Sponsored link
Saturday, January 17, 2026

Sponsored link

News + PoliticsEnvironmentThe beautiful, transit-friendly Great Highway park: I should live so long

The beautiful, transit-friendly Great Highway park: I should live so long

There's no money for improvements or maintenance. What Prop. K got us is a closed road and maybe a few chairs.

-

The supporters of Prop. K talked over and over during the campaign about a new “park” at Ocean Beach. Some of the opponents worried that the fancy new waterfront park will just spur more development along San Francisco’s coast.

State Sen. Scott Wiener was among those who celebrated the new “park” in a rally Saturday:

“This has been a contentious issue, but I am confident that years from now, we will all look back and say, ‘Why was this even controversial? ’” state Sen. Scott Wiener said at the rally. “People are going to love this park so much, so let’s keep moving forward.”

This looks lovely. There’s no money to pay for it. Image via greathighwaypark.com

Maybe that’s true, some day, “years from now,” when San Francisco has vastly improved public transit on the West side, so nobody needs a car, and Donald Trump is long gone, and the nation and the state and the city have reduced economic inequality by taxing the rich to pay for things like nice new parks.

Oh, and new housing near the beach is affordable to the working class, not just to rich people, because that new tax money has turned housing into a public good.

I can’t wait to take the new high-speed subway out to the new park (on those rare days when it’s nice out, if the rising sea level hasn’t turned the park into a swimming pool).

But for now … it’s not happening.

Despite the campaign promises, there isn’t going to be a fancy new park along Ocean Beach any time in the foreseeable future.

Sponsored link

Prop. K didn’t include any funding for improvements of any sort, from infrastructure to road replacement. The city’s maxed out its bond capacity, and as far as I can tell, there’s no extra money in the Rec-Park bond fund, which can’t be diverted for projects that the voters didn’t approve, and there won’t be another park bond for years to come.

With a massive budget deficit, incoming Mayor Daniel Lurie is not going to find the cash to pay for anything new at Ocean Beach, and Rec Park has and in the immediate future will continue to have nothing in its budget to fund operations and maintenance.

I emailed Tamara Aperton, the Rec-Park media person, and asked where the money might come from for all these improvements. She didn’t respond.

So for now, it won’t be a grand park, as supporters envisioned. It’s going to be a strip of roadway that’s closed to cars, with a few chairs, some public art, and a few other improvements paid for by private donors.

Nice place for kids to learn to ride a bike (except for the wind and fog, and the fact that a lot of them will probably drive there). Nice place for the bicyclists who ride through Golden Gate Park to add some fun to their ride.

But a lovely new waterfront park, with native plants and sculptured sand dunes and bathrooms and playgrounds, served by adequate public transit?

I should live so long.

48 Hills welcomes comments in the form of letters to the editor, which you can submit here. We also invite you to join the conversation on our FacebookTwitter, and Instagram

Tim Redmond
Tim Redmond
Tim Redmond has been a political and investigative reporter in San Francisco for more than 30 years. He spent much of that time as executive editor of the Bay Guardian. He is the founder of 48hills.
Sponsored link
Sponsored link

Featured

Lurie discovers affordability

But of course, that doesn't mean taxing the billionaires

So what if the billionaires leave California?

A member of Patriotic Millionaires says the rich probably won't flee a new wealth tax—but we might be better off if some of them did

As Trump threatens Cuba, a solidarity visit shows the impact of US sanctions

Even Cuban Olympic hopefuls are cut off from qualifying events

More by this author

Lurie discovers affordability

But of course, that doesn't mean taxing the billionaires

So what if the billionaires leave California?

A member of Patriotic Millionaires says the rich probably won't flee a new wealth tax—but we might be better off if some of them did

Should I sign that petition? A handy guide to the clipboards you’re seeing on the streets

Make sure you know who is funding the the ballot measures before you sign.
Sponsored link

You might also likeRELATED