San Francisco, CA
Debate continues over traffic on SF Great Hightway

SAN FRANCISCO – One week since San Francisco’s Great Highway was closed to make way for a park, the closure remains controversial.
Now, both sides of the issue are looking to see how traffic patterns have changed since the closure.
The signs are clear that the southern portion of The Great Highway running along San Francisco’s west side is now closed.
While the closure was controversial, now supporters and opponents of plans to transform the four-lane highway into a park are now debating how it will impact traffic.
On the Nextdoor app, some neighbors are complaining, saying traffic that should be on The Great Highway is instead speeding down residential streets.
“I’ve lived on La Playa since February of 1992,” said Joe Baker, who lives just off the Great Highway and says the impact of the road’s closure has been clear.
“That traffic now being diverted down La Playa Street and down lower Great Highway, those cars are running right through those stop signs,” Baker said. “Those cars are not slowing down for speed bumps.”
Supporters of The Great Highway say they have data backing up their position that traffic has settled into a similar flow seen before the pandemic, highlighting posts they gathered that say the traffic nightmare that some had predicted never materialized.
Catherine Unertl lives on 45th Avenue, just a few blocks from the Great Highway and said she’s seen a modest increase in traffic.
“I think during rush hour, there’s a little bit more traffic than would ordinarily be on the highway,” said Unertl. “But, most of the day, it feels just like it did a week ago.”
Commuters are learning to navigate the closure of The Great Highway.
KTVU watched as vehicles traveling northbound on The Great Highway turned onto Sloat Boulevard, and then made a U-turn to head north on The Lower Great Highway and 48th Avenue, which run parallel to The Great Highway.
Refugio Haro said before it closed, the Great Highway was his preferred route to get to work.
“With the Great Highway you used to go 35 miles per hour to get to one end to the other,” said Haro. “It was a beautiful drive.”
He takes the detour up 48th Avenue and says it has added a few minutes to his drive, but says overall it hasn’t made a major impact on his morning commute.
“It’s a little slower because of all the cars trying to figure out which way to go,” said Haro.
People are still learning how to navigate around this closure, and traffic patterns are still developing.

San Francisco, CA
49ers near deal to sell 6.2% stake in franchise to 3 Bay Area families

SANTA CLARA, Calif. — According to San Francisco 49ers owner Jed York, interested parties have approached his family “probably on a weekly basis” to attempt to buy a piece of the 97% of the team the Yorks own.
This week, it seems, three of the parties who approached the York family came with the right offer. The 49ers are working to complete the sale of more than 6% of the team to three Bay Area families, according to a league source.
Sportico, which first reported the pending sale Thursday, said the sales will be done at a franchise valuation of more than $8.5 billion. If the deal is completed at that number, the valuation will be the largest ever for a sports franchise in a transaction.
The Khosla, Deeter and Griffith families are the prospective buyers, with the Khoslas purchasing 3.1%, the Deeters obtaining 2.1% and the Griffiths acquiring 1%, The Athletic reported Thursday afternoon.
The NFL is expected to formally approve the transactions at the spring owners’ meetings in Minneapolis next week. The 49ers declined to comment on the proposed sales Thursday./p>
br/>The Niners have been receiving offers for the past few months, and York said in March at the annual league meeting that his family had been considering a sale of up to 10% of its ownership stake. At the time, he called it a “family asset allocation decision” based on the wants and needs of various family members.
“It’s just one of those things where if there’s an opportunity that makes sense, we would always explore that, but I’m not sure what we’re going to end up doing,” York said then. “And if we do, we would try to find the right people who would help bolster everything that we’re doing in and around the team, on the field, off the field, and just make sure that we had good partners that are with us.”
All three of the reported buyers have venture capital backgrounds. Vinod Khosla is co-founder of Sun Microsystems and the founder of Khosla Ventures in Menlo Park, California. Byron Deeter is a partner at Bessemer Venture Partners in Redwood City and San Francisco, and William Griffith is a partner at Iconiq Capital in San Francisco.
In other franchise-related news, theLos Angeles Chargersare requesting approval to sell an 8% stake in the team to a private investment firm, The Los Angeles Times reported, citing a person with knowledge of the approval request sent in a memo to NFL owners.
The newspaper said Chargers owner Dean Spanos and siblings Michael Spanos and Alexis Spanos Ruhl will attempt to sell the stake to private investment firm Arctos at next week’s meetings.br/]
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San Francisco, CA
UC San Francisco’s psilocybin therapy shows promise for Parkinson’s patients

On a quiet plot of land in rural New Mexico, Jeff Deming feels like he’s really living, once again.
“Mentally, it’s day and night,” he said.
He’s able to do the things that make him happy, like woodworking, despite living with Parkinson’s Disease.
“Physically, I feel better than I did 2-3 years ago,” he said.
Deming credits the treatment he received during a first-of-its-kind clinical study he participated in at the University of California, San Francisco: Psilocybin therapy for people with Parkinson’s Disease.
“This is very cliché, but it truly gave me my life back,” he said.
Psilocybin is a naturally occurring psychedelic compound found in ‘magic mushrooms.’ When administered in controlled, clinical research settings, it has shown promise in treating depression and anxiety, both of which are mood symptoms associated with Parkinson’s that are linked to a faster physical decline.
“The neurodegeneration that is happening isn’t just impacting motor circuitry – it’s impacting a lot of brain circuitry. That creates this huge burden of symptoms that we often overlook and don’t talk about enough, maybe,” said Dr. Ellen Bradley, of UCSF. “We were really surprised by how well this trial went.”
Bradley and a team of researchers at UCSF are trying to figure out how Psilocybin may help treat mood dysfunction and more in those living with the neurodegenerative disease.
“This is a first step, and now we’ve opened the door to being able to really investigate the effects of Psilocybin for people with Parkinson’s,” she said.
12 patients participated in this first-round study, which involved a first and second course of Psilocybin treatment.
“We had folks do a lower dose of Psilocybin – a 10 mg dose initially – and monitored them for a couple of weeks to see how that went,” Bradley said. “If it did go well, if we didn’t have safety concerns, then they were eligible for the full therapeutic dose of 25 mg.”
All 12 patients were able to complete both courses of treatment without reporting any serious side effects, according to Bradley.
“We want to find out not just does Psilocybin therapy work, but if it does, how does it work? That mechanistic piece is so important,” she said. “Can it change the brain’s ability to adapt to its environment and to rewire itself?”
While there were no serious adverse effects reported, every patient didn’t have the same life-changing experience as Deming says he experienced. Though many did report their motor and cognitive functions improved afterwards, per Bradley.
“We don’t have a reason to believe that this is a treatment that is going to be a good fit for every patient. That is never really our expectation in medicine. But our goal is to figure out when is it the right treatment and how much for which patient,” Bradley said.
Bradley says her team is scaling up their work and are in the process of recruiting for a larger study, due to the success with the initial research.
“That was really exciting just to see that promising safety profile in this initial pilot. That kind of gives us a green light to go forward with more in-depth research,” she said. “We really desperately need new treatments for Parkinson’s. It’s a very quickly growing disease that’s becoming more and more prevalent in our population, so, we really feel like we have to be investigating every possible route that could mean new treatments for patients.”
Two years removed from his controlled Psilocybin dosing, Deming says he feels better now than he did when he received his initial diagnosis four years ago.
“Something about this experience just freed everything back up so I could think again, I could dream again,” he said.
He’d like to see more research into psychedelic therapies for a range of conditions, with the hopes that more people will be able to reclaim the reins of life, as he has.
“There’s been such a stigma against the research with it,” he said. “It is definitely worth looking more closely at.”
San Francisco, CA
San Francisco 49ers 2025 schedule: Will a last-place schedule help produce a bounce back?

The NFL will release the 2025 schedules for all 32 teams at 8 p.m. (ET) Wednesday. Here is what we know about the San Francisco 49ers’ schedule so far.
The 49ers will play each team from the NFC South and AFC South, as well as the 2024 fourth-place teams from the NFC North, NFC East and AFC North. San Francisco also will see its NFC West division rivals twice, once on the road and once at Levi’s Stadium, as part of its 17-game schedule.
Here is the lineup of home and road opponents, listed alphabetically.
Home | Road |
---|---|
Arizona Cardinals |
Arizona Cardinals |
Atlanta Falcons |
Cleveland Browns |
Carolina Panthers |
Houston Texans |
Chicago Bears |
Indianapolis Colts |
Jacksonville Jaguars |
Los Angeles Rams |
Los Angeles Rams |
New Orleans Saints |
Seattle Seahawks |
New York Giants |
Tennessee Titans |
Seattle Seahawks |
Tampa Bay Buccaneers |
The 49ers went 6-11 in 2024 as injuries and a Super Bowl hangover again got the best of them. San Francisco has reached the Super Bowl twice in Kyle Shanahan’s eight seasons, and both times followed up that appearance with a last-place finish (the 49ers went 6-10 in 2020 after losing quarterback Jimmy Garoppolo and defensive end Nick Bosa to early-season injuries).
After a roster reset this offseason ahead of Brock Purdy’s anticipated massive contract extension, the 49ers, with the benefit of playing a last-place schedule, will need to show they can bounce back and re-establish themselves as one of the NFC’s contenders.
Come back Wednesday night for the 49ers’ week-to-week schedule, plus season analysis and predictions.
(Photo of Brock Purdy: Ezra Shaw / Getty Images)
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