New SF Supervisors prez: ‘Bout time we shifted from social justice fluff to “the basics”

Chatting with The Free Press, SF’s president of the Board of Supes (Rafael Mandelman) says progressives have gotta start prioritizing “basic gov’t services” before auxiliary social justice initiatives. Plus, Mandelman wonders if 2020-era changes—defund the police, anyone?—were even helpful.

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In which preserving older housing actually worsens affordability

SJ City Council and Housing Dept recently raised eyebrows by gifting a local nonprofit a cool $5m to "preserve" some older affordable housing in ESJ. Turns out, such a strategy may run counter to Best Practices for cities that want to decrease the overall cost of living and housing. From Local Housing Solutions.

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Books by poets from San Jose / delight and take our breath away

Join us, below, as we waft through reviews from Amazon/Goodreads (plus Opp Now’s resident English majors!) on three highly-rated anthologies from local poets.

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Instant, not insight

Silicon Valley's obsession with “fast” and “more” (news headlines, social media updates, gov't comm's) isn't leading us to better perspectives on the world, says LA Review of Books. Rather, this “onslaught of information” overwhelms and makes many prioritize hyperrealism over reality.

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Opinion: SF's failure to provide oversight of nonprofits a key reason why homelessness crisis never improves

Susan Dyer Reynolds of the excellent Voice of SF says the quiet part out loud: unaccountable nonprofits and virtue-signalling tech execs have blown through hundreds of millions on homelessness, to little effect.

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Is it (finally) end of the line for HSR?

Hopelessly late. Wildly over budget. And ridiculously over-hyped. California's High Speed Rail project may finally be sent back to the shed, unless new sources of funding are found, says local State Senator Dave Cortese. LA Times reports. 

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Why Silicon Valley gov'ts overreach into new projects when they're (clearly) not working

Kinfolk magazine's theory of “subtraction neglect” may explain why local pols are eager to expand their jurisdictions (adding more and more initiatives on homelessness, basic income, etc.) but have trouble backing off. Even when they're far outside their charter. Or the projects fail—miserably.

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Palmyra paradox: Crime drops despite—or because of?—lost citation revenue

Many Silicon Valley pols worry that excessive taxes can poison the goodwill between a city’s government and its people. Taxation-by-citation is no exception. Case study: one small police force took a big step back from ticketing—and property crime dropped by 80%. A Route Fifty commentary by James Small and Joanna Weiss.

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Local biz community split over tax policy mirrors polarization at national level

Ostensibly pro-business electeds on the San Jose City Council (Mahan, Casey, Foley, Mulcahy) surprised recently by advocating for lowering voter thresholds for new taxes. This is a position many local businesspeople (and most Californians) oppose. Below, The Harvard Gazette explores how this reflects national trends, in which business leaders self-segregate around political groupings.

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Salvation Army on the role of shelters in a meaningful homelessness strategy

While California cities dawdle on implementing more and bigger shelters for homeless people, the Salvation is a proof-of-concept for shelters—including in San Jose. Below, the Salvation Army's argument for why shelters work and are important.

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☆ Mark Moses: Saving a city should take years, but it’s worth the wait (3/3)

Rather than limp along, hike taxes, and sell off assets to survive, cities like Oakland and San Jose should prioritize the needs of their residents—and their long-term financial health. So says Mark Moses, author of The Municipal Financial Crisis, who calls for cities to begin a years-long unwinding of costly services, regulations, and labor agreements. An Opp Now exclusive Q&A.

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The Cupertino Project: A case study in facilitating meaningful city–community feedback

The City of Cupertino, De Anza College, and the Public Dialogue Consortium (incl. Dr. Shawn Spano, who writes below) partnered on a landmark “Cupertino Project” in the late '90s. Their mission was simple: engage Cupertino residents about issues affecting their community, and brainstorm solutions. The fascinating study (recapped below) utilized focus groups, town halls, and action plans—to put findings into practice. From the Rogue Comm Domain Directory.

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