San Francisco, CA
One Man’s Quest to Fix the Housing Crisis
A heated neighborhood assembly—is there some other form?—kicks off. A developer has purchased a 1,200-square-foot single-family residence in a transit-rich, extremely fascinating location and plans to show it right into a 19-unit constructing. Dozens of neighbors have banded collectively in opposition. The constructing would flip “day into evening” with its shadows, they inform metropolis officers, with one particular person worrying about the specter of seasonal affective dysfunction. It will “discriminate towards households,” because the items are so small. They model it a “dorm.” They ask why not 4 tales as a substitute of six; why not six items as a substitute of 19? “Please don’t seaside this monumental whale in our neighborhood,” one neighbor begs.
These sorts of municipal debates occur on a regular basis in localities throughout the nation and principally go unnoticed. However in San Francisco, somebody is watching how town will get constructed, or not, and ensuring folks hear about it. He does so for his personal edification. He’s not getting paid. He’s only a man with a pc and a little bit of spare time. For the previous 4 years, Robert Fruchtman has monitored and live-tweeted dozens and dozens—and dozens and dozens—of neighborhood conferences, together with this one, a couple of proposed improvement close to Dolores Park. “Folks simply do not know what goes on with these hearings, more often than not,” he advised me. “You don’t hear about it aside from snippets that often make the information.”
No surprise. Not everybody enjoys watching neighbors squabble over the positioning of a motorbike lane or bureaucrats be certain that a constructing has the suitable paperwork so as to add an annex. “Nobody’s ever going to have a land-use-and-transportation-committee-watching occasion the identical method folks have an Oscars-watching occasion,” Fruchtman mentioned. However what occurs at these types of conferences is vital. San Francisco, like many cities in California, makes many property-development selections topic to public debate. Builders, enterprise house owners, and householders have a tendency to not have the suitable to do what they need with their properties; as a substitute, they must ask metropolis officers and their neighbors to approve their plans. This coverage ensures that residents of beautiful, tree-lined blocks don’t get shocked by single-family properties getting razed and 19-unit buildings going up. It is also how, brick by brick, block by block, San Francisco has constructed one of many worst housing crises on Earth: Such citizen actions result in not simply the so-called preservation of neighborhood character but in addition sky-high rents and mortgages, employee shortages, displacement, gentrification, and climate-wrecking suburbanization.
Fruchtman has, for years, documented this course of in actual time, making it simpler for neighborhood activists, politicians, and journalists to note and get entangled. Can town transfer ahead with reasonably priced housing at 730 Stanyan Avenue (delayed, however sure) or everlasting supportive housing at 1800 Sutter Avenue (no)? How a couple of tiny-home village at 33 Gough Avenue? (Lastly opened final month.) Can a developer put properties at 1846 Grove Street? (Delayed for years.) Can a house owner construct an honest-to-goodness mansion at 376 Hill Street? (Sure.)
“I search for instances the place San Francisco’s progressive beliefs don’t match up,” Fruchtman, who’s a software program engineer and volunteers with the native YIMBY group, advised me. One time, he referred to as in to a planning-commission assembly to listen to a debate on proposed adjustments to an condominium constructing in his neighborhood. “I assume it was fortunate I logged in slightly early,” he mentioned. A longtime ice-cream store, Backyard Creamery, was making an attempt to stop a potential soft-serve store, Matcha n’ Extra, from transferring onto the identical block, utilizing a provision of a state legislation designed to guard towards environmental degradation.
Ensue public remark! The primary caller requested why the query of whether or not two dessert retailers may function on the identical block was a problem for the planning fee within the first place. The sixty fourth caller was extra blunt. “I assist the brand new enterprise,” the particular person mentioned, per Fruchtman, whose Tweet thread on the assembly went viral. “The entire course of is dumb as shit.” Nonetheless, Jason Yu of Matcha n’ Extra ended up spending $200,000 navigating San Francisco’s bureaucratic processes. After two years of procedural wrangling, he gave up.
This type of kudzu doesn’t simply forestall the development of latest properties or the opening of latest companies; it additionally has a profound impact on the dimensions and form of town and on the carbon emissions of the state. Regulatory bottlenecks enhance the price of constructing and drag out challenge timelines. What would value $250,000 to construct in rural Texas may cost $750,000 in San Francisco; what would take weeks to get approval for in Idaho would possibly take years right here. Many cheap tasks by no means get constructed in any respect, driving up housing prices, pushing households into homelessness, sapping town of latest companies, and squeezing Bay Space residents out to the far-flung suburbs.
In San Francisco, “as a substitute of bright-line guidelines, the place a developer is aware of I’m allowed to construct this right here, all the pieces is a negotiation and each challenge proceeds on an advert hoc foundation,” Jenny Schuetz, a housing economist on the Brookings Establishment, advised me. Small-d democratic-citizen participation has led to profoundly regressive outcomes.
That small-d democratic participation isn’t very democratic, for one. The varieties of individuals with the time and power to indicate up at neighborhood conferences are disproportionately white, disproportionately outdated, and disproportionately rich, as my colleague Jerusalem Demsas has famous. In addition they are typically conservative, within the sense that they like issues the best way they’re and don’t need to see 19-unit buildings going up of their neighborhoods. “Even in extremely numerous communities, improvement conferences are dominated by whites who oppose new housing, doubtlessly distorting the housing provide to their profit,” one examine discovered.
The conferences are typically formal. However folks’s participation tends to be, properly, slightly unmeasured, Fruchtman advised me. “Hysteria,” he mentioned. “There’s typically a way of hysteria at these conferences that isn’t mirrored in what you learn within the press.” He recalled the time that an individual described his struggle to stop the development of a navigation middle for homeless companies as a form of private “Little Bighorn.” Or the time one other particular person objected to the conversion of a car parking zone on the grounds that it might enhance visitors. Such rhetoric is “mental malpractice,” Fruchtman added. And the intemperate rants of the individuals who present up matter, as metropolis officers hear such impassioned claims principally from a privileged class making an attempt to maintain issues as they’re.
The flip facet of so few collaborating a lot is that everybody else participates so little. Who can blame them? So Fruchtman reveals up. Making an attempt to hire right here was what acquired him taken with YIMBY politics within the first place, he advised me. “I had dropped out of graduate college and acquired a job supply out in Silicon Valley,” he mentioned. “I used to be making an attempt to line up an condominium earlier than I acquired to town. And I spotted how unhealthy it was. In addition to the sticker shock, it was the truth that anytime I emailed anyone or referred to as anyone about an condominium, each single time, they mentioned it was taken. Making an attempt to get an condominium a month out or perhaps a week out was inconceivable.”
He did discover a place, in time. And a part of his motivation for going to or calling into or watching so many public conferences is that he got here to San Francisco to seek out himself and his neighborhood—and it pains him that others may not be capable of. “One purpose I wished to maneuver to San Francisco particularly is, as a homosexual man, it actually at all times stood out to me my entire life as a spot the place I may very well be accepted,” he advised me.
The NIMBY tide is lastly starting to recede within the state and town, because of activism and the rise of YIMBY elected officers. A flurry of payments have streamlined the allowing course of and exempted extra tasks from discretionary overview, in addition to permitting property house owners to construct buildings like casitas by proper. Nonetheless, the state is in need of thousands and thousands of housing items, and the thirst for flats and houses in San Francisco feels unquenchable.
A bunch of 19-unit buildings are what town wants, if not what its residents need. At that assembly, after they made their complaints, the builder responded that their proposed adjustments would make the challenge financially infeasible. A metropolis supervisor nervous that the tall constructing would “blow by means of” the objections of the neighborhood. The board gave a form of go-ahead for the developer to construct. Now, the challenge is tied up in litigation. It might by no means break floor.
San Francisco, CA
IEEE Trips To Singapore, Japan, New Jersey, San Francisco, Bologna And Milan
This is the last month of my IEEE Presidency and still a few things to do. I estimate I have been away from home over 250 days this year, flown on 17 different airlines and given over 100 talks either in person, remotely or via recordings at various IEEE and other events. It has been quite a year!
We had a virtual board of directors meeting this month to approve the winner of the 2025 IEEE Medal of Honor, who will be awarded a $2M prize in April of 2025 in Tokyo. This month I visited and spoke at IEEE Tencon, a Region 10 conference in Singapore, attended and spoke at a YP/student-oriented event and visited a milestone in Kyoto, Japan as well as the Nintendo Museum with other IEEE volunteers and staff. I then flew to San Francisco, CA to give out some IEEE field awards at the IEDM and then to Italy to give some talks in Bologna and another IEEE field award in Milan, Italy.
At Tencon, I spoke about IEEE AI Ethics activities in a keynote talk as well as giving a talk on recent IEEE board activities and encouraging our younger members to stay with us and make IEEE their professional home. I also visited the local Schneider Electronics Office, a startup called Black Sesame, the IEEE Singapore office and A-Star, a Singapore government funded research organization. The image below is me during my keynote talk. The shirt was a gift from the Singapore IEEE office, a batik print shirt, which are common wear in this part of the world.
Below is an image of me at the Schneider Electric visitors center in Singapore. We were shown their various electric power and facilities management products and services and spoke with them about stronger engagement between industry and the IEEE. We had a similar conversation with Black Sesame, who have offices in the same building as the Singapore IEEE office and make chips for electric vehicles. At A-star we talked about various IEEE activities include those related to sustainability efforts, including port electrification for ships to connect to the electric grid when in port and for charging electric boats.
In Kyoto, Japan I gave a talk at a virtual and physical event for students and young professionals about recent activities approved at the IEEE November board of directors meeting, about stronger engagement with industry and how IEEE can the professional home for our younger members and support their careers. I also visited two milestones in Kyoto.
The first was to Shimadzu Corporation, a biomedical company in Kyoto. There I joined Nobel laureate Koichi Tanaka, shown with me below next to the milestone plaque at Shimadzu, who invented the matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization technique, which allowed ionization of large organic molecules so they could be detected by a mass spectrometer. This allows detection of useful large organic molecules for various medical and biological research applications. This milestone was installed in November 2024.
The image below is from my visit to the Keage Hydro Power Station in Kyoto, which used water from the lake Biwa Canal to create electricity for the city starting in 1897. The first power plant was DC powered and later converted to AC. In 1936 a new facility near to the original building was completed which used water from a second canal to increase the AC power output. This facility is still working to provide low-carbon power to Kyoto. The image below shows me next to one of three copies of the milestone plaque near the hydro-power generators.
Nintendo recently opened a museum near Kyoto. I visited it with 2020 IEEE President Toshio Fukuda, IEEE Council Office’s Makiko Koto and my Kyoto host, Tomohiro Hase-sensei, from left to right, shown below with some animated Nintendo Toads, Toadstools, at the museum. Nintendo started in the 19th century making card games, expanded into board and other games in the mid-20th century and offered its first electronic game devices in the 1970’s.
I flew from Kyoto to New Jersey to give out the Charles Proteus Steinmetz award to Gary Hoffman at the IEEE Standards award event and then flew back to San Francisco to attend the IEEE IEDM, International Electron Devices Meeting, to give out three more technical field awards and attend some sessions at the IEDM and the MRAM Forum following the IEDM on Thursday. I also attended an IEEE Magnetics Society standards meeting on Wednesday night.
After half a day at home in San Jose I then headed to Bologna and Milan Italy to give some talks in Bologna, including at the Italian Academy of Science and give out the IEEE Control Systems Society award at the IEEE Conference on Decision and Control, CDC, in Milan Italy before heading home for some time with my family.
The picture below shows me with my gracious hosts Cecilia Metra, left, and Carlo Alberto Nucci, right, at the amazing meeting room where I spoke at the Italian Academy of Science about the IEEE and things that our IEEE board has been working on in 2024. Those are hand painted drawings on the ceiling of this room and there were busts of famous Italian scientists on the walls.
Cecilia is an IEEE Fellow and a professor in Electrical Engineering at the University of Bologna, the world’s oldest university, founded in 1088. She has been very involved in fault-tolerant design of digital circuits and systems and is a past President of the IEEE Computer Society and will be an IEEE director again in 2025. Carlo Alberto is a member of the Italian Academy of Science and is a professor of Electrical Power Systems at the University of Bologna and the Editor and Chief of the Electric Power Systems Research Journal.
I also gave a talk at the University of Bologna to students and faculty about IEEE and other sustainability efforts for data centers, particularly involving digital storage and memory technologies. I visited the Marconi estate, Sasso Marconi, near Bologna where I had a chance to see where Guglielmo Marconi did his pioneering radio work. The image below shows me with the IEEE Engineering milestones outside of the house in front of the hill where he and his associates were able to demonstrate radio communication beyond line of sight, using a spark gap transmitter.
The next day I traveled to Milan to participate in an awards ceremony to present an IEEE Technical Field Award, TFA, at the IEEE Conference on Decision and Control, CDC, put on by the Control Systems Society. We had social events at the Alfa Romeo Museum and at the National Museum of Science and Technology near and in Milan. On December 19 I flew home to be with my family for the holidays.
This trip was my last as IEEE President. I have been honored to have been part of the 2024 IEEE board and I am very proud of the things we have been able to accomplish this year. I look forward to working with the 2025 IEEE President, Kathleen Kramer, as IEEE Past President in 2025.
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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