You can always count on SF to approve one of the largest business taxes in recent memory to address homelessness and then not be able to spend it because no one actually wants services or beds in their backyard.https://twitter.com/DominicFracassa/status/1105691943051321345 …
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Unless it’s owned by the port authority or something and being gifted to the city below market. I have no idea what the ownership structure is. I just know that it’s a massively inefficient use of very valuable land
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Is it? We have king tides regularly flooding the Embarcadero multiple times every year and this is before climate change-induced sea level rise.
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Why not? If the city can build a nav center on it it can sell it. Philadelphia has some huge residential developments built on former piers.
@SonjaTrauss can vouch for philly’s high density waterfront development. -
The land doesn’t belong to the city. It belongs to the port, which is an entirely different legal entity.
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