San Francisco, CA
SF dog owner wants to find unhoused man who rescued his lost pet, gave tender loving care
SAN FRANCISCO (KGO) — Here’s a story that will brighten your day and perhaps even restore your faith in humanity. It’s about how an unhoused man rescued a lost dog and gave him a little extra TLC—or tender loving care—until that dog was reunited with its owner.
And when that man was offered a little money for his trouble, he turned it down.
Now, the dog owner wants to find that Good Samaritan to say thank you.
Bob Eicholz of San Francisco walks his two whippets Wardy and Taylor often. Wherever the dogs go, they have a GPS tracker on them.
But last Saturday, the dogs were staying with a pet sitter and Wardy got loose.
“He escaped from our pet sitter’s hose. Wasn’t her fault. He jumped over the fence. Got out,” said Eicholz.
And boy, did Wardy take off-like a whippet.
“They’re very skiddish. They’re extremely fast. They can run over 30 miles an hour,” said Eicholz.
“10 minutes later, a lady captured him. But she grabbed the collars, and he backed out and she kept the collars and he ran off. So now, he is in urban San Francisco with no collars. No ID of any kind,” said Eicholz.
MORE: Woman looking to adopt new pet reunited with dog lost 2 years earlier
Wardy’s GPS tracker came off with one of those collars. He was missing for two days. Eicholz posted missing dog flyers all over the city and shared the information online.
“There were probably at one point 50 people helping me find him,” said Eicholz.
With the help of strangers, Eicholz kept tabs on where Wardy was spotted.
“He runs all over the Mission District, crosses Market Street; he goes to Hayes Valley,” said Eicholz.
Wardy ended up in the Tenderloin. Eicholz said a homeless man found the dog at a park off Eddy Street.
“The homeless man bought him a little crate, a blanket, a pad, food, dog toys and kept him for two days. This is man who has nothing, and lives in this park. And took care of our little boy,” said Eicholz. “Just makes me think you don’t realize how many kind people are out there until something like his happens.
Soon after Wardy went missing, another dog walker actually spotted him.
“I notice he had no owner; no collar and he took down the street,” said Monique Lee.
Monique Lee posted about it online and two days later got a call from a different dog walker who saw Wardy and a man at a bus stop.
That dogwalker approached the man and Wardy three days after the dog went missing.
“The man had Wardy in a little crate and blanket, and he was giving him love and care. you can tell Wardy was content with him,” said Lee.
“That’s him asleep in the crate,” said Eicholz.
MORE: SF family demands answers after dog lost while staying with sitter booked through pet care platform
A San Francisco family is demanding answers after their 2-year-old Maltipoo Coco went missing after escaping from a pet caretaker hired through Rover.
The woman showed the man the missing posters and explained that Wardy had run away. The man handed over the dog.
“That’s when he said, ‘Here, take the dog. You have to take the blanket. He loves this blanket’,” said Eicholz.
Wardy is home again.
As for Eicholz, he wants to find the kind-hearted man who gave Wardy so much.
“I’d love to know more about this man,” said Eicholz. “We’re looking for him. I’d like to say ‘thank you.’ I’d like to give him a little more money or buy him something he needs –just the kindness of someone to do something like that when I’m sure he has a lot of other things on his mind.”
Eicholz has these words for the man.
“That was incredibly kind of you to do that. You didn’t have to do that. It touches my heart deeply that you took care him. Not only food but you also bought him a place to stay. Thank you,” said Eicholz.
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San Francisco, CA
Daniel Lurie wants to pause city hiring — with some caveats
Newly inaugurated Mayor Daniel Lurie said Thursday he wants to freeze city hiring and new programs — though there are major exemptions and scant details on exactly what departments will be affected.
In light of a historic budget deficit reaching nearly $900 million, Lurie said the city would pause hiring for new positions, except those that are “historically challenging to staff and that directly support public safety and health.”
Additionally, Lurie told department heads to “realign programming and spending” with core priorities, according to a press release, including freezing new contracts and programs.
The mayor’s office did not respond to a list of questions from The Standard about which departments would be exempted from the hiring freeze or the criteria for halting programs and contracts.
San Francisco, CA
At SF Mayor Lurie’s Chinatown Party, Dancing, Fireworks and a Promise of Unity | KQED
“As we speak, the San Francisco Police Department and sheriff’s department are rapidly shifting resources and personnel to bring drug dealers to justice and clean up our streets,” Lurie said in his inaugural address Wednesday.
Chinese Americans have long played a critical role in San Francisco politics and the city’s identity as a bastion of progress and compassion, advocating for integrated schools, affordable housing and public safety, especially after the pandemic when anti-Asian hate crimes spiked.
It’s also a fast-growing electorate. The Asian population had the highest growth rate of any ethnicity in San Francisco from 2010 to 2020, according to U.S. Census data. Chinese residents account for nearly 22% of the city’s population.
Lurie has already hired several staffers to help him bridge cultural divides, including Han Zhao, a political strategist for Lurie’s campaign who will be the director of public affairs; Paul Yep, a former San Francisco police commander who will be the director of public safety; and Kit Lam, who was the Asian American and Pacific Islander political director for Lurie’s campaign and who was previously an organizer of the school board recall in 2022. He will serve as a press liaison between the mayor’s office and AAPI communities.
Lurie, founder of the nonprofit Tipping Point and heir to the Levis Strauss clothing fortune, campaigned as a political outsider fed up with dysfunction and corruption in City Hall.
He has never held elected office before, but convinced voters that his background in nonprofit work would position him well to bring new ideas to City Hall. Campaign contributions soared past $62 million, topped by Lurie who raised roughly $16 million — about half of which was self-funded — making his run the most expensive in the city’s history.
At Wednesday’s night market, hundreds of residents packed the streets of Chinatown to eat and dance to electronic music by San Francisco-born electronic music producer, Zhu.
“I just got off of work over at Equinox and came because Zhu was performing, but I also came here to support our new Mayor Daniel Lurie,” said Mason Maes, who lives in Noe Valley. “It’s great to see all these residents get together.”
Elizabeth Wang, a Marina resident, came because she was hoping to learn more about Lurie and to have fun with friends.
“I’m just here for the vibes. I can’t say I know much about [Lurie] since he’s new to government,” Wang said. “But having a party here in Chinatown means a lot.”
Others at the event, who didn’t vote for Lurie and had skepticism about his wealthy background, said they’re waiting to see what type of change his administration will bring.
“We weren’t Daniel Lurie fans, but we love this city and hope it gets better,” said Tiny Harris, who was chasing her toddler around the market.
She said she voted for Aaron Peskin partly because he opposed sweeps of homeless encampments and supported housing and behavioral health solutions over law enforcement to address street homelessness.
“But out of all the mayoral candidates, we could have done worse, so I’m thankful for that,” Harris said.
San Francisco, CA
New San Francisco Mayor Daniel Lurie celebrates inauguration night in Chinatown with banquet and night market
Large turnout for new San Francisco Mayor Daniel Lurie’s inauguration night celebrations in Chinatown.
He thanks the Asian and AAPI communities for their support. San Franciscans, even one that said she didn’t vote for him, say they are excited and optimistic that he may bring change.
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