San Francisco, CA
Mission District businesses face thousands of dollars in storm repairs
SAN FRANCISCO — It was a tough begin to the 12 months for a lot of small companies that handled main flooding in San Francisco’s Mission District.
Since then, many storefronts have fortified their entrances with sandbags, plywood, and steel gates in preparation for extra rain.
After being closed for per week after the New Yr’s eve storm, recent pizzas are as soon as once more popping out of the oven at Pink Onion on 14th avenue.
“From one hour after the flooding began, up till possibly 5 hours in the past once we lastly obtained our water heater up and working, that was the final piece we wanted. And in between then, we have had refrigeration firms, electrical firms, fuel, plumbers, water heater restore guys, flooring guys, dry wall guys,” mentioned proprietor Matthew Coric.
Coric mentioned he estimates these repairs have already set him again at the least $50,000 {dollars}.
“That is not even together with payroll hasn’t run and my time or my household’s time or something like that,” he mentioned.
14th Road close to Folsom Road seemed like a river per week in the past. The restaurant was flooded, and the tools was destroyed.
Since then, the town got here to unclog storm drains and catch basins, however not earlier than a number of companies within the space have been hit with 1000’s of {dollars} in damages.
Izakaya Rintaro close by remains to be cleansing up and anticipated to open mid-January. A neighboring house additionally on 14th Road was speculated to be a brand new bread or bagel manufacturing unit.
It wasn’t but open for enterprise when the storm wrecked almost every part inside. Employees have been busy making repairs because the rain fell late within the day Saturday.
There’s nonetheless a room filled with soggy containers.
“I place confidence in the town at this level that they are not going to let it occur once more, and we nonetheless have our steel storm doorways there so if issues get dangerous we’ll simply plug them in,” mentioned Coric.
Coric mentioned instantly after the storm, his employees stepped up and cleared the drains themselves earlier than the town obtained round to responding, and it made the distinction.
The six-year outdated restaurant mentioned its assured it could possibly survive what’s to return.
“It is one other impediment, however I suppose we have simply been battle-tested,” he mentioned.
San Francisco, CA
San Francisco Giants Boss Building Franchise in His Image, Insider Says
When the San Francisco Giants hired Buster Posey to replace Farhan Zaidi, it was clear that San Francisco would be heading in a new direction, but unclear what direction that was. The new regime has now made their first big signing and the direction and type of player that Posey and company want is becoming clear.
That type of player are ones like Posey himself, as Susan Slusser of the San Francisco Chronicle explained on the show Foul Territory.
“I think Buster Posey really wants gritty guys,” she said. “There was a lot of talk the other day, and this won’t come as a surprise to anyone, during the WIlly Adames press conference. He played in 161 last year, wanted to play 162, he wants those kind of guys, he wants guys that play like he did.”
Chapman played 154 games last year, the first Giants player to appear in 150 or more games since WIlmer Flores in 2022. Chapman’s ability to play everyday and show that type of grit is why San Francisco felt comfortable giving him a huge extension.
Adames has played in at least 140 games each of the past two years, including that 161 number last season.
Another player who they are currently a “favorite” for is that same type of gritty guy, just from the mound. Corbin Burnes has made at least 32 starts in each of the last three seasons, including at least 190 innings all three years and even a 200 inning season. That is something not seen as often in the game anymore.
One of the big complaints during the Zaidi era was that the Giants didn’t always hav that one player who played everyday. There was a lot of platooning, and it now seems like Posey wants to get away from that and find players who will be there everyday.
“He wants Chapman’s, Adames’ guys who are going to go out and really fight and lift up their teammates and hold them accountable, too, which is exactly what Buster did when he was a player. I think that’s important for him,” Slusser continued.
The president of baseball operations wants to re-work this team and build a new identity in his vision, which is something he has begun to do. However, in order to do that, Posey will need time and patience to turn over a roster like that.
With the addition of Adames, though, he joins Webb and Chapman as those type of gritty players who will be out there everyday.
San Francisco, CA
San Francisco DA Brooke Jenkins reacts to 2nd degree murder verdict in Nima Momeni trial
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San Francisco, CA
San Francisco's Papenhausen Hardware to close after 88 years
SAN FRANCISCO – A legacy business in San Francisco that has been around since 1936 is going out of business.
Papenhausen Hardware, a fixture in West Portal for 88 years, will close its doors on Dec. 31, or sooner if inventory runs out.
On Monday, customers flowed in and out of the store, many learning that the days of visiting the shop and benefiting from the staff’s expertise are limited.
“Without this place, where can you go?” asked customer Frank Ruiz.
Karl Aguilar, who joined the staff in 1988 and eventually became a manager and partner, said the business survived two fires, the latest in 2018. However, it could not withstand rising rent and changing social patterns following the pandemic.
As a neighborhood business without a parking lot but situated close to the West Portal, it relied on a steady stream of commuters to stop in. The post-pandemic era, with remote work and food delivery, has led to a 30% drop in foot traffic.
“We have always been more of a convenience store than a destination,” said Aguilar. “When you don’t have parking, you’re always going to be more convenience-based. We just became less convenient for 30% of our customers.”
The hardware store is offering deep discounts, and customers are flooding in to get what they need.
“Even though it’s a small store I find everything I need here,” said customer Joyce Zanze. “But, it’s our community, West Portal. We need a hardware store.”
Papenhausen has been more than just a hardware store; it’s a neighborhood landmark. During the pandemic, it served as a location for essential workers and a gathering place for neighbors when it was safe.
John Veizades said the store’s history goes back farther than that.
“We moved to this neighborhood when I was 11 or 12 years old and we were the commensurate DIY family,” said Veizades. “So, when you needed a screw or a bolt or piece of wire you came on down to Papenhausen.”
Now, the owners are saying their farewells to staff and loyal customers, urging people to support small businesses to prevent further closures in the city.
“I talk to a lot of business owners, and a lot of them are in the same boat,” Aguilar said. “Whether they’re doing better or worse has a lot to do with whether they were able to adapt, how much they can streamline, and whether or not they own their buildings.”
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