San Francisco, CA
Proposed San Francisco Giants Trade Sends Away Big Offseason Signing
The San Francisco Giants made a couple of big signings this offseason, but could be looking for ways to get something in return for them at the upcoming MLB trade deadline.
As Rucker Haringey of FanSided pondered what San Francisco can get from a trade that sends Matt Chapman away, he found something that could work with the New York Yankees.
The deal would see Chapman sent to New York in exchange for right-handed pitchers Yoendrys Gomez and Zach Messinger.
After a rough start to the year, Chapman has completely turned things around to go with the improved play of the Giants as a whole.
The 31-year-old is slashing .241/.322/.423 on the season, at least looking like his average self.
San Francisco’s big issue is that he has a player/mutual option after 2024 and can walk away with ease, making the team lose him for nothing. A contending team could trade for him as a rental.
This type of trade package isn’t super exciting on paper, but could fill some needs with players that have the chance to turn into something better.
Gomez is the No. 17 overall prospect in the Yankees farm system. He’s 24 years old, about to turn 25, and made his MLB debut last season but has only played in five games.
He’s back in Triple-A where he has a larger samplle-size 14 games with a 4.21 ERA and 1.325 WHIP.
What has translated over the past few seasons is his ability to strike batters out with relative ease. He’s averaged double-digit strikeouts in three of the last four seasons.
The Venezuela native has a little bit of starting rotation upside, but could also be a nice reliever if he can mantain an upper-90s fastball.
Messinger is a little bit lower in their rankings, but has had a nice career in the minors since being drafted out of Virginia in 2021.
In 17 games at the Double-A level this season, he had a 3.86 ERA and a 1.154 WHIP. He’s another 24 year old, but given his success and the fact that he was in college, he shouldn’t be in the minors for much longer.
His 6-foot-6, 225-pound frame offers some oomph to his fastball and slider combo thanks to his pitching motion. His peak in a big league staff likely comes as a late-rotation starter or extended outing reliever.
As the Giants search for answers in their pitching staff, these are two potential quick turnaround pitchers to make up for losing a star fielder.
San Francisco, CA
Multi-million-dollar donation saves San Francisco’s Oasis nightclub
Meesha Jones thought she’d serve her last drink on New Year’s Eve.
“I’ve had, you know, multiple small breakdowns over the past,” Jones said.
Oasis nightclub, where she’s worked the past 10 years, announced plans to close six months ago.
New Year’s Eve was slated for the final performance.
A last-minute, multi-million-dollar donation turned the final curtain call into an encore performance.
“It means everything. It means everything,” Jones said. “Like this place has been through so much and provided so much.”
The club first opened in 2014 as a small drag and cabaret that quickly captured the hearts of San Franciscans. But the club struggled, especially after COVID dealt a rough financial blow.
No one was more devastated than owner and performer, D’Arcy Drollinger.
“Sometimes things shine so brightly, but that’s also what makes them unsustainable,” Drollinger said.
Drollinger had almost given up when they came across Sky Stevens, a fan of the club.
A quick meeting over lunch changed everything, giving Drollinger the donation of a lifetime.
“It gives us a little runway time so we can hire a development team to raise money for the nonprofit, so we can be sustainable over time, and that we can underwrite all the programs, and we don’t get in a situation where we were before,” Drollinger said.
The club will remain a cultural beacon for San Francisco’s LGBTQ community, but now Drollinger hopes to elevate it, turning drag into a widely respected art form, one that loyal patrons, like RJ Singleton, can enjoy — though he never doubted the club would return.
“It’ll be a place for people that are newly out of the closet, that are trying to find community,” Singleton said. “They’ll have another year and another year and another year to be able to come to a place to find their community and discover themselves.”
San Francisco, CA
Who’s behind those ‘SHIMBY’ posters across San Francisco?
San Francisco’s upzoning plan has passed. On Jan. 12, 2026, the day it goes into effect, developers will be able to build taller, denser buildings on thousands of sites in the western and northern parts of the city. As the debate over how and where to upzone raged in City Hall, flyers taped to utility poles across the city signaled the launch of a much more DIY campaign to reignite a plan that took shape — and fell through — over five years ago.
“Mayor Lurie has the chance to fund social housing,” the simple, black-on-white flyers read.

The posters refer to Proposition I, a ballot measure that passed in 2020 with 57 percent of the vote. Prop. I doubled the real estate transfer tax rate on buildings valued at $10 million or more. Proponents expected the new city revenue to be earmarked for new housing projects.
But the city’s mayors, who hold most of the power over the city’s budget, have so far declined to do so. Instead, it goes to the general fund.
Enter Honest Charley Bodkin and Dylan Hirsch-Shell, the duo behind San Franciscans for Social Housing. They call themselves SHIMBYs, or “Social Housing in My Back Yard.” An offshoot of the YIMBY movement, they think that, with enough public pressure, Lurie could be persuaded to change tack and start funding social housing in San Francisco. Their signs urge readers to sign an online petition pushing the mayor to establish a fund for “housing that is municipally-owned (or non-profit owned), permanently affordable, and available to a wider mix of income than traditional public housing.” Some 650 signatures have been collected so far in what appears to be a modest launch.
Hirsch-Shell is a former Tesla engineer who self-funded his mayoral campaign last year to the tune of $160,000; Bodkin was his campaign manager.
“I wasn’t so much convinced that I would win necessarily, but my interest was in promoting policy ideas that I thought were important,” Hirsch-Shell said. His platform included support for universal social housing and a universal basic income.
Bodkin was also a mayoral candidate before he met Hirsch-Shell on the campaign trail and joined his team. Shortly after getting into local politics, he was perhaps best known for being 86’ed from bars across his Haight Street neighborhood for alleged antics like inciting customers and striking a bartender in the head with a chair, according to a short documentary by Vincent Woo.

Bodkin says he’s six months sober now, and is focused on affirming local programs such as social housing and the public bank. He’s joined forces with Hirsch-Shell on the SHIMBY line, and they are plastering flyers in English, Spanish and Chinese across the city. They’re starting with Prop. I as a fund for social housing because “the will of the voters has been spoken.”
“I put my struggle, my efforts not into arguing with people at bars,” Bodkin said, “but with those that actually matter, those at City Hall.”
Former Supervisor Dean Preston, who authored Prop. I, is not formally allied with the SHIMBYs. Neither are the Democratic Socialists of America — arguably the most politically powerful socialist organization at the moment.
Still, Preston agrees with the SHIMBY thrust — he has been fighting for at least a portion of Prop. I funds to be spent on social housing for years. “The transfer tax is the one opportunity you have to tax these huge real estate speculators buying and selling mega-mansions and skyscrapers downtown to raise funds,” Preston said.
The plan, he said, was to utilize the Prop. I funds towards rent relief and social housing. The latter would be open to a variety of income levels, and owned or financed by the city, as opposed to traditional affordable housing which typically depends on subsidies and non-profit developers.
But no such funding mechanism was written into the proposition. Special taxes — taxes that go into dedicated funds — generally require a two-thirds vote, and a special tax of this nature would have been, according to the city attorney’s office, unconstitutional in California.
Instead, the Board of Supervisors passed a resolution saying the city should use Prop. I funds for affordable housing programs, including social housing. Because resolutions aren’t legally binding, the money went into the city’s general fund, where it has been flowing ever since. A report published in June of 2024 found that some $200 million were spent on a mix of housing related issues.
In 2024, Preston requested a report from the city that found a social housing program based on Prop. I revenue was feasible. The report indicated that cumulative revenue from the increase could total upwards of $400 million by 2026.
Although Preston, a democratic socialist, and the hundreds-strong DSA have long been vocal in the cause of social housing, San Franciscans for Social Housing is an organization of two (and “hundreds of other people that call themselves San Franciscans for social housing,” Bodkin said, referring to petition signers).
Without formal alliances, the pair may continue to address the Board of Supervisors during the minutes allotted for public comment during meetings at City Hall, or approach individual supes in public (as Bodkin has done to Mayor Lurie a couple of times before).
Even then, options are limited: Supervisors could pass another non-binding resolution asking for the money to be rerouted, but Lurie has given no indication that he would do so.
Bodkin and Hirsch-Shell are not the first to try to carve a third way through the YIMBY vs. NIMBY divide. In 2018, the short-lived PHIMBY (“Public Housing in My Back Yard”) acronym was rolled out by the Los Angeles chapter of the DSA, which saw it as a way to mitigate the risk of gentrification posed by SB 827, a bill championed by state Sen. Scott Wiener that would have exempted most new construction near public transit from local zoning laws.
The SHIMBYs are trying to pitch a wider tent. Bodkin said he has “paid dues” to SF YIMBY and lobbied in Sacramento with Wiener and California YIMBY. More recently, he said, he also joined the San Francisco DSA.

That hasn’t stopped Jane Natoli, the organizing director for YIMBY Action, from taking to Bluesky to refute the strategy of the nascent SHIMBY movement.
“San Franciscans didn’t pass a property transfer tax that funds social housing. They passed a tax that goes to the general fund,” Natoli wrote. “You can’t just wish funds for things.”
Preston is not surprised that YIMBY leaders like Natoli aren’t lining up to rally around the cause of social housing.
YIMBYs and socialists might look like allies “on paper,” Preston said. But as far as the YIMBY organizations are concerned, he continued, “There’s a consistent pro-industry theme that is very much at odds with developing social housing in San Francisco.”
On top of all that, Prop. I may be on the chopping block next year — local and state officials are looking for ways to repeal it, or mitigate its effects.
The flyers keep going up, for now. Bodkin and Hirsch-Shell say they’re trying to build a movement. Hirsch-Shell says it’s a lesson from the campaign trail:
“Retail politics is not dead.”



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