and I thought — I have a one minute thirty gap and he has a thirty second penalty, so I think the gap is big enough,” Bogen said.

Bogen would cross the line in 3:17:25 after posting the day’s fastest bike split (1:55:34). Nygaard Priester was thrilled to finish in second.

Photo: Wouter Roosenboom

“I had the penalty in T2 for not putting my socks back in the box — I realized it about 200 meters later,” Nygaard Priester said. “But, in general, I’m very happy with the race, especially the bike. I did everything I wanted. I really tried not to hide and just go for it. It’s almost a little unreal — two Olympic medalists (Wilde and Bergere were silver and bronze medalist at the Paris Games) behind me. At one point I was looking back and realising the gap was getting bigger, so starting the run I felt quite in control of second place … I’ve never biked that hard — it was a new experience. I felt like my run isn’t where it’s been this year, but the whole race from start to finish was quite on.”

Photo: Wouter Roosenboom

Wilde would hold things together enough to take a solid third-place finish, while Pearson would take the top US spot in fourth, with West just 20 seconds back in fifth.

Here are a few more notes from the day’s racing:

Advertisement
  • Sam Appleton also had an equipment penalty which he served on the run.
  • As mentioned, Bogen had the days fastest bike split, Pearson would have the day’s fastest run (58:15), which was a couple of seconds ahead of West.
  • West gained nine places on the run on his way to fifth.
  • Leo Bergere struggled on the run, losing six places. The Frenchman appears to still be dealing with the injury issues that plagued him through much of 2025 – a benign tumour on his sciatic nerve and Achilles tendon problems.
  • As if his bike dominance wasn’t enough, Bogen also had the day’s fastest T2 time of just 30 seconds.
  • Pearson led the swim and also had the day’s fastest T1 time – 2:48. (There’s a long run from the swim exit to the bikes.)
POS ATHLETE COUNTRY SWIM BIKE RUN OVERALL
1 Rico Bogen Germany 17:54 1:55:34 1:00:35 3:17:25
2 Lasse Nygaard Priester Germany 17:53 1:57:58 0:59:09 3:18:30
3 Hayden Wilde New Zealand 18:27 2:00:25 0:58:44 3:21:13
4 Morgan Pearson USA 17:42 2:03:22 0:58:15 3:22:42
5 Jason West USA 17:59 2:03:13 0:58:17 3:23:02
6 Jake Birtwhistle Australia 17:57 2:01:30 1:00:13 3:23:23
7 Kurt McDonald Australia 18:32 2:00:46 1:00:48 3:23:44
8 Henry Räppo Estonia 17:50 2:01:30 1:01:17 3:24:16
9 Gregor Payet Luxembourg 19:35 2:01:08 1:00:39 3:25:06
10 Léo Bergère France 17:43 2:01:01 1:03:13 3:25:47
11 Will Draper Isle of Man 19:41 2:00:53 1:02:30 3:26:41
12 Jannik Schaufler Germany 17:47 2:03:21 1:02:10 3:26:50
13 Blake Harris Canada 19:42 2:05:31 0:58:24 3:27:28
14 Sam Appleton  Australia 18:31 2:02:29 1:03:58 3:28:39
15 Marcel Bolbat Germany 19:42 2:04:39 1:02:31 3:30:31
16 Justin Riele USA 18:32 2:02:03 1:06:17 3:30:47
17 Thomas Davis Great Britain 18:31 2:06:18 1:03:10 3:31:49
18 Benjamin Zorgnotti French Polynesia 19:41 2:05:40 1:05:03 3:34:05
19 Henri Schoeman South Africa 17:48 2:09:39 1:04:40 3:36:08

Tags:

T100 Triathlon World Tour



Source link

Continue Reading

San Francisco, CA

Chapman (8 RBIs) among trio of Giants with 2 HRs in 18-run Wrigley romp

Published

on

Chapman (8 RBIs) among trio of Giants with 2 HRs in 18-run Wrigley romp


CHICAGO — Suddenly, the Giants appear to have found their power stroke.
The Giants crushed seven home runs — including two apiece from Willy Adames, Matt Chapman and Casey Schmitt — to cruise to a commanding 18-3 win over the Cubs in Friday afternoon’s series opener at Wrigley Field.



Source link

Continue Reading

San Francisco, CA

Driver Who Raped Woman After She Mistook His Car For An Uber Convicted By Bay Area Jury

Published

on

Driver Who Raped Woman After She Mistook His Car For An Uber Convicted By Bay Area Jury


SAN FRANCISCO, CA — A man who raped a woman in San Francisco after she got into his car, thinking it was her Uber, has been convicted, prosecutors said.

Jurors convicted Yucel Eryilmaz, 44, of rape of an unconscious person and assault with intent to commit rape, according to the San Francisco District Attorney’s Office.

Prosecutors say a woman and her sister were leaving a club in San Francisco’s Mission District on Oct. 18, 2025, when they accidentally got into Eryilmaz’s car, thinking it was their Uber.

The woman sat in the front seat while her sister sat in the back, where she fell asleep, prosecutors said.

Advertisement

Eryilmaz started driving the women to their destination before he tried to kiss the woman in the front seat, prosecutors said.

The woman refused to kiss him, and when they arrived at the destination, she got out of the car, prosecutors said.

Before she could wake her sleeping sister, Eryilmaz drove off and took her to a parking lot in his apartment complex where he raped her, prosecutors said.

“Video footage shows Mr. Eryilmaz pulling into the parking lot next to his apartment building, exiting the driver’s side door, going to the back of the car, sitting down and locking the door,” prosecutors said. “Three hours later, the victim woke up in the back seat of Mr. Eryilmaz scared and confused, with Mr. Eryilmaz on top of her in the process of a rape.”

Eventually, she was able to free herself from Eryilmaz’s grasp, prosecutors said. She spent about 10 minutes on Eryilmaz’s apartment roof with him and he let her use his phone to call her sister, prosecutors said.

Advertisement

She learned police were looking for her and ran away from Eryilmaz to call for help, prosecutors said.

“I commend the victim for her bravery, authenticity and vulnerability while she relived these terrifying events during her testimony,” Assistant District Attorney Abigail Adams said in a statement. “She showed everyone in the courtroom that there is no ‘correct’ response to rape because trauma affects people differently. I hope the victim finds the closure and healing she needs as she attempts to put this horrific incident behind her.”





Source link

Continue Reading
Advertisement

Trending