Sponsored link
Wednesday, December 24, 2025

Sponsored link

DevelopmentSF is sending out upzoning notices; here's how to find out what's...

SF is sending out upzoning notices; here’s how to find out what’s really going on

The official letters don't mention demolitions or displacement—but there are other sources of information that do

-

Letters will be arriving in mailboxes across the city, particularly on the West Side, this week, advising residents and businesses that the city is planning major zoning changes to their neighborhoods.

The notices are going out because Sup. Connie Chan demanded that people be notified about the profound transformation that the new zoning laws could involve.

But the notices don’t exactly tell people what’s happening. They say that the city “is required to expand housing availablilty and affordabilty,” which sounds just wonderful. The QR code on the notice takes you to a city planning website that says

The SF Family Zoning Plan (a.k.a. Expanding Housing Choice) aims to expand housing affordability and availability by allowing for increased density throughout the City, especially along transit and commercial corridors, in order to meet San Francisco’s Regional Housing Needs Allocation requirements set by the State of California.

Again, that sounds just grand.

The problem is, the plan would allow, and in some cases encourage, the demolition of existing buildings that have small commercial tenants. A new bill by state Sen. Scott Wiener would go further, allowing the demolition of rent-controlled buildings.

All in the name of making housing more affordable.

The problem is that the city only requires 15 percent of the new housing to be affordable, and given construction costs, interest rates, and demands for high returns by investors, the vast majority of the new housing will be far too expensive for most working San Franciscans.

More new housing doesn’t mean more affordability; it often means the opposite.

None of that information is on the city website. There’s no discussion of the possibility of displacement of small businesses and the wholesale transformation of neighborhood commercial districts.

But there’s plenty of information out there. You can find a detailed discussion of the issues involved in upzoning at the website of Neighborhoods United SF. There’s more at the Race and Equity in All Planning site. Small business info is available at Small Business Forward.

The Planning Commission will hold a hearing on the upzoning Thursday, Sept. 11 at noon.

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

SF could move to take over PG&E’s system right now, if city officials had the political will

We don't need a new state bill or more hearings. The city could start the public power process immediately—and send a powerful message to the state

Good Taste: Fantastic food moments of 2025

Burgers, bagels, sandwiches, and a giant slice of chocolate cake: our columnist reflects on the dishes that ate.

Rachel Wolfe-Goldsmith’s art is empowerment writ large

'Oakland inspires me daily,' says creator, who works with incarcerated men and depicts 'change-makers and world-builders.'

More by this author

SF could move to take over PG&E’s system right now, if city officials had the political will

We don't need a new state bill or more hearings. The city could start the public power process immediately—and send a powerful message to the state

It’s time to kick PG&E out of the city. In fact, it’s long, long overdue

Plus: Robocars could cause a massive crisis in an emergency— and the budget for next year is going to be awful. That's The Agenda for Dec. 21-28

The great PG&E debacle: A timeline 1898-1997

A deep dive into the scandalous history of the power company, including the Raker Act and Hetch Hetchy dam deal.
Sponsored link

You might also likeRELATED