Study Says San Franciscans Could Wait A Century For Affordable Rents
A new study finds that building market‑rate housing alone may take decades to make San Francisco affordable — in a slow scenario that could stretch to about 124 years. Researchers say broader public finance and protections are needed.
Antioch Cops Wrap DOJ Cleanup as Text Scandal Hangover Lingers
Antioch officials say the police department has finished the DOJ‑required policy rewrite tied to the racist‑text scandal. The city and federal monitor now shift to training, reporting and compliance checks.
Back on the Block: Stanford Court Hotel’s Nob Hill Saga Isn’t Over
The Stanford Court, a landmark Nob Hill hotel, is back on the market with brokers saying the offering is "fully unencumbered." The relisting follows lender litigation and deferred capital needs.
Bottle-Cap Mosquito Invades Bay Area, Officials Sound Alarm
Aedes aegypti — a bottle‑cap‑breeding, day‑biting mosquito that can spread dengue and Zika — has been detected in parts of the Bay Area; officials urge residents to clear standing water.
Menlo Park Parents Go to Court to Stop TIDE Academy Shutdown
A parents’ group has sued to block Sequoia Union’s plan to close Menlo Park’s TIDE Academy, arguing the shutdown would disproportionately hurt students with disabilities and low‑income families.












