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Tuesday, April 29, 2025

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Tim Redmond

Tim Redmond
2659 POSTS71 COMMENTS
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.

Boudin recall ad features paid staffers and a scandal-plagued former DA

Why don't the local media, so happy to attack the DA, fact-check an ad that is blatantly false and kind of ridiculous?

Politics killed a homeless drop-in center, supes hearing shows

Mayor's Office cancelled project the same day Breed told a conservative group in the Haight that 'it's not going to happen.'

Rittenhouse verdict: ‘If he were Black he would be going away for life’

Cat Brooks, Justice Teams Network director, responds to the jury in Kenosha

Preston seeks $64 million, now, for social housing purchases

The city has the cash to buy buildings that are at risk for speculation and evictions, which could have a huge impact on displacement.

Castro eviction battle shows total failure of state housing laws

The abuse of the Ellis Act is a total disgrace—and the city needs to move faster to buy at-risk buildings, protesters say.

Poll shows SF voters don’t believe market-rate housing will help crisis

Clear majorities say the city should protect vulnerable communities from luxury housing that causes displacement.

Breed bows to Cole Valley conservatives in blocking homeless drop-in center

Plus: Uncovering the privatization and corruption scandals of the Parks Alliance and the Rec-Park Department. That's The Agenda for Nov. 15-21

Campos kicks off campaign with strong labor and LGBT support

With election in just 93 days, wide range of progressives come together to support the only queer Latinx candidate in the race.

Why Mayor Breed suddenly blocked a homeless drop-in center in the Haight

A plan that CIty Hall and community activists fully supported abruptly died last month. Here's what happened.

No surprise—Boudin recall will be on the June ballot

If you spend $1.4 million, you can qualify almost anything—but this will be a big test for the integrity of elections and SF's political leadership.