City Hall
1 Dr. Carlton B. Goodlett
Place
San Francisco, CA 94102-
4689
City and County of San Francisco
Legislation Details
File #:
Version:
1
130353
Name:
Formal Policy Discussions - April 23, 2013
Status:
Type:
Hearing
Filed
File created:
In control:
4/17/2013
Board of Supervisors
On agenda:
Final action:
4/23/2013
Enactment date:
Enactment #:
Title:
Pursuant to Charter Sections 2.103 and 3.100(7), and Administrative Code, Section 2.11, the Mayor
shall answer the following eligible questions submitted from Supervisors representing Districts 1, 3,
and 11. The Mayor may address the Board initially for up to five minutes. Discussion shall not
exceed five minutes per Supervisor.
1. According to the 2010 census, 35.6% of San Franciscans are foreign born and City residents
speak more than 28 different languages. Our City’s Language Access Ordinance has been in effect
since 2009 to make sure that the various needs of this population are well served. Yet, I am aware,
from feedback from community groups, that our City Departments still struggle to meet the language
needs of San Francisco’s diverse communities. In heavily immigrant populated Districts, like the
Richmond, it is critical that our City’s services have the ability to serve all of our residents equitably. I
am particularly concerned that our first responders and other Tier 1 Departments be in compliance
with the Ordinance and recently called for a hearing to examine this issue. I would like to know what
your office is doing to ensure the requirements of the Language Access Ordinance are fully met?
(Supervisor Mar, District 1)
2. Mr. Mayor, my office recently implemented San Francisco’s first pilot program in participatory
budgeting. As practiced in 1,500 cities around the world, including Chicago and New York City,
participatory budgeting is a direct democratic process in which residents decide how to spend a
portion of a public budget, which leads to better and fairer decisions, makes government more
accountable and efficient, builds community in our neighborhoods, and increases public confidence in
how our city works. With the partnership of the Controller’s Office and community groups, my office
successfully managed a process that included collecting ideas proposed by residents, winnowing
implementable projects, and a week of voting at locations around District 3. This year, my hope is that
we can expand our participatory budget pilot beyond the modest $100,000 of funding available this
year, which represents less than 1/70,000th of our annual budget. Will you join me to make San
Francisco a participatory budgeting leader in the United States? (Supervisor Chiu, District 3)
3. A small area of the Oceanview, Merced Heights, and Ingleside (OMI) neighborhood has
experienced a high level of gun violence and a rash of homicides over the past several years, mostly
affecting African American men in the Broad Street corridor. In November, OMI residents and service
providers held a public safety town hall meeting attended by many City departments, most of which
committed to stepping up their work in the neighborhood. Earlier this year after a young African
American man was shot at the Minnie and Lovie Ward Recreation Center playground, you and I spoke
directly about creating a violence prevention plan specific to the OMI neighborhood and its African
American community. Thank you for your attention to this matter. Please tell us the status of the plan
to bring jobs and violence prevention and intervention resources to the OMI to address the crisis of
gun violence. (Supervisor Avalos, District 11)
Sponsors:
Attachments:
1. Board_Packet_042313
Action By
Date
Action
Result
Ver.
ASSIGNED
President
4/17/2013
1
HEARD AND FILED
Board of Supervisors
4/23/2013
1