SAN FRANCISCO — Sunday notes…
San Francisco, CA
Explore: How will S.F.’s rezoning affect your neighborhood?
The buildings most likely to be affected by San Francisco’s new upzoning plan are those where apartments and multi-family housing already sit, according to an analysis of the plan by Mission Local. Single-family homes, meanwhile, are likely to see very little change.
The newest, amended version of the plan to make the northern and western parts of the city taller and denser, which was announced by Supervisor Myrna Melgar and Mayor Daniel Lurie on Thursday, would no longer affect some 84,000 units of rent-controlled housing.
Mission Local’s map of that proposal, which will go to the Board of Supervisors Land Use Committee on Monday, showed that 33 percent of multifamily units would see even higher and denser zoning. These are in buildings currently zoned for apartments, many of which have commercial storefronts on the ground floor.
The low-lying areas of neighborhoods like West Portal, Forest Hill, the Sunset, and the Richmond, meanwhile, are unlikely to see drastic change outside of commercial and transit corridors.
See how the new upzoning plan affects your neighborhood. Switching tabs shows the kinds of parcels affected in the amended plan.
Just 13 percent of single-family homes and condos in the plan would be upzoned. The large majority of those units would remain as-is: They were already allowed to be up to 40 feet tall before, and will remain at 40 feet if the plan passes.
That’s by design: The upzoning plan has focused on increasing heights along commercial streets and transit lines, including Geary in the Richmond, Judah in the Sunset, and Van Ness in Nob Hill.
If you don’t live in a single-family home or condo, your building is more likely to be impacted. Multifamily residences — a category that includes apartment buildings — are located along transit and commercial corridors far more frequently. They are more than twice as likely to receive height limit increases in the proposed changes.
That’s true even under the amendment that would exempt any rent-controlled buildings with three or more units, the majority of multifamily housing in the plan.
All buildings, regardless of type, will be subject to “density decontrol,” however. That lets developers build any number of units on a single lot, as long as height limits don’t exceed those in the plan and design standards are followed. Effectively, that means no more exclusively single-family zoning.
And businesses? Since many exist on commercial corridors, 84 percent would be upzoned.
That has some business owners, like the owner of Joe’s Ice Cream on Geary Boulevard, worried.
Sean Kim’s building was bought in 2022 by an architecture company. The firm then met with the Planning Department to discuss potentially redeveloping the site to add housing atop what is currently a single-story commercial building housing the ice cream shop.
Kim fears that his lease won’t be renewed when it expires in three years, forcing him to either relocate or close the business.
“Probably, once we’re displaced, we cannot come back,” Kim said with a sigh.
Relocating is extremely costly. If Kim can find another building that already has the freezers and grills needed for ice cream and burgers, he thinks it would cost between $100,000 and $200,000 to move. If the building doesn’t already have that infrastructure in place, it’s more like $500,000.
Kim and other business owners worry that building owners will have an extra incentive under the new upzoning to let commercial leases expire and then sell their properties for redevelopment. Taller buildings would let developers profit more.
The Planning Department, for its part, said development tends to occur on vacant commercial buildings and lots, not ones with profitable businesses that pay rent.
Planning staff explained that the upzoning focuses on commercial and transit corridors so that new housing is transit-oriented and more environmentally friendly. With housing near transit and businesses, residents can walk, bike, and bus more, and drive less.
That will ultimately help small businesses, staff said. “Locating new housing on or near these corridors means more vibrancy, more foot traffic and more customers for our local small businesses, especially over the long term,” Planning Director Sarah Dennis Phillips wrote in an email to Mission Local.
District 7 Supervisor Melgar, who introduced the rent-control amendment, is also concerned. She introduced the “Small Business Rezoning Construction Relief Fund” to give funding for small businesses displaced and impacted by neighboring construction, though it’s unclear how much the city will be able to afford.
Kim is worried it won’t be enough. A grant of around $10,000, for instance, “doesn’t even help one month,” of relocation, Kim said.
Tenant advocates, meanwhile, are also worried about displacement. Though rent-controlled buildings with three or more units will now be removed from the plan, two-unit buildings, plus non-rent controlled apartment buildings, are still included. Advocates say building owners may displace tenants in order to redevelop their property.
“The stress that it causes is so extraordinary,” said Joseph Smooke, an organizer with the Race and Equity Coalition. “You get this feeling of hopelessness. Your whole life is built around how you commute to work and where you get your groceries.”
The worry about the zoning changes comes after the state weakened cities’ ability to control demolitions in 2019. While the city used to be able to unilaterally decide whether to issue a demolition permit, now a series of objective criteria have to be laid out for developers to meet.
The criteria are written in Supervisor Chyanne Chen’s separate ordinance, and include the building being free of inspection violations and the landlord having no history of tenant harassment or wrongful eviction.
Once demolition permits are acquired, developers must notify tenants about their rights, hire a relocation specialist, pay the difference between the tenant’s old and new rent for 42 months, and, once the new building is complete, offer any low income tenants a unit in the new building for at least the same rent as before (or a condo at a below market rate price).
The Planning Department emphasizes that demolition of existing housing has been extremely rare. Since 2012, the department said, an average of just 18 units a year have been demolished, 11 of them single-family homes. This is 0.00004 percent of the city’s 420,000 units.
Or, as one market-rate developer put it: “If you’re a developer and you can have two buildings, one is vacant and one you’re going to have a fight with tenants that’s going to drag out for years and cost hundreds of thousands of dollars, which one would you do?”
Methodology
The San Francisco Planning Department provided the latest zoning files, from Sept. 30 2025. We joined this dataset with another one on property assessments from the Assessor Recorder’s office. This allowed us to gather more information about the properties on each parcel affected by the zoning changes. When we joined both datasets, a very small portion of the rows did not match (0.37 percent).
We isolated parcels eligible for rent control by including the following: Buildings built before or during 1979, with more than one unit, from selected class codes (that include apartments, dwellings, flats and exclude condos and TICs). This does not necessarily mean those parcels are currently tenant occupied – there is limited data on how many buildings have rental units that are rent controlled. For the amended plan, the same parameters apply but for buildings built before 1979 that have at least three units.
To run calculations about change in existing height limit compared to the proposed ones, we excluded parcels that fall under several zoning classifications (representing 0.3 percent of parcels — 310 of 92,744). On the map, these parcels are shaded light gray.
San Francisco, CA
Chicago Cubs vs. San Francisco Giants preview, Sunday 6/14, 2:10 CT
- IT’S PRETTY RARE: The Cubs swept three games at San Francisco on Sept. 13-15, 1993. They have done it in only one of the 35 subsequent series before the current one, July 26-28, 2013. This is their 12th since then. Five times, the Cubs won the first two games and lost the third, most recently in 2023. In 2009, they won three, then lost the fourth. (Courtesy BCB’s JohnW53)
- RUN SCORING NOTE: The Cubs have scored 20 runs in their last three games (nine, five, six). They had scored at least 20 in 11 previous three-game spans this season, some overlapping, but only twice since May 8: 21 runs, May 15-17, and 22, May 27-29. They played 10 more games after the last of the previous span before the first of the current span. (Courtesy BCB’s JohnW53)
- THE PITCHING IS BETTER THAN YOU THINK: Cubs pitchers have yielded no more than three runs in a season-best four consecutive games. They had allowed three or fewer in three straight three times, all between March 30 and April 20. The Cubs have allowed eight runs in the last 40 innings. Six came on five homers, one on a triple and one on a walk-off single. (Courtesy BCB’s JohnW53)
- PCA! PCA! PCA!: Pete Crow-Armstrong is on a 17-game on-base streak in which he is batting .370/.425/.726 (27-for-73) with six doubles, a triple, six home runs, 10 RBI and 14 runs scored.
Ryan Rolison, LHP vs. Logan Webb, RHP

Ryan Rolison is going to open this game because the Giants generally stack the top of their lineup with left-handed hitters. This is an attempt to try to neutralize that. Rolison threw a scoreless inning vs. the Giants last Saturday at Wrigley Field and overall this year, lefties are batting .182/.263/.182 (6-for-33) against him with 13 strikeouts. Rolison last pitched Thursday against the Rockies, throwing one inning and 17 pitches.
After Rolison, Colin Rea is supposed to be the “bulk guy” this afternoon. Rea got hit pretty hard by the Rockies in his last start, last Tuesday at Coors Field. So what do you say we try to pretend that didn’t happen?
In Rea’s three previous starts he posted a 3.57 ERA and got into the sixth inning in all three of them.
Current Giants, though, have hit him hard (small sample size alert): 16-for-32 (.500) with four home runs (Luis Arraez, Matt Chapman, Rafael Devers and Jung Hoo Lee).
Rea has two outings this year as the “bulk guy” and in those he’s thrown 9.1 innings, allowed eight hits and four runs, and struck out eight.
Logan Webb has been the Giants’ best starter for the last five-plus seasons, with Top 6 Cy Young finishes three times in that span. He’s continued that this year, with a bit of a higher ERA (3.88), which has come down over his last three starts (0.90 ERA, 0.672 WHIP, no home runs in 19.1 innings).
Webb last faced the Cubs Aug. 28, 2025 in San Francisco and allowed three runs in seven innings. Ian Happ is 5-for-14 (.357) against Webb with a home run and Dansby Swanson has homered twice off him in 14 career at-bats, including a homer in that game last year.



Here is the weather forecast for the area around Oracle Park.
Today’s game is on ABC (full national broadcast, no blackouts) and streaming on the ESPN App. Announcers: Jon Sciambi, David Ross and Buster Olney.
Here is the complete MLB.com live streaming page for today.
Baseball-reference.com game preview
Please visit our SB Nation Giants site McCovey Chronicles. If you do go there to interact with Giants fans, please be respectful, abide by their individual site rules and serve as a good representation of Cub fans in general and BCB in particular.
The 2026 game discussion procedure has been changed, so please take note.
You’ll find the game preview, like this one, posted separately on the front page two hours before game time (90 minutes for some early day games following night games).
At the same time, a StoryStream containing the preview will also post on the front page, titled “Cubs vs. (Team) (Day of week/date) game threads.” It will contain every post related to that particular game.
The Live! (formerly “First Pitch”) thread will still post at five minutes to game time. It will also post to the front page. That will be the only live game discussion thread. After the game, the recap and Heroes and Goats will also live on the front page as separate posts.
You will also be able to find the preview, Live! thread, recap and Heroes and Goats in this section link. The StoryStream for each game can also be found in that section.
Discuss amongst yourselves.
- Fewer ads
- Create community posts
- Comment on articles, community posts
- Rec comments, community posts
- New, improved notifications system!
San Francisco, CA
Where to watch Chicago Cubs vs San Francisco Giants: TV channel, start time, streaming for June 14
What to know about MLB’s ABS robot umpire strike zone system
MLB launches ABS challenge system as players test robot umpire calls in a groundbreaking season.
The 2026 MLB season has surpassed the quarter mark, and after each team’s first 40 games, there’s plenty of reasons to tune in all summer long.
Chicago White Sox slugger Munetaka Murakami has already proven doubters wrong by launching 17 home runs, Pittsburgh’s Paul Skenes consistently looks like the best version of himself on the mound and Milwaukee ace Jacob Misiorowski is throwing harder than any starter in the majors.
The MLB action continues on Sunday as the Chicago Cubs visit the San Francisco Giants.
Here’s everything you need to know to tune in for the first pitch.
See USA TODAY’s sortable MLB schedule to filter by team or division.
What time is Chicago Cubs vs San Francisco Giants?
First pitch between the San Francisco Giants and Chicago Cubs is scheduled for (ET) on Sunday, June 14.
How to watch Chicago Cubs vs San Francisco Giants on Sunday
All times Eastern and accurate as of Sunday, June 14, 2026, at 6:32 a.m.
- Matchup: CHC at SF
- Date: Sunday, June 14
- Time: (ET)
- Venue: Oracle Park
- Location: San Francisco, California
- TV: ABC
- Streaming: MLB.TV on Fubo
Watch MLB all season long with Fubo
MLB regional blackout restrictions apply
MLB scores, results
MLB scores for June 14 games are available on usatoday.com . Here’s how to access today’s results:
See scores, results for all of today’s games.
San Francisco, CA
Person jumps out second-story window in SF after electric scooter fire
File Photo. San Francisco Fire Department’s Engine 2.
SAN FRANCISCO – A person jumped out of a building Saturday in San Francisco after extinguishing a fire involving an electric scooter, fire officials said.
After using a fire extinguisher to put out the fire, the individual jumped from the second floor of a building at 34 Sixth St., according to the San Francisco Fire Department.
The individual sustained non-life-threatening injuries and was taken to a hospital.
Fire crews confirmed that the fire was fully extinguished. The cause of the fire was determined to be an accident, involving an electric scooter.
-
Los Angeles, Ca37 minutes agoPasadena man run over by catalytic converter thieves faces long recovery
-
Detroit, MI55 minutes agoVernors fans tickled to celebrate 160 years of iconic pop at Detroit event
-
San Francisco, CA1 hour agoChicago Cubs vs. San Francisco Giants preview, Sunday 6/14, 2:10 CT
-
Dallas, TX1 hour agoDallas Stadium Live: Traffic, weather & match updates — Japan vs Netherlands
-
Miami, FL1 hour agoSpirit Airlines acquisition bid submitted by Mooney International, company says
-
Boston, MA1 hour agoBoston Police Blotter: Boat fire in Dorchester near Rainbow Swash mural
-
Denver, CO1 hour agoKalshi World Cup Promo Code DENVER: Trade $10, Get $10 Bonus for Sunday Night Matches – Denver Stiffs
-
Seattle, WA2 hours agoWEST SEATTLE WEATHER: Heat Advisory update; cooling center at The Y