Guardian Editorial

Economic stimulus, at home

Put money in the hands of the people most likely to spend it
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EDITORIAL Mayor Gavin Newsom is planning to announce a local economic stimulus package some time this week. The Board of Supervisors is holding hearings on how the city can help the San Francisco economy. As the presidential candidates thrash around with proposals to address the worst economic crisis since the 1930s, local politicians are hoping to do their part at home.

And that's a fine idea. Even in this globalized economy, San Francisco can do a lot to protect its residents and businesses from the ongoing disaster. Read more »

The big landlords' blackmail

If these thugs can threaten a popular and essential public works program, then the mayor and the supervisors will forever be vulnerable
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EDITORIAL The landlords who are threatening the San Francisco General Hospital bond are thugs, and the supervisors and the mayor need to hold firm and refuse to pay their blackmail.

It's almost too amazing to believe — an organization financed and controlled by the biggest residential property owners in town is trying to hold Proposition A — without which the city's entire public health system will collapse — hostage to an unrelated policy dispute.

The landlords, represented by the Coalition for Better Housing, want the city to let them pass increased sewer charg Read more »

An economic locavore policy

San Francisco needs to take a broad approach to the city economy
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EDITORIAL Local food is all the rage in San Francisco these days. The locavores and the slow-food people held a conference at Fort Mason a couple of weeks ago that drew huge crowds. Mayor Gavin Newsom is on board, and he loves to talk about creating a sustainable San Francisco. Read more »

A planning primer for the supes

Everyone in town ought to be fighting a developer giveaway that brings the city nothing
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EDITORIAL The Eastern Neighborhoods Plan, which comes before the Board of Supervisors this month, is more than a set of rezoning and fee proposals. It's a blueprint for how San Francisco sees its future as a city. Read more »

PG&E's $107 million lie

Prop. H not only sets aggressive targets for renewable energy; it opens the door for a city-owned and city-operated electrical system
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EDITORIAL The entire focus of the campaign against the Clean Energy Act is the claim that the measure will cost you money. This isn't rocket science: Pacific Gas and Electric Co. has clearly paid for expensive polling and focus groups, and concluded that this is the best way to attack Proposition H. It's brutally cynical. The PG&E strategy assumes that San Franciscans are essentially selfish and would be unwilling to spend a little more money on electricity in exchange for radically reducing greenhouse gases. Read more »

Take Lowe's off the table

If we've learned anything from the past few years, it's that big-box chains can't be trusted
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EDITORIAL The battle over a proposed Home Depot store on Bayshore Boulevard several years ago dominated politics for a while in two supervisorial districts and became a nasty battle over race, jobs, small business, and community development priorities that spread citywide. In the end, with Sup. Aaron Peskin providing the swing vote, the Board of Supervisors approved the giant chain store.

And then — as giant out-of-town chains will do — Home Depot abruptly pulled the plug last spring. Read more »

Getting beyond JROTC

We'd much rather see local kids encouraged to become cops than directed into the military
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EDITORIAL The racial achievement gap is the most important issue in the School Board race, but JROTC is the most politically divisive. The ballot initiative that seeks to save the military recruitment program will be used to attack progressives, and there's a real risk that San Francisco will wind up sending a terrible message to the rest of the country.

This madness needs to stop. The School Board needs an alternative to JROTC that includes all the elements that make the program attractive to kids and families, without the military baggage. Read more »

Pelosi can't duck the next Bush war

The Speaker has not said she would oppose sending US troops to Georgia
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EDITORIAL The last time the George W. Bush administration began the saber-rattling that would take the nation into war, the Democratic leadership in Congress was afraid to say a word in opposition. It was that period of fear-driven politics just after 9/11, but even then, the evidence was pretty clear that Saddam Hussein and Iraq had never attacked the United States. Read more »

And now, the controller's big lie

A wildly inaccurate estimate of the cost of the Clean Energy Act
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EDITORIAL Pacific Gas and Electric Co. will get a huge political windfall if the San Francisco Controller's Office moves forward with a wildly inaccurate estimate of the cost of the Clean Energy Act.

In an Aug. 7 letter sent to the Department of Elections, Controller Ben Rosenfeld wrote that the costs to the city of acquiring PG&E's local distribution facilities are "likely to be in the billions of dollars." That's a scary figure, the sort of information PG&E will use to attack the measure. Read more »

PG&E's first big lies

It's not too early to start evaluating the campaign rhetoric and exposing the most ridiculous untruths
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EDITORIAL The San Francisco Chronicle reported Aug. 2 that Pacific Gas and Electric Co. is almost certain to miss the state's deadline for increased renewable energy generation. It's a pretty modest goal: 20 percent of the company's electricity is supposed to come from renewable sources by 2010. Read more »